Scooter in the Sticks

Exploring life on a Vespa Scooter and Royal Enfield Himalayan motorcycle.

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Every Leaf Speaks Bliss

November 1, 2015 by Scooter in the Sticks 22 Comments

Belgian Sheepdog running in the gardenA riding intermission pushed other things into awareness.  Autumn on the road gave way to the dogs racing through the garden as I pondered the bright yellow Sassafras leaves with my camera.  The desire to ride despite a flare of an old back injury finally receded when I surrendered to a battle I could not win on my schedule. And now October has faded into November. Every leaf speaks bliss when I take time to pay attention.

Autumn has always generated a nostalgic energy which colors my thoughts.  As a child I recognized the change and loss the came with the season.  Now I connect it with the natural cycle of life — in the mirror I see autumn.  My body whispers of changes.

Vespa GTS scooter in central PennsylvaniaA first ride since an old back injury flared and sidelined the Vespa.  Pushing the scooter out of the garage hinted of improvement and by the time I stopped to make a photograph I could assess the limits of body and mind.

Junior, a male Belgian SheepdogJunior, our seven year old Belgian Sheepdog (with faulty ears), saw more of me the past two weeks.  While I couldn’t ride I could still toss a tennis ball and reach the dog cookies on the counter.  It’s easy to understand the positive affect a dog can have on people suffering from myriad ailments.

Thank you Junior.

Vespa GTS scooter in farm field

The biggest physical challenge to riding is sudden, jarring movements.  The kind of indifferent attitude I had to where I rode and parked the scooter now is a more careful, studied act.  I don’t want to pull the scooter on and off the centerstand several times looking for solid ground.  My back demands I do it once.

It was cold during the ride — 37F when I departed.  The heavy sky didn’t seem to matter save for add mood to the morning.  Any fear I had of not being as cold tolerant after the heart attack seems unfounded.  I remained warm save for the cold air striking my neck which my misplaced balaclava would normally protect and the expected cold hands.

Female Belgian SheepdogLily is no Junior.  Not yet at least.  At almost 10 months old she’s full of energy and has little time to comfort and console.  She will ram into you at breakneck speeds or relentlessly remind you of the need to throw the ball, throw the ball again, retrieve a treat, serve some food, throw a ball, throw a ball…

At least you feel needed.

Vespa GTS scooter on gravel roadI’ve missed most of the flaming foliage this year.  Riding through the forest I could see much of the canopy is now on the ground.  Riding on the gravel roads introduced occasional ruts that provided striking reminders of my back.  Strong enough to have me make a note to self: “No off-pavement riding for awhile”.

Vespa GTS scooter in Bellefonte, PennsylvaniaBy the time I reached Bellefonte, Pennsylvania I had meandered for about thirty miles and decided my hands were cold enough to enjoy a cup of hot tea.  I still love the transition from bracing chill to cozy coffee shop.

Kool Beans Coffee and TeaCool Beans Coffee and Tea provided a welcome respite from the riding experiment and enough distance from the gathered throng of Penn State football fans gathered just ten miles away.

Earl Grey tea at Kool Beans CafeMy friend Paul (somewhere in Kansas) is on his way to New Mexico with his Ducati in the back of his truck.  He sent an email in response to a query about the trip and he said he was sitting in a cafe, drinking his coffee and reading his book.  He’s trying to have no expectations and just do whatever he wants when he wants.  Sitting in Cool Beans I was thinking of how difficult it is to reach that state.

Vespa GTS scooter on autumn roadMoments after making this photograph I learned a lesson about bad habits — leaving the engine running while stopping for a picture.  That habit started some years ago when I was riding with a suspect battery which left me stranded a few times.  I started not turning off the engine.  Seems to work fine right?

As I walked back to the Vespa I could see it slowly start to fall over.  With my camera in one hand I grabbed the grip with the other — the throttle grip.  I wondered why the engine was revving so high and suddenly realized as the scooter fell more my hold on the throttle was applying more fuel.  Had it come off the centerstand the scooter would have scooted right across the road.

My pride would have been injured at the very least.

Vespa GTS scooter on winding country roadSo my riding experiment yielded useful data.  My back is improving but not enough to ride with reckless abandon.  I don’t seem to be less cold tolerant.  And I’ve learned to shut off the engine when I park the Vespa.  Add that to the still lovely riding landscape and it was a pretty good ride.

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The Joy of Less

October 6, 2015 by Scooter in the Sticks 24 Comments

Cover of The Joy of Less by Francine JayI’m no minimalist.  I’m haunted by stuff.

Francine Jay’s book The Joy of Less describes how stuff can weigh you down.  Her advice to imagine all your possessions being chained to your waist makes me think of Jacob Marley’s ghost in A Christmas Carol weighed down by the mess he crafted in life.  I’ve spent a lifetime trying to sort out my relationship with stuff.  Jay’s book offers a glimmer of hope that things can change.

If you’re wrestling with your own stuff, check out the book…  The Joy of Less.

