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Is Riding Like Walking: A path to more creative thinking?

March 24, 2023 by Scooter in the Sticks 16 Comments

Vespa GTS 250 scooter parked on a farm lane.
A stop on a recent late afternoon ride. Just some time on the road to think. Is riding like walking?

Ride or Walk?

I’ve long recognized feeling better when I go for a ride. The distance, duration, or destination don’t seem to matter.

A recent study from Stanford University suggests that walking led people to more creative thinking. I’ve read about writers being able to shake loose mental blocks and solve narrative problems while walking. So I’ve begun to wonder if riding is like walking.

The Stanford study showed from 80 to 100 percent of participants produced more creative ideas while walking compared to sitting. And sitting down afterward, that creative energy continued. I sit a lot. Perhaps if I take more regular walks my blog writing blocks may begin to dissolve.

When I ride my imagination definitely increases. Many of the ideas for blog and video topics surface during rides. Not so many when I sit at the keyboard.

Perhaps I just trying to rationalize more reasons to ride.

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Lost in Thought

October 26, 2018 by Scooter in the Sticks 14 Comments

Ride Free sign on the back of a Honda Metropolitan scooter.

In My Head

Finding this sign on the back of a Honda Metropolitan scooter had me wondering if my recent tendencies to be lost in thought were a result of not riding the Vespa enough.  It’s been sitting quietly in the garage sucking electrons from a Battery Tender for over a week now.  The weather has been fine and I certainly could make the time but still it sits.Continue Reading

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Comfort with Ambiguity

February 3, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 8 Comments

Vespa GTS scooter in snow covered forestWinter Scooter Riding is Confusing (but Beautiful)

Comfort with ambiguity caused me to think about riding the Vespa scooter in winter because at best all the elements are in play and in flux conspiring against you.  A slight change in weather has great influence over how you ride.  The uncertainly clearly leaves you in an ambiguous situation that defies the best planning.  No wonder most riders stay at home.


Comfort with Ambiguity

That phrase, comfort with ambiguity, has been with me for days.  Today, it’s there again before I physically start to move. My mind is already in another county.  I heard that phrase while watching a TED TALK by Cindy Meyers Foley , Executive Assistant Director and Director of Learning and Experience at the Columbus Museum of Art.

In discussing the challenges of teaching creativity she postulates that artists employ three essential tools that are critical to creativity — in art, business, engineering, medicine — any field.

They are:

  • Comfort with Ambiguity
  • Idea Generation
  • Transdisciplinary Research

Think about the people you know, the work you do and look in the mirror.  How do you score with these three?

Vespa GTS scooter covered with snow

No Snow

While today won’t look like this of my poor Vespa caught at work on a snowy day, it is supposed to rain.  Ride to work?  No.  Why?  Don’t want to. I have a lot to do and don’t need an extra dose of ambiguity.

Today, I’ll save the Vespa for another day.

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Other Forms of Travel

December 1, 2014 by Scooter in the Sticks 9 Comments

salt on drivewayHaving taken a few days of vacation time from work provided the potential opportunity to do some more serious scooter riding with the Vespa.  Sloth, weather and bad planning on my part eliminated my options revolving around the Vespa and relegated me to other forms of travel.

Weather interfered on a few mornings as the temperature dipped below freezing and transformed lingering slush and moisture into the kind of early season road ice that can give a scooter rider fits.  Standing in the driveway I could see the remains of salt still at work and with my Heidenau snow tires still sitting in the garage it would not be a great idea to go for a ride.

Even if the snow tires were mounted, the scooter headset is still dismantled as I await some additional parts for the heated grips.

State College, PennsylvaniaSunday morning in State College, Pennsylvania, the view down Allen Street as I make my way to Saint’s Cafe to join fellow riders and photographers Gordon Harkins and Paul Ruby.  Neither rode on this morning either though ice was not an issue with the temperature in the upper 30s.

As the morning unfolded I realized that there are more travel options than I often realize.  And many don’t involve motors or wheels.

