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Postscript
Most of our friends and family reading this blog will, by now, understand the lack of updates. Speaking to my mother on Monday 13th, from Cranbrook, BC, it became evident that she was extremely unwell. Our group having begun to split up, John and I made an immediate decision to cut our trip short, possibly flying back from Detroit instead of Halifax. As it happened, I received a call on Wednesday morning, telling me that Mum was dangerously ill and had been readmitted to hospital in a critical condition. We flew home on Friday from Chicago to be with her.
Holiday memories are apt to fade all too quickly. Even more so, in circumstances such as these. Sitting on my 81-year old mother-in-law’s sofa in Coulsdon on Saturday evening, watching a Kevin Costner movie with a glass of wine, I began to mull over the last days of our trip. The film was set in Alaska. Our hero is having some communication issues …
Me (having had a little too much to drink): The trip was tough. Alaska is not that easy to conquer.
Betty: I was not ever that much of a fan.
Me: Uh?
Betty: Michael Jackson. I never really liked his music.
Me: No. Alaska. It’s not that easy to conquer. A lot of us didn’t get there.
Betty: I mean, lots of people like him. But I never really saw the point.
Me: … On a motorcycle, I mean.
Betty: Oh, yes. Of course …. Oh, I’ve just remembered, I’ve got someone coming to service the gas boiler on Tuesday …
Since leaving Kelowna, we had been assuming that George’s Alaskan crew were still on schedule, so it was a relief when I called the hotel in Watson Lake to find they were still booked in. With all the delay and disappointment, it would be good to ride with friends again for a few days, and we were glad to see a few familiar bikes in the Belvedere’s parking lot.
As if in confirmation, George approached me the following morning to ask which group we would be riding with. To have altered our plans in order to catch up, only to be forced to pick sides, seemed unfair. But there it was. The road from Watson Lake to Dease Lake is notorious: unmarked, uneven and partially unsurfaced. Received wisdom suggested that riding the Cassiar Highway as part of a large group might be hazardous. And, since George’s group was notably smaller than the breakaway faction, we chose to ride with them. In the event, the Cassiar was as about as savage as MGM’s toothless lion.
Dinner at Dease Lake was a protracted affair. The food was mediocre and overpriced, and the service, appalling. So, after a congenial evening of beer and bike washing, we left early the next day to seek breakfast elsewhere with the mutineers: Willie, Jim, Chris and Flo, Bill, Greg, Julie and Johnny Higgins.
With no deliberate decision on our part, the pattern was now set for the rest of the week. There being no published itinerary to adhere to, we got up late and ate breakfast when and where we chose to. We exceeded speed limits, stopped whenever someone saw a bear, or suggