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Sledding!
| Article
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13861 |
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Section : |
LIFE
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| Issue
Date : |
12 / 1988 |
928 Words |
| Author
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Harvey Hagman Harvey Hagman often writes on adventure and treasure hunting. |
Can you ever forget your first sled ride?
Mom bundled you up and wrapped a scarf around your face. Then Dad plopped you on the sled, in front of him, put his feet on the runners, and SHAZAM!!!
The hill raced past, the runners dug in, and fresh powder snow froze your face. What freedom! What exhilaration! Who dreamed life could be this thrilling?
Then, after the long hike up the hill, you begged to attempt the daring solo ride. Pushing off with your hands, the sled shot forward, snow blinded you, the sled flipped, and BAM! You stopped dead in a snow bank. …surprised and exhilarated.
Millions of sled runs would follow. Winter would never be the same again.
The sled, one of man's first vehicles, has also become one of his most sophisticated toys. Its scope encompasses everything from bone-runnered sledges to $12,000 Italian bobsleds.
Cave drawings from 15,000 years ago show early man using sleds over both dry and snow-covered ground. About 5000 B.C., the sledge, or sled, was as much a part of the North American, European, and Mideastern cultures as the car is today. The prehistoric wooden runners of sleds that hauled freshly killed game through northern Europe's forests have been discovered in bogs. And 4,000-year-old stone carvings portray Sumerians and Assyrians hauling giant statues and blocks on
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