Poster: A snowHead
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Scenario is your 9 year old exits the speed run at 54 km/h, hits a bump and loses one ski, takes a tumble and loses the 2nd ski. She is in a heap crying and complaining of a sore ankle.
After xing skis above her, comforting her and leaving her in position for 5-10mins she stops crying, she can stand but cannot put any weight on her foot, and still complains of a sore ankle.
You are at the bottom of a dead end slope, miles from your hotel and car, with your wife and older child.
What would you do?
Cheers,
Greg
Last edited by Poster: A snowHead on Sat 14-04-12 22:27; edited 1 time in total
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Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
Obviously A snowHead isn't a real person
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Does the scenario include...nobody else around, no mobile phone no uplift from dead end slope? otherwise just call the local patrol.
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Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
Well, the person's real but it's just a made up name, see?
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As a parent you'd have a better idea of whether she genuinely can't put any weight on her foot or is playing for sympathy because she doesn't want to ski any more. If she really can't put weight on her foot I'd call slope patrol.
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cran
cran
Guest
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Tell her to man up and get back on her skis...
If that doesn't work, tell her that the bears come out when it gets dark so she might not want to sit there all night...
If neither of those work take the older child to the nearest pub and wait there while the wife sorts it out...
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Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
Anyway, snowHeads is much more fun if you do.
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kitenski, sorry to hear that Hope she is ok.
Patrol probably unless there was an option of 'shuffling' child to a nearby bar/base area to wait with one adult whilst the other went to bring the car over.
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You'll need to Register first of course.
You'll need to Register first of course.
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sarah, she is fine, thanks.
We were at the outer limits of the ski area, so after 10-15 mins I called ski patrol. The medical man agreed with me that we didn't want to remove the boot, so she was put into a blood wagon, then lifted on the front of a piste basher to the top of the slope, where the ski patrol took her down to the bottom in the blood wagon (now he was a great skier, I've never appreciated the speed they can achieve whilst towing a wagon)!
She was then taken to the Drs, x-rayed and declared fit with a bruised bone. Ibuprofen & ice did the trick and she appears fine now.
My main concern was wether she had broken her ankle, so I decided to leave the boot on and call ski patrol.
Car was in Zurs, we were in Lech! once she got to the Drs, I skied back to Zurs, got the car, drove over and she was all sorted by then!
Now for the medical claim...
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kitenski, pleased to hear that.
We had two encounters with ski patrol last week in the US and I was impressed. The first was that one of the kids in our party was blood waggonned off the mountain after a fall 10 mins before the end of his lesson, he was absolutely fine but was waggonned just to be sure. They took him to the first aid centre at the base where he was assessed. There was no charge for this, I was really surprised. There would only have been a charge if they had taken him off the hill and down to the hospital but apparently recovery within the resort is included in the lift ticket.
The second incident was finding a lone skier fallen and crying on Easter Sunday morning whilst we were doing an egg hunt on a quiet slope. She was really distressed, thought she had broken her arm. We did the crossed skis and called ski patrol who arrived with a wagon within 5 mins. We lent her our phone to call her husband. The patrol guy made a quick assessment and then radioed for a 'doo' to transport her. She was so distressed that he then offered her pain relief on the spot which she said she would have and so he then radioed for 'ALS' to come too, apparently she would then get some kind of IV narcotic and oxygen. We called the lady's husband for her to let him know that ski patrol were with her and where they would take her. We then wished her well and left her with ski patrol. Again very impressed with the service.
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sarah, massively off topic, but any chance of some details about your USA trip? Price, where you went, how it compared, what the kids thought etc etc ?? Maybe a new thread would be better
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You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
You'll get to see more forums and be part of the best ski club on the net.
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I had a similar experience with my son after a wee crash and he claimed he had hurt his knee I was all for trying to get him to ski but Mrs T bar thought we shoud get the patrol. They arrived and blood wagoned him off the hill. He was taken to the meical centre and they gave him the all clea. Cost me a small fortune getting him down when I was pretty sure there ws nowt the matter witrh him. He gets no sympathy now. Mothers are I suspect a little overprotective.
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T Bar wrote: |
Mothers are I suspect a little overprotective. |
I've seen many a loving mother who spends a lot of time around her children become quite inured to tumbles, spills and tears, meaning the child really has to do some convincing if they're unwell or hurt themselves.
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snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
snowHeads are a friendly bunch.
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And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
And love to help out and answer questions and of course, read each other's snow reports.
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I'd make her ski with her mother instead.
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kitenski, Glad she is all ok.
Quote: |
Now for the medical claim...
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I've found myself increasingly buying the local insurance in addition to my holiday cover especially when the family is with me, which is why I wouldn’t hesitate to call the local patrol.
On our last trip 10% of our hotel went down with holiday ending injuries, all had to pay "cash" for recovery & local treatment, one family had two incidents and had to scrape up 1500 Euros for the local side, one of them spent the rest of the week in hospital & didn’t have a valid EHIC card may have been costly.
For me for less than the cost of a daily coffee its one less thing to worry about.
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You know it makes sense.
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Carried her to the gondola that was about 5 yards away. (I wasn't brave enough to try the speed trap!)
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Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
Otherwise you'll just go on seeing the one name:
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fatbob, yes we did that and sat her outside, whilst deciding what to do!
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