Saint's Cafe, State College, PennsylvaniaFinding and establishing rituals is more important to me now than when I was younger and the world was something to consume and discard with each new day something to experience.  I don’t believe my experience was that robust or unique but it was easy to romanticize newness and adventure in ways I don’t now.  The younger me wanted to see every sight on a trip.  The older me wants to revisit the familiar over and over until I understand what I’m seeing.  Can’t say which is the better approach, only that they’re different and where I am now.

Saint’s Cafe has been the place I return to on most Sunday mornings for the past seven or eight years.  I wonder if I’m considered a regular and if I’ve become a character like those on Cheers.  I don’t think many people know my name but they do recognize the yellow riding jacket.

Tea and a Moleskine journalEarl Grey tea and a Moleskine journal — part of another long standing ritual.  The tea has remained consistent though my writing has fluctuated in the past couple years as I’m drawn more and more into the digital bog.  Digital is so alluring and easy that I’ve considered abandoning the pen and paper, film, darkroom and more.  Some lingering voice whispers for me to resist.  Part of the ritual of being at the cafe is to ponder the meaning of those whispers.

Kodak Tri-X film at Saint's CafeGordon returned some of the Kodak Tri-X film I lent him to shoot the Penn State football game.  I bet there were no other photographers along the sidelines shooting film, especially black and white film.  I’m not sure if he’s an enigma or an anachronism.  Either way, seeing that film sitting on the table triggered some powerful desires to pick up my Leica M6 again and make the photographs that so faithfully fulfilled the creative hole that lives in me.  Everything stands ready to do it save for the personal hesitation I shroud in excuses.

Film is not dead.  Merely tired.

Paul Ruby examining printsPaul and Gordon routinely show up with new work while I sink into my chair as a distant observer who remembers what it was like to be a photographer.  The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak.  Or maybe just over scheduled.

Gordon brought a lovely set of images he made of our friends and colleagues Stephen Dirado and Frank Armstrong at the opening of their exhibition in Massachusetts titled Regarding Landscape.

I can barely comprehend the work involved to produce another exhibition myself.  It’s been too long.

Greta Righter photoPaul also had a lovely set of images made over Thanksgiving at a friends place in the Catskills.  This print of his girlfriend’s daughter emerged from his backpack along with some others of the location. Paul is persistent in his image making and works hard to stay engaged with the camera, a critical component in being a good photographer.  He was working with an 8×10 Deardorff camera when I first met him and while today he’s fully digital his work sometimes echoes that large format approach.

Snow scene in Glen Spey New York

Paul put together this lovely composite image that for me creates a powerful feeling of that snow filled landscape.  I can’t wait to see a large incarnation in print.

Thinking about photographs and photography I realized that there are other ways to travel besides the physical act of moving through space.  Like Rod Serling often said, “You are traveling through another dimension, a dimension not only of sight and sound but of mind. A journey into a wondrous land of imagination. Next stop, the Twilight Zone!”

Perhaps that’s where I’m headed.

Gordon Harkins at Saint's CafeThe signs juxtaposed against Gordon was too much for me to resist.  He would be the first one to say he’s always going the wrong way.  While I don’t agree with the assessment it was a funny scene.

Feet on the floor.For an hour or so each week the three of us exist in close proximity, sharing ideas, problems, stories and lies, all part of a ritual that provides me with a great deal of satisfaction.  Seeing our feet on the floor reminded me of the closeness that’s developed because of our shared interests.

Breckenridge Brewery Christmas AleI still don’t have the scooter put together.  I’ve not shot any film.  I haven’t accomplished much of anything lately.  I did buy some craft beer.

Alcohol is no longer part of my life.  Not even a little due to the medication I take for my ankylosing spondylitis.  My doctor at Johns Hopkins grilled me about perils of even sips of beer or wine and how they can fry my liver.

Right now.  Fast.  Badly.

My luck it would come at a time when the craft brews exploded.  So while I can’t sample any of them I do enjoy looking at the labels and names and putting together little collections for friends and family that can still partake.  This Christmas Ale was one of the graphical items that caught my eye.

