Saturday, October 26, 2013

Piston and Pints Extravaganza


I'm one lazy blogger and when I catch up it can often mean a boatload of photos with little text, description or commentary.  Such is the case with some images of a Piston and Pints gathering from earlier this month AND images made today at the final moto hang cookout.

Couldn't resist photographing the tank on this vintage Royal Enfield.  How often do you get to see one anymore.  The rider, I did have his name written down somewhere along with all the technical details about the bike, rode in from Beford, Pennsylvania, about 90 minutes south.  Along with the Enfield he had some other vintage British bikes.  Perhaps sometime in the future we'll have the chance to see them.




Paul Ruby interrogates, I mean interviews the owner of the Enfield...



Another vintage bike -- a Harley Davidson that doesn't rattle your fillings when it goes by.




Early in the evening.  Ken Hull's trials bike in the foreground.  Looks uncomfortable for long trips.




A Triumph and a Vespa.  Doesn't get much better than that.



Piston and Pints executive board and think tank members stand aside and ponder deep thoughts.



Always at least one two-stroke machine at the event.  The sound reminds me of my youth...



Romance or just jostling for position to admire the Royal Enfield???



Ken Hull leads Mario towards his first ride on a full sized motorcycle (I think).



I should have shot video.  The results -- Mario was ripping around the yard and then off down the alley.  Not sure I saw him return...




I'll end this group with "a good time was had by all..."


October 26 Moto Hang Party



Hot Italian sausage from Hogs Galore was on the menu today along with a host of other fine foods.  Ken is just beginning to get things going...

A lot of pictures, it's late, I'm tired, so I will just post them here.  Visit the Scooter in the Sticks Facebook page if you need to share or tag pictures.  I think that's how it works.

























Friday, October 18, 2013

Strangeness and Murk


There's a full moon overhead and the plaintive sound of a worried dog drifts in the window along with the cool, damp air.  Something is happening as the world resigns itself to the coming of winter. Everywhere there are signs of the strangeness that seems to follow the murk.

Where has the light gone?



Historic Boalsburg absorbs the changing of the season and soon will be looking towards its Victorian celebration of Christmas.  Dead leaves are beginning to pile on the road offering unsuspecting riders a slippery surprise if they're not careful.

This Vespa parking space is just a couple hundred feet from Ken Hull's Moto Hang Lounge -- home of Pistons and Pints.



Halloween isn't far off and the artist's in State College, Pennsylvania seem to be embracing the chaos of the season.  Unfortunately, the model in this painting must have been riding without a helmet, something every rider should think hard about before pressing the starter button lest you look like part of the Halloween landscape.




Junior seems unfazed by the change in the earth's energy and whiles away his days eating, sleeping and chasing women when he can.  Border Collie's are fast but so are Belgian Sheepdogs.  Try as she might she just couldn't open any distance between herself and his ardent pursuit.  Junior's no dummy though -- he's hedged his bets by carrying a tennis ball on the chase should there be a change of plans.

Somehow, looking at this picture, I keep thinking of Jack Riepe...



Riding in the murk -- I have to admit that I love it.  The gray, dark, damp days where the sun struggles to be seen.  Even short rides can turn into gothic novels.  Mount Nittany, an icon of Penn State, remains a fascinating subject to me, not unlike the Vespa itself.  Not sure why, I just keeping running the camera in it's direction.



Trips to Saint's Cafe are far more satisfying when the world feels forbidding, when the fading light along forested roads reveal shadows of phantoms and ghosts and others of my twisting imagination.  As Gordon talks with another patron I could not help think of how the place could be a scene from Dark Shadows and at any moment Barnabas Collins would join us for tea.

The delusion flew as I realized Collins is a vampire and he wouldn't be joining us in the daylight.



Thankfully, I have a good dog to keep me safe and grounded lest the season sweep me deep into the eerie terrain of mystical stories where much seems possible.  And just as it was at 9 or 10, I loved this time of year when spooks and demons became as real as Superman and the Man from U.N.C.L.E.

And now, as then, my trusty dog stayed close to keep the bogeyman at bay...

Friday, October 11, 2013

Attitude Adjustment: Riding at the End of the Week


I needed to be out in the world, riding, or making photographs, I'm not sure which.  The mist cum rain shrouded the mountains in a dark gloom.  Seven miles from home, the gray ribbon of limestone and mud flows through stands of White Pine and hemlock, oak and ash trees creating a sensual canvas of sight and smell that I can't resist.  Triggering those senses serves to reset a mind and body drawn thin from a week of work.



My first visit to this part of Rothrock State Forest came over 40 years ago when I drove a Volkswagen Beetle along the roads I continue to prowl on the Vespa.  Thinking about the vehicles I have owned during my life I see a trend of spartan power and performance right up to the Honda Fit sitting in the driveway now.



The rain was light, just enough moisture to keep the camera wet and continually wiping the helmet visor with my glove.  When I traverse these kinds of roads, especially when wet, I find myself wishing I had more aggressive tires.  Too early for the Heidenau winter tires and too late to change out the summer ones.  Even so, I can safely manage the scooter from 25 to 40mph depending on the amount of loose gravel, washboard sections, mud or crown height.  Riding a scooter on wet gravel roads is a different piece of business from riding a motorcycle.

