9 March 2009

The crash at Pooh Corner

| johnboy
Join the conversation
48

The ABC brings word that two Canberra women (48 and 24 years old) have died descending Clyde Mountain.

Apparently the area was shrouded in rain and fog at the time.

Join the conversation

48
All Comments
  • All Comments
  • Website Comments
LatestOldest

This is a real shame these people died. Let’s just hope on the positive side, some awareness comes out of this, on how to properly drive in these kinds of conditions.

I think the crux of the issue, is that there is no mandatory requirement in getting your license to be taught how to drive in these kinds of conditions.

The number of times I have been driving on the clyde or brown, and you can smell someones breaks… you just know they have no idea how to properly use their gears to slow themselves down and are just riding their breaks. It’s an accident waiting to happen, even if the breaks don’t fail completely, they are going to be all spongy and inneffective when overused like that, and someone is going to loose control.

at least the clyde is better than it was. In times past, you would have to call from the braidwood phone box to the steampacket hotel to check whether the road was clear, or if it was raining…. so my grandpa tells me.

Gungahlin Al2:52 pm 11 Mar 09

caf said :

It’s quite possible to have a fatal accident at 60km/h closing speed.

The real live crash test (real driver – no dummies) at 30 mph and comparison of 3, 4 and 5 star wrecks on this week’s Top Gear was – to say the least – enlightening.

I remember when the Hume highway was “The Deadly Hume” – it was rubbish, just like the King’s Highway is now, with people dying on it all the time. In fact, I recall being in one accident where some old codger lost control on a (pretty moderate) bend and hit us head-on. Dunno what the “closing speed” was, but I’d guess it was at least 150km/h.
We took the brunt of it, but the traffic behind us ploughed into the wreckage, too.
The only real injuries were suffered by those people travelling behind us in horrible little pieces of jap-crap like Mazdas and Datsuns.

So – blame the drivers, blame the road, but don’t forget to also blame whoever has approved these horrible little unsafe asian-built cars for use on our roads.

It’s quite possible to have a fatal accident at 60km/h closing speed.

I don’t understand how an accident at Pooh Corner could be lethal – surely nobody’s travelling any more than about 30km/h around there?

I have to say – Macquarie Pass is much hairier than the Clyde, although with far less Canberra drivers on it, it’s usually less nerve-wracking.
I went down it 2 weeks ago and sure enough, there was the obligatory P-plater overtaking me on a blind 25km/h bend. He then crossed the double-yellow again to overtake the guy in front of me and arrived at the next bend (another 25km/h one) on the wrong side of the road and found himself nose-to-nose with a driver coming in the opposite direction.
If I’d had a gun on me, I’d have liked to have shot the #$@%, for all our sakes.

Was that the author and philosopher Genevieve Lloyd? Probably not, based on the age given in media reports …

I wonder if a simple ad campaign would help reduce accidents on the Clyde by illustrating the point that VY made earlier – that drivers need to learn how to moderate their speed through gearing rather than overuse of the brake pedal.

Rest in peace Genevieve and Lauretta Lloyd.

I’m with Sgt Bungers!

Speed cameras would fix it all. No doubt…

But seriously, concentrate and drive to the conditions. Simple as that.

thumper, they wouldn’t. the idiots slow for the camera, then speed up again. or jam on their brakes, creating an accident…

It’s bizarre that people will try to do that road at speed. I like mountain roads, and in fact equalled the unofficial record for getting from Mt Beauty to Falls Creek a few years back, but I do the Clyde very slowly. It’s steep, there’s frequent bad curves (and the infamous Government Bend… too steep and too tight), and you get classic mountain weather there too. First time I drove it was on my Ps (except ACT drivers didn’t have p plates then) and I got brake fade!

People who come to grief on that road really need to explain themselves.

Speed limits are the majority of the problem. Most Canberrans spend their time driving on wide, excellent roads with relatively low speed limits, thus get used to driving at the speed limit, all the time. Get to the Clyde’s twisties with a 70km/h limit, and that’s what too many people try to stick to, rain hail or shine. It only takes one moron not thinking about how fast they’re going to put your entire family in wheelchairs for the rest of their life.

