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sv-wolf
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#551 Unread post by sv-wolf »

jstark47 wrote:I dunno, maybe the thing is jinxed... is insurance going to cover this?

Around here, Triumphs aren't that popular with the sport bike crowd... the joke is you can leave the keys in the Triumph, the thieves will always go past and steal the GSXR instead.

I feel your pain though. I really don't know what else to say - I know you're not religious, but maybe Somebody is trying to tell you something about this bike? Is there something else you like - maybe it's time for a trade?
Hi Mr Stark, always good to hear from you.

Me too! I was surprised they went for the Triumph. Round here professional thieves normally go for the big fours. Triples and twins get passed by. I reckon this was some semi-opportunistic, local operator who was just taking a chance.

One way or another, whoever it was, they really managed to make a balls-up of it. The police SOCO - scene of the crime - officer got a set of smudged prints off the side of the tank. He reckoned that one of them tried to grab the bike as it fell (makes sense.) He thought that if the thief was a local villain, there might be a chance of catching him. But... I'm not holding my breath.

Like you said, I did seriously think of getting rid of the Daytona. Enough is enough, y'know! But I can't do it. I just love it too much. Every time I ride it I feel my confidence rising. It handles so brilliantly. It must be just about the best big road bike on the market for the money. Must be! I keep telling myself that this run of bad luck can't go on forever. But... LOL. I said that last time.

What is strange is that the steering lock, which appeared to be broken on the night of the robbery, is now working again. And the electrics seem fine too. The bike hasn't been hotwired - there are no trailing cables - and the engine is firing up just like it ought. Another odd thing: the digital 'clocks' are working perfectly, yet on the night of the robbery they remained blank when I tried to start her - just backlit. Maybe that was something to do with the ECU (???) It's a sensitive little beast and, once upset needs time to readjust itself. Or maybe the immobiliser? (Ha!) Don't know.

I suspect the thieves must have used a skateboard or trolley under the front wheel to move her. And that's probably also why they dropped her.

I ordered a replacement nearside mirror from a local dealer last week. That's come through now. As soon as I have some spare time during the day I'll pick it up and fit it and then take the bike for a ride.

I'll probably drop her over to the dealers after that and ask them to check her over. And I'll get a quote on the cracked plastic, though I might try a few breaker's yards first. The can is very slightly scuffed, and there is the tiniest tear in the pillion seat, but I can live with that. I rarely take pillions so I will just patch it and put the cowl back on her.

With a bit of luck the damage won't cost me an arm and a leg to put right. There is £500 excess on the insurance and I doubt if it would come to that. But I'm feeling stoney broke at the moment. I'm probably going to have to rob a bank or something.

At least it has shocked me out of my lethargy. I've still got the infection and I'm still sleeping a lot, but I'm feeling shiny side up again at last. Hell, I've been in a strange frame of mind recently!

Two days later I had an interesting encounter. I usually get on well with the tenants at the hostel next door. But when I came home from work on Monday, two guys visiting someone there had parked right across the shared entrance. They were hanging around and it was easy enough to run the bike up over the kerb so I decided not to make a fuss about it.

But just as I got to the house one of them nipped down my alleway and started pissing up against my wall. I went ballistic. He was a nasty little creep. Then another guy came out and started threatening to rearrange my features if I didn't shut up. I started to face him down. I thought at first he was blagging it, but he began to get very agitated so after that I wasn't sure. I decided to back off - just in case. He was a fair bit bigger than me and I'm no expert at handling myself physically. But it really pissed me off. I hate letting creeps like this get away with that kind of behaviour.
Hud

“Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform: he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley

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#552 Unread post by sv-wolf »

Bloody brilliant BMF

I’ve been waiting for this all month - the annual pilgrimage to the BMF motorcycle show in Peterborough. It’s the biggest bike show in Europe; it’s very laid back and it’s a hell of a laugh. Nothing dampens my enthusiasm for it, ever - not even the rain.

It always rains at the BMF bike show. It always has. But May this year came in with such a burst of glory we all started thinking that we might get a half-decent weekend for once. Did we? Well, following a long week of brilliant sunshine, Friday morning came in cool and non-committal. As the morning wore on the weather gave clear notice that it was preparing for a traditionally cold and wet weekend. A few hours later the sun had disappeared and the skies were turning BMF grey.