So that’s the news from Happy Valley.  Hopefully by the end of the week the scooter will be back on the road and life will be grand…

 

 

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Cold Riding

November 16, 2014 by Scooter in the Sticks 12 Comments

Vespa GTS scooter with chrome front rackCold and grey this morning for my weekly ride into Saint’s Cafe where I attempt to keep a creative flame alive — if only a flicker.  The 35F temperature provided another opportunity to try the new First Gear jacket and test my Gerbing electric gloves to make sure they’re working.  The jacket was great and has a little more room making it much easier to manage the wires to the gloves which must be fished through the sleeves. Cold riding requires me to embrace a gear ritual that at the beginning of each season seems unbearably tedious.  Here’s the ritual I have to learn (again) to be tolerant of:

  • Layer, layer, layer.  Depending on the temperature it can be up to five not counting the jacket and thermal liner.  It’s a damn nuisance.
  • Overpants. I hate fussing with the pants, those long zippers and then trying to get the Velcro secure at the ankles to keep the air from rushing up towards my bellybutton.
  • Wires and jacket.  I have to say the new jacket is much, much easier to manage the wires though they still hang up at times.
  • Balaclava. Think ski mask.  This thing keeps the frigid air knife from my jugular vein.  Absolutely essential when the temperature nears freezing and below.
  • Earplugs and helmet.  I like riding quiet and want to continue hearing birds sing hence the earplugs.  Foam, -32dB contractor plugs.  Then the helmet.  I hate getting this out of order by doing the gloves first only to find out I can’t secure the helmet with gloves on.  I’ve tried many, many times. (Insert appropriate curse word)
  • Gloves.  After securing the ends of the sleeves and having the wires in the right config, I attach each glove and then pull them on and make sure they are securely over the sleeves to make sure no cold air rushes up the arms.

I think I’m now ready to ride in the cold.  I do this every ride when the temperature is below 40F.  That’s a lot of rides.  This ritual requires about 10 minutes time.  After months of quick departures it is the longest 10 minutes of my life.  Luckily for me, it fades after a few weeks and seems simple and easy.

Scooter riding jackets hanging in the garageI have all three riding jackets hanging in the garage.  From the left is my mesh Triumph jacket, old First Gear, and new First Gear Kilimanjaro.  I’ve been considering the fate of the middle one.  Someone suggested I give it to Junior to lay on and soak up some daddy mojo.  I was leaning towards the landfill option.  I mush note a saw a comment on a forum about how much trouble Hi-Viz is to keep clean.  My first reaction was, “What?”.  After a moment to think I realized not everyone is like me and never washes their riding jacket.

Junior is going to love my old one.

Scene from Saint's Cafe in State College, PAGordon and I had a fine conversation on our collective creative trauma and entropy.  Neither of us had any solutions on how to flame the photo fires but it is nice to know you’re not alone.  He brought a new book produced by one of our graduate school advisors who has remained remarkably productive his entire career.  I suppose it’s how you get your work in the Whitney, MOMA, and receive Guggenheim Fellowships.  The book was a collection of photos made at proms and titled “Prom”.

Steve Williams with his Vespa scooterThe new jacket is brighter than the neon Public Parking sign across the street.  Chalk one up for modern pigment and textile technology.

Hi-Viz glow on Vespa scooter.

Hi-Viz changes the riding experience — take a look at the glow in the headset reflection. It’s like riding a Day-glo scooter.

Vespa scooter on dirt and gravel road

Wasn’t a lot of time for riding but I did manage to find some dirt and gravel roads to play on.  The little street tires are not ideally suited for this kind of riding nor are the shocks but it’s still fun to see what sort of trouble you can get into.  More on trouble in a future post.

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Archives

Snow: An Error in Judgment

Vespa GTS scooter covered in snow

A snowy ride home. (CLICK IMAGE)

A Sample of Vespa Camping

Vespa GTS scooter along Pine Creek

A trip north along Pine Creek. (CLICK IMAGE)

Riding in the Rain

Vespa GTS scooter in the rain

Thoughts on rain. (CLICK IMAGE)

Riding a BMW R nine T motorcycle

BMW RnineT motorcycle

Initial experience with a BMW. (CLICK IMAGE)

Demystifying the Piaggio MP3 scooter

Piaggio MP3 250 scooter

Understanding the MP3. (CLICK IMAGE)

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