Scooter in the Sticks

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

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Aimless Wandering

October 4, 2017 by Scooter in the Sticks 31 Comments

Vespa GTS scooter in fog along railroad tracksWandering Along

The past few weeks have been a collection of exquisite riding weathers — fog, warm days, cool mornings.  For many riders it would open the door to long rides and adventure.  I wish I could say that’s what I’ve been doing.  But I’ve been doing some aimless wandering, on foot and on the Vespa scooter, but it’s not so much about the physical act as it is about engaging the senses.  Relishing the perceptions of being out in the world.

I stood for a long time at this railroad crossing gazing at the edge where what’s visible disappeared into the fog.  I wasn’t looking for anything; just feeling life flow around and through me.

That’s often the case when I’m riding the scooter.Continue Reading

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Spokesman for Myself

November 15, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 8 Comments

Steve Williams self-portraitJust Wandering

Those days with no meaning or purpose, just seeing what the road will reveal is happiness.  This process is infused in much of the work that appears on Scooter in the Sticks — the writing and photographs — are reflections of those experiences.

I photograph, write and post the results to better understand the journey I’m on — both the literal ones where the Vespa scooter moves through the world, and those trickier trips where my mind conspires to understand what the hell is happening to me.  In either case, I’m a spokesman for myself and don’t pretend to offer much to anyone else.

While I accept a reader may find some value, I can’t claim to be able to answer any questions since I’m still struggling myself.  If there is any ongoing lesson I might share it’s in the ongoing and relentless self inspection of motives, ideas and appearance.

Labels of navel-gazing and self absorption often surround these kinds of activities.  I’ve always suspected they mask a terrible discomfort facing the possibility that one might discover they’re not the person they think they are.  Myself, I have a long list of defects.

The camera provides a different kind of evidence.  It reveals changes in the world around me that I’m too blind to see.  Or when the camera is turned my way I can’t pretend I’m someone I’m not.  The camera never blinks.  I try to do the same.

Is that really me?

Vespa GTS scooter on a small forest roadSeeking Oblivion

What is it that draws me down little paths and byways?  As a kid I was always searching for evidence of something — the detritus left my others in places seen as acceptable locations for abandoning “stuff”.  Decades later I ride my Vespa scooter down paths searching for something else, somewhere else, a different world, perhaps oblivion.

This ride, or at least this track through tick infested grass was a bad choice as the roots and rocks trounced my lower back with ample opportunities to bring bone and nerve together in a curse inducing manner.

I knew it was a bad idea, but sometimes, I just want what I want.

Vespa GTS scooter on a winding forest roadCrisp Days of Autumn Riding

While cold enough to have nearly all my cold weather gear on my back, save for the Gerbing electric gloves, I felt every warm ray of sunlight on my face as I rode along the winding roads that trace the entire region. I’ve been pushing myself to ride despite the mental resistance cultivated from my back.

When things get crazy the scooter makes things right, just hold on tight and see what I can see.

Perhaps this explains why I take the same pictures over and over again.

Vespa GTS scooter in park along Spring CreekLet the Sun Shine In

I keep telling myself that I need to make videos.  Short confessions on the road.  If I were the stop at this location along Spring Creek would have yielded a groaning, labored commentary on fall sunlight and the fragrance of drying leaves as I struggled to stand erect after some miles astride the scooter.

Maybe I should make that video.

At this moment typing out these thoughts it’s really hard to know much at all.  Two dogs and a wife sleeping quietly nearby.  Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here” plays in my head:

“So, so you think you can tell Heaven from Hell
Blue skies from pain
Can you tell a green field from a cold steel rail?
A smile from a veil?
Do you think you can tell?”

The clock just struck midnight.  I should stop.

Go out to the garage.

Push the Vespa into the driveway.  Go for a midnight ride.

Speaking for myself…

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Non-Riding Day

August 14, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 15 Comments

Paul Ruby, photographer, working near Madisonburg, PennsylvaniaWhere’s the Ducati?

The weather forecast called for heavy rain so we left the riding contraptions at home.  A non-riding day. When I first met Paul twenty years ago it was through photography.  He didn’t have a motorcycle at the time and my riding life was still ten years in the future.  But we did routinely set out to explore and make photographs.  This recent misreading of the weather had us reliving those earlier photo safaris.

Paul works with a Nikon D800 camera and almost always on a tripod.  He’s chasing perfection in sharpness and tonal range best served through a motionless camera.  I’m at the other end of the spectrum fueled by impatience and indifference to most technical concerns.

Utility pole and cornfield in central PennsylvaniaTradition of Verticals

One of my professors in art school pointed out to me after looking at dozens of photographic contact sheets that I have a fascination, perhaps an obsession, with vertical elements in pictures.  I thought of those conversations when making this photograph of a utility pole standing before a cornfield.  Still don’t know what piques my visual interest but I do have a lot of pictures with vertical elements slicing through a scene.

Paul Ruby pondering a viewARAT

I’ve photographed that tree dozens of times over the years creating scenes and views of it slicing a frame.  The images have little to do with trees but can’t say for sure what exactly drives the effort to look.  Whatever I see it’s meaning remains a mystery.

