From Newsgroup: rec.motorcycles
On Mon, 8 Jul 2024 09:18:59 +0200 (CEST), Rookie tourists <
leave@them.rot> wrote:
A motorcyclist died of suspected heat exposure and another was
hospitalized for severe heat illness Saturday amid record
temperatures at Death Valley National Park in California, park
officials said.
<snip remainder of sensational Park Service PSA />
It is with great pleasure that I touch my keyboard to respond to an
on-topic Reeky post. It has been a coon's age since the last
opportunity. I'm taking liberties with trimming the cross-posting
though.
This news report is similar to the grisly-bear-exploitation PSAs that
the U.S. Park Service pushes to every visitor in the western venues:
"Don't get et!" The omnipresence of such messages does little to
discourage tourists from being stupid and may even popularize the
danger and thus the thrill. Certainly these announcements magnify the
actual risks in the Public's and the Media's eyes beyond the actuarial
reality, which is the opposite of "public service."
... so it is, too, with riding in hot weather. Big Media and Big
Government are inclined to hype the risks to serve their anti-consumer
agendas. This is not to dismiss the risks rCo merely to point out that
you need to hear these messages from your riding buddies, not Big
Brother.
Yes. Humidity is a factor in most areas (not in Death Valley). At
over 60% humidity your perspiration is considerably less effective,
maintaining body temperature.
Yes. Temperatures approaching blood-warm pose grave obstacles to body
cooling.
Yes. You absorb heat from the sun rCo particularly wearing dark clothing
rCo and you don't shed that heat.
Yes. Going faster won't cool you. It will heat you up. Not smart!
Yes. You get crazy in the heat.
Been there! Approached an intersection in open country. Had the
right-of-way. Came to a full stop to the puzzlement of the cars
behind me. On reflection could not figure out why I had stopped.
Just like a boiled frog, you don't feel how hot you are, and, if you
did, you wouldn't care. At this point, low humidity does not help.
In the same way that you don't feel perspiration taking place in a dry
wind, you don't feel how much more heat the wind brings than it takes
away. Your perception gets warped before you realize it's happening.
Take these steps to avoid heat-related illness: keep tabs on others,
follow their advice, stop riding in hot weather, get out of the sun,
get into shade and air conditioning (if possible), push cool fluids,
rest, take the afternoon off, relax with pie |a la mode.
I'm sure most people do these things. The ones who don't are the ones
you year about on the Internet.
--
Moreover I'm convinced that Reddit must be destroyed.
Worst Case
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