But what the hell!

It belted down during the club ride up to the show site on Friday afternoon. It showered while we put up the marquee. It drizzled sadly while we struggled with our tents. And it bucketed out of the skies while we sat around under canvas trying to get warm. Later that evening, it was still trying to rain as we made our way across the large site to the venue for the rock concert. Then, just when it no longer mattered, the skies relented and it dried up for the rest of the evening. But I shouldn't complain; at least I managed to nip out of the concert at 10 o'clock to buy myself a take-away chicken-curry supper - without getting soaked.

And to be fair, it didn't rain again until, oh… half past ten the following morning. So it wasn't all bad, eh! :roll:

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Stevenage and District Bike Club members smiling through the cold and wet. A good cup of tea (or a beer)
always helps in situations like this.


Saturday was wet and Saturday was cold. The sky remained grey and miserable all day. I, on the other hand, was full of warmth and sunshine. And why not? It was the BMF.

The BMF is about pissing around for hours on end doing absolutely nothing in particular It's about wandering here and there across the huge showground looking at bikes: cool bikes, crazy bikes, vintage bikes, rare bikes, rat bikes, custom bikes. There are Japs and Brits, Ities and Ruskies, CZs, Heskeths (I've never understood how anyone could get excited about Heskeths) Indians, Douglas’s, Buells, Cagivas.

Everything that ever moved on two wheels rolls up to the BMF show: old and new, clean and dirty, matt and chromed. Everything! Whatever your fancy there will always be something here for you: huge F-O monsters and nippy little-uns; poncey dazzlers and venerable old rust buckets; sharp-looking, two-wheeled weapons bristling with technology - and Royal Enfield Bullets. Of course!

Bikes and booze and bargains are what the BMF is all about. People turn up in their thousands to look at bike accessories and bike gear, bike books and bike bits. Thick-set geezers and skinny-looking bike nerds spend hours sorting through piles of auto-jumble, nosing out ultra-cheap insurance deals and listening to slick salesmen trying to flog them a sure remedy for speed cameras. You see bearded guys and guys in slick one-piece leathers searching hard for that once-in-a-lifetime bargain - the one they can crow about for months afterwards to their mates. You see youngsters and old men buying raffle tickets in the dreamy belief that they are going to win some super-fantastic bike well outisde their normal price range. I just love it.

The BMF is about avoiding mud slicks on the sodden showground; it's about time spent sussing out which fast food vans are not going to poison you, and of course it's all about watching your mate’s face turn green as the beer he has been downing all day reacts to the G-forces on a lunatic fairground ride. You’ve just gotta enter into the spirit of the thing.

BMFers come to prattle on enthusiastically about their biking passions and avoid others who want to prattle on about theirs. The BMF is about being very, very surprised by what you find. It’s about joining in the collective bragging sessions at the bar. It’s about finding out that the dumb teenage T-shirt slogans are really very funny. And it's about laughing till your stomach gets too tense to laugh any more. If you do the BMF properly you'll get yourself totally high in the company of fellow enthusiasts: yakking, lying, leg-pulling and driving each other on to buy more than any sensible person could reasonably afford.

But there is a serious cultural aspect to all this as well. For many people, the BMF is all about getting stupidly, gut-wrenchingly drunk (never forget to tie up your shoelaces before going to into the Gents, lads.) C’mon! This is the BMF. What more could you want? Rain? Pah!

Image
A visitor at the show from Africa, attired suitably in black

But this year, among all the usual greyness drifting overhead, a more personal dark cloud was hovering. Only a few days before, one of the club members had contracted pneumonia and was now lying in the Lister hospital on a life-support system. He was in a critical condition. A few days previously I had met him in the town. We had both been suffering from a long-drawn-out dose of flu and swapped jokes about how crappy we were both feeling. By Friday he was fighting for his life. On Saturday, phoned messages from friends at the hospital came through to the showground now and then to punctuate the hilarity a little. There was an occasional pause, a moment’s thought, a sudden access of sobriety.