Variable speed limits will cause more problems, as again it’s removing the need for people to think.

My solution… Get rid of speed limits all together. Impose a law stating that if you cause a crash which results in someone being injured, automatic 10 years in prison. Kill someone that’s 20. Kill a family of four that’s 80 years.

Watch how quickly people re-evaluate the value vs risks when it comes to the 5 minutes they save by driving somewhere quickly, vs driving somewhere sensibly. Suddenly you’ll get people thinking about the way they’re driving, rather than just adhearing to the “magic number” on some piddly signs.

My wife and I took the kids down to broulee for a holiday, only 2 weeks ago. I drive a camry altise, older model to the new body kit, v6, and an automatic, and i did the clyde in 2nd, for most of the way. I didn’t go above 40 at any stage of the sharp and tight corners, not because I couldn’t, but because my family was in the car, and it wasn’t my right to put them at risk. I also had my lights on, and made it down with very little stress. There were cars that overtook me in the slow lanes, but for most part, many drivers just slotted in behind me and we all drove down slowly.

It is the responsibility of the driver to recognise the road may be different to the last time they drove it. I don’t know what caused the accident being discussed today, but my condolences are with their Families.

poptop said :

Speed-bump or speed camera? Guess where public opinion will lie with this choice.

A speed bump would make a good launching ramp! One of my family members has also come to grief going down the Clyde in the rain, of course going too fast for the conditions. I’d suggest a wet weather speed limit going down there, the same as there is on the F3 freeway going south into Sydney. Though then the morons driving would still pay not attention and would overtake on the double lines going around a corner as usual. Enforcement on the highway isn’t exactly great, despite the police’s claim to be highly visible.

Speed-bump or speed camera? Guess where public opinion will lie with this choice.

Well the speed limit is 90 on the western approach to the mountain, and drops to 70 before the crest, so perhaps better enforcement of that would do the trick Kramer.

I have seen heaps of crashes just at the top of the Clyde – I reckon it’s people (and I am guilty of this too), flying up to the crest at 100kph, and down into the descent and fog way too fast. Before they know it they’re into the wall or guard rail. Easy solution – one big speed hump right at the top of the Clyde.

ant said :

I fail to see why fog or whatever is some kind of excuse. It scares me to think I share the road with people who want ot find excuses. If you lose traction and your car goes deolally, it is YOUR fault. It’s always your fault. You f-cked up. You did.

Never a more true statement has been said! I agree, it is always someone’s fault. Unless you are the victim of circumstance where it is someone else’s fault and they crash into you, it is one’s inability to handle the road conditions or themselves that causes accidents. Fatigue = your fault for not sleeping, drink driving = your fault for driving under influence, crash into a tree or roll over from a bend = your fault for not driving to the conditions of the road.

Condolences to anyone affected by accidents, fatal or otherwise, but it is not the road or weather. If drivers are concerned about the road or weather they *can* and *should* slow down or even pull off to the side of the road and let the weather pass. It is not a race down the Mountain.

This leaves me to another point where the adage ‘speed kills’ is not correct. Hitting a tree at 100km/hour will probably cause injury or death but if the road is posted at 100 you are not speeding. Again it comes down to driving to the conditions of the road. I bet you could not do 50km/hour down Bunda St even though that is the posted limit.

A novel thought: Let’s take responsibility for our own actions!

Hells_Bells7410:46 am 10 Mar 09

Well.. I’ll tell mum to add Mountains to her statement of the past! Thanx ant 😛

Just what I thought too Gobbo 😉

There’s no innuendo if you don’t refer to it as “the Brown”. e.g. “Went on a dirty weekend with my missus, took her up the brown… and we ended up staying in Bega”.

ant said :

Guys, it’s Brown Mountain, not “the Brown”.

I remember the Clyde …

Would that not also be the Clyde Mountain, not ‘the Clyde’?

🙂

Guys, it’s Brown Mountain, not “the Brown”. I remember the Clyde from the days when we had to get a punt across the Clyde river at Nelligen, and oh boy it was hairy. And the weather hasn’t changed.

