It almost happened to me. Maybe it has happed
to you. No doubt you've heard of it happing to someone else. My Dad was a professional truck driver but it happened to him
three times in two years. I think that's a record! I came that close to dropping our fifth wheel trailer on the truck bed
rails.
No, I didn't forget to lower the landing gear.
Since my Dad's experiences, I have been especially careful to make sure the landing gear was down before I released the hitch.
So if the landing gear was down what happened?
Like a lot of fifth wheelers I place blocks under my landing gear. This procedure reduces the length the landing gear has
to be extended which seems to help stabilize the trailer. But the practice, and some carelessness, almost did me in.
The last time we parked I went into my unhitching
routine. After getting the fifth wheel positioned, I placed the blocks and lowered the landing gear. Then I released the hitch,
jumped in the truck and proceeded to drive the truck ahead. But I pulled the trailer too. I hadn't raised the trailer high
enough and there was still too much weight on the hitch. The block under one leg slid along but the other leg was hanging
in mid air about eight inches off the ground! I was just lucky the trailer didn't slide off the hitch right then. Even now
I cringe when I think of the damage that could have resulted.
I could argue that I had been somewhat distracted
by our Daughter in Law's greeting when we arrived. We've all had the experience of stopping to talk with someone while in
the process of hitching or unhitching and then forgot to do some part of the process. Have you noticed that the RVer with
all the 'helpers' is the one who gets into trouble?
Because it's easy to get distracted during hitching
a unhitching I wait to greet or say goodbye to a fellow RVer until after I know he's completed his chores.
However, more important than the distraction was
that I had allowed myself to become complacent. Hitching and unhitching had become a routine. Now I believe in having a routine,
a set procedure to follow each time, and I'm good about following it. But I allowed the routine to become a no brainer. And
that's what really got me into trouble.
It's easy to become complacent when you are an
'old timer' at RVing. After you hitched and unhitched a few hundred times you get pretty good at it. Braking camp used to
take an hour or more now I can do in fifteen minutes. Twenty tops. It's clear now that at least part of the extra time it
used to take me allowed me to stop a think once in awhile.
Then there is the issue of the blocks. If the fifth
wheel hadn't been perched on blocks the potential for damage would have been minimal. I went for years without using blocks
for fear the trailer would somehow fall off them. I've seen some precarious setups that still make me wonder if the slightest
movement would topple the blocks allowing the fifth wheel to fall a foot or more.
Because we use a king pin stabilizer jack and it
is capable of holding up our fifth wheel by itself I decided the risk of the trailer falling off the blocks was minimal. The
thing is I never considered the possibility of the trailer falling while I was unhitching, before the jack was in place.
What I should have done, and will do from now on,
is set my wheel chocks before I unhitch. Yes, I do use them. But on a level site, which this was, I use them to stabilize
the trailer rather than out of any concern for the trailer rolling down a slope. In this situation I don't set them until
later. Now I know better.
So, I've learned a good lesson. I've changed my
routine and I'm going to slow down a little and be a lot more careful. Thankfully the lesson didn't cost me more than a little
embarrassment. Hopefully, you have learned a lesson too. |