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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    C-Bus Oh/Lake Cumberland-Grider Hill Dock Ky
    Posts
    100

    Default Buy Boat-Blow Knee

    Here is a cruel twist of fate for you.

    I bought a new 2006 Mob LSV on Monday 1/16/06. I "coach" my 16 year old's (we had him young, I am 36) intramural basketball team and hyperextended my right knee filling in at practice 2 days later Wed 1/18/06. Went to Ortho Surg today, he says it's a torn ACL and is doing MRI tomorrow, but he thinks it is an ACL tear by how far forward my tibia moves. I didn't even realize he was moving it.

    So I have a decision. I'm a CPA with a mainly tax practice, so my busiest and most important time of year, to help pay for the new boat, is coming up. Busiest mid Feb to April 15. If I get the ACL surgery I won't be able to drive for 3 weeks and there is a 6 month recovery period before I can wakebooard, per the Doctor.

    So, do surgery now and struggle for the beginning of tax season and hopefully get to wakeboard part of the summer, by end of July, or wait until after April 15 to have the surgery, make tax season easier and lose the whole wakeboarding season here in Ohio.

    Anyone recover from ACL then wakeboard? Is 6 months too long of an estimate?

    I really don't think it is that bad, it didn't swell up that much, I can walk on it, and it doesn't hurt in the places the doctor checked, but I guess the MRI will tell me.

    Suggestion on recovery time?
    Black & Tan 2006 Mobius LSV

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Posts
    199

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    I had the right knee ACL rebuild in '96 and an extensive left knee reconstruction in '03. Both injuries from soccer. I waited for a while on the first one. I could walk and work fine. Couldn't do any sports (not that I didn't try). I did the second right away. No regrets at all. The six month recovery is pretty average. You lose a lot of muscle in the first couple of weeks. So, the harder you work at it, the better you will perform after the recovery period.
    Expensive procedure, in excess of 10K. The MRI alone is about $800.
    My recommendation would be to do it as soon as you can. Six months of nothing but physical therapy is a torture. But a new boat and not boarding for over a year would kill me.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Location
    Minnesota and Wisconsin
    Posts
    1,197

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    I would think a few things need to weigh-in.
    1. As a CPA are your clients coming to you or vice-versa? If they are coming to you dealing with the surgery might not be that bad. I would think you would be totally out of comission for a week. Then maybe able to take customers?

    2. Your age - Over the last 35 years I have had to sacrifice several weeks of skining due to injuries. The older I get the more frequent. If you are 50+ you have to ask yourself how many more seasons you may actually have. In the answer is - not many, then opting to go for some kind of season makes some sense. However, if you 30-something, 1 sacrificed season may give you 30 or thirty more seasons in the future.

    3. As much as you might want to 'Go For it', discretion really is the better part of valor. You want to be able ski after this season. Pushing it before you are ready could put an end to that - permanently.

    Good luck
    Dave
    If you believe something to be true, it will be - in it's consequences.

    2009 MasterCraft ProStar 197 - DD - 5.7L - 325HP - Zero Off

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Spokane, WA
    Posts
    57

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    I skied on my blown ACL (blew it out wakeboarding, no less) all summer and snow skied all winter. Mostly because I was mis-diagnosed. The first orthopedic surgeons missed the torn ACL on the MRI. I had my surgery early September (a year after the "accident") and was back to full duty at work within 3 months. I was given a knee brace for support if I wanted to wear it during sports, and I used it mostly the first couple times wakeboarding. I would strongly suggest talking with your Doctor. Depending on how bad the tear is, you might be able to get away with having the surgery after the summer season. And physical therapy is a must. The better it is, the quicker you will get back into things. With a February surgery, you should be able to wakeboard by June with the use of a brace.

    Good luck!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Janesville,Wi
    Posts
    28

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    I went through this last year...

    due to work schedule I didnt get the surgery till the end of march, I was wakeboarding again in july, and pushing it pretty good by august. Wearing a brace of course...

    YOu should have the optiion of wearing a good brace for the summer and having surgery in the fall... I kind of wish that I would have waited..

    With a good knee workout(lots of physical therapy and highly recommend an eliptical machine- everytime my knee starts getting sore or if I tweak it a bit, I hit the eliptical pretty hard and it starts feeling better quick) and a brace You will get through, and if you have a partial tear like I did, and you reinjure... well then you have a full tear... still the same surgery( just a matter of when it catches up with you!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    C-Bus Oh/Lake Cumberland-Grider Hill Dock Ky
    Posts
    100

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    Update.

    I went ahead and had surgery on 2/22/06, very successfull, to try to get back on the wakeboard for part of the summer.

    I've been rehabbing with Physical Therapist 2 times a week and doing my excercises regularly that she's told me to do.

    It's been 5 weeks since surgery, post-op brace gone and my sports (waterproof) brace is in, I have to pick it up. Very excited about my progress, just need to build the leg muscles back up to normal strength. Quad muscle very weak after surgery and it is comimg back well.

    I'll be back on the water, at least driving the boat soon and behiind the boat on the wakeboard by 7/17 (family houseboat vacation date) my goal date, if things keep going as they are now.

    The bonus is it did not take away from my work except the week of the surgery. I worked 2 days after surgery, just didn't get 60 hours in that week-but 45.

    So it has all worked out pretty well-so far.
    Black & Tan 2006 Mobius LSV

  7. #7
    Guest

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    Glad everything went well for you so far

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
    Posts
    718

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    Hydrofoiling is also much easier, at least on the legs.

    I tried attaching a relavant picture (of me, making a jackass of myself on a hydrofoil), but got an error from the server. Maybe I'll try again later. Anyway, that's good news about your surgery and recovery. Best wishes!

    Ian
    2005 XLV, upgraded ballast, Comptech swivel wakeboard and hydrofoil racks, Monster cargo bimini

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    C-Bus Oh/Lake Cumberland-Grider Hill Dock Ky
    Posts
    100

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    I've been looking at Air Chair's on the internet. I've ridden them before and thought it would be perfect for rehab time-kind of like a wheel chair on water!

    I'm not too sure about wake surfing, but it looks like it is becoming very popular by the threads on this site.

    So many different toys to buy, my wife said I've reached my toy budget for the year-the new boat. I was going for the Air Chair first since I know I like it before I talk her into (or just buy without her knowing) the wake surfing gear.

    Thanks for the advice.
    Black & Tan 2006 Mobius LSV

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
    Posts
    718

    Default Replying to Topic 'Buy Boat-Blow Knee'

    Yes, hydrofoils are pricey. But, they last for a long, long time. I do both wakeboarding and hydrofoiling, and I would say that having the hydrofoil has virtually doubled the value of having a boat. I can ride it for a long time, even after exhausting myself on a wakeboard.

    BTW, my buddy who bought the hydrofoil did a ton of research on Web forums last year prior to purchase, and SkySki was the preferred brand over AirChair by a margin of about 50 to 1 in responses. That '1' later turned out to be an AirChair dealer, too! It's a matter of refined design over the years. Note: SkySki had a change of ownership a year or so ago, so things might have changed.

    I have an email that I sent someone else a while ago, cobbling together my information about it (brands, the must-have options, the yahoo group, etc). I'll dig it up if you gain approval for a purchase.

    Ian
    2005 XLV, upgraded ballast, Comptech swivel wakeboard and hydrofoil racks, Monster cargo bimini

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