30.12.16
Update 2
27.12.16
Accident and injury
13.12.16
Minnippi
12.12.16
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
11.12.16
Minnippi
10.12.16
O'Reilly's, Lamington
7.12.16
Oxley
5.12.16
Eye Update
3.12.16
Update 2
Major progress
yesterday! I got out of bed and into a wheelchair! The physio stood by while I
moved myself across and into the chair, a second physio supporting my right leg
which refuses to bend beyond 10% at this stage. So, leg supported by an
extension, I self propelled myself, slowly, down to the lifts and then along
another corridor to the gym. I hung out there for a half an hour or so, then it
was time to return. My hip/pelvis was aching but it was a good start to further
progress.
27.12.16
Accident and injury
By now most, if
not all, of you will know of my ‘accident’
- but just so its on record, here’s the story….
Wednesday 14.12 I
decided to cycle in to Stones Corner to Langland’s Park swimming pool so I left
home at about 8.15.
50 meters down the
road and I swung out to turn left towards the bike path and found a flat bed
truck completely blocking the road between parked cars. I had nowhere to go, he
had nowhere to go and when I braked I slid sideways on my left said under the
front of the truck ending up half wrapped around his left (driver’s side) front
wheel.
As he was still
coming to a stop the wheel pushed me along the bitumen for several meters.
An ambulance was
called and arrived very quickly, apparently just being in the area. I was
conscious until they gave me, what I believe was, morphine and then I entered a
very weird space I am still trying to come to terms with, before losing
consciousness completely.
I was placed in an
induced coma and transported to the Princess Alexandria Hospital where my
following injuries were treated:
- 13 broken ribs – 4-9 on the left at the front, 4-10 on the right at the back & 11 & 12 on the right at the front.
- A punctured right lung
- My pelvis fractured in several places
- Compound fracture of the right femur - broken in two places –the femur was treated immediately and the bone stabilized with external metal work.
- Extensive gravel rash on my left side from my shoulder to my knee.
- Various other cuts and bruises including a cut on my right shin requiring a dozen or so stitches.
The good part was I didn't damage my head, neck or back at all - there was not even a scratch on my helmet.
Friday 15.12 My femur was operated on and ‘nailed’ – i.e. a metal
rod inserted, permanently.
Friday – Wednesday 20.12 Was spent in the acute ward of the PA with three other patients, watched over 24 x 7 by a dedicated team of young nurses who do amazing
work. A dark time in the main, which has become a blur in my memory now. A time
of pain and anguish with visitors moving in and out of my days, my daughters
predominate – their worry obvious.
Thursday 21.12 Moved to St Vincent’s Private Hospital, Level 2, Bed
29, a private room with a sky view and another team of empathic, respectful, professional nurses who took over my
care.
Thursday – Tuesday 27.12 The days marked by progress and the ‘little
things’…..
- Slowly bending my right knee about 5 degrees! I managed to cross my ankles this morning (27.12) for the first time since the accident and can now move my leg across the bed independently.
- The main pain is in the gravel rash on my left side – requiring dressing changes every couple of days, which means I have to roll onto my right side as well as I can so they can access the whole area – challenging with a smashed pelvis.
- Sitting up straight in bed for the first time on Christmas Day and sorting my emails!
- Opening my bowels successfully - which is a huge deal when you don’t move from day to day, trust me! It has become the topic of conversation among friends and family.
- The morning ritual bed bath which is just heaven!
- Finally getting it together to update my blog!
The future?
No weight bearing
at all on my pelvis for 6-8 weeks – which is hard at times. I just feel like
getting up and going over to the sink for a drink or to go to the toilet.
Once I am
re-assessed (in about 4 and a half weeks now) a decision will be made as to
what I can do then, how much my pelvis will take, how my femur has progressed.
Funnily enough the
broken ribs are the least of my concern! Maybe its previous experience and
understanding of that pain and the management of movement – having broken 4
ribs 5 years ago, it seemed much more painful then! Or maybe its just the pain
killers?
The gravel rash is
definitely the most painful part of the whole deal and I will be having the
dressings changed again tomorrow when I go back to the PA for a check up………
I’d like to acknowledge
all the people who have emailed me, texted me, visited me and called me over
the past 2 weeks. It has been a revelation and a pleasure and I look forward to
many more visitors in the coming weeks.
Do I feel stupid?
Yes.
Do I regret it?
Yes, but it wasn’t a decision I made and it was no one’s fault but my own.
Do I feel lucky? YES - I even, consciously, thought I was dead!
Do I feel lucky? YES - I even, consciously, thought I was dead!
Am I concerned?
Yes. Concerned that I will struggle to walk properly – a little. Concerned it
will affect me, physically long term - a little.
