
What did I say?

sv-wolf wrote:I really believed that December (the first half of it anyway) would be a cheap month this year.
While I've been standing back in horror watching the repair bill for the SV1000 mounting daily, the powers that be have been busy planning another (very costly) little surprise for me. They chose to spring it this morning.sv-wolf wrote:I have to weigh up the occasional hour spent fiddling with the bike against the many dismal hours I would have undoubtedly had to spend listening to the wind whistling round the bleak platforms of Stevenage station if I'd come in by train. And I cannot tell you what a miserable experience that is.
This morning I decked the Daytona on a patch of black ice 300 yards from my front door, smashing her offside fairing to bits, breaking the indicator and twisting the front end - just the yoke I hope, not the forks. I dropped her right in the middle of the road. I asked a guy from a nearby garage to help me get her up (the Daytona's a big bugger - and I'm not). He helped me push her back up the hill to my house as well. She was stuck in first gear and wanting to go in circles, so it wasn't easy.
I had to hurry into work after that and didn't have the heart to check her over carefully. I'll have a good look at her in decent light first thing tomorrow morning.
Oh! Me? I'm OK; just a little bruised on my right shoulder, but nothing significant. I have a slightly dented ego to go with it, of course, but that will mend. There is nothing wrong with me that a little self-administered TLC won't cure. And, come to think of it, there is also that unopened bottle of whisky in the cupboard...! (I'm not going to be riding for a while, after all.) But, my first and persistent thought has been the state of my bank balance. I'll mend for free; the Daytona won't.
With the fairing gone to hell it will be an expensive job. I'll have to get her done on my insurance. That means I'll lose my no-claims bonus and have to pay the excess, etc, etc, etc. Why the hell didn't I put crash bungs on her like I've been meaning to?
Oh Lord!
It was frosty this morning, but it didn't look that frosty when I wheeled her onto the road. I didn't realise how bad it was until I got her rolling. Apparently, it was -3C; not particularly cold but cold enough for black ice to form. My road is narrow and runs north-south. In winter, the morning sun doesn't start warming the tarmac till nearly noon. This morning there was a thick frost over the whole road - which I guess the passing traffic had begun to compress into ice. When I hit it, there was no chance to save the bike; she just went straight down. I was only doing about 10 mph and not making any inputs at all at that point. The weight distribution must have been a little off centre; maybe I was shifting around in the saddle. All it took to lay her low were a very few, very simple laws of physics.
I had to get a taxi ride at lunchtime and the driver told me that coming along the Barton road this morning (that's a country road near Hitchin with a lot of twists and hummocks along it's length) he saw three cars lying upside-down in the fields on either side. He told me that people were taking corners at 40 and 50 mph, even in these conditions. Some people seem to have no appreciation of the risks of driving in this weather. (Oh! Errr... Well, yes! Hmmmmmm!)
[Edit: I rang the insurance company Friday morning and they told me they had been inundated with calls all day Thursday - I'm not at all surprised.]
The adrenalin shock saw me through the first couple of hours, but I became a bit shakey after that. That phase has passed now and left me feeling just a litle blue. On the other hand a chuckle surfaces from time to time. What's that about? The slide and all the events of the last few days have knocked me out of my increasingly deadening routine - and I think that is no bad thing. Life's for living, after all, and I could do with a change. Sometimes we need something like this to wake us up.
So, I keep thinking what I will do if the insurers write her off. With all that plastic way beyond repair, they might just. Would I buy her back and get her done up? I'm still deep in the honeymoon period with the Daytona. She's a beautiful road bike. I'd hate to lose her. On the other hand, I could use the cash to buy a cheap off-roader to see me through the winter? About half the Himalaya trip I'm going on next September will be off road, so I need to get a little more experience of that kind of riding. There are a couple of training courses near here and I've been itching to have a go at one of them. Maybe this is the excuse I need.
I'm also thinking I would like to take part in the Enduro India again in 2009. That would mean doing a lot more fundraising. My first reaction to that was 'no way!' I don't have the energy for raising the required £4,300 for charity again. But then I thought, It might be fun to see if I could busk the money by doing some story-telling and street theatre at the weekends. I've not done that for years and wonder if I could still manage it.
Decisions! Decisions!
If you've been reading my posts, you'll know I bought a pair of used SV1000S forks on Ebay from a guy who lives in Surrey - the other side of London. As I don't drive, and I needed them quickly, my mate Ron had offered to pick them up for me. He took the car down this morning. On the way he had to slog it through the London traffic - which was (understandably) not a good experience he says. That's made me feel bad on his behalf. But feeling bad seems to be what is required of me right now, so that's par for the course, then.
The guy in Surrey had claimed that he had taken the forks off his SV as soon as he had bought it and replaced them with a pair of GSXR forks. Ron rang me this evening to say that the one's I'd bought are in perfect condition. So that's one piece of good news, anyway. And it's a saving. (Well, no, it's not a saving: at £125 for the pair it's an expense but not as great an expense as the £390 quoted at me by the dealer for a single new fork leg.)
That means the SV should be up and running again soon. Maybe I'll ask the dealer to fit a couple of crash bungs to her while he is at it. I might just do that! At any rate I won't have to put up with windy station platforms for very long...
Nggggrrrrh! I just gotta stop saying things like that!