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Thursday, April 28, 2016

Really?!



SO... it's 8 am Thursday morning, April 28th.





In fact just yesterday I was lamenting in this blog about the weather conditions being less than ideal to ride my bike.













Oh what a difference a handful of hours can make.

I wanted the weather to change and it did.  Should have kept my mouth shut it seems.  NO where was this in the forecast, yet here it is.














Wahhhh!  I'm putting porridge on the grocery list, just so I can cry in it, Wahhh!

Wednesday, April 27, 2016

C' Mon already!



WAKING up to wonderful sunny days each morning just succeeds in teasing the heck outa me.

From Retro to Modern!
Course as soon as I see the thermometer on the north east side Sunny side of our home, showing 12 maybe even 15C... only to have my hopes dashed when I get to the shaded side of the house, open the kitchen door and Wham, get a face-full of cold ice "hasn't yet melted in the Gulf," brisk northern wind.  Brrrr!

Check the weather network... it says 3 but feels like -6.

Of course last year at this time it was still snowing, so I guess I have little right to complain.

Needless to say, there hasn't been much in the way of motorcycling around my digs.  The odd time I've bundled up in my snowmobile gear and ventured out for 30 minutes, nearly freezing my family jewels in the process.  The Serow is the only thing I currently have on the road, well that and the Big Bear 350 for exploring around here.

Our access road has seen some improvement since highways sent out my old customer (there's lots of them around) Myles Hickey and his whopping big blade equipped monster John Deere.  We can actually 'drive' the PT Cruiser now.

Forecast for the remainder of the week is still showing under double digits although I have ridden a little bit with my latest addition to the two wheeled family.

Pretty isn't it!




New Glasgow
Milton Hall
 
AFTER selling my fun little retro Velo cc 150scooter last year,  and my Honda VTR 1000 just last weekend to a nice chap down east...



Sold the pretty VTR to make room in the garage for the pretty SYM

I have brought home a SYM (San Yang Motors) Citicom 300i.

Roger at ToyMaster was patient with my looking around, and was rewarded by selling me a very nice mid sized liquid cooled scooter, made for world consumption in Taiwan.  I looked at several used scoots but liked this one best.

The Citi has a top speed of approximately 140 kph (90mph) weighs just over 400 pounds which makes it light enough to push around the garage yet heavy enough that we won't get bounced around on the highway.
The Citicom has large wheels, handles more like a 400 pound touring bike than a small wheeled laid back, Maxi scooter. I even considered a used Burgman 650 but for the type of riding we will do, I felt the added horsepower and weight was not needed.  Sure a Burger 650 will easily top 100 mph (imagine doing the TON on a scooter)

I did a little testing with her the other day and found that 0-100 kph from a standing start could be covered in under 7 seconds, while the 40-100 and 80-120 passing time was right round 6 seconds. When you think about it, this is a 21horsepower CVT transmission, mid sized scooter... the acceleration is pretty even with most mid sized motorcycles.  Them numbers are pretty dang impressive.

I've ordered a bolt on rack, made a few small mods (like helmet hooks under the seat) and adapted an existing cordura bag I have, and I am looking forward to adding lots to the existing 3800 kilometers it's run up in 7 years.  I'll likely use my GIVI trunk for awhile or maybe add one and leave the one I have on my Thunderbird 900.

It's looking like a good year to ride the Maritimes.

Now if only the weather forecast would be favorable!
















Wednesday, April 20, 2016

It's not nice to gloat!


WHILE many of my 'friends' are broiling like shish-kabobs under a hot Western sun, I'm almost ecstatic that my thermometer has reached 5 degrees Celsius!!  Time for the beach! Almost, well not quite.

Brenda on the throne.

Reports of 30+ degrees in the BC interior and close to that in Southern Alberta and even similar temperatures in Northern Alberta leaves me feeling, well, left out in the cold.  I just stepped outside to have a look see where little Willy may be (I let him out earlier this morning) and realized that standing out there for even 60 seconds in flip flops and a housecoat was causing severe, como se dice... how do you say, shrinkage of my own little Willy. 

"I know there's cat food around here someplace"


Brrr!  The aforementioned 5C is actually misleading myself as that is in direct sunlight now for over an hour. 

"Oh this is much warmer, thanks dad."



I'm sure on the side of the house where shrinkage was occurring... it was much cooler.  In fact checking the official, reliable weather network tells me it's actually 0.

"I AM WILLY, HERE ME ROARrrrryawnnnn."



That'd be ZERO.  As in the range where water turns to ice.

Where's my long-johns anyway...

I picked up a couple of oil filters yesterday while in Metro (Summerside) for a scheduled oil change for the Big Bear, which, btw has been seeing a fair bit of use this winter.  The 4X4 uses the same filter as my XT 600, many sizes of Yamaha Virago/V Stars and others.  With limited snow cover and frozen fields and trails I have ridden around the hood in places that snow would normally exempt me from.  I even popped wife Brenda on the pillion/Queens throne the other day for a little video footage of the trails. 

The Bear is getting a little much deserved service today after which I will be bringing the TY Yamaha in for some mechanical work and spring service.  I plan on riding the 175 Trials bike much more this season, in fact on my to-do list for myself is learning to do wheelies!


Okay so I'm over sixty, why now you may ask... 






................zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz !

Not much snow this season.  Great for the Bear in the woods!

