I went out for a motorbike ride today with friends Neil and Bill. Other than being a bit windy it was a great day for a ride. Bill has a Kawaski 800 Vulcan and Neil is 3 sleeps from taking a riding course, then off for his bike licence; hence Neil being a passenger with Bill.
After meeting for breakfast we headed north (ne & nw) along the fringe of the city. Two gas stops later, one suntan lotion stop, one beer stop and a mid afternoon snack stop, seven hours had passed and the weather was cooling down. Oh yes, Bill decided not to get gas and ran out.
A reserve tank is a wonderful thing. It has saved my ass several times and mostly on the highway. Nothing like the thrill of passing an 18-wheeler on the highway, on a windy day and running out of gas just as your looking up to wave at the driver.
Heading south this time, Gord and I took a ride to Kalispel, Montana in early July. Gord had never been through Glacier National Park so we ventured the Road To The Sun. I think the peak mountain drop IF you were to go over the barely guarded cliff would have you plummet 10,000 feet, to what might be considered your death.
On a more plausible tone, while riding up and down both sides you can literally reach out and touch the ice cold water falling off the mountains. It was somewhere in the vicinity of 100 degrees and yet you are looking at blankets of snow on the mountains beside you. The view and the smell in the air is literally breathtaking. If you are the motorbike enthusiast, it is a must see.
Going futher south last year, there were several of us who rode through a great history lesson: Our roadtrip to Sturgis, South Dakota. It was simiply incredible the number of people we met on a 4,000+ km trip. We ventured on the back highways to avoid the main highway obstacles, to take advantage of frequent stops and ride at lower speeds in order to take it all in.
We ended up leaving one of our (younger) friends in Sturgis because we were old and boring. Not to mention the fact that she shares my opinion on camping. My translation is Motel. Well, apparently not with the friends I now bike with. Shit, I've moved them from pulling over and sleeping in fields to at least staying in a campsite where a shower is possible at the end of the day.
Our friend made it home safely. It was odd for Gord to explain to Customs why he had three pairs of stilouettes in his saddle bags and no women on the back.
Two years previous to that, there were three of us who headed to Sturgis. This was my first trip to Sturgis. Going through Big Sky Country (AKA Montanna) was a pinch me moment. The skies are so incredibly open and the temperatures south of the border are a bikers dream.
Crossing the US border is good for two things...buying beer at the gas station and going without a helmet. Hmmmm, nothing better than having the wind blowing through your hair. We only stop every 1.5 hours for a frosty cold 3% alcohol beer...you know US beer.
I had two moments...
First one was when I looked down at something on my leg and my $18 sunglasses flew off my face. I liked my $18 sunglasses so much that I decided to to a u-turn on the highway without being able to see over the hill I was on. Call me stupid. Seriously, call me stupid. It gets better...I was also carrying one of my riding partners packs because his bike was falling apart (Harley). I had stuff packed on my handle bars and behind me.
My load on the back was shifting earlier that day and I stopped a couple of times to adjust. When I did my 5km/hr u-turn, the load on the back shifted and my normal centre of gravity was no more. The bike went down right in the middle on the yellow line. My heart started to race, I looked up and saw that I could really see nothing because I was on a hill and simply walked away from the bike.
In seconds, my friends were there and one of them picked up my bike and brought it to the side of the road. There was a fellow who had came over the hill on his bike just as I was dropping mine and he returned...with hi Auzzie accent pulled up to us on the side of the road and said 'shiny side up eh'. We all laughed and off we all went.
My second little incident was at Mount Rushmore. We were sitting at a T-intersection waiting for an opportunity to turn out left onto the highway. After waiting and waiting and waiting and waiting, I guess that I started to focus on clearing one direction only of the oncoming traffic.
I saw an opening and drove out...my friends followed. I immediately pulled over and went all weak from an adrelin rush. The problem being is that I did not look both ways prior to pulling out, I only looked one way and pulled out. The thought of what could have happend (being killed by a car coming from the direction I was not looking into) was overwhelming.
I shared the 'holy fuck what did I just do' with my riding partners. One of them who is a 25+ year vetern rider said that he was watching me and realized that I was not looking both ways. He said that he would have yelled at me or cut me off. I don't like to think about the whatifs but I often rewind that moment in my brain when I am out riding and try to turn all these (mis)fortunes into strong lessons.
I learned many lessons on that trip and fortunately lived to tell the stories. The good news is that we are heading out this week on another seven day biking adventure. Not sure where we are headed but what I do know is this...
LIKE MOST GREAT THINGS IN LIFE, IT IS NEVER ABOUT THE DESTINATION, IT'S ALL ABOUT THE JOURNEY.