Scooter in the Sticks

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

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Lost in Delirium

March 29, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 30 Comments

Some rides are the product of illness — a projection of being lost in delirium.

Can a person ride motorcycles (or scooters) in their eighties?

For the past few days I’ve been swept up in a chain of illness (a cold or flu) and have lost touch with the routines and rituals that normally keep me grounded — walking the dogs, working and riding the Vespa.

I hate being sick; suppose everyone does. While drifting between sleep, delirium and mindlessly watching online videos I came across an old favorite — five aging men deciding to ride motorcycles again. I’ve posted it before.  When I close my eyes I want to ride again.

For a few moments I thought I could push through the illness but dizziness raised its hand to remind me of my current predicament.  I’m sure Kim would have added her input, “You don’t ride when you’re sick dummy.”

So I’m left again practicing patience, something I never do well with, and hoping whatever illness I have passes quickly.

If you’re feeling your age take a moment and watch the video.  It’s nice to think at 80 we might still have choices…

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Things You Should Know About Riding Scooters

March 13, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 36 Comments

Vespa GTS scooter coming off the Allegheny frontScooters are great on the road

Aside from “How many miles per gallon do you get?” and “How fast will that thing go?”,  the most common discussion I have concerning the Vespa focuses on a belief that it’s great in town but you need something different for “the road”.  It’s not hard to imagine the origins of this belief, at least in the United States, since almost all the marketing and promotion of scooters focuses on it’s utility in the city and frugal consumption of fuel.  The marketing agencies probably recognize the equally well ensconced belief of American riders that you need a liter sized engine or larger if you plan to do any serious riding.  Like riding 50 whole miles to breakfast with like minded bikers.

The reality is you can ride a scooter practically anywhere other than through deep water.  The Vespa GTS 250 scooter I own will cruise all day at 70 – 75mph on the freeway (shoot me if I regularly choose that route).  And on all other roads it is just fine.  All day long.

So if you think a scooter is only good for running down the street to pick up groceries (which it is) think again — men and women criss-cross the continent on scooters.

I made the above photograph after descending off the Allegheny Front and heading home on a road crossing Bald Eagle Ridge.  The Vespa didn’t blink being away from town. It will rip along at any legal (and some illegal) speeds making it a fine companion for anything from a Ducati to a Harley.

Vespa GTS scooter under a cloud filled skyYou can see the world on a scooter

I’ve ridden my Vespa to a lot of places in Pennsylvania.  It’s a great sightseeing machine that will take me and my gear (including food and water) anywhere I want to be.  Even if it’s a muddy field that I need to traverse to photograph a tree.

Whenever I start to think about longer scooter rides I always think about two riders who have pushed the scooter envelope:

Mike Saunders and his transcontinental scooter expedition on a 50cc Honda Ruckus

Mike Hermens and his trip across America and back on a Vespa GTS 300

Both these fellows, and a lot of other riders, have done big rides on their scooters and saw the world in the process.

This picture was made near the village of Rock Spring.  Turning off PA Route 45 I was surprised how watersoaked the field was.  Luckily the turf was thick and I didn’t have to content with the mud below.

Vespa GTS scooter on an unimproved township road in a forestScooters are OK off the pavement

While my Vespa GTS scooter is not a dirt bike it’s fine for wandering along the thousands of miles of dirt and gravel roads in Pennsylvania.  Don’t plan to jump or ride over logs or expect a soft ride when the road surface gets rough — the suspension was designed for pavement and reminds of that fact when you hit a rock or pothole unexpectedly.  More aggressive tires adds more stability and feel, especially in loose gravel.  If you go this route keep one thing in mind — it’s hard on the cosmetic appearance of the scooter.  Lots of scooter riders, particularly Vespa riders, keep their machines glistening in every detail.  Riding off the pavement will challenge that goal.

I made this photo on a road I had missed for years.  I passed the turnoff many times but a new township road sign caught my eye.  I must have thought it a private road in the past.  The township should have added “Dead End” to the sign post.  After wandering for some miles through the woods and up the side of the mountain I came to the end of the road — a big dog standing in my path probably saying in a canine thought wave, “MY property starts here.”

Luckily for me he was friendly and was content to watch me turn around and head back down the mountain.

Vespa GTS scooter parked along a rural roadScooters support contemplation

There are moments and places that reveal themselves during a ride that cry out, “Stop, look and listen!”.  I’ve encountered them many times and have learned to heed that call.  The words are loudest when I’m alone and traveling slowly, the landscape more a still life than a movie, and there’s time to hear the voice and stop.  Had I been racing along at 60mph I would be cresting the hill before I understood what was happening and unlikely to make a decision to turn around to see what just happened.

