Torch, I get it that you have it in your mind whatever you had that prompted you to post that…. But the fact is …. I was working in the middle of my 1500-acre ranch. It’s a MILE LONG road from the ranch security entrance-gate to where I was working and a full Quarter-Mile of straight drive from where she first saw me going back and forth working that gravel. Like many folks, my wife dirves her car looking only about 30-feet in front of her hood…and since I know that‘s the way she drives it’s entirely my own fault that I didn’t anticipate this sequence of events. (stoopid me)I get that the operator's attention can be divided when backdragging with the bucket, and that one tends to get into a complacent rhythm going back and forth, but she followed you as you were driving forward, stopped when you stopped and then you backed into her. Yes she could have hit the horn and maybe you would have heard it over the tractor, but I'm not really seeing how it was in any way her fault.
I'm going to suggest you add a step to your routine: Have a look in the intended direction of travel before setting the machine in motion.
YES… I agree that I’m partially responsible for the incident… but MAINLY because I had failed to ever instruct her never to approach me from behind if I’m working the tractor. It was secondarily my own damn fault for not setting out orange safety-cones, roping off the area with yellow “caution” tape, and not posting reflective-vest-attired traffic-marshallers 360-degrees around my worksite.
Next time Butch says “let’s go to Bolivia…. then lets GO to Bolivia!”
Next time!