Third Wheel

Feb. 9th, 2018 03:40 pm
davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)

Courtesy of FB reminders, it appears today's my third anniversary of becoming a wheelie.

Phone call: "Hi, this is the wheelchair department, can we deliver a wheelchair tomorrow?'
Me:'Um. er - just hang on a minute while I get up to speed, I haven't heard anything back from Wheelchair Services since requesting an assessment."
Them: 'Oh, they've just decided to do their own thing again, have they?'

I guess it's better than the outright refusal to see me at the first attempt, but I was sort of hoping for something that would look at my actual needs (and size and shape!)

And amazingly also the second anniversary of the great eBay Quickie GPV fiasco.

So I was poking at several different auctions over the weekend [snip]and found two new GPVs had gone up last night, both with Buy Now prices (and blue frames, not purple, definite plus - c.f. my accidentally purple laptop). I checked a couple of details with the vendor, the front castor set-up is a little weird in the pictures, but that's reconfigurable, and the tyres were caked with mud, making it impossible to tell the state of the tread, but the answers were positive (nearly new tyres*), and so I'm now the owner of a GPV.

The moral of that story was make sure your vendor knows how to use a ruler. I broke the pattern with the XLT, which turned up in August, not February, but my plan for the day is to make it through to Saturday without buying a new wheelchair (or an old one).

* That turned out to be an outright lie, at least WRT the castor tyres, which were worn to the point of non-existence..

davidgillon: Illo of Oracle in her manual chair in long white dress with short red hair and glasses (wheelchair)

Distance covered yesterday, c 900m there with a descent of 24m in the first half, pretty much braking all the way - I've reached a landmark and worn my first pair of wheelchair gloves through to the gel on both thumbs. Hands were unpleasantly hot by the time I'd slowed onto the level!

c950m back with a 22m rise, 2m of which happens in about 10m on a corner. I'd have to choose a different route if I couldn't get out and push those 10m. I in 5 is not practical. But apart from that I pushed it non stop, if very slowly in places. I did have the traditional little old lady asking if I would like a push, but she did it aboot 10 feet from the crest of a slope, and there's a straight 150m with a slight descent immediately after, so of course I whipped by her as soon as I crested it.

So total distance about a nautical mile, which I think is the furthest I've pushed apart from the couple of days in Athens (and that was all downhill).

What taking the two slightly different routes confirmed is that I have substantially more difficulty on cambered pavements, and that my left arm is only capable of getting me up a kerb with difficulty. Because of a car being awkward, I ended up doing one slope on the opposite side to usual, The side I usually do it on has flat paving, the opposite side has the same slope, but is steeply cambered, it was far more difficult than it normally is (this is where I had the little old lady intervention). It's not simply a matter of me, though, the new chair isn't great at holding a line on a cambered pavement, it has a strong tendency to turn into the slope. The clown chair was  just as bad, the GPV, with cambered wheels, made it not an issue.The particular problem I have with this is it means I need to brake with the uphill arm while pushing with the downhill, and if my dud left arm is the downhill one, this is massively less than ideal.

I rang Wheelchair Services on Friday to say I definitely need a 3" cushion as discussed (and noted) at the handover, the seat to footplate gap is too short otherwise and my legs aren't flat on the cushion. I strongly suspect they measured me while I was sitting on a 3" cushion. I'm currently using the 2" they gave me, with a 1" I had in the house under it, which makes the difference between being in intolerable pain within an hour or so, and being able to sit for at least three hours.. Apparently fixing this will need one of the therapists to ring me back and discuss it. I'll raise the camber issue at the same time. I've checked the manual and the XLT can have cambered wheels, but you need an extra part in the wheel mounting to accomplish it, rather than just adding a couple of extra washers as on the GPV, so that'll probably need to be ordered in if I can get them to agree to it.
 


davidgillon: Illo of Oracle in her manual chair in long white dress with short red hair and glasses (wheelchair)

I managed to give the new wheels a decent test drive on Saturday, and they're so much better it's ridiculous. It also helps we're finally having some decent weather, though a touch too sticky.

