After a long absence from the back of the Vespa is was good to be on the road again on a Saturday morning. Spring is sweeping through the valley and the scent of fresh turned earth filled the cool air. The chill from the ride was opposed by the fire to be riding again, the interconnected opposing forces of physical cold and psychic heat, a yin and yang experience. I didn’t know it at the time but this philosophical opposition would raise it’s head again later in the ride in a more dramatic and challenging fashion.
As the tempo of the work week slowly unwound the little details of life began to emerge. Or at least I noticed them. The lone tree in the middle of a field, that tree left behind to give a team of plow horses a place to rest under the noon day sun. On the Vespa, riding slowly through the countryside, I become more willing to stop and smell the roses.
The roads in Penns Valley meander through farms and villages; the emptiness at times allowing a fantasy of isolation and aloneness I usually associate with the West.
I feel as if I’ve stepped into a scene from an LL Bean catalog shoot as I make my way to a chair to eat and make some notes in my journal. For a moment a wave of nostalgic sadness sweeps over me as I realize that I grew up in a time when spaces like these were real and not replicas. Hunting camps, sportsman’s clubs, places my father took me. Suddenly I feel old and at the same time alive, memories dancing like flames across a broad tapestry of experience.
A great place to pause the ride and have breakfast. While sitting in that room I knew with certainty that I would not be there without the Vespa. The ride — the capital “R” ride — brings forth an experience that would otherwise lay dormant within the plain monotony of an automobile.
Flying, that’s what’s it’s like, riding along a sweep of asphalt through the forest. Onward, forward, ahead and beyond. It’s good to be riding.
On the road again, the scooter running faster and smoother than I remember. Anything is possible as I turn off the main road to ride over the mountain. Not far from this spot the road turns to gravel and dirt and isn’t maintained through the winter — the promise of a more challenging ride on the Vespa.
And then, from the blue, the scooter stalls. Restart, ride a few hundred feet and the engine cuts out again. Not wanting to engage any mechanical issues alone on a mountain road I turn around and head for home.
Minutes later something isn’t right — engine cuts out, restart, ride for a few moments and lose power. Repeat the sequence again. Each time the riding interval shortens until the scooter finally stops for good. A quick survey of the engine reveals the sparkplug wire has burnt off again where the wire meets the sparkplug boot. I know how to replace the wire but no extra on hand. The only course of action is to sit along the road, against a utility pole, and make the call.
So another kind of riding adventure began. I always wondered how the whole “broke down along the road” thing worked. Now I know. The scooter is with the dealer and I’ll await the mechanic’s verdict on what happens next. The yin and yang of riding. Strangely, I had fun throughout.
borgbike says
no
bob skoot says
Steve:
I JUST KNEW IT ! You shouldn’t have put in the NEW battery.
It had too many AMPS for the spark plug
bob
Riding the Wet Coast
Coop a.k.a. Coopdway says
“Strangely, I had fun throughout.”
This or something very close to it was what I expected and then received at the end. I’ve known and hope to know again the very same.
Steve Williams says
borgbike: No…. I think I said that at some point.
Steve Williams says
bob skoot: I wish that were the answer but it is the right battery. Has to be. Can’t possibly be the battery.
Regardless, I am bowing to the technician and will patiently awake the return of my scooter and the arrival of a MacBook Air…
Steve Williams says
Coop: What can you do….? Things happen and life is better when you go with the flow as best you can. Or at least make really informed decisions on which occasions to make a stand, “I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore!”.
This wasn’t one of those times.
RichardM says
That is a really strange failure. Is it from heat or vibration?
VStar Lady says
It’s a great age we live in when a cell phone brings roadside assistance. Might as well just go with the flow. Could be a lot worse. Bummer though.
Charlie6 says
dang Steve, that’s some bad luck! I’m curious to see what the diagnosis is as well.
dom
kz1000st says
The high tension wire is caught on something and pulling out of the cap. Remember scooter engines pivot up and down and a snagged wire will not move with it.
Poppawheelie says
I’m going to go to that place, Inglebean Coffee House.
Steve Williams says
RichardM: Turns out I botched the installation of the wire. See most recent post for details and apology…
Steve Williams says
VStarLady: Cellphones have changed the experience of breaking down along the road. At least in the East. Definitely makes it easy to deal with.
Steve Williams says
Charlie6: Remember when I had the fuel levers in the wrong position on your BMW? Well, I repeated my stupidity with the wire. See recent post.
You should be getting near the Alaska border soon.
Steve Williams says
kz1000st: The engine does pivot and will pull out if the wire isn’t routed correctly OR in my case you neglect to tighten the wire in the boot……
Steve Williams says
Poppawheelie: The Inglebean Coffee House is a nice addition to the potential stopping places in that part of the valley.