IN the days I was racing MX, I found out from the really fast guys like (Fast) Eddy MacDonald and Steen Hansen that you won races by keeping the front wheel on the ground, where it could actually steer and leave the showboating for the annual parade.  Now that I am not so serious about winning, and having lived 6 decades, I feel like I can take on a new challenge.  Besides, I'm living in PEI now where showboats are everywhere catching lobster. I always had a hidden admiration for those that could elevate the front wheel for hundreds of feet while my pitiful attempts yielded barely a dozen!

We could use some ofthat Global Warming effect around here.







Never the less, I have a great learning tool in the TY (and later in the season the TL) 

The little Yamaha is battered from a very rough almost East Hasting's like hard life, but as such a dropsy/oopsie here and there isn't gonna kill it right.

So, I have work to do today, heaven knows where I would find time to work if I weren't retired, there's too much to do around here anyway.

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Dreamin'







WHAT else can you do, when the weather is raining one day turning my access road to mud, snowing the next with just enough sunshine in between to ward off thoughts of stepping off a cliff.

The 225 is officially 24 years old, the XT600, twenty six!

The DT 50 was born in Hamamatsu in 1989.

And those are just my 'new bikes'

I appreciate my machinery, keep them running well and talking to them on cold winter nights, much better since moving to the Island, at least my garage is under the house and I don't have to be standing barelegged with cold air swooping up my housecoat like I did in Calgary.

Yes, I have plans, I always manage to cobble something together, like for instance, this time last year I was prepping my gear to head West for what turned into an epic and fitting 40th anniversary of the first XC ride in '75.  Okay so I flew out there but then managed to ride Liz's LS 650 SAVAGE almost 4500 km, adding a few hundred more on Ron's V Strom and Burgman 650.  Am I glad I didn't actually 'ride' across the country... you bet!  After all Canada is a huge space and much of it simply road.

I got to visit with many many friends along the way some of whom I wouldn't have had time for had I chose to ride my own V Strom from the Island and back.  At our age, me thinks its best to visit with Rusty and Ron, Tom and Liz, Kazue, Dan, my sister and John rather than sing to myself in my helmet for 10,000 lonely kilometers, don't you?

Somewhere in the Rockies 2015 on the Yellowhead.


... and here we are in 2016.  Can you believe that.  It's two thousand and sixteen.  What would George Orwell have thought when he wrote "1984" I've got motorbikes older than that!

Somehow even saying "2016" sounds like some far fetched futuristic, Star Trek like science fiction date in time, when humans had created flying drones, flip phones, talking screens telling me to 'turn right in 400 meters.'  Things have gotten so complex, not only a computer in every home but several!

Maybe that's why I appreciate so much checking the valves on my 225 or changing an oil seal on my TY 175.  Maybe it's something about getting in there, fingers greasy and stains on my jeans.  It's still something I can do myself, without calling a technician in.  You see, never in my wildest dreams when I was 10 would I have thought I'd have done all the things I have by the time I was 60.  In fact even the number was inconceivable at that age.  Hell, I thought my father old at 45... what did I know.

Dreaming is good, dreaming is gold.

Sure I still dream of one more ride in the Baja peninsula, maybe with niece Cindy, or doing the Trans Lab before it's all paved over, maybe going back to Europe and this time ride a scooter to Croatia or Greece or Elba or the south of Spain and  just staying there in a cottage on the beach.

On the other hand, we're surrounded by beaches right here on the Island, fabulous beaches.  Alright there are no topless women at Twin Shores as there were in Istrea but the beaches themselves are fabulous.

Within 500 km of where I live, there is history, great back roads both paved and not, the Atlantic proper is but a stones throw away in Nova Scotia and from there you can practically see Portugal!

I'll admit, I've slowed down some the last few years and proud of it.  Sometimes I'll do twenty five laps on my "BIG TRACK" sometimes ten is enough.  In fact sometimes it's enough to just wander through the trails and woods as Brenda and I did yesterday...

I'm still pondering a Moto magazine of some form, wondering if its really something I 'want to do'?  It could be done, could be fun doing it and could give me a broader forum than this blog.  On the other hand, there would be work involved and even though some of that work would be fun stuff, I can do the fun stuff any day of the week on my own.  I have nothing to prove to myself nor anyone else at this point, that I guess comes with age and experience.

I brought a National Motorcycle Training program to Fort Mac during the 70's, then to PEI.  Was heavily involved in getting Moto X going there as well as here, moved across the country at 26 and ran a successful dealership in three cities.  Ridden in Baja 12 times, crossed Canada 12 times.  I've raised two young women who are now extending the family further, should be a grand dad any day now, courtesy of Lisa and Rick.  Holly and Kevin will be getting hitched here on the Island in a few months and no doubt thinking of starting their own families.

Do I have anything left to prove... even to myself?

Let me see, at one point I was planning an around the world solo motorcycle ride, I'd even chosen a KLR as my transport and planned a cool "side car" that would carry my spares and could be mounted on the side of the bikes or towed behind.  Those plans were about 51% complete when I was rear ended in Calgary and physically have never quite recovered.

Right now, I am looking out my window of the home I designed myself here in Spring Valley.  Rained most of the night, but should be slightly above zero today.  Wasn't much of a winter but between those bastard loggers that clear cut across from us and left our access road in a mud rut shambles, and spring teasing us every day, I am getting short of patience.

I've been out to the highway (and beyond) on my Serow recently but not a chance I would attempt getting out with the VTR or T Bird, or even the V Strom.  Wanting to pick up the new addition to the two wheeled fleet but of course can't even get it in much less out to ride.

So... once again I find myself somewhat impatiently waiting and waiting, waiting for mother earth to warm us up, for highways to repair our road and for the snow to be gone from the fields and woods.

Dreaming...

Kensington PEI 2016