Vespa GTS scooter on rural roadRiding the Vespa scooter is an exercise in simplicity of which I’m reminded each time I’m on the road.  Last week on the way to work I considered my two-wheeled needs against my two-wheeled desires.  Desire has led me down dark paths and left me strangled by things I don’t need or want.  I don’t need anything other than the Vespa right now.  More stuff never got me anywhere. Recognizing desire for what it is may save my soul.  Or at least many dollars…

misty landscapeI only have a vague idea of what minimalism might be in my life.  Visually, I’ve always been drawn to scenes like this that I saw last week during my ride to work — empty places constructed of simple elements of shape, color and texture.  With lots of stuff in my space, at home and at work, nothing is simple.  I’m faced with a scream of chaotic material.

Vespa GTS scooter and Mt. Nittany in the rainRain can wash the world clean — in a figurative sense at least.  Noise and activity is scaled back as a large part of daily living retreats toward shelter.  On the road I’m left with the scooter and my thoughts.  Sitting in my office I look around and see all the things that require attention — if only to throw them away.  Postpone for a day and the collection grows.

foggy, misty landscape near Linden Hall, PennsylvaniaIs it a coincidence so few people appear in my photographs?  Or in my life?  There was a time when I would self-identify as shy.  Or anti-social.  Now I recognize a strong need to be alone; with my thoughts.  Not that I’m a deep thinker, but if I allow my thoughts to become as cluttered as the spaces around me, I’ll lose my mind.  It will become, as a friend likes to describe things gone awry, a shit show.

Shit show.

Vespa GTS scooter on the roadI don’t know what’s ahead.  I’ve shed my Leica rangefinder camera system.  A mountain of photography books will be next along with clothes and shoes that should have been disposed of years ago.  Tools and gadgets and a host of camping and backpacking gear silently await a similar fate.

Francine Jay lit a fuse with her book.  Finally, after all these years, maybe there is some freedom on the road ahead.

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Are Scooter Riders Different?

September 26, 2015 by Scooter in the Sticks 13 Comments

Are scooter riders different?

The moto-culture might suggest certain kinds of people are attracted to certain types of machines.  The man or woman who finds themselves prowling the Harley Davidson showroom being a world away from another couple wandering through their local Vespa dealership. My own observations lead me to believe any differences have less to do with machinery and more to do with the innate personality traits of individuals.

The video below depicts a love relationship with a scooter rider but it could just as easily have unfolded for the right Ducati, Harley or Suzuki rider.

I have two dogs sleeping at my feet while I write.  My heart swells at the connection we have but there’s always a hint of sadness in recognition of the lightning fast speed at which their lives unfold.  I see the looks on their faces when I ride to work and if I let them I bet they would run after me as far as their legs could take them.  Much like the goose flying along with the scooter.

Is their a goose in your life?

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Simplifying Life

September 15, 2015 by Scooter in the Sticks 12 Comments

Our life is frittered away by detail… simplify, simplify.
Henry David Thoreau

Steve Williams with Leica M6Since the late 1990s I’ve been carrying a Leica M6 camera.  It was the perfect tool for the photographic projects I was working on and together we made thousands and thousands of negatives.  I described the camera as “beloved”.

This past weekend I sold it, a gesture toward simplifying life.

Leica M6 with Tri-X film and contact sheetsThe camera is haunted by memories.  Those memories trigger a nostalgic reaction that makes decisions to dispose of things difficult.  For the past couple of years it sat in it’s Domke satchel waiting for another project to come to life even though I knew that wasn’t going to happen.

I almost kept it.  Going through contact sheets and finished prints I was swept up into those moments in silver that I relived in my head.  How could I abandon them?

Leica box in the darkroomStanding in the darkroom I could see the past; the Leica, the image I made in the early 1970s in my apartment, the Ben Hur book I bought at the Warner Theater in the early 1960s.  Details, evidence of my existence are everywhere.  They have weight and I feel it.

The Leica couldn’t sit quietly in the cupboard.  I thought about it.  Felt bad about it.  Made plans to use it.  It consumed energy.  It had to go.

And it has.

Vespa GTS scooter in black and white printWhen Vespa scooters entered by life the world I was experiencing changed as did the photographic needs that arose.  The Leica fell into disuse as digital photography showed its value.  And it wasn’t long before Scooter in the Sticks was born, a different project with different needs, that relegated the Leica into memory.

When I sealed the deal to sell it I only felt relief.  It was one less thing I whispering in my head.

For me, Thoreau was right, life does get frittered away by the little details.  I’m making an effort to simplify life.

Books are next.

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Heart of the Sunrise

August 28, 2015 by Scooter in the Sticks 8 Comments

Sunrise over central PennsylvaniaI made this photograph a few days ago with my iPhone while walking with the dogs at sunrise.  For the past week, work and other activities have kept the Vespa mostly at home save for a handful of errands and a single ride to work.

Like riding the scooter, I find myself choosing walks that allow me to move toward the heart of the sunrise.  On the road the dazzling light impairs vision often requiring a hand up in front of the rising sun.  While walking eyes are down or look off to the left or right.  But I don’t turn away.

There’s a magical energy at sunrise — at least that’s what I tell myself.  A slow heating and rise in energy, a stronger stride, a taller stance, and the dogs run wildly around me in what I can only believe is a common celebration of a new day.

So I haven’t been riding as much lately.

Life is still sweet.

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Snow: An Error in Judgment

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A Sample of Vespa Camping

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Demystifying the Piaggio MP3 scooter

Piaggio MP3 250 scooter

Understanding the MP3. (CLICK IMAGE)

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