I would have thought that regional ambulances would be fitted with GPS as a standard practice. Glad your foot is mending John.
Location was not an issue. My landline has a precise location in the database that the ambulance service uses, and the actual address, that is locality, street name and number, takes you to the house. Put that into Google and it takes you to the house.
The problem was basically that the paramedics had no maps, and with no mobile phone coverage, apparently did not think to use their phones as stand alone GPS (can you do this with all phones? Works with mine.), add to that incomplete and misleading signage on the roads (thanks NPWS!). Giving them a precise location was not the issue. The problem was finding a way there. Despite my giving simple, clear directions how to get here, these directions apparently got mangled between the dispatcher and the driver, and not having phone coverage, I was unable to talk directly to them.
When they were here I did not discuss their getting lost with them, both of us were more interested in my foot. Which is well enough this morning to get the boot on.
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
I would have thought that regional ambulances would be fitted with GPS as a standard practice. Glad your foot is mending John.
Cheers, Billy.
Keeping it simple is complicated.
 Wizard
					
					
						Wizard
					
					
                                        
					
					
						You do not have to be remote. A friend died in residential house in Caboolture when the ambulance could not find the address. Lived on his own. Managed to make a phone call but ….. event was survivable if they had been able to find the house
I am not remote. I am less than 60km from one of the largest inland towns in Australia, and less than 20km from the bitumen!
Remote might (in NSW), for example, be somewhere in the roughly one third of the state where most of the roads are closed whenever it rains, simply because they are formed of blacksoil. And that is without looking at the states with large remote areas such as WA, Qld, SA, NT!
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
I know Road rules do not really apply when walking. I tend to keep left. Just walked into a shopping center and had a pram, shopping trolly, several kids an one gent spread across a walkway walking towards me spread out from left to right with a majority being on my right or their left.
The one gent walked straight at me. I stopped rather than step out into the crowd move past me. The Gent said 'Excuse me' I said sure. I'll happily wait here.
The bucket full of bile was heard for a fair while from the gent as he finally took a step to the left away from the wall I was up against
It never ceases to amaze me, how rude and arrogant some people are.
If you don't like trucks, stop buying stuff.
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