[stylist] rollerball cane tips

Angela fowler fowlers at syix.com
Sun Nov 16 04:25:46 UTC 2008


Those carbon fiber canes are expensive and weak. I've seen a few people get
a carbon fiber cane caught between their legs like that and inadvertently
break it. It happens with fiber glass canes too, but not often. It rarely
happens with rainshine canes, after years of attrition.  

-----Original Message-----
From: stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:stylist-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of LoriStay at aol.com
Sent: Saturday, November 15, 2008 8:02 PM
To: stylist at nfbnet.org
Subject: Re: [stylist] rollerball cane tips

Blind people have been using canes for a long time, though usually in the
literature they talk about sticks, or tree branches whittled down, etc.
As for carbon fiber canes, I actually have some experiences!   The first
time 
David used one was at an NFB convention.   A friend had bought it for him as

a present.   I walked in front of him when we went somewhere (Kansas City, I

recall), probably to lunch, and his cane wound up between my legs.   To
prevent 
my falling, I somehow broke the cane in half!   It might be stronger than
the 
lighter fiberglass, but it was brittle too.   We brought the cane back to
the 
exhibit hall, and it was replaced.   He's used carbon fiber ever since.
But 
once, our chapter had a bumpersticker that said, "I brake for white canes," 
which I somehow kept quoting as "I break white canes!"
Lori

In a message dated 11/15/08 8:57:36 PM, n6yr at sunflower.com writes:


> that is very well written.
> one would think you a professional in writing and mobility!
> I did the "knowledge base for today's chapter meeting.  brought in my 
> rollerblah cane and my old fiberglass.  I made the point you did about 
> lighter is better for safety and control.
> mother of blind child asked about carbon fiber solid (nonfolding) 
> canes.  what do you think of those?  I have no experience.
> I also made the point that lighter made the cane more sensitive to 
> what  is at the tip to be detected.
> was a five to seven minute presentation, much more than that then in 
> questions and discussion.
> 
> robert it made my mind wander too: when did canes first get used by 
> blind people?  is there a book on the history of the cane?  if not, 
> maybe we need to write one.
> 
> 




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