Trailride Vignettes: Part 7

The bike was mine! It was strapped in the truck; ready to form a Dodge/Yamaha two-piece team for continental backcountry exploration.

The day was young. All that was left to do was leave the city and drive many hours back to our snowbound redoubt in the hinterland.

This is when I said words I’ll always remember. It was laden with the unintentional irony of people who’ve no idea what’s about to happen:

“There’s this thing going down in China. It’s probably nothing.” I paused. “What worries me is that the press constantly lies and everything China says is bullshit… so who knows?”

“Yeah?” Mrs. Curmudgeon had heard the news too. The situation in China was, at the time, an ignored undercurrent. At the moment the press was still cheerleading fears over a military conflict with Iran. Sick people in China was a distant ship on the horizon.

“Well, you never know.” I continued. “People are primed to go apeshit. It’s that social media thing again. Folks are super twitchy. Plus, it’s already flu season and they’re slobbering over each other like usual. If there’s a second flu right now, it’ll spread until things get warm in summer. But I was wrong about Ebola so…”

“I remember when you got H1N1… that sucked!” Mrs. Curmudgeon recalled.

I winced, remembering a flu that was just a flu but also traveled clear from nowhere to my body. It wasn’t life threatening but it was a week-long shit sandwich. The undeniable fact remains; humanity dragged that damn contagion over, though, and past any barriers; clear from Asian pigs to our house. “Well…” I paused at the foolish thing I was about to say. “Just in case, lets pick up a few extra groceries while we’re here.” I felt silly saying it. “But it’s almost certainly nothing…”

Mrs. Curmudgeon is no fool. “Relax. That’s a great idea. Food’s cheaper here anyway.”

We stopped at a city grocery store and were reminded how much extra we pay in the country. Everything was a good 10% cheaper! I basked in the selection and savings. If you’re not impressed with a modern grocery store, you’re not paying attention. We generally maintain a well-stocked larder; that’s just proper household planning. But we picked up a few bags of mostly cans and dry goods to fill in empty spots. We really enjoyed the cheaper prices.

I wasn’t particularly worried about whatever was coming out of China. I was more worried about people. They seemed so tightly wound. They appeared to be searching; searching for a reason to lose it. Any excuse to go zombie horde and they’d be off like a shot. Sooner or later everyone would mainline CNN and social media until they lost perspective and things would get out of hand. They might block highways and screw up the supply chains. Or they might trash half of Baltimore. Or it could hit everywhere all at once! With reason in short supply, who knows what would stop it? I doubted a flu would light the fuse but only a fool could deny the fuse was ready to be lit.

I couldn’t imagine the people would hold their shit together all the way to November. Maybe they needed to freak out. Maybe that’s part of human nature I don’t quite understand. There’s been times when I’ve needed to get good and drunk. Who knows if that scales up?

For those who paying attention to such things, was I wrong? Think back to February 2020. Am I wrong in this? Am I biased by future events? I know damn well I really did buy extra groceries. Faulty memory or not, it was the right call. Yet contagion in China wasn’t a big deal back then. Nobody else was buying canned goods. I just picked up the sense that a shitstorm was fixing to self-ignite.

What did it feel like before a Medieval pogrom? What’s a cult look like from the inside? Can you sense an oncoming riot? There’s always stupid out there but can one feel the stupid outgrowing its host? There are always a few freaks but in small quantities they’re part of the colorful magic of humanity. Someone dresses up like a vagina and screams in front of a TV camera, or a ghetto full of losers burns a Volkswagen in the streets, but sometimes things hit critical mass. Can you smell it on the wind?

Who, on the cusp of the French Revolution, glanced about and thought “everyone is about to do something nasty”? Did they quietly haul ass for Germany? Did they die, leaving their concerns unrecorded? Did they join the crowd and build the guillotine, knowing they might be next?

Lemming off a cliff. That’s what I was thinking, not “flu”. I was also thinking I had time. It would happen later in the year… when the warm weather made prancing about the streets more fun.

