Time to Roam Magazine Issue 12 - December/January 2015 | Page 13

| letters feedback Police D shackle checks no hoax In July/August we were holidaying at a caravan park outside Bundaberg and one Sunday night went to the Brothers Club for a meal, then stayed for the entertainment. During a break in the evening, our group started chatting to a man who had kindly let us sit at his table and in the course of the conversation we told him we were all holidaying in our caravans. He promptly told us his mate had just got back from a trip down south and coming through Gympie had been pulled over by the police and he was booked, supposedly for having incorrect D shackles. This caused us all some concern, and the next morning while I was attending a physiotherapist’s appointment, my husband walked down to the Jayco yard at the end of the street. He asked the sales person if he’d heard anything about people being booked for having non-standard D shackles (and yes, from memory there was a colour mentioned) and my husband said the salesman immediately looked over at another man who was waiting to purchase something. This man came straight to the counter and said it was him –he’d been pulled over outside Gympie and in the process was booked for having non-standard D shackles. My husband said this man was so overwrought he didn’t think it was an act and the man repeated the whole thing to my husband. So we bought another set of D-shackles, which, incidentally, were exactly the same as the ones we already had on the van, just to be on the safe side. We could only conclude that this man, given his anger and distress, was telling the truth, but there are many types of D shackles available, some from the cheap shops like the Reject Shop, and if he’d put one of those on his chains, it wouldn’t have sat well with police. In hindsight, it is likely that there were other reasons he was pulled over, but he wasn’t about to ‘fess up and his apparent distress and insistence that he was booked for having non standard d-shackles lea