But I am
determined to work through it, to get the re-hab and physio and beat whatever
my body throws in front of me, to walk, to run, to swim, to climb, to kayak
but…………..not to ride. I have decided that riding now is not the way I want to
go. The bike will be buried – it’s shattered – and not resurrected. This was
too close. This was too traumatic.
So – not the
Christmas I envisioned and certainly not the ones the girls needed! They have
been terrific, I am so proud of their strength and resilience, their compassion
and their love. I love them deeply and am so sorry I have caused them such shock and grief.
For now its:
Onwards &
upwards!
13.12.16
Minnippi
Mr P had an hour
to spare so we met at 6 and wandered in on the usual route – minus the Airfield
track.
On the walk in Mr
P found a Phasmid (Stick insect) I sent it to Mr B
at the museum for identification – to be updated.
Near the lake a Pale-vented Bush Hen called once from
the tree line. The M1 track was a s quiet as it has been lately, not much going
on.
The alley and lake
were also pretty low-key, but a raptor flying over the far side caused a bit of
discussion eventuating in us agreeing on Baza.
Long, rounded wings, very pale underneath, a good sized bird it couldn’t have
been anything else.
A claim of a Dusky
Honeyeater feeding young had been made in the last day or two and we were keen
to check it out. We did find a Brown
Honeyeater in the presumed location with no yellow on the face – as we have
seen many before – and we believe it has been a case of mistaken identification.
We finished up at
the car with a fairly limited list, but with the time in hand we did OK.
12.12.16
Norman Creek, Holland Park West
A bright fresh
morning – the southerly change still affecting the temperature.
A good morning
bird-wise for the site – 24 species. Nothing exceptional, just the usual stuff.
11.12.16
Minnippi
The southerly
change that had moved through on Friday night – and created the cool, damp
conditions at Lamington yesterday, created a cool, cloudy morning so I thought
I’d check Minnippi.
On site at 6.30 it
was overall average. The M1 track was quiet – just a single Sulphur-crested Cockatoo and a single Galah standing guard outside their,
assumed, nestholes. A distant calling Pale-vented
Bush Hen somewhere along the river bank and a calling Lewin’s Honeyeater made up the total activity.
Up the alley – and
I noticed the ground littered with Meadow
Puffballs Lycoperdon pretense breaking
through after the recent rain.
Back to the lake –
the surface again partially covered by the noxious weed that seems to re-appear
on a regular basis – not much going on. Up and over the hill and a brief stop
at the Raptor Lookout before heading onto the Airfield Track.
A nicely marked
little lizard on a log turned out to be a new species for me, Elegant
Snake-eyed Skink Cryptoblepharus pulcher, identified by the museum within a couple of hours on a SUNDAY!! Impressive!
(Note – the skink
from Python Rocks yesterday was also identified – I was half-right, it was a Murray’s Skink Karma murrayi.)
The Airfield Track
was also fairly bird-less although Meadow
Argus, Dainty Grass Blues, the season’s first Common Crows and a single Blue
Triangle, sitting still for a change, provided some interest.
Back again half an
hour later at the Lookout and a pair of Channel-billed
Cuckoos chased across the sky – God, I love those modern day pterodactyls!
Walking back
alongside the creek a pair of Red-browed
Finches flew across my path.
Other than that it
wasn’t an overly exciting morning and I was in the car by 8.45.
10.12.16
O'Reilly's, Lamington
Mr P picked me up
at 5 and we were in the carpark at O’Reilly’s at 6.30. On the road we had two Wonga Pigeons, 2 Common Bronzewings – nearly collected one on the windscreen, God,
they’re hopeless – and a very relaxed White-headed
Pigeon.
Headed straight
out the Border Track – fast pace, heading directly for the Antarctic Beach
Forest and Mt Bithongabel, 6 kms away. Our mission? Olive Whistler. There had
been a report, now, unfortunately, several weeks old, but we thought they may
still be around as they are, presumably, resident in the area, albeit in very
small numbers.
We stopped twice
for a drink and a short break and arrived at the short turnoff track to the
Cairn, 300 meters before Mt Bithongabel, at 8.15.
We tried all along
the track from there to the Lookout itself and found nothing but Australian Golden Whistlers in good
numbers. It was amazingly Tasmanian-like with temperatures, about 14-15 degrees
and a heavy mist or cloud hanging among the trees.
Mr P in the mist |
In the damp conditions we
started getting leeches. In my wisdom I had worn shorts and ended up with a
couple of bleeding bites from the tiny buggers – no drama, just annoying – and kept
busy making sure they didn’t crawl up the leg of my shorts and bite something
precious…….
After an hour and
a half we headed back, birding along the way.
The activity was
pretty low key – we only heard one Wompoo
Fruit Dove and one Rose-crowned,
several Brown Cuckoo-doves, Noisy Pittas
and Green Catbirds. Saw a few Brown Gerygones, Yellow-throated,
Large-billed and White-browed
Scrub-wrens, one Black-faced Monarch.
All in all it wasn’t very busy. A dead log provided some substance for a large
clump of Jelly Ear fungi Auricularia auricula-judae.
Jelly Ear fungi Auricularia auricula-judae. |
Back at O’Reilly’s
we had coffee on the verandah and saw a ‘semi-distantly’ perched up female Rose-crowned Fruit Dove and had very close
encounters with Crimson Rosellas, Satin
Bowerbirds and a pair of Regent Bowerbirds
– spectacular bird, beats Golden Bowerbird hands down, I reckon.
Regent Bowerbird male |
After coffee Mr P
suggested a short stroll on the Python Rocks track and that was a little
birdier. Several Paradise Riflebirds,
though no good views, another Rose-crowned
Fruit Dove calling, Fan-tailed
Cuckoo and excellent views of a single Crested
Shrike-tit. We also had a pair of Richmond
Birdwing butterflies, but they didn’t stop for photographs.
A large skink did (identified by the Queensland Museum as a Murray's Skink Karma murrayi) and a Golden-scruffy Collybia
Cyptotrama asprata didn’t move too
far either.
UPDATED - Murray's Skink Karma murrayi |
Golden-scruffy Collybia Cyptotrama asprata |
Headed home around
13.30. Not a bad day despite mission unaccomplished.
7.12.16
Oxley
A storm at 2.00am
woke up the suburb and the crashing thunder and vivid lightning was followed
by heavy rain. I needed a bit of a walk and I thought Oxley might be worth a visit.
It wasn’t. The
birds were very quiet and it rained most of the time I was on foot. Not heavily
– just a wetting, not a downpour - but enough to keep things low.
A Black-shouldered Kite perched up in the
classic dead tree against the (grey) sky took me back to our recent adventures
on the Strzelecki, but other than that it was very average.
5.12.16
Eye Update
At the specialist today:
There has been no noticeable improvement in my sight - BUT the scans showed a reduction in the fluid. Good news! The medicine in my eye presently is a 3 month programme and I'm only 6 weeks into it so hopefully..... at least I can have another injection in January and if its made some improvement in 6 weeks...maybe?
There are signs of a cataract starting - but that was expected and is of minimal concern. Dr Warrier believes that will not become an issue for 6-12 months. And a cataract op is nothing.
3.12.16
Dohle's Rocks road
Mr P and I met up
with Mr J and Ged T (Mr T) at 6 and walked out onto the exposed mud of the Pine
River. Loads of Black-tailed Godwits,
Whimbrel, Common Greenshanks and a few Eastern
Curlew, but nothing suspicious.
Walking back Mr J
pointed out an apparent moth which, on closer inspection, appeared to be being
predated? Mr T also spotted a caterpillar which I submitted to the museum for
identification.
UPDATED: Robberfly (Zosteria sp) & No-brand Grass Yellow Eurema brigitta |
Unidentified, as yet, Caterpillar |
Back to the cars
and we moved down the road parking up near the west end of the nature reserve
area. As we were setting up the scopes Mr P spotted a falcon like bird flying
overhead – a cuckoo. No one got any detail but strongly suggested an Oriental Cuckoo. Out on the mud more Black and Bar-tailed Godwits and a good number of Great Knot. A single Red
Knot showed briefly before flying out of sight behind the fringing
mangroves. A flock of approx 100 White-throated
Needletails hawked overhead as we had a look at the new hide built to overlook
the ponds on the north side of the road. Once again the viewing ports were too
low – who designs these things? Not much on the water – a few Chestnut & Grey Teal, a single Black-fronted
Dotterel and a single Marsh
Sandpiper.
On to the end of
the road (and a flash back memory stir for me as we passed the parking slots along
the front) and a walk out onto a mosquito infected claypan. A number of Red-capped Plovers and a small
overflying flock of Topknot Pigeons
(the latter a little unexpected at this time of year) were about all apart from
a couple of Whistling Kites and a Black-shouldered Kite.
Back up the road
and down a side street to a dead end and another swamp. Not much here but I did
turn over a piece of cardboard and found a small Keelback Tropidonophis mairii curled up underneath.
UPDATED Keelback Tropidonophis mairii |
Very very humid,
29 degrees and cloudy, but really draining even though it was only 8.30. We
decided enough was enough and headed home.
2.12.16
Mt Gravatt
Found this guy, Carpet Python Morelia spilota, wandering across the
road in residential Mt Gravatt at 16.30 in the afternoon! It curled up behind
the wheelie bin before I disturbed it and it slid off into my ex-wife’s garden.
Almost Garden of
Eden stuff – without the apple…..
Carpet or Diamond Python Morelia spilota |