Various commitments--canine, family, and professional--have dramatically cut into my riding this year. In previous summers, I would have been on 350-450 miles rides every weekend. This year, I hadn't been on a single long ride since my disastrous late June/early July unadventure so I decided to take yesterday off of work, take advantage of having a dog sitter, and ride one of my favorite routes to the north and northwest of home, stitching together routes 74, 235, 144, 120, and 477.
The weather was good and the traffic light. It didn't take long until my riding was back in the zone and I was deep in the ecstatic feeling of flying. There wasn't anything particularly noteworthy or photo worthy on the trip but I did notice something about diverse motorcycle subcultures.
Since it was a weekday, there weren't a lot of other motorcycles on the road. But I did encounter other riders twice. The first was in a lovely section of Route 144 that runs for nearly twenty miles through state forest land, It is purely woods--no businesses, no farms, no cross roads. It can be a hoot to ride but can also be a problem. There are no passing areas whatsoever for the entire length so if I'm alone, it's great but if I get stuck behind someone, not so much.
In this instance after I was a few miles in, I came up behind a couple of other motorcyclists. I won't mention what brand they were riding but just say they were dressed like pirates and had after market "mufflers" that literally caused me pain when I was behind them even though I was wearing a full face helmet and ear plugs.
Their riding skills were pathetic. They wallowed below the speed limit on a completely empty road. Their brake lights came on at the slightest curve. And they did their best to avoid leaning in the curves.
Luckily they eventually pulled over and let me pass. A bit later I'd stopped at a picnic area to drink a Red Bull and they went wallowing past again. Of course I felt and heard them coming long before I saw them. But by the time I was finished they had ridden away, undoubtedly to a local bar or wherever else wannabe pirates hang out.
Later I was sort of lolling along on Route 11. It's a heavily patrolled road, so I don't speed there. In my mirrors I saw a bike coming up fast and it passed me in the left lane. To my surprise, it was another BMW R1200R. They're rare enough that I've only seen another one on the road a handful of times. The rider was clearly one of my "own kind," not only riding my bike, but also geared up the way I was (white Arai helmet, BMW and Rev'it protective gear).
He got a bit ahead of me and turned off only Route 34. I decided to chase. The easternmost section of Route 34 is nicely open, running through sections of forest and farmland with a few twisty sections. I thought I'd run the guy down but quickly realized he was GOOD. He was running in the mid to upper 60s so I had to really rocket to catch up.
When I pulled up behind him, he didn't acknowledge me but I know he saw me. So then we began to play. We were knifing through the curves on perfect outside-inside--outside lines a couple of inches from scraping a peg. Pennsylvania posts a sign with a recommended speed before most curves. We were averaging 20-25 over that.
I didn't push him but stayed glued about 20 yards back. This went on for about ten miles. But then we hit the section of 34 where there were a series of little towns. And I never speed through towns. The other rider turned off on what was probably a shortcut and I lost him. Pity because that was someone I'd really like to ride with on a regular basis.
Dear Steve:
ReplyDeleteI can't believe that was you... You should have waved or something. I was riding along, minding my own business, when suddenly, I had a stalker. I thought it was Dick Bregtein. That alone caused me to twist the throttle another half inch. My thought was to make the state line, or maybe even Mexico.
Not really. I prefer "K" bikes. Had you going, huh?
Jack Riepe
Twisted Roads