ARAT, another rock, another tree, is a pejorative term in the visual arts community sometimes applied to photographers interested in the landscape.  When America was falling in love with Ansel Adams in the 1960s and 70s many artists criticized photographers gazing at rocks and trees when the world was on fire and needed more social and political commentary.

I still photograph trees.  And scooters.  Not much in the way of social commentary coming from me save for the relative simplicity of life on the road with two wheels.

farm fields near Centre Hall, PennsylvaniaPennsylvania Agriculture

I recently purchased a Nikon D3300 DSLR camera.  It’s small, plastic and makes incredibly sharp images.  As much as I like my Canon G15 I wanted something that performs better in low light and generally produces a crisper, cleaner image but was not the kind of heavy beast that I’ve carried for years as a working photographer.

Over the years my understanding of agriculture has deepened and I appreciate the struggle and timing of production and harvest these scenes mean.  But the real attraction has always been the patterns and sweeps of land that a farmer serves.  Whenever I think I’m busy or hard at work I think of these scenes.

Amish buggy parking sign in Millheim, PennsylvaniaAmish Accommodation

A sign not seen in every town.  Millheim, Pennsylvania is in the heart of the Amish communities of Penns Valley and it’s not uncommon to see horse drawn wagons and buggies on the roads crisscrossing the area.  They take up more space to park and the town reacts accordingly.

I can’t say I’ve ever seen someone cleaning up after their horse though.

brick facade of a building in Millheim, PennsylvaniaArchitectural Palette

Millheim is a prototypical central Pennsylvania town.  The brick facades and construction styles can be found everywhere.  They’re ordinary and invisible but on closer inspection they have their own unique hue and spirit.  I could spend a lifetime and not see all the variants of color and texture.

Harley Davidson event in Millheim, PennsylvaniaHarley Davidson Infusion

Offsetting the quaint horse and buggies of Millheim was a gathering of Harley Davidson motorcycles at the Millheim Hotel.  In addition to the main street lined with motorcycles there was a rich collection out back with a dazzling array of sparkling chrome and color.  Not a filthy, hard ridden adventure bike in the mix.  No Vespa scooter either.

I’m not a Harley aficionado so the machines can all sort of look the same to me but Paul provided a mini-lesson in some of the finer points of Harleydom.  If the machines look alike to me, so do the riders.  There is definitely a uniform of sorts for both men and women.  While I’m sure there were helmets somewhere I don’t remember seeing any unless you call the red, blue or black bandanas tied to the head a helmet.

Everyone was having a good time.  When we first walked down the street toward the gathering you could hear one extremely loud motorcycle revving it’s engine, moving slowly somewhere along an alley and continuing to rev, move and rev again.  The sound echoed among the buildings and seemed to go on forever.  The rider eventually emerged onto the main street and then roared out of town at a breakneck speed.

It was gratifying to see the Harley riders standing in front of the hotel just shaking their heads. I just kept walking and making pictures, wishing I would have ridden so I could park my little scooter among the motorcycles.

All part of a non-riding day.

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Tolerance for Noise

March 25, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 16 Comments

How much noise is in your life?

Why I Photograph

Dredging through my files I found this old video — a visualization of the kind of stuff I write about now only without a scooter as subject.

Back in 2000 I was in graduate school working on a degree in art and learning to explore my self and the things that motivate me.  After a life of saying (and believing) “My work speaks for itself”, I was pushed to examine, explore, doubt and second guess everything I believed to be true.  Or at least those things related to art and photography. I resisted at first but slowly came to realize the value in understanding what was driving me (or not).

In one class taught by a member of the painting faculty we were challenged to respond and react to a variety of ideas and questions using video — an attempt to expand our ability to think and talk about why we work.  As I thought about photography I began to realize there was little motivation regarding beauty, light or form.  What I found was a method to help strengthen my tolerance for noise — the demands of earning a living be one part of it.

I was doing this before I bought the Vespa scooter and started riding and blogging.  But those things serve the same role now.  Last night I was talking to my wife about this when she asked why I try to do so much.  It’s not that I want to accomplish things — it really is a need to get the noise out of my head.  It builds up, a nervous, sometime frenetic energy that just needs drained like a recurring boil.  Nothing cosmic or romantic — just a terrible aspect of how my brain works.

So the video is a quick reflection of the sort of thing I write about now on Scooter in the Sticks.  We usually had three days to make a video.  Was sort of fun.  While classmates decided to use friends and actors in their videos I always chose myself.  I’m always available, show up on time and don’t complain.

When I’m on a deadline and don’t want any additional aggravation — I ride alone.

 

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Film is Not Dead

March 23, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 18 Comments

scene at Saint's Cafe with Hasselblad cameraFilm is not dead — just on hiatus.  For me at least.  Last week after a long separation from Ilford black and white film I picked up a camera in hopes of rekindling a project.  Any project at this point.

With a Hasselblad at hand and a shipment of paper and chemicals delivered from B&H Photo I’m back in business.

What ever that is.

Maybe I’ll dust off the darkroom too…

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