Two motorcyclists killed
By Seth Slabaugh
seths@muncie.gannett.com
MUNCIE - Two motorcyclists died in unrelated collisions Friday and Saturday.
Ball State University student Joshua Hudson, 22, 1001 Ashland Ave., was killed Friday afternoon near campus after an oncoming car made a left turn in front of him.
Thomas Foster, 52, 1710 N. Delaware County Road 397-E, was killed Saturday afternoon after entering a curve and colliding with an oncoming farm tractor, according to police.
Hudson, whose hometown was Huntington, was eastbound on Riverside Avenue at 3:14 p.m.
Kevin Smith, 43, 5700 Cedar Springs Road, was stopped in his Ford Taurus in the westbound lane of Riverside, waiting to turn left onto Martin Street.
"He (Smith) sees a bicycle, so he stops until the bike crosses," city police Sgt. Brad Arey said. "The bike is going eastbound on Riverside. He (Smith) never saw the motorcycle. The motorcycle hits the car on the passenger side, toward the front part of the car, and the rider goes over the top of the car and hits his head on the pavement."
Smith failed to yield, the officer said.
The student was not wearing a helmet, "but it's hard to say if that would have saved his life," Arey said.
At 5:41 p.m. on Saturday, Foster was southbound on County Road 400-E (north of Centennial Avenue) a short distance north of his home. The road curved to Foster's right.
"He was going south and the tractor was going north," said county police Lt. Arlan Johnson. "We've got a witness who says he (Foster) was going really fast. He comes around the curve and hits the tractor."
The collision knocked the left front wheel off of the tractor, which was driven by Joe Shroyer.
The tractor was pulling a hay conditioner that measured 11 feet, 7 inches wide. The lane the tractor was traveling in measured 10 feet, 8 inches wide.
"The hay conditioner is wider than the lane," Johnson said. "But the tractor, .... has the right to use the road that way, by Indiana law. You've seen combines 20- feet wide on roads. It looks to me like the point of impact was right in the center of the road. I don't think either one of them could see around the curve," Johnson said.
Foster, who died instantly, was not wearing a helmet, but Coroner James Clevenger doubts Foster would have lived even if he had been wearing one.
Foster might have been rushing home or to the hospital after receiving a call that his wife had been hospitalized for treatment of a bee sting.
Clevenger notified Foster's wife of his death while she was in Ball Memorial Hospital.
"She is groggy," Clevenger said. "She is medicated and with friends. She is being admitted overnight due to her own injuries from the bee sting."
"He was going south and the tractor was going north," said county police Lt. Arlan Johnson. "We've got a witness who says he (Foster) was going really fast. He comes around the curve and hits the tractor."
The collision knocked the left front wheel off of the tractor, which was driven by Joe Shroyer.
The tractor was pulling a hay conditioner that measured 11 feet, 7 inches wide. The lane the tractor was traveling in measured 10 feet, 8 inches wide.
"The hay conditioner is wider than the lane," Johnson said. "But the tractor, .... has the right to use the road that way, by Indiana law. You've seen combines 20- feet wide on roads. It looks to me like the point of impact was right in the center of the road. I don't think either one of them could see around the curve," Johnson said.
Anytime I see farm machinery on rural roads, I get real cautious!
You never know who is getting real impatient to get around it, or if the farm machinery is going to suddenly cut in front of you to turn into some field or driveway. They're also usually going much slower than you guess, and are wider than they look.
My favorites are the rolling pieces of junk you see locally in the early mornings here in SC, during watermelon season.
You'll be barreling down a rural road in the dark, and notice a dark spot ahead of you.....and it turns out to be a ancient, overloaded pickup, pulling an ancient, overloaded trailer, with NO lights, and maybe doing 35!
There may be some exemption for these farm trailers to be on the road, but it sure as hell isn't safe. I"m talking 4 wheeled trailers like you'd haul stuff around the farm, with NO lights....and heading 60-70 miles away in the dark to the farmers market.
Frequently, you'll come up on them broken down, or with flat tires.....just sitting in the middle of the road........in the dark.