Scooter in the Sticks

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

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Restorative Powers of Scooter Riding – or Motorcycles

April 13, 2017 by Scooter in the Sticks 54 Comments

Portrait of Vespa scooter rider Steve Williams reflected in mirror

Canon G15 6.1mm 1/1000 @ f2.8 ISO 100

Riding Reflections

This will be a short post.  It’s premise and conclusions obvious to many who already ride a scooter or motorcycle.  To others, and perhaps most of those men and women who are thinking about riding, the idea that riding has any sort of powers or rewards beyond transportation or recreation may not even register in their thinking.

I don’t want to preach.  I’ve long ago understood that what I believe, the actions and approaches that work for me, may be utterly useless for others.  We each walk (or ride) our own path and come to understand and embrace what we will regardless of what others accept or reject.Continue Reading

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3:12 a.m.

November 27, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 27 Comments

How does illness influence your thinking in the middle of the night?

medicine and thermometer

CC0 public domain image from Pixabay.com

Medical Choices

Standing before a stack of pre-heart attack cold medications in the bathroom I realize how much has changed in the past eighteen months.  Not so long ago I would down any number of cold remedies without hesitation to relieve any symptom I had in mind.

After some consultation with Doctor Google I settle on two Tylenol and a big glass of water.

I feel like crap.  The common cold on top of a sore back within the landscape of post-heart attack and ankylosing spondylitis life.

It’s funny the thoughts that come into your head when you wake at 3:12 a.m. after six hours of sleep.

“F*ck I feel bad.”

“My head hurts.”

“Better text Paul that I won’t be riding to Saint’s.”

“I need chicken soup.”

I rode into town this morning on the Vespa to run a few errands.  A few hours earlier I had planned to ride 120 miles for lunch.  The spirit is willing but the flesh is sick.  Even the ride into town was too much.

I walked laps around the house with a bowl of chicken soup, dogs trailing behind wondering what this middle of the night activity meant.  I didn’t tell them it was purely to limber my back and allow gravity to drain my sinuses.

After fifteen minutes I’m feeling a lot better.  Not well, but improved enough to embrace delusion and denial.

motorcycle on country road at sunset

CC0 public domain image from Pixabay.com

I Want to Go For a Ride

It started with me thinking about riding in the morning to Saint’s Cafe despite feeling light-headed, sneezing and coughing.

“It’s not that far.”

“The fresh air would be good for me.”

A lap around the house later I’m thinking about going for a ride now.  In the middle of the night.  Kim, who’s awake now and reading a book, breaks the spell by asking if I’m going to take off work today because she thinks this is Monday morning.

I don’t mention the riding idea.

A dog is nosing me.  He’s suggesting it’s time to go back to bed.  Don’t have the heart to tell him I’m going to have a cup of tea and a cookie…

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Ride to Work 2016

June 21, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 18 Comments

Vespa GTS scooter in open fieldOn the Ride to Work

It was pure coincidence that I rode to work on Ride to Work Day.  After two weeks off I left early enough for a leisurely commute and stopped to make one photograph during a small rustic detour.  At 7:30am the temperature was already above seventy degrees.  It was a near perfect ride to work.

Ride to Work poster 2016Ride to Work Day

Only later in the day did I realize it was Ride to Work Day.  Judging by the small number of motorcycles and scooters I saw on the road today it’s hard to imagine there being much traction to the idea of commuting on two wheels.  There are a zillion practical reasons why commuting in a car or truck is the common choice while the perception of two-wheeled commuting is inconvenient and downright dangerous.  And motorcycles and scooters are, well, toys.

As long as the machines we love are looked upon by much of the public, and our elected officials, as toys and recreational vehicles, we shouldn’t expect much in the way of support or respect.  Perhaps the Ride to Work effort will add to the voices of riders in America.

I know there are a few things I would like to see happen.  Selfish things.  Traffic lights that respond to a scooter.  Paint used for road lines that doesn’t become slippery when wet.  Parking spaces for motorcycles so I don’t feel bad taking up an entire space with my scoot.

Just to name a few.

I wonder, if we were making a list, what kind of concerns would we tally up as riders?

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Vespa Meditation

June 19, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 5 Comments

Buddha statue in a treeStrange Reminder of a Vespa Meditation

I saw this Buddha statue in the hollow of a tree toward the end of a ride. It highlighted what I was experiencing on the scooter — a deliberate and ongoing rumination of thoughts and questions that cloud my mind along with a more and more focused recognition of the world as experienced as a scooter rider.

Sometimes it’s nice to let body and mind free for a few moments to seek some natural balance.

Vespa GTS scooter on Bald Eagle ridgeWinding Along the Road

It was still cool, low sixties, when I rode over Bald Eagle Mountain on a wonderfully twisting road complete with a hairpin turn.  The challenge was to let go of plan and expectation so I could be present for whatever presented itself rather than be completely locked in my head.

I saw a half dozen deer in the middle of the road during the ride included a couple of clumsy fawns.