In this case I found a hardwood remnant from an agricultural past — those lone trees left in a field to park a team of horses in the shade when the farmer had lunch.  With air conditioned cabs and working draft horses relegated mostly to Amish and Mennonite communities those trees are confusing icons to more modern visitors. One thing I hadn’t counted on when I turned off the road — the tree capturing my attention — is the field had been heavily dressed with cow manure and the recent rain had left an inch of semi-liquid manure covering the ground.  Once you’re in it though what can you do.  Riding up the road I let the bottoms of my boots drag along the pavement to scrape as much manure away as I could.  Maybe tomorrow I’ll wash the scooter…

Scooter parked underneath a railroad bridgeScooters can take you to creepy places

Some places have bad energy and unfortunately the scooter has no warning system that signals their approach. On a rare occasion I stumble into a place that feels haunted by something dark.  After wandering along a narrow path through the woods I found myself beneath a railroad bridge still used by Amtrak and whatever commercial traffic crisscrosses Pennsylvania.

But something wasn’t right here.  I could feel it in my bones and a little voice was telling me I don’t belong here.  I made a few quick pictures but could not stop looking over my shoulder wondering when something would appear from the woods.  I heard no banjo music.  The Vespa scooter started and I left this place behind.

Vespa GTS scooter at a cross road.Scooters give you choices

A scooter gets you off the wheel and onto the road, away from the chains of responsible living and to places where you can make choices based, for once, on what you want.  Seems a rare occurrence.  Never happens in the car but time and time again I find myself standing in the middle of the road wondering which way I’ll go.

I wandered this intersection for about five minutes before getting on the scooter and turning around and heading down the road to the right.  When I got to this point I was planning to head straight.  Mental calculations told me the right=hand route was longer and would provide more riding time.

Just a few of the things you should know about scooters — Vespa or otherwise.  They’re not just good for town.  They’re good for the soul…

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Destination for Next Ride

March 1, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 22 Comments

Vespa on gravel roadWhere Am I Headed?

After a month of posting daily to Scooter in the Sticks I need to pull off the road for gas and look at the map. Not sure where I’m headed or what I hope to see along the way. Riding home from work today had me thinking about a direction.

And that it’s still cold.

For a long time I’ve been content to let things unfold without plans or interference on my part. It’s how I decided to participate in the Brave, Bold Blogger Challenge 2016. That and a sometimes no-well-thought-out response to ideas and projects that “seem” creatively challenging.

I won’t rise quickly to paint the bathroom, but 29 posts in 29 days – count me in.

Being completely honest, I learned a lot about myself, my ideation and writing abilities, and was rewarded with some interesting web data about reactions to post subjects and frequency. Not sure if all bloggers do this but I monitor traffic on a variety of blogs and websites of which I admire the voice and content and measure my traffic against them. There’s no real reason to do this, I’m not selling anything or trying to attract sponsorship opportunities. Perhaps it’s the little part of me that harbors some inkling of competition.

So when I received a message a few days ago about what I was trying to accomplish here and how I may be able to do that without posting frantically I was left wondering what my goals are with Scooter in the Sticks.

Goals.

Goals?

Makes sense only if I connect the time I spend riding, making photographs and writing as a means to an end. Can’t that be the end itself? A labor of love.

Maybe.

When pushed I can devise a goal: Create an engaged readership to which I can market my Scooter in the Sticks book. If I ever write one.

Or: Share the cosmic experience of riding a Vespa.

No?

Vespa GTS scooter and pile of dirty snow and iceAllure of Abjection

Behaviors are hard to break. Riding home today I had to stop to look at a large, filthy pile of snow. I could never pass up a pile of trash along the road, tailings at a mine or debris collections of almost any kind. “Evidence of something” echoes in my head as the collective call of discovery.

I first heard the term “abjection” in art school as discussions took place around some of the more controversial art in America boiled — artists like Cindy Sherman, Kiki Smith, Louise Bourgeois, Carolee Schneemann, Collier Schorr and others upsetting the status quo of beauty.  But that depressed, gloomy look of certain places was always attractive — beauty is in the eye of the beholder. These piles of dirty snow are as lovely as the sweeping dunes of White Sands.  Maybe I’ll travel another photographic road.

Where the road leads now I can’t say. A glut of Vespa maintenance tasks await along with a spring cleaning of the garage and reassignment of a snowblower. So any plans may drift in limbo for awhile.

The next ride could be interesting.

