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Married to Night Train
- Location
- Salford, UK
Yesterday, I was pulling away from a green light to turn right onto Fulford Road, and as I was getting across the first lane, I heard the first sound of a siren of to my right, so I hammered the pace a bit to sprint across and out of the way. Three drivers behind me followed anyway, apparently oblivious to the police car coming - I heard the dirver using his horn on top of the siren a fair bit. But that's not my point (just a dig at dopey drivers).
Anyway, as I rode into town along Fulford Road, I saw another police car, the fire service landrover towing the boat, two full size fire engines, an ambulance and another police car, all hammering along in the same direction, so I assumed something big must be happening, on the river.
Looks like it was this:
http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/8636159.Three_people_rescued_in_York_river_drama/?ref=mr
Three people, pulled from the Ouse when a canoe capsised at the Naburn weir. Three people, one canoe. Were TWO fire engines really necessary? I imagine the landrover carries a pretty good selection of rescue equipment, but maybe you'd want one engine with long ladders etc. Not only that, but fire crews from Tadcaster apparently also attended. Knowing the distance from Tadcaster to Naburn, I can't imagine the Taddie bunch got there until it was all over.
Obviously, you want enough people to help, and I suppose intial reports might be confused, but it seems like a bit of an over reaction. Apart from the fuel used, and the fact that both those engines were then not at base, and potentially further away from something over the other side of town, the more vehicles you have speeding along the more chance you have of accidents - witness the drivers who followed me out unaware into the way of that police car. Also, the vehicles going my way that pulled into the bus/cycle lane I was in away from the oncoming vehicles, probably without looking all that hard in their mirrors - fortunately I was expecting it, and pretty much pulled up until it was all clear.
Is anyone expert on this sort of thing, and could explain?
(On an unrelated note, I pulled up at the next set of lights, in the ASL, behind a German lady on a bike, who turned to look at me, and say how cool the trike was. At which point the car at the head of the queue, which had been stationary and then creeping forward, set off. Clean through a red light. Not an early amber, resolutely red.)
Anyway, as I rode into town along Fulford Road, I saw another police car, the fire service landrover towing the boat, two full size fire engines, an ambulance and another police car, all hammering along in the same direction, so I assumed something big must be happening, on the river.
Looks like it was this:
http://www.yorkpress.co.uk/news/8636159.Three_people_rescued_in_York_river_drama/?ref=mr
Three people, pulled from the Ouse when a canoe capsised at the Naburn weir. Three people, one canoe. Were TWO fire engines really necessary? I imagine the landrover carries a pretty good selection of rescue equipment, but maybe you'd want one engine with long ladders etc. Not only that, but fire crews from Tadcaster apparently also attended. Knowing the distance from Tadcaster to Naburn, I can't imagine the Taddie bunch got there until it was all over.
Obviously, you want enough people to help, and I suppose intial reports might be confused, but it seems like a bit of an over reaction. Apart from the fuel used, and the fact that both those engines were then not at base, and potentially further away from something over the other side of town, the more vehicles you have speeding along the more chance you have of accidents - witness the drivers who followed me out unaware into the way of that police car. Also, the vehicles going my way that pulled into the bus/cycle lane I was in away from the oncoming vehicles, probably without looking all that hard in their mirrors - fortunately I was expecting it, and pretty much pulled up until it was all clear.
Is anyone expert on this sort of thing, and could explain?
(On an unrelated note, I pulled up at the next set of lights, in the ASL, behind a German lady on a bike, who turned to look at me, and say how cool the trike was. At which point the car at the head of the queue, which had been stationary and then creeping forward, set off. Clean through a red light. Not an early amber, resolutely red.)