Regardless, it was a good time to restock the pantry. What else can you do?

I felt silly entertaining such ideas but I’ve learned to trust my instinct. And you can’t really go wrong picking up a can of beans while they’re on sale.

That was just 2 months ago. I knew something was up but didn’t know the form of the destroyer. You never expect the Spanish Inquisition… or the Stay Puft Marshmallow Man.

We did not buy extra toilet paper. That would’ve been ridiculous.

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Trailride Vignettes: Part 6

It was time to go home.

The shiny new bike perched proudly in the truck bed and it was glorious! It fit just right. Tailgate closed and everything. I had brand new ties with which it was solidly secured. It rode like the lead float in a small-town parade. It was vibrating with potential awesome. It had 0.1 miles on the odometer.

Damn that’s a special moment! Everyone pause and take it in. Just close your eyes and think of it. For a certain personality this is a treasured inflection point of pure joy. Remember your first car, or your favorite car, or a beloved motorcycle, or a boat, or whatever the hell it is that made you happy. Remember when you and that machine met. Remember that time in your life.

It’s all about possibilities!

A factory in Japan had birthed this anachronistic machine and I was going to flog it mercilessly all over the American outback. What fun we would have together!

Mrs. Curmudgeon smiled at my childish excitement. She wants nothing to do with falling off cliffs on a mechanical death trap. If I want to careen around some God forsaken wasteland; crawling with scorpions and bears, getting frostbit and sunburned, well that’s just an untreatable malady which her husband possesses at the molecular level. No need to fight it; just send him off on his own and hope he doesn’t get too stupid while unsupervised. She’s a wise woman. Also, she enjoys seeing me do the things that I love. What man could ask for more? So long as I don’t get myself killed out there, she’s pretty supportive.

I was starry eyed like a child on Christmas morning. I already had a list of “mods” to make the thing from a chunky minimalist blank slate to a beefed up mini-mule. I’d tweak it here or there (but not too much, just enough to meet specific needs without endangering reliability; hot rodding engines is not my game). After 6 months of attacking it with a wrench I’d probably never alter anything again. I’d do oil changes and maintenance but almost never wash it. I’d consider every dent and scratch a delightful chapter in an adventure story. It would become tough and grizzled, like it’s owner.

I sipped overpriced coffee and smiled.

Posted in Spring_2020, Travelogues, TW200, Walkabout | 3 Comments

Trailride Vignettes: Part 5

[I rewrote this part several times but could never truly capture what happened. This is the best I could do.]

The motorcycle I’d agreed to buy was a long way from my home. I decided to make an overnight “mini-vacation” of it. Mrs. Curmudgeon and I traveled together and that was excellent.

The rest happened entirely unlike this: The long trip to get to the dealer was uneventful. I arrived with plenty of time to go every detail of the bike with the dealer. The paperwork was relaxed and unhurried. Dinner afterwards was cheap and excellent. Our hotel was well appointed, quiet, and I got a great night’s sleep.

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Trailride Vignettes: Part 4

The Death Valley Trail maps were now useless too. They were stashed in the box with the Lake Powell maps. Salt Lake City was out, Barstow was out, the new destination was in western Texas. Was I unknowingly involved in a geographic lottery?

I was already on phase #3 of plan C. At first, I decided to take the time to drive to Utah and play in terrain I already knew. Then I decided it wasn’t a great season for my old stomping grounds near Moab so I’d been researching somewhere lower elevation and further south. Meanwhile, my dog had died, my heart had broken, and an ATV had turned into a motorcycle. Phase #3 was a stack of blogs and reports from the Utah Backcountry Discovery Route (UTBDR). I was just about to buy an overpriced UTBDR map.

The phone rang…

Oh, dear God, not again! I picked up the phone.

“How’s $4500 out the door sound?”

“I’m in!”