Vespa GTS and US322 road signsJust Ride

Sometimes seeing a sign that says “East” or “West” can trigger a strong desire to just ride into the sunset. (Or sunrise depending on choice).  I’ve been itching to put hundreds and hundreds of miles behind me to embrace the cleansing nature of a long ride.  The wind slowly dries my brain of the sloshing thoughts that do more to irritate than enlighten and can transform an easy commute into a tedious mental exercise.

“Just ride” has been ringing in my head.  My friend Paul has been offering opportunities and plans.  Maybe it’s time for the next ride.

Blog be damned for the moment.

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Riding is the Spice of Life

February 25, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 16 Comments

Vespa GTS scooter along US Route 6 in Potter CountyEmbracing the Senses

Many neurologists believe there are 21 senses, not just the five we learn in school – touch, taste, vision, hearing and smell.  Riding a scooter or motorcycle embraces the five and I expect a great many on the longer list.  On a beautiful summer day riding along US Route 6 fires the nerves and ignites the brain.  Riding is the spice of life, the additive to a day that makes life a feast.

measuring spoonSpiceless

Thoughts of spices for many raise ideas of food and culinary adventure.  In the kitchen this evening I thought about the spice that has the most influence on my life and a way to reduce it to a photograph.  I come up empty with spices unless, perhaps, I should have filled the red spoon with salt.

Instead I moved past food and on to the Vespa.  Riding is the spice of life.  In this life at least.

BMW F800 GS motorcycleMotorcycle or Scooter

Makes little difference what you ride — any machine adds spice to existence.  Looking through my photos I came across this one of a BMW F800 GS motorcycle made during a ride some years ago. I still remember the route through the forested hills south of home and the open stretches of highway to the west — that motorcycle spiriting me away physically and emotionally in an experience that lives today.

That’s spice.  That’s what riding is about for me.

A few days ago I read something about arriving at the end of life and not regretting that I didn’t go to one more meeting at work.  I understand what that means.  At the last breath I imagine I’ll be thinking of spices — one last embrace of my wife, a smile from my kids, a look from the dogs.

And one more ride.

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Nature of Friendship

February 20, 2016 by Scooter in the Sticks 12 Comments

two men looking at photographic printsPhotography Bonds

My friends Gordon and Paul at Saint’s Cafe looking a photographs — one of the common bonds among us.  Paul I met at a large format photography workshop he was teaching over 20 years ago, and Gordon in the MFA program at the School of Visual Arts at Penn State nearly 10 years later.

I call them both friends.

Photography has driven connections between us and created conversation and travel to serve our collective camera masters.  It’s a powerful enslavement that has been with each of us for a lifetime.

And both are riders.

Gordon Harkins on Vespa 300Riders All

Gordon pilots a red Vespa GTS 300.  I’ve suggested he could assume a role on Sons of Anarchy but would have to abandon the scooter.  So far he’s shown no interest.

Paul Ruby leaping at the sight of a Vespa scooterPaul is a more eclectic rider and at home with a Vespa or a Harley and everything in between.  During rides I often have the opportunity to photograph one of his spur of the moment performances.  I often wonder at what age a broken bone will occur.

Gordon Harkins and his Vespa GTS scooterDefinition of Friendship

If I can call you at 3am and say “help!”, then you must be a friend.  Having someone in your life that you know will be there when you need them, no questions asked, is a gift beyond treasure.  I believe it’s a rare connection.

It’s not something we talk about or make an agreement about — I sense it.  I hope the others do as well.

Paul Ruby with a yellow Ducati motorcycleViews Through the Looking Glass

I’ve collected a number of pictures from our times together.  Paul always has a new motorcycle love — this one several machines ago — a bright yellow Ducati 1098.

Gordon Harkins with his Vespa scooterGordon rides only his Vespa scooter.  Not other machine has materialized in his garage.  At least as far as I know.

Steve Williams and Gordon Harkins with their Vespa scootersIt’s good to have friends who ride.  They understand the obsession, the desire to get away on two wheels, the phone calls requesting a truck and pick-up at at remote location.  This photo was made during a ride through Moshannon State Forest.  Red may be the fastest color in Vespa mythology but the silver scooter is by far the more beautiful…

Paul Ruby exercisingThis has become a familiar scene while riding with Paul — his back stretching exercise which appears in a variety of locations — on the road, on the side of the road, on a motorcycle, on a scooter — he’s an equal opportunity stretcher.

Gordon Harkins and Paul Ruby discussing cameras

A person is fortunate to go through life with a couple friends — especially ones with so much in common.

I’m a lucky man.

 

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A Sample of Vespa Camping

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Snow: An Error in Judgment

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