Cosh! Smosh! I'm in far too happy a mood to consider this one now. Feel free to continue the discussion guys but I am off to the club's Monday pub night in half-an-hour on the SV.
Yep, I have the 'ol girl back with me again, looking neat and pretty in the back yard. And with the new gasket and the new air filter she is sounding loads better. Friends tell me that I am sounding a lot less grumpy and old codgerish, too. No surprise there. The morbid belief that my bright motorcycle-shaped world is in a state of terminal decay and that I am now the owner of a shabby, unrecoverable mass of terminally sick hardware has begun to dissolve - the clouds have parted; and the blue meanies have scuttled off to whatever miserable bogey hole they go to when they need somewhere else to be self-righteously bad-tempered in.
But this is not a perfect world, apparently. (Have you noticed?) In fitting a new gasket to the SV’s pipe, the engineer broke off a 'bracket'. On the SV the clip that secures the joint in the pipe is (or was) welded to the bike's frame via this 'bracket'. Unusual. (

) It was rusty the guy said – which is quite possible; I can't argue. The poor ol’ SV did get badly neglected during the long months of Di’s illness. Washing it down on a regular basis was not the most pressing thing on my mind and it got frequently salted up during the winter months. And as we all know, Suzuki have never staked their reputation on the finish of their bikes.
The dealer has ordered a part for me, but at present the joint is held together with a jubilee clip. It’ll do for now. I'm just hoping we don't get another long dose of rust-inducing stormy weather in the next week or so. [Just looked at the weather forecast. Lots more wet stuff on the way.]
That apart, she is running better, and I’ve stopped thinking of her as a tired 'ol thing on her way to the scrap heap. No indeed! I hope to get another 60,000 miles out of her.
And there is another reason why I am feeling a lot less grumpy now. I’m off on a short break in two day’s time. I’m riding the SV down to the Dorset coast (southern England) for five days of camping and walking along the cliff tops. The Dorset coast is one of the most truly magical places on earth (in my humble opinion.) Long summer days spent walking along this coast make up some of the very happiest memories from my much-extended boyhood years (which lasted well into my 30s).
Back in the 1985/6/7, Rohan (my oldest friend) and I spent many blissfully happy, funny, crazy days foot-slogging our way along the 550 mile South-West Peninsula Coastal Path. We hitchhiked down to the coast from Hertfordshire (that was part of the holiday) and then backpacked our way along it. We put up the tent wherever the night fell, and hoped to avoid the attentions of touchy farmers and irate National Trust wardens. Or sometimes, when the moonlight was full and strong enough to see by and the mood was on us, we just kept walking on and on into the early hours of the morning. I don’t think I’ve ever felt so completely happy or at peace with the world as on those journeys.
The path runs westward from Bournemouth on the Hampshire coast right through Dorset and Devon and then on to Land’s End, which lies at the tip of the Cornish peninsula. At Land’s End it turns eastwards and a little north and runs back up to Minehead following the line of the Severn Estuary. The southern part is a sunny, sub-tropical glory of a walk. The scenery and wildlife are stunningly beautiful and varied.
I’m meeting another friend and his family down there on Wednesday and we are walking to Durdle Dor, a fantastic rock formation along Dorset’s famous Jurassic Coast – Fossils and dinosaur bones practically fall out of the rocks in front of you along here. West from Durdle Dor lie the cliffs at Lyme Regis, where the whole Victorian dinosaur-mania thing was born. The Dorset cliffs are magnificent, and riddled with caves and ancient mine workings. The shoreline abounds in rock platforms, stacks, sea arches, lagoons, sand bars, offshore islands and bird colonies. You name it, this place has it. It’s just beautiful.
Can’t wait.
(Just hope the weather forecast for this week is wrong!)