I’d just agreed to buy a motorcycle I’d never seen, of a type I’d never ridden, without a test drive. It was a long drive to pick it up. I was delighted. The loss of my dog had been a big blow and I needed a little “pick me up”. If I could play in the canyonlands, adequately supported with the cheapest thing legally allowed to have a plate… I sighed contentedly

Maybe things were going my way!

Posted in Spring_2020, Travelogues, TW200, Walkabout | 2 Comments

Trailride Vignettes: Part 3

I’ve only been to Barstow once. I dimly remember a blistering hot highway and a ridgeline with windmills. There was lots of dust as my motorcycle and I were sandblasted by hot desert winds. It was hot. I don’t know if Barstow can ever be cold. All I remembered was wind and sand and air hotter than the balls of a scorpion in a frying pan.

It was -18f outside my window and I was pulling out all the stops to keep the room where I was working a barely tolerable 61f. Heat exhaustion sounded like bliss.

I had a new pile of maps to supplant the old. Trails in Death Valley. I’ve ridden my street bike across Death Valley and it was wonderful. I’ve never gone into the backcountry. I was delighted with the prospect.

Next to the maps was a pile of ATV sales brochures. This new ATV was going to get a maiden voyage for the ages! A small stack of camping gear had started coalescing in the corner.

Then, the phone rang again…

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Trailride Vignettes: Part 2

There was a pile of maps on my desk. Most involved Lake Powell. Camping writeups and wind / climate data. Was I really going to mess with that inland sea using only my 8’ box boat and my limited seamanship skills?

Meh… it would be warmer than my current snowbound misery. I’d figure something out.

The phone rang. Ten minutes later I’d swept the maps into a box. They were useless now. The situation had shifted to Barstow.

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Trailride Vignettes: Part 1

[Things don’t always go as planned. My first 2020 Walkabout was conceived in good faith and pursued with diligence. It didn’t come together well. It was a reasonable idea but it got pancaked by the truck of external factors. What follows are vignettes from the oft-interrupted process.]

Vignette #1:

It was dark out; not because it was late but because the northern climate spends half the year trying to kill us. That includes blizzards so dense they blot out the sun. The wind was howling and I was shivering.

I was in my workshop (not the one with wood heat). It’s well insulated but a standard 1500-watt heater just wasn’t up to the task. I had a generator outside humming away and a second auxiliary heater going. The two combined were only barely adequate. The window panes were frosting up. Through them I could see no more than ten feet into the maelstrom. I saw nothing but misery and the snowdrift that used to be my truck.

I usually like working from home but this day I was miserable. I was talking to someone on the phone. They were in a clean, properly heated, well-lit office. Imagine the unparalleled luxury of heating that’s provided entirely by unseen forces you can ignore! For once, I was jealous.

“So, we’re going to need some poor sap to go to all the way to Salt Lake and do this job. It’s a lot of work so I won’t ask you but if you know someone who can…”

I glanced at the thermometer. It was -22f. It had warmed to -22f over a long unpleasant day. It was sure to drop to -35f by midnight.

“I’m in.”

“WHAT?”

“I’ll do it. E-mail me the details.”

I hung up the phone. I’d just agreed to a less than ideal work situation. I didn’t care. It was just so damn cold. I’d have driven 2,000 miles to submit to a proctology exam on live TV if it happened where the ambient temperature was above 50.

I’d figure out a way to make a silk purse of this sow’s ear.

Posted in Spring_2020, Travelogues, TW200, Walkabout | 2 Comments

More Satire

https://youtu.be/64UJ2vhsG8k

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Satire

Best line ever at the end: “Fuck it, that’s enough internet for today”.

Hat tip to Ace of Spades.

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Trees

“Society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in.”

I’ve been planting trees. It’s hard work. Slow going. Then again, it’s better than whining about “lockdowns” and sucking down media propaganda. Maybe I won’t live long enough to harvest them. Maybe I will. Either way is fine.

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