Here is an email I got from my older brother today:
"My granddaughter’s Phoenix softball team is playing in a tournament this weekend in Payson, AZ. This morning around 8 AM, the families of several players were caravanning to the ballpark from nearby Kohls Ranch when a horrible freak accident occurred.
In the caravan, a Phoenix couple were driving with their daughter and two other young players in the backseat of their car when a 1200-pound elk fell from a cliff alongside Hwy 260 landing on the hood of the car, totally destroying the vehicle. Thankfully, no one was hurt in the accident.
Following immediately behind was a second car driven by the parents of one of the three girls just ahead in the accident vehicle. That couple witnessed the entire freak accident unfold knowing their daughter was inside the destroyed car ahead.
Making matters all the more tragic for everyone, the huge animal took several agonizing minutes to die from the crash as parents and children looked on in disbelief.
My daughter said the families and players involved appear in a state of shock."
I called my brother after I got the email and he told me the little girls were still in shock, and the car that it landed on (a 2 year old BMW) was totaled. A few seconds later and it would have landed on the roof of the car - probably killing those in the car.
Can you imagine the face on the insurance adjuster when they call him to come look at the car and then they describe how it happened?
I hope the Kids in the lead car played that day. It might help put the shock a little bit out of mind.
Other than that, my bet is that the insurance company will use a sanitized version of the event in a TV commercial - provided the kids’ psyches prove undamaged.
We were in Wales a few years ago and were supposed to meet a stonecutter who was making some slate name plates for us. He was about 45 minutes late. He apologized for being late and said that a dog had chased several sheep off a cliff and they landed on his shack, destroying it.
Good grief, wasn’t there a report of a moose attempting to fly earlier this year, too? And last year’s fallingcow…
Why are these ruminants trying to fly? What do they know we don’t?
From the picture, my guess is that the engine is going to be a bit hard to start…and once costs to repair exceed the value of the car - it is considered totaled.