Your scariest moment...

Balzac89

Undercover Mod
Took a 25 mph curve going 65 in my fathers truck when I was 18. (Used to driving my car which can easily do it.)

The truck fished tailed and one back wheel came off the pavement. The truck in the opposite lane pulled over and stopped like he was going to witness a horrific accident.

I don't know how But I recovered and kept driving.

It scared the living shit out of me. Let me say I never drove my pops truck like that ever again.
 

PattyWagon

Well-Known Member
I was getting some road head from my girlfriend at the time(now wife) while driving my truck down a snowy road. I started focusing on her and next thing I knew my truck was rolling over. We flipped about a dozen times. No seat belts were buckled. I kicked out the window and got out to check the gas lines weren't leaking. Cops showed up and started asking me why I'm only wearing underwear. Long story short I got a wreckless driving and failure to drive safely. Least they didn't find the QP I had locked in the truck box. Went and got that out of the wreck yard 3 days later.
 

clownfreak9000

Well-Known Member
I don't get scared but id go with attacked by nest of hornets or almost getting run down and almost shooting driver fucker drove through a yard trying to get me misses by a few inches and i managed to pistol whip him through open window i warned him i was gonna blow his head off and he took off and called the cops all i waas doing was dropping a bag off and he starts yelling why are you breaking into cars then the bs started i will shoot next time btw it was 11:30 at night i broke his eyebrow wide open at least. welcome to the ghetto.
 

hoonry

Well-Known Member
had a few near misses in the mountains with avalanches and bad weather that were frightening for sure. but nothing has been as scary as the time I went to water a patch I had in mid sept one year (many years ago now). I was hiking down the hillside and heard what I thought was my pit bull walking behind me. turned around and instead of my dog, saw a 150 lb cougar following me. our eyes met, and he went into a crouch like he was about to pounce. I had a 9 on my hip, which I pulled out so violently that the holster went flying. I let off a round and expected to see it bolt. Instead, it casually turned to the side, cast miss a dismissive glance, and strolled away. It was a nerve-wracking trip home that day, and I still had 2 or 3 weeks before the plants were ready so I had to keep going back there.... never in my life so glad to be done with a crop.
 
When I was a youngster my mother always picked us up at the buss stop and walked us home. Our house was about a mile away and she always brought my bike along so I could ride it along side her on the way to the house, well on the particular day my little brother wanted to ride on the bike with me and he was to little to hit on the handle bar so I allowed him to sit on the sit while I stood and peddled. Well he didn't have any shoes on and accidentally stuck his big toe in the chain. Well have his toe had been cut completely off only hanging by a piece of skin the size of a sewing thread he then took off through a freshly cut field to our house to my dad. When we finally caught up with him he toe had been torn completely off. we immediately took him to the hospital and they saved it !!!!!! I was more scared that day then I have ever been in my entire life. Also have had a gun in my face but that was a walk in the park compared because I was drunk enough to not care LOL.
 

Ringsixty

Well-Known Member
Sitting in my car on the edge of a mountain road. Then all of a sudden my car slides sideways down a steep mountain cliff. "Oh Fuk" Lucky, I got hung up against a tree. Scared the crap out of me. Needed 2 big Tow trucks to get it back up on the Road. Car was a loss, only had liability.
 

doublejj

Well-Known Member
carry on, I love reading your posts. memories and stories like that are so intense and insane and take so much balls they need to be shared and should never be lost or not shared with others. mad respect for anyone that has the balls to do it and has done it and walked away, or who has ran through a live field of gunfire... god damn talk about an adrenaline rush that would be. youre allowed to brag!!!
........Jack Mapes Platoon Sgt

We had been pinned down for almost two days. The Sun is about an hour from setting. We are almost out of ammo our radio is dead and we don’t want to face another night surrounded by Viet Cong in the bush. Last night had been bad enough with plenty of ammo. But the combination of no ammo and no light just didn’t sit well with me. I low-crawl up the creek to check the rest of my squad. Everyone is still in good shape but no one’s got more than a half dozen rounds of ammunition. It’s my call and my responsibility. I’m the Sarge in charge. I have to choose someone to send for help and I’ll probably be sending that someone to his death. I crawl back to my position thinking hard about alternatives and the fact that this mission has been a bust from the start.Yesterday morning my squad escorted a four-men demo team to blow a wooden bridge located a few clicks from our company’s position. We had no problems getting to the bridge and I was thinking ‘piece of cake’ mission. But I thought too damn soon. We set up a defensive perimeter and the demo team went to the bridge to do their thing. I wasn’t paying much attention until I saw the demo guy, who was carrying all the explosives, start walking across the bridge like he was on a Sunday stroll back in the world. I yelled a warning just as the sniper blew his left leg out from under him. He went down screaming holding his leg. My squad opened up with suppressive fire. Then despite all the training and yelling to ‘Take Cover’, ‘Get Down’, ‘Hit the Deck’. The rest of the demo team ran out on the bridge to aid their wounded buddy. When the rest of the demo team reached their wounded buddy, the sniper sprung the trap by shooting one of the demo packs. The entire demo team disappeared.So here we are pinned down, lost a whole demo team, out of food, only a few dozen rounds left, no grenades, no flares, no radio, the Sun is sinking swiftly, and out of cigarettes. There was only one thing left for me to do. I decided I’d have to go get some cigarettes. I low-crawled up the creek telling my men my plan. There’s a lot of volunteering, protesting, even some regulation citing but it’s my call. Back in my position I take a few quick looks over the creek bank trying to map out my best rout. It’s at least a hundred-and-fifty yards of rice paddies to the nearest cover. I toss my remaining ammo to my radio man. I tell him to take care of my 16 it’ll just slow me down. I signal my men then scramble up out of the creek bed in a dead run. I hear AKs open up but they haven’t got my number yet. When I feel the rounds getting too close I fall and lay still like I’m dead. I wait until I think they have relaxed, then jump up and run like a bandit again until the rounds get too close. Then fall again and play dead. Sometimes I make it ten yards and sometimes I make it twenty but it still seems like forever. I cuss my men because they are wasting their ammunition trying to throw off the VC’s aim. I think, ‘You dummies! I told you to save your darn ammo. What if I don’t make it?’ Their selflessness renews my determination, recharges my energy. I check my position. I figure I’ve got about another hundred yards. But my odds are improving as I get farther away from the enemy’s positions. I jump up and run like a rabbit. I feel good. The rounds kick up mud and rice plants all around me. I think about zig-zagging but don’t want to because my buddies are probably out of ammo by now and I don’t want to waste the time. I’m almost to the tree line now and nothing is going to stop me.Finally, I hit the treeline but I don’t stop running. I don’t have time to walk. All I can think of is my friends back there in that creek who thought nothing of themselves and used the last of their ammo to protect my worthless ass. I arrive at my company too winded to explain. I run to the ammo and grab as much ammo as I can carry. People are asking me questions but I can’t answer. I can only do what I came to do. A couple of guys get the idea, grab some ammo, their 16s and somebody else grabs an M-60. Finally I can speak and without stopping I relate the situation to the LT. Then I run back the way I’d come with the others close behind me. It’s still taking to damn long. My mind runs through all the depressing possibilities as we make our way toward my men in the creek. Then as we clear the treeline at the edge of the rice paddies I hear a chopper. It comes in low off to our left and opens up on the VC’s position. Thank GOD for Hueys.
 
Top