I fail to see why fog or whatever is some kind of excuse. It scares me to think I share the road with people who want ot find excuses. If you lose traction and your car goes deolally, it is YOUR fault. It’s always your fault. You f-cked up. You did.

VYBerlinaV8_the_one_they_all_copy9:48 pm 09 Mar 09

Fair point Old Canberran, although I base my opinion on driving a powerful modern car without towing, so find the Clyde’s wide lanes on the hairpins make things easier than the narrow lanes on the Brown. Light towing wouldn’t be much of an issue, but if you were hauling a decent sized caravan up, then yeah, the Clyde would be a pain.

I have towed on the Brown before, and just did my standard trick of leaving the V8 in 2nd and rolling down, occasionally brushing the brakes for the tight turns.

old canberran8:22 pm 09 Mar 09

No I wouldn’t, Al but then I was talking about the roads not the drivers. It’s much easier to tow a big van up the Brown as it’s not as steep as the Clyde and it hasn’t go the same tight hairpin bends. It also has fewer Canberra drivers. 🙂

Gungahlin Al7:22 pm 09 Mar 09

old canberran said :

VYBerlinaV8_the_one_they_all_copy said :

I don’t think the Cylde is that bad. The Brown Mtn pass between Nimmitabel and Bemboka 100k’s or so further south I think is worse, as is the Jamberoo pass.

The closure of the Clyde might explain why there are so many Canberra number plates down here in Merimbula this weekend. There seems to be more than usual.
Berlina, I can’t agree that the Brown Mountain is worse than the Clyde. I travel the Brown sveral times a year and have been doing so since 1974. It’s certainly longer than the Clyde but it does not have the tight U bends or landslide problems of the Clyde. I used to tow a 22 foot caravan up and down it without any problems at all.

Ah but with a van in tow you wouldn’t be doing the insane speeds that so many Canberran drivers feel the need to drive at would you?

old canberran6:46 pm 09 Mar 09

VYBerlinaV8_the_one_they_all_copy said :

I don’t think the Cylde is that bad. The Brown Mtn pass between Nimmitabel and Bemboka 100k’s or so further south I think is worse, as is the Jamberoo pass.

The closure of the Clyde might explain why there are so many Canberra number plates down here in Merimbula this weekend. There seems to be more than usual.
Berlina, I can’t agree that the Brown Mountain is worse than the Clyde. I travel the Brown sveral times a year and have been doing so since 1974. It’s certainly longer than the Clyde but it does not have the tight U bends or landslide problems of the Clyde. I used to tow a 22 foot caravan up and down it without any problems at all.

cranky said :

If you’re really good at tailgating, the car in front will cover your number plate from the camera.

Well that’d be a 3/4 of the Canberra driving population. Conservatively.

If you’re really good at tailgating, the car in front will cover your number plate from the camera.

You know, I don’t see why they can’t alter the software to use speed cameras to measure the distance between two cars and factor in the speed limit to catch people who are tailgating.

+1 on Berlina’s comments. If driving an automatic, and you stick it in 2nd, some loon will instantly appear very close to your tail. And yep, their brakes get a lovely workout all the way down. But they are in a very important hurry.

Hells_Bells746:11 pm 09 Mar 09

Oops VY*

Hells_Bells746:04 pm 09 Mar 09

Here here VBerlina, was thinking that myself earlier.. Remember my mum telling me to not ride the pedals, but ride the gears down the Clyde and Brown. Yep some other prick with no idea always around too though!

VYBerlinaV8_the_one_they_all_copy5:45 pm 09 Mar 09

I don’t think the Cylde is that bad. The Brown Mtn pass between Nimmitabel and Bemboka 100k’s or so further south I think is worse, as is the Jamberoo pass.

The biggest problem I see on mountain passes is that people have forgotten the long lost skill of using the gears, rather than the brakes, to make the descent. Of course, this means some time spent with your feet off the pedals as your car descends due to gravity, and inevitably, there’s a yogi plate that catches, tailgates, then rides the brakes down once you let them past…

Gungahlin Al5:42 pm 09 Mar 09

I hate it when the general rule of thumb that you can take a corner at twice the signposted advisory speed falls over, because for once the advisory speed is actually spot on…

On these apparently particularly slippery corners, perhaps an easy mitigation would be to reseal them using what is called “open graded asphalt”. This has a waterproof membrane underneath an open porous layer of hotmix (about 10cm thick) so that any water passes through to the membrane and then drains off to the side below the driving surface.