Vespa GTS scooter in timber cutOff-road Vespa

Could pass up an opportunity to check out the view from a newly cut woodlot.  A short ride off-road on the scooter reminding me of how versatile the Vespa actually is.  While not a dirt bike the scooter can easily handle most of what a casual rider would encounter off-road.

Vespa GTS scooter at a lime plantMaking Photographs

I try and make photographs that reflect what I saw and felt on the road.  They serve as snippets of memory recording the stories made up by the details discovered during a ride.  That’s not dependent on riding a Vespa or connected to any particular camera.

When I first stopped at the limestone plant I lined up the scooter in the picture but something was missing — the old railroad tracks.  They were part of what I felt about the place.

Didn’t go far on the ride, less than 50 miles, but I’ve learned that I can get my head focused in a way to see and experience more.  It’s not just fun, it’s a Vespa meditation.

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An Experience of the Senses

June 11, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 21 Comments

Why do I ride? To feel alive.

Vespa GTS scooter in Bald Eagle State Forest

An Experience of the Senses

Reading reviews of new motorcycles and scooters I often feel the writers are missing the point as they focus on machinery, specifications and performance metrics, reducing riding to a quantitative assessment of engineering. Perhaps marketing research and reader testing has revealed that’s what most people want.

Or need.

Making a decision on what two-wheeled machine to purchase is serious and personal. We may end up looking alike on the road in the way we dress and act, but for a moment, we are unique.

Riding through Bald Eagle State Forest last week I was reminded that the machine often fades away as I’m overtaken by human biology and an experience of the senses.

clouds in the sky

Weather Drama

There’s almost always a thrill at the beginning of a ride. In part the anticipation of unexpected experience is at work, but a larger measure the thrill of the senses being engaged in ways largely overlooked during everyday life. At least by me.

It starts early when I walk outside to feel the air on my skin as I decide exactly what I’m going to wear. Or the the cold chrome seat rail against my hand as I push the Vespa into the driveway. Feet buzzing in heavy leather boots and the warmth of the sun on my face as I adjust my helmet.

As the ride approaches the senses spin up in a celebration of being alive.

Vespa GTS scooter on a rural roadThe Scent of Hay and Road Apples

Riding through Amish country provided an array of warm weather fragrances — the scent of fresh cut Timothy hay and the aroma of horse manure from the horse drawn buggies and carriages seen in this part of the county.

As always, I’m struck by how much I miss hurtling down the road in the van with windows closed and the air conditioner removing most references to the outside world.

Vespa GTS scooter with conflicting road signs

Sensory Challenges

Riding presents an ongoing challenge to mind as the brain works to process sensory input from the body. Decisions are made at an ongoing and withering pace in hopes of remaining smiling and safe on the road.

The two signs, placed at the apex of a hairpin turn presented a visual question mark, my brain seeking to process the sensory data from my eyes. It only took an instant but in that moment I made a decision to stop, look and make a photograph.

Vespa GTS scooter along road in Bald Eagle State Forest

Riding as Spiritual Experience

Moving slowly through Bald Eagle State Forest was like meditation.

The visual changes in light, the vibrations of the road felt in the hands, a passing scent of wildflower or damp leaves in a cool glen, all of these things are part of an ongoing, sustainable orgasm of sensory experience that makes riding more than recreation, expand beyond transportation to something akin to a vital spiritual experience.

A pilot described the first time he could sense the curvature of the earth as a spiritual experience.

So it can be with riding.

Vespa GTS scooter along a small stream
Water of Life

It’s hard not to notice the blessing of fresh water in central Pennsylvania. Almost everywhere I ride there are streams, creeks and rivers — slivers of sparkling silver reminding of their value in supporting life. As a rider I appreciate the sudden cool air on a hot day when the Vespa passes under the canopy of trees along the water.

Vespa GTS scooter along a narrow forest trail
All Terrain Vespa

Even on a clear day the forest can be dark. Riding along the smaller trails in the forest can make a rider think the sun has abandoned the day. I think of the first European settlers moving through these vast forests going days and weeks with barely a glimpse of the sky. The lack of light plays with the mind and for me can create ideas and images of the fantastic. The Vespa scooter continues on in the dark.

There are elves in this wood.

Vespa GTS scooter with powerlines
On Into Civilization

Eventually I emerged from the forest for food and fuel and wandered awhile along the Susquehanna River between Williamsport and Lock Haven. Riding in more developed areas provides a different experience of sight, sound and smell. Power lines were everywhere as were fumes from the exhaust of trucks or the strong smell of creosote from freshly laid railroad ties.

Vespa GTS scooter and railroad tracksChasing Railroads

Railroads are fascinating creatures whose tentacles stretch across the nation. In another life I might have made a choice to work for one. Or become a railfan chasing trains across the country with camera in hand. Whenever I can during a ride I stop to admire the view and dream of times gone by.

Still an hour from home on a direct route and my phone indicating rain on the way I shifted from wanderer to express rider in hopes of avoiding some of the rain. Ended up riding through two short downpours that were heavy enough to cause me to consider putting on the rain suit.

As the ride drew to a close I saw the world change from bright to dark, the wind and rain transform cozy to cool and the new smells of of wet pavement and moist air join me until I got home — another experience of the senses.

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