As Saturday wore on, more and more members arrived at the club stand. I've never seen so many of us all together at the show. By evening time, the marquee was heaving with damp, steaming bodies. Everyone was on good form. A lively afternoon turned into a side-splitting evening. The craic was awesome.

Despite all the enthusiasm and high spirits we only signed up three new members this year during the entire show. (Signing new members is the official rationale for our collectively being here.) That is well down on the average. Everyone blamed it on the weather but we could just as easily have blamed it on the beer.

I’ve never seen so much of it. On the way up the A1 to the showground the suspension on the club van was bottoming out. The van was loaded with so much booze that several people had to carry their camping gear on their bikes to make room for it. But it turned out to be not a can or bottle too much. In a spirit of enthusiasm that typifies all club activities icans started to get cracked open the moment we arrived on the site. It was thirsty weather - at least, it was, if you take the view that all weather is thirsty weather.

I have poor brains for drinking so I took it nice and slow. For me, the highlight of the show wasn't the booze or the concerts and the stalls or the craic, but the performances given by a duo of bikers calling themselves “Extreme Globeriders”.

Unbelievable!

This must be the most impressive bit of stunt riding I have ever seen on a motorcycle – or am ever likely to see. A Finnish bloke with an unpronounceable Finnish name (‘Mikko’, for short) and his ‘colleague', Heidi, a young and unpronounceably attractive Finnish woman with a very long, very blond ponytail, gave an extraordinary performance on motorcycles at 60 mph inside a six-metre-diameter, wire-mesh globe. This show is a must-see. Mikko and his lovely partner tour Europe with it - so don’t miss it if it comes down your way. It puts the ‘Wall of Death’ to shame. Here’s a pic.

Image

This is ‘Mikko’ by himself doing a series of vertical circuits inside the globe. The commentator's voice over the PA system claimed that at 60 mph a force of five Gs drains all the blood from your head at the apex of the globe and sends you doo-lally. Apparently the experience is so disorienting that it becomes nearly impossible to tell up from down. Some guy in Russia tried it, apparently. He came to a stop at the top of the globe thinking it was the floor. Gravity had its way with him and he fell to his death.

Mikko is apparently not only an amazing stunt rider but a very able engineer as well, as it appears that he built the globe entirly by himself – in his garage. (Not sure what kind of garages they have in Finland but I sure as hell could do with one here in Hitchin.) Some people are just sickeningly talented. To design and engineer a perfect sphere like that is no mean feat.

Here’s another pic.

Image

You just have to use your imagination on this one to get a real feel for what is going on here. Heidi is circling the globe horizontally at around 60 mph while Mikko is circling vertically, crossing and re-crossing her path twice every second. Just to make life a little more interesting he is progressing his vertical path round the globe so that he gradually faces, North, East, South and West. The co-ordination is stunning. They must have absolute trust in each other's judgement and ability. I keep thinking of the stages they must have gone through to put this act together.

The female announcer, who was also Finnish, declared in a dead-pan voice that it took Heidi six months of pleading and 'other services' to persuade Mikko to let her inside the globe with him. You've really got to hand it to the Scandanavians and the Finns - they are so totally matter-of-fact and off-hand about sex.

(I remember a moment in the 1980s during a long hiking holiday on the south coast when I sat in a park and watched as a schoolgirl outing from Sweden formed itself into an impropmtu choir. The choir was conducted by a severe-looking schoolmistress with plaited hair wound up into 'earphones' on either side of her head. The girls sang: "Vere Sveedish, vere Sveedish, ve drink und ve f**k". I don't remember the words after that except that they went on to elaborate the details. The other holidaymakers in the crowded park just sat there with their mouths open.)

As a finale, Mikko and Heidi repeated their double act with a volunteer member of the audience standing bottom-dead-centre on the floor of the globe. Mikko adjusted his vertical plane of travel slightly onto the diagonal, so that he missed the volunteer by centimetres each time he rode past her. Once again, he progressed the diagonal a few feet on each lap of the globe while continuing to avoid colliding with Heidi who circled horizontally round its ‘equator’. The woman standing in the middle looked petrified. And why shouldn’t she?