This was done on a section of road I lived on that suffered many ‘offs’ and almost completely stopped the accidents resulting from slides.

I would agree that the Clyde is a little different to most other mountains, but most drivers in Canberra do not drive to the conditions anyway. I have nearly had an off there due to inexperience and not driving slow enough, it is a hard mountain but I wouldn’t be blaming the road or conditions…

Pommy bastard1:59 pm 09 Mar 09

Thanks for that Granny, much appreciated.

Woody Mann-Caruso1:59 pm 09 Mar 09

I agree with PB (having driven in mountains in the US and Europe). There’s something evil about the Clyde that requires extra, extra care. Maybe it’s hainted 😉

Take it easy on the new bike!

PB you might be completely impossible, but you are one of us!

Pommy bastard1:35 pm 09 Mar 09

I have to admit my first drive down Clyde Mountain, (and indeed Brown’s mountain) which was in the rain and fog, was something of an eye opener. It’s not that I’m not used to mountain driving, I’ve driven in the French/Swiss/Italian Alps and the Sierra Madre mountains. There is something uneasy about the driving, the light in foggy conditions is deceptive, the corners are never quite as easy as they seem, and the roads are very greasy after a long period of dry.

I’ll be taking my new bike down there soon, I’m praying for good conditions. I’m sure some here will be praying otherwise. ; )

My condolences to the families of those involved.

farnarkler said :

Pity cars can’t be fitted with an equivalent of an airliner black box (I think such things exist in formula one) to give investigators assistance in finding out the cause of accidents like this.

Some cars do come fitted with something similar, the owners sometimes use them to check if the cars were thrashed during the test drive after a service.

farnarkler said :

I remember driving down the Clyde in the thickest fog I’ve ever seen back in 1991. I know the mountain pretty well but I couldn’t get above 40km/h because it was such a pea soup.

I came up the mountain last night and that pretty well describes the conditions. It was also very slippery.

Pity cars can’t be fitted with an equivalent of an airliner black box (I think such things exist in formula one) to give investigators assistance in finding out the cause of accidents like this.

With so many people having in car GPS these days, this isn’t as far from practical as you might think. Do the cops look at the log on such things to see what was happening before the crash?

I remember driving down the Clyde in the thickest fog I’ve ever seen back in 1991. I know the mountain pretty well but I couldn’t get above 40km/h because it was such a pea soup.

Pity cars can’t be fitted with an equivalent of an airliner black box (I think such things exist in formula one) to give investigators assistance in finding out the cause of accidents like this.

Spot on, Gung. Al. It’s always the road’s fault. Maybe we need some kind of train system where peoples’ cars are mounted on a machine and transported to the destination. It seems that any road with curves, or oncoming traffic, is a deathtrap scandal menace or something.

Gungahlin Al11:53 am 09 Mar 09

Without making any comment on this particular tragic accident, another Canberra long weekend, with multiple Canberra drivers killing themselves or others on Kings Hwy.

And always the reports have the road itself as the culprit.

Apart from the fact that this road has to descend a major escarpment or two, requiring those nasty corner thingies, what is it about this lovely drive that Canberra drivers have such a problem with? The fact that it can’t all be driven on a 100 kph or more like a freeway, therefore requiring one to use that annoying brake gadget?

Do we know any names yet?

The Canberra Times have illustrated their online article with a photo of an entirely different stretch of the King’s Highway … past paddocks near Bungendore … the CBR Times photo library after 60 or so years doesn’t include a photo taken on the Clyde?

Daily Digest

Want the best Canberra news delivered daily? Every day we package the most popular Riotact stories and send them straight to your inbox. Sign-up now for trusted local news that will never be behind a paywall.

By submitting your email address you are agreeing to Region Group's terms and conditions and privacy policy.