I suppose it's part of the mental attraction to a ride serving now purpose beyond hitting the reset switch in my brain and perhaps tease the lizard brain.



Central Pennsylvania is a beautiful place in the fall.  Riding through the woods I expected to see a black bear or two loping along the road or crossing in front of me.  I've seen it before on foot or in the car.

But nothing this evening, just a few deer and the odd squirrel.  It's cold enough now I don't worry about rattlesnakes as I tromp through the weeds and brush.  The deer tick is the only evil worth paying attention to at the moment.



The Vespa can go just about anywhere a motorcycle can.  Perhaps not as fast or with the same mechanical prowess, but it is a capable little machine.  At least until you encounter water.

I expected to see pools of water but hoped to avoid any flooded areas which I did.  But the low air intake on the scooter makes it a poor candidate for any sort of foolishness involving water or deep mud encounters.  Doesn't take much liquid or debris being sucked into the engine to cut a ride short.

Possibly permanently.

I make sure to avoid water where possible and to absolutely know how deep a murky flow is before attempting any riding heroics.



My hope for drama in the sky with fog in the valley were dashed as I looked east towards Detweiler Natural Area and the Seven Mountains beyond.  Not even an eagle soaring overhead or a screech owl to serenade me before turning towards home.



As the day began to fade my eyes adjusted for darting deer and the black bear I still hoped to see. I'm amazed at how well a ride continues to demonstrate a unique power to transform my attitude and outlook on life.

Sitting at home now thinking of other rides and what the next will bring.  Until then a cup of tea and thoughts of dinner will transform the world again...

Thursday, October 10, 2013

Aging and Riding a Vespa


Autumn is for the mind and spirit, the senses taking in the changing of the world.  At no point during the year do I feel so exhilarated and sad at once.  Falling leaves a sharp reminder of the impermanence of life yet the sparkling thrill of feeling alive amidst the sudden sea of color and fragrance makes this time a gift.  Standing at the edge of the road I felt oddly parallel to the world around me, my body in sync with the autumn as I paused at the beginning of a ride to visit a rheumatologist at Johns Hopkins in Baltimore.



Still not sure why I chose to make this trip on the Vespa.  By car on the freeway I can drone along at 75mph for four hours to make my appointment.  The empty stretches of road are a moving meditation for the eye and the soul.  Even though this trip would take 7 hours, an accurate estimate based on an assessment of the route and my propensity to stop to look, listen and make a picture.  Or two.



My complaint is psoriatic arthritis, an inflammatory disease affecting the joints for which there is no cure.  Looking at the field of corn transitioning into something else I couldn't help but see my own transition.  One day healthy and the next barely able to walk.  That was two years ago and I've been fortunate to find control of the symptoms with the tamest of the chemical interventions.  Genes and luck may keep my liver intact for a long time and the ability to lead a more or less normal life for an aging man.



A handful over 200 miles separated home from Johns Hopkins.  Paul Ruby and I both now wrestle with the various annoying maladies that grow more common with aging.  Watching Paul stretch on his BMW had me asking myself when stretching wouldn't be enough for me.  Precisely when would I know that I can't ride anymore?  And would my willingness to stop arrive at the same time?

The kinds of questions that are perfect mind puzzles on a long ride through a quiet countryside and if not interrupted can turn gloomy.



No wonder why the National Military Park at Gettysburg seems eerie.  Though I have to add that more than once I have wandered through the Devil's Den or along Little Roundtop along and sensed a restless energy among the rocks.

Paul and I paused only for a few moments along the road — all access to the park closed due to the shutdown of the federal government.



And then the first leg of the trip was over and I found myself sitting once again in the Arthritis Center filling out forms, submitting to some biometric tests, and going over the results of a series of blood tests I had done a couple weeks earlier.

Executive summary — I'll live to ride another day though admonished to take better care of diet and exercise lest other insidious metabolic tragedies rear their heads.

I want chocolate so bad right now while I'm typing that I can barely concentrate.



Camping outside Baltimore in Patapsco State Park.  I needed to sleep on the ground again for some reason I think is related to convincing myself that I still have a few years of life in me.  Or maybe it's just a cheap refusal to spend more money to sleep in a motel and worry about bedbugs.

The front rack on the Vespa was handy to carry a sleeping bag and tent and I was pleased I remembered how to put the think up.

It was a fine campsite.



The morning came quickly.  Paul spent a few moments with a book while I took one last look with the camera before we began the ride home.



Breakfast, ice water for the road, and a few minutes of charge time for the iPhone as Paul and I reflected on our collective health or lack thereof.  I can hear my father, "It's hell to get old boy.".

I understand the joke.



I've not ridden across the border from Maryland into Pennsylvania in the Appalachian Mountains.  It's beautiful and left me wishing I could spend days rather than hours exploring.

That's a fine desire.



Two days and 440 miles of riding on backroads and byways at leisurely velocities.  It's the perfect formula for the Vespa and I.  I think Paul was comfortable as well and appreciated the chance to embrace slow travel.




A week has passed and autumn is in full bloom.  The desire to ride is strong and the roads are calling.

I wonder how many rides are left...