I ended up parked in the further of my two regular parking spots in Rochester, which is about 700m from our regular Saturday haunt on the High Street, so a decent but not excessive push, with a helpful downhill slope going (the height difference is about 40ft). So it's about 50m on the road I park on (no handy kerb cuts to get on the path), across a busy junction into the Vines, a local park, 200m on its paths, which are tarmacced but not exactly flat as the avenue of trees has some major roots under them. Then out into the precinct at the back of the cathedral for about 250m on bricked roads (the paths are partly possible, but the heritage flagstones make them worse than the road and there's one stretch where neither side is passable for a chair), then out onto the main road between Castle and Cathedral, a quick cut through the disabled car park (which you can never park in - only 6 bays, and which they now want to sell for development - grr!) and on to the High Street

I'd realised the chair was significantly better than either the clown chair or the eBay chair as soon as I pushed out of Wheelchair Services on Thursday, but this really showed it off. I'd expected it to be better than the clown chair, that was the whole point of moving to a rigid frame, but not that it would be markedly better than the eBay GPV, which is another rigid. I'm tentatively putting that down to inflatable tyres vs solids (which were an unpleasant surprise on the eBay chair, but at least I didn't end up paying for them). Rolling resistance appears to be significantly less, the Schwalbe Marathon Plus tyres seem to have quite a narrow contact area, in fact I was a bit worried about slowing down at that first junction, which has quite a sharp descent into it. It was fine in the Vines, though I nearly lost it coming out of the park and onto the road behind the Cathedral - there's a driveway I've been using as a kerb cut, but if I'm hitting it that little bit faster then I need to be taking it at closer to a right angle, which means slowing down however I do it.

I'd say the ride on the bricked road was actually better even than the GPV. In the clown chair (which is now back with Wheelchair Services, presumably to be refurbished as a fleet chair) it was literally tooth-rattling, the GPV smoothed that out to a rumble, and with the XLT it's barely even that. Not much to report on the ride past the Castle, apart from motorists who see a wheelchair on the road and freeze like a rabbit in headlights, nor really on the high street, though people who erect scaffolding on the pavement and then block the way through it with barriers for no reason are not my favourites! One definite advantage to the new chair is that I don't need to fold it to get it through the doors of the George Vaults, I still need to get out, two steps up inside the door, but the XLT is light enough to pick up and lift in if I want.

On my own for lunch unfortunately, one set of friends are in France, the other has a sick family member, but no problems getting a table, and I took a chance on the special (a chance as the waitress's description was a bit garbled) and oh, boy was it worth the wait - chicken breast (the bit I heard) on a bed of freshly made ratatouille, with a smear of pesto (the bits I didn't). The ratatouille was absolutely gorgeous.

Back to the car was a bit more of a chore, 40ft uphill rather than downhill. On the bright side I made it almost all the way without stopping, the first time I've actually managed that, though I was close last week. It's pretty clear my shoulders are a problem on even fairly slight upslopes, though there's a slow improvement. And the 'almost' is effectively a mandatory stop, there's a 10m stretch of path that's too steep to safely wheel going uphill. Especially if you've forgotten to put the anti-tips out....

I'm still figuring the best way to fit the dismantled chair into the boot of the car, there may even be a way to do it without dropping any of the back seat (the boot in my Yaris is pathetically tiny), but I need to spend some time experimenting.

Next stop was PC World, checking their ink prices - £10 more than HP? Thanks, I'll pass. I've actually taken all three chairs to PC World to try them out on a decent-sized  flat surface almost as soon as I've gotten them, and the XLT is just a pleasure on that kind of surface (so long as salespeople don't step out in front of you!).

And at least I didn't have to demolish any displays to get into the aisles this time, he says innocently ;)

Then up to Asda for some grocery shopping. Thankfully the XLT will connect to their wheelchair trolleys, the GPV wouldn't, the vee front is too narrow and I was worried I might have to revert to online orders only if the XLT wouldn't fit them. Of course they were a) in the middle of restocking, with pallets of stuff blocking my way everywhere I went, and b) they'd decided to rearrange all the aisles so no one could find anything, which made it a thoroughly irritating experience. But at least the chair was a non-issue; well, until the trolley broke free as I wheeled to the car and pivoted out into the roadway. So only just connects, I guess.

Back home after that, and asleep on the sofa from 7PM til Midnight, sigh. My body is all too predictable in its reaction to exertion.
 

davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
Friday, I didn't see it til late Saturday, the chair vendor agreed to a return, and said they would drive over to pick it up rather than paying for return mail, they also sent a bunch of details I'd requested on their other chair for sale on ebay in the hope I would buy that instead and offered to bring it over for me to look at.

Unfortunately the details actually confirmed (as I expected) that it's unusable for me as it stands, and even if I could eventually replace the back (which is the problem),  I 've concluded there's no point getting a long-term spare chair that might not suit whatever back I do end up getting on the theoretical long term main chair, especially when its current back is unusable. So I emailed back on Sunday afternoon with a few details of the best route to get to me, that I wouldn't be able to confirm which days I'll be around until Monday evening, and told them there was no point bringing the other chair for me to look at (basically to ensure my enthusiasm didn't get the chance to override my sense, but also to be fair to them as they had been quick to accept it was their mistake and a return was necessary).

Sunday evening I got a return email saying "Whoa, I just realised that's too far to drive"  and "We'll have to do return by mail, but I can't afford the postage right now, it'll be a few weeks."

Grrrrrrr!!!!!

They have confirmed they're accepting a return in the ebay system, and say that the money is now locked up with ebay rather than with them, but I can't get at it 'til the whole return process goes through. I think they're probably being genuine (it's a 3 hour drive each way), but it's slightly eyebrow-raising that the offer to drive over disappeared the instant the potential of me buying the other chair disappeared off the table (slight tactical error there, clearly). If they take long enough I may have to escalate the ebay problem resolution process just to cover myself. I need to check the effective dates on that.

On the more positive side of things I've finally found my draft letter to Wheelvhair Services from last year - guess the one file that didn't get transferred off the old laptop, and I'll be updating that to try and get a proper assessment, and hopefully a better chair, from them.  I gave my GP the heads-up I was doing that on Friday. A plus-side of the whole ebay chair fiasco is I can now claim in the letter to have been able to 'borrow' a rigid framed chair for several weeks, and that even when it doesn't fit to the point of being painful it's a far better chair for me than the clown chair they dumped on my doorstep.
 

 

 


davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
I now have my new chair. For how long remains to be seen.

It was advertised as 16" wide across the seat, it's actually 14". my spare 15" cushion will just fit, but there's very little clearance between me and the wheels (OTOH it does make it a hell of a lot easier to get through the doors in the house, the clown chair only just fits through the door into the living room).

The rest of it is as mostly as expected, the frame need some touching up, and the upholstery is a little shabby., but that  was clear from the pictures.

Front castors are fairly well worn, rear tires turn out to be treadless solids, which is a bit of an unpleasant surprise, but not actually contradicting anything in the ebay ad.

Handling knocks the clown chair into a cocked hat, though if anything it's too tippy, the castors leave the ground (but only just) almost every time I push. The anti-tips are staying exactly where they are (i.e. down and in use) for now.

The plan is to spend as much of today as possible in it to see whether its tolerable or not, I'll head out in it later to run some errands and evaluate it outside, but I didn't get  a great deal of sleep so I'm going to have to go and take a nap before anything else.

It's never simple, is it?


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davidgillon: A pair of crutches, hanging from coat hooks, reflected in a mirror (Default)
David Gillon

March 2025

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