M
Macguyver
Guest
Sunglasses
Sunglasses
I tried wearing my prescription sunglasses with no visor last June, but unfortunately for me, located in lovely midwestern Ontario as I am, I did not take the June bugs into account.
Now for those of you not familiar with the June bug, they can range from about the size of a large pea, to the size of a jawbreaker candy.
Not fun hitting you in the face at 100kph!
I was tooling along on a shakedown run, doing plug chops, when THWAP!
Felt like someone slapped me right on the cheekbone. Not content with merely causing some small pain, and causing some mild cursing, the little bugger decided that it would use it's death throws to best effect by climbing up under my sunglasses.
I am not usually one to "freak-out", but instinctually this provoked a near-frantic reaction from me. Instinct kind of sucks sometimes. Off came the glasses, back of the left hand futily pawing at the right eye to clear away the distraction.
Around this time I noticed from the edge of the peripheral vision that that ditch looked awfully close to me.
In my fervor to remove the bug and guts from my right eye, I had wandered onto the very edge of the pavement. In an effort to correct this, left hand went back to the bars, and I very carefully braked to a stop on the gravel shoulder. Wait, where are my sunglasses???
A half hour of searching later I found them. Funny how much distance one can cover in a few seconds eh? I got lucky, they landed in the grass on the side of the ditch. Not even a scratch.
So long story short, sunglasses, no thanks. I have a helmet with an internal shaded visor now. Highly recommend one, no fuss, no muss, one flick and down come the shades. I can even wear my regular eyeglasses without fear of them being squashed or moved around by the shaded visor.
Sunglasses
I tried wearing my prescription sunglasses with no visor last June, but unfortunately for me, located in lovely midwestern Ontario as I am, I did not take the June bugs into account.
Now for those of you not familiar with the June bug, they can range from about the size of a large pea, to the size of a jawbreaker candy.
Not fun hitting you in the face at 100kph!
I was tooling along on a shakedown run, doing plug chops, when THWAP!
Felt like someone slapped me right on the cheekbone. Not content with merely causing some small pain, and causing some mild cursing, the little bugger decided that it would use it's death throws to best effect by climbing up under my sunglasses.
I am not usually one to "freak-out", but instinctually this provoked a near-frantic reaction from me. Instinct kind of sucks sometimes. Off came the glasses, back of the left hand futily pawing at the right eye to clear away the distraction.
Around this time I noticed from the edge of the peripheral vision that that ditch looked awfully close to me.
In my fervor to remove the bug and guts from my right eye, I had wandered onto the very edge of the pavement. In an effort to correct this, left hand went back to the bars, and I very carefully braked to a stop on the gravel shoulder. Wait, where are my sunglasses???
A half hour of searching later I found them. Funny how much distance one can cover in a few seconds eh? I got lucky, they landed in the grass on the side of the ditch. Not even a scratch.
So long story short, sunglasses, no thanks. I have a helmet with an internal shaded visor now. Highly recommend one, no fuss, no muss, one flick and down come the shades. I can even wear my regular eyeglasses without fear of them being squashed or moved around by the shaded visor.