Not the same thing. Train surfers ride - and run along - the top of the train, hang way off the side, or monkey around between the cars, and they do it for kicks.
We all called it train surfing, and we did it because we had to. We did fool around while we did it - because we were kids. But that wasn’t the primary motivation. That some kids do it only for kicks doesn’t mean what we were doing was any different.
Train surfing is a common and usual way to ride trains in countries such as Bangladesh and South Africa, where this type of riding by trains is compelled due to the high population density and severe overcrowding of trains.
Never underestimate the power of that endorphin rush when a stranger “likes” your social media post. More powerful than crack, and easier to get. Sadly, the Darwin Award comes to mind here, and I think all the news media attention on this will result in continued risky behavior and more maiming/deaths.
Used to skitch trains and trucks for both fun and transport. Dangerous as all hell running alongside a moving train, grasping for the ladder. Used to scare the Bejeezus out of me, but did I want to be “that kid” that didn’t go along? Of course not.
/Toronto Skitching a cube van west on Lawrence, cubevan starts taking the Northbound ramp onto the DVP, have to jump off in motion. Hit the ground in a rolling heap forcing the car behind to skid to a stop, driver laying on the horn. Jump to my feet running, cackling like an idiot trying to catch my friend… Fun times! /Toronto
Knew a fellow who would regularily skitch Toronto to Vancouver. Was always envious. Never jad the cojones, myself.
The grand prize was hopping onto the “liquid cars” where there is a flat area fore- and aft- of the taper of the tank. A can of spraypaint and low-quality weed rolled in a cheap cigar. Ahhh, to be 16 again.
I suppose we could simply call it Darwin’s razor and then it’d be a good thing. I fail to see the need for pearl-clutching. There are 30 million kids in the USA. A tiny fraction are going to die during their youth from doing stupid shit. And modern media will ensure that if you’re tuned in, you’ll know about every one of them by name.
A parent should do what they can to instill sensible behavior in their own kid(s) and stop right there.
The dramatic chase along the top of a moving train has been a staple of cinema since the silent film era. It would not surprise me a bit if some kids decided to try it in real life just as long ago.
And of course in San Francisco standing on the running board of a moving cable car is a long standing tradition. Ok, the cable cars only move at like 9 mph, but IIRC they do have a fairly high accident rate compared to other forms of transit.
Yeah, after reading the thread title I came in here to say that there has long been plenty of train surfing in Indonesia - I first moved there in 1993 and it was a thing then. It was fairly common to read in the paper about people dying as a result.
In San Francisco you don’t even need the train. When Lincoln Steffens was a kid there in the 1880s they’d grab the cable with tongs stuck through the slats of crates and get dragged up and down the streets.