Absolutely incredible! Skill? Total madness? Brilliant to watch. I have two new heroes. I was so impressed I even queued up with the kids for a signed poster - now reverently displayed on my kitchen wall. And even Steve was blown away. Steve is an ex–racer, down-to-earth and very hard to impress. He pointed out that even the warm-up display - Mikko riding the bike forwards, then backwards up and down the walls of the globe - was incredibly difficult. ("Have you ever tried to ride a bike backwards over a constantly changing gradient?")

Over the course of the BMF weekend I watched their performance four times and it was more amazing each time. Try looking up the two videos at www.extremeglobe.com/video.htm Of the two, the one lower down the page gives a much better impression of these two can do. There are more videos if you click on the site's 'shows' tab. They are well worth a few minutes of your time.

On Sunday afternoon I went to watch an army motorcycle stunt team in the central arena but walked away half way through it. By contrast with what I’d seen in the globe, it was tedious and ana – skilful, but just very wooden-looking – it was stunt riding by numbers, typical military stuff. No soul!

The army were out recruiting in force at the show this year. Several regiments were there with their vans and motorcycles. I’ve never seen them at the BMF before. The only camo-gear you usually see on the showground is the stuff you can buy from Millets. Clearly, the army is having difficulty recruiting replacement cannon fodder for the guys they are losing in Iraq. Sad business!

The show puts on two big rock concerts every year: one on Friday, mostly for the clubs and traders who've spent the day setting up their stalls, and one on Saturday. The Saturday concert is for everybody, traders and visitors to the show, so it is pretty packed. The big name in this year’s line-up was The Damned. Although I was into punk rock in the 70s I never liked The Damned very much and I liked them even less this weekend. They were terrible. No, that’s not true: their musicianship was ‘irreproachable’ (that’s the word) - no doubt about it, it was a very sharp performance. It was just… empty! Their material was crap and they took themselves far too seriously to be entertaining.

Much better was the warm-up band, Hooker. Hooker is a local, Peterborough band. They play at the BMF every year and every year they bring the house down. They are a covers band but brilliant at what they do. Trev Smith, their front man, always performs kitted out in a big grin and an orange boiler suit. He has a great voice and is a real entertainer – a natural. He works the audience for all he is worth and can get people going very quickly.

Image
Hooker on stage

Loads of people complained afterwards about how bad The Damned were but the club was too busy getting pissed to pay much attention to the music anyway. Here is a pic of the club secretary - in one of his better moments that night. He's a brilliant rider...

Image

I excelled this year at not buying things I didn’t really need – well, expensive things, anyway. I did come away with a very cheap bike cover, some very cheap T-shirts, another motorcycle travel book by Sam Manicom (good man Sam – ‘just get on the bike and go’), and a fair bit of bumf. Oh, and I bought myself two enamel badges: one of a Triumph Daytona 955i and one of a SV1000s. I haven’t a clue why I bought them. I don’t wear badges. They just called to me in a weak moment, I suppose. They are well made and detailed, but I guess they will soon be sitting around in a drawer gathering dust.

I did try to find a pair of leather trousers, but nothing I wanted fitted. Both pairs I currently own have a racing crotch which is just a little too permeable in the winter time for true comfort.

I also thought very hard about buying a GPS speed-camera detector. Three new speed cameras have been set up near my home recently. As I rode into Royston last Monday the nasty little buggers gave me quite a fright. But the detector cost £130 and right now that constitutes 130 good reasons for not buying it. I'll need that money to pay for the off-roading day I’m booked to do next Wednesday – at least, I will if I stick to my plan - which is to continue eating for the rest of the month.

Hey, it must be gone ten o’clock (That’s my next-door neighbour I’ve just heard arriving home on his Bandit.) and I haven’t eaten yet. Time to go.

Ride safe.
Last edited by sv-wolf on Sat May 24, 2008 12:10 am, edited 2 times in total.
Hud

“Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform: he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder.”
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#553 Unread post by blues2cruise »

I could tell you were right PO'ed.....I've never seen you say dodo so many times in one entry. :P

I feel your pain about the flu.....I've had it a few times and it is so debilitating. Good to hear you are finally feeling better.

Badges, t-shirts,...you are such a tourist. :laughing: :laughing:
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#554 Unread post by sv-wolf »

blues2cruise wrote:I feel your pain about the flu.....I've had it a few times and it is so debilitating. Good to hear you are finally feeling better.
Thanks blues. I've had flu loads of times but never anything like this.

Good to hear from you.
blues2cruise wrote:I could tell you were right PO'ed.....I've never seen you say dodo so many times in one entry. :P
PO'ed - you might say! I could've ripped off a few heads that week and torn the furniture apart with my teeth.

Damn! Now, that thought about the furniture has got me feeling all sloppy about my dog, Loki!

A man should have a dog (Too damn right, he should.)

I found a new home for him when I couldn't look after him any more. I'm still missing him two years later. Sometimes I still expect to see him running to the door when I get home from work.

Loki was nuts; mad as a box of frogs.

You don't believe me? Get a look at this guy.

Image
His one amibition in life was to outsmart you anyway he could - and he usually could.

Not a handsome beast, but once seen never forgotten - a real vagabond of a dog. Always fighting you for mastery. He had more than a little Gypsy in his soul.

Hell, this scratchy old analogue photo is practically all I have left to remember him by (apart from a few teeth marks on the table legs).
blues2cruise wrote:Badges, t-shirts,...you are such a tourist. :laughing: :laughing:
Tourist? Yeah, a real mean! Especially when I tell you that the T-shirts had a little logo on them which read: "BMF marshall 2006."
Just wanted to help the BMF funds a little. (No? Don't buy it? OK. Tourist/mean then!)

Cheers

Richard
Hud

“Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform: he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley

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#555 Unread post by blues2cruise »

Your dog looks like he was giving you the evil eye. :)
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#556 Unread post by sv-wolf »

blues2cruise wrote:Your dog looks like he was giving you the evil eye. :)
Blues, you don't know the half of it! :D LOL If ever there was a spirit of mischief then this dog embodied it. That's why we called him Loki after the Norse god of mischief and destruction.

Everyone should spend a day in Loki's company as an essential part of their education!

Di found him, half-starved roaming round the Irish countryside and brought him home. But he's a rover. It's absolutely in his blood. We took him to a specialist trainer but there was nothing she could do with him. His new owner never lets him off the lead except when she visits her sister who lives way out on the moors. She frees him as soon as she arrives at her sister's house and he comes back two days later, happy as Larry.

He was a great, warm, fun part of the family. But wild and wilful!!!! No-one was his master apart from himself.

And I'm really glad of that.


Cheers

Dick
Hud

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#557 Unread post by blues2cruise »

If you ever have another crazy thought about needing a dog.....
STOP

Remember.....dogs need walking, watering, feeding, poop scooped, walking again, poop scooped again, vet visits, walking, poop scooped, walking, feeding, vet visits, they shed hair everywhere, you have to get up early to let them out for their morning constitution, you wait around the door in the freezing cold dark dead of winter waiting for them to out because they don't want to go out in the freezing cold and then you still have to wait for them to come back in. Drying off their wet muddy feet, scooping the poop, watering, feeding, walking, rushing home after work to let them out...

Meanwhile.....Daytona, SV, ride-outs, tramping, camping, Himalayas, rides to the continent, Daytona, SV, bike shows, ride-outs, getting home after dark while the dog is at home and couldn't wait any longer and has peed on your favourite carpet. :laughing:

You better stick to the bikes and club members for company. :P :wink: :lol:
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#558 Unread post by sv-wolf »

blues2cruise wrote:If you ever have another crazy thought about needing a dog.....
STOP

Remember.....dogs need walking, watering, feeding, poop scooped, walking again, poop scooped again, vet visits, walking, poop scooped, walking, feeding, vet visits, they shed hair everywhere, you have to get up early to let them out for their morning constitution, you wait around the door in the freezing cold dark dead of winter waiting for them to out because they don't want to go out in the freezing cold and then you still have to wait for them to come back in. Drying off their wet muddy feet, scooping the poop, watering, feeding, walking, rushing home after work to let them out...

Meanwhile.....Daytona, SV, ride-outs, tramping, camping, Himalayas, rides to the continent, Daytona, SV, bike shows, ride-outs, getting home after dark while the dog is at home and couldn't wait any longer and has peed on your favourite carpet. :laughing:

You better stick to the bikes and club members for company. :P :wink: :lol:

:D :D :D :D :D :D

LOL

Yes, oh wise one. Oh yes!

Blues every word you write sends an anguished memory running through my head. Ouch.

:D

Over breakfast this morning, I spent some time thinking about some of the funny moments I had with Di and Loki.

Here's a story about them.

After her disease was diagnosed but before the paralysis began to set in, Di insisted on carrying on her life very much as normal. She was growing weaker all the time but still would not give up walking Loki. She loved him to bits and indulged his desire for freedom at every opportunity. She'd sit in the fields waiting for hours until he decided to come back to her, or chase him for miles over the countryside. Eventually though, it just got too tiring for her, so she took to walking him on a long, long lead (about 30 feet of tough red tape which she tied to his collar).

One summer afternoon, as I was getting ready to ride home from work I got a mobile phone call. It was Di, asking if I could come and get her. She said she was with Loki in the fields beyond the Purwell meadows. She was giggling like a schoolgirl but wouldn't say what was going on.

I rode straight over to Purwell, parked the bike and trekked off down the footpaths. I found them both sitting in a hedgerow. It was obvious what had happened. Loki had dived into the hedge after a rabbit and got his long lead tied up round a group of bushes. Di had crawled into the hedge after him to try and free him. She had to hunker down under some dense undergrowth while she untied the knots. Loki, totally manic as usual, had continued to prance around. When I found them they were sitting side by side, Loki looking extremely pleased with himself and Di tied securely to the trunk of a tree by yards and yards of red tape.

It took me nearly quarter of an hour to free her.

:D
Last edited by sv-wolf on Mon May 26, 2008 2:27 am, edited 2 times in total.
Hud

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#559 Unread post by blues2cruise »

:laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

That must have been a very funny sight to see. Thanks for sharing that memory. :)
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#560 Unread post by sv-wolf »

FridayAs I rode into the courtyard at work this morning, there she was: a gleaming new V-Strom, storm-blue and beautiful. As I parked her sister, the SV thou, beside her I was wondering where she had come from. None of the regular motorcyclists at work had said they were looking for a new bike. Was this a newcomer?

It turned out that the new bike belonged to Mike, erstwhile owner of a wine red Royal Enfield 500cc ‘Electric’ Bullet. He'd taken the Enfield up to Cambridge for a regular service, he said, seen the V Strom, asked for a test ride, was utterly smitten, and signed on the dotted line. It was an impulse buy. (The mean!)

When I pinned him down later, though, he admitted that there was a bit of a history to the purchase. As much as he loved the Enfield he was getting fed up with the cost of having to service it every 2,000 miles ( :shock: ) - and fed up, too with the experience of having bits dropping off it on a fairly regular basis.

Sigh! Old British or Anglo-Indian bikes are great lookers but they have always been generous in the way they like to dispose of their parts …

I've never ridden the V Strom but, as it has the same engine as the SV1000, I suspect Mike is going to have to reprogramme his Enfield-oriented brain to deal with the torquiness of the new machinery. When I asked him about the ride into work this morning he didn’t reply for a moment but just stood there with a far-away look in his eyes.

OK, OK, Mike. ‘Nuff said!

Not that Mike is a stranger to speed: he was a blue-light, hospital emergency rider for many years, couriering pints of blood up and round the county, flat out, day and night. He bought the Enfield three years ago when he moved out to one of the country villages in North Herts, in the hope that it would calm him down and help prepare him for his retirement. Hmmm…… Once a bike has set your blood a'boiling, it is going to be hard after that to live without the bubbles.

A week last Saturday I rode the SV into Letchworth this morning and paid a visit to the dealers. The thieving swine who molested the Daytona a couple of weeks ago had smashed a mirror and I'd ordered a replacement. I hadn't ridden her since then. (£72 the bloody mirror cost me - $140 - what a rip off!) It took me five minutes to fit the mirror, ten minutes to kit up and then the rest of the afternoon to get over my agitation.

No! No! No! Hell and damnation! She felt wrong. She sounded wrong. She rode wrong all the way to Cambridge and back - which meant that the whole world felt wrong, too – wrong and ugly and out of sorts. I could have wept.

I knew she was misaligned from the moment I sat astride her and leaned into the bars. I couldn’t see the problem but I could sure as hell feel it. The throttle and clutch adjustments were out very slightly, too, and once I had her running at speed she kept pulling to the right. You know what it is like when a beautiful and perfect thing that brings joy to your life becomes maimed and distorted…

Whatever the bastards did to her was very slight: but it was enough to upset her handling big time.

I’m not going to try and fix her myself, even though I’m told that if it is the bars it will be easy enough. When I know what I’m doing, then I’ll start to maintain her myself. In the meantime I will just have to hold up my hand and admit ignorance. So she goes back to the dealers in Aston Clinton. (They must love me!) And that means taking more time off work. Damn!

Saturday night: I rode down to see my friend, Anna. The plan was to sleep over at her place and then for the two of us to go walking with her friends the following day. Anna and I are good mates. We go way back. And that's all. (It's amazing how your female friends all start to turn into matchmakers the moment you become unattached.) Anna lives in Dorking on the other side of London. It’s a 70 mile journey, first down the A1(M) then half way round the London Orbital (M25), then a short ride along the A24.

Back in the 1960s The M25 was carefully designed as one of the world’s most boring roads. And I can personally vouch for the fact that nothing has changed in the intervening 40 years. The M25 is boring to the point of stupefaction. It's boring and also very busy; but primarily it's just plain boring.

You need to have spent your entire life watching black-and-white footage of five-day international test cricket not to be bored by it.

As I turned off the A1(M) onto the M25 at the South Mimms roundabout I wondered in desperation how I could liven up the journey just a little. Maybe, I thought… maybe I could try to remember the turn-offs on the way down, ‘cos I’m always getting them muddled up. (OK, OK so I was already scraping the bottom of the barrel – but you see the problem.) Or I could try and work out where the speed cameras were hidden under the Heathrow gantries, or experiment with improving my motorway road positioning technique. Surely, I thought – surely, there must be some way to make riding the M25 more interesting!

Fifty miles later, as I turned off the M25 and headed for Anna's, I reflected that the last hour had been one of the most truly boring experiences in my motorcycling life.

Anna, I thought, as I reached the outskirts of Dorking, you’d better be on good form this weekend!

Sunday
The British weather forecast for the south-east of England said it was going to be wet and grey. The French weather forecast for the south-east of England said it was going to be wet and grey, too. And, as I later found out, the weather back home in Hertfordshire was most definitely wet and grey all day long. But in this little corner of England, and for this one afternoon, the sun shone, the air was warm and sweet, birds sang and I began to imagine that summer had genuinely arrived.

We drove out into the glorious Kent countryside and up onto the greensand ridge where I would be meeting Anna's walking friends for the first time. I was looking forward to it. After weeks of being cabined at home with flu I was feeling feisty again and in need of a damn good laugh. We found the place, got out our gear, breathed the air, and then, as Anna introduced me to her friends, one by one, in the car park, I felt my heart sinking slowly like a stone.

I don't know what I was expecting, but it wasn't this elderly and determinedly upper middle-class gathering. Elderly is fine: I like older people. They can be fun. Middle-class is fine too – up to a point: I can play the propertied middle-class game with the best of them. But after all these years, people who are both elderly and middle class still fill me with dread. There are barriers, you see - barriers and prejudices (on both sides) which rarely make for easy socialising.

I started wondering whether to knuckle down to an afternoon of polite conversation or gratify a growing desire to be as impolite as possible. ("Go on!" the voices urged, "Play the gobby motorcyclist. Unpack that low sense of humour.") It was during this inner debate that I started to realise that a lot of these ‘elderly’ walkers were actually younger than I was. That came as a serious shock. I started to feel confused. These days, I don’t look in the mirror very often.

A lot of people (very annoyingly) regard me as middle-class too.

But that’s different!!!

The walkers gathering here on the ridge belonged to that strata of English society for whom ‘being middle-class’ is a badge of identity. They build their middle-classness around them like a castle wall to defend against invasion or attack from the rest of the world - and that, in my book, is very bad news. I imagined an afternoon in the company of some bloke with full fat cheeks and debatable chins going on about how well his son's business was doing in Abu Dhabi, or waxing lyrical about the relative merits of this or that continental 4x4. As the latest arrival with a plummy voice stepped out of his Range Rover and began pulling on his walking boots, I was already asking him in my head how many Arabs his son was exploiting on low wages and how many motorcyclists he had mashed on his bull bars this week. Prejudiced? Me?

It's just that there is a certain kind of middle-class English accent that liberates great waves of hostility in me.

I realised that, right now, I was going through some sort of crisis.

I realised, too, that it had to stop before there were... consequences!

I started talking to myself sensibly and rationally and calmly about what I was feeling. I reminded myself that I was a tolerant person who generally got on with most people and… (oh god, it wasn’t working)…

LISTEN! (I was shouting at myself now.) Calm down! You’re behaving like a stupid stroppy teenager. Most people are fine once you stop treating them as stereotypes. Don’t prejudge. What the hell has got into you anyway?

But, I knew what had got into me. I could feel the beanie on my head shifting around as the horns started sliding out beneath it. Then, in the distance, I heard the roar of a sportsbike changing down to take a corner - and that was that! I suddenly felt furious. What the hell was I doing here, I asked myself, traipsing around the countryside with a lot of stiffs capable of boring the life out of a glass eyeball?

It is a very curious fact about prejudice that it can always find plenty of raw meat to feed itself on. These people, I noted, did not want to engage with the landscape, they wanted to tidy it up. Stiles were ‘rather muddy’, ‘too high’ or ‘badly designed’. Several of the walkers were using those alpine walking sticks that I despise so much. Weak dinner-table jokes began circulate... It was all so f****g bourgeois.

“Get on with it!” I wanted to scream. Get dirty. Enjoy yourselves! Take up the challenge, if that is what it is. STOP COMPLAINING!

And then, as I dropped back to wait for Anna while she went for a pee... it happened. A woman in a bright red top and with a ringingly cut-glass accent stepped forward and, in the extraordinarily polite but authorative manner of middle-class women, told me to carry on walking. She would wait for Anna…

I took a second for me to catch on. In her world - a world I had inadvertently wandered into - it was improper for a bloke to be waiting for a 'lady' while she relieved herself in the bushes. She would take charge and perform the required duties.

“Oh! For crying out loud!”

“Don’t you think that is a little medieval?” I asked, rather more loudly than was absolutely necessary. “Don’t you think it is positively pre-cambrian?”

She didn’t talk to me after that...

...which was a relief.

It was the turning point. After that, I began to relax. Having vented my spleen (and having felt immoderately pleased with myself for several minutes) I started to see just how funny this whole situation was. The ridiculousness of it came washing over me in great waves. Thank god that my moodiness, which was poisoning my whole day (and potentially, someone else's as well) was beginning to dissolve in silent laughter.

Soon after that I fell into conversation with Maggie, who, I discovered was neither elderly nor middle class nor boring nor cut-glass nor effete but shared a common Irish ancestry with me, enjoyed the same kind of films and had a similar love of being out of doors.

Gradually, individual human realities began to penetrate my awareness and the beanie settled back down on my head. This collectivised mass of elderly, middle-class walkers gradually became Pam and Isobel and Irene, and Bob and Jack and Mike. I started to like some of them, found them funny or interesting, and got occasionally animated when we talked. The warmth of the Kentish sun softened me. After months of confinement and dreary weather it was wonderful to feel the heat beaming down on my head and shoulders. And Kent itself, ‘the garden of England’, so full of plump May greenery, began, at last, to work its own natural magic.

Thorough it all, though, I still kept hankering to be out on the bike.
Last edited by sv-wolf on Tue Jun 03, 2008 10:20 pm, edited 6 times in total.
Hud

“Man has no right to kill his brother. It is no excuse that he does so in uniform: he only adds the infamy of servitude to the crime of murder.”
Percy Bysshe Shelley

SV-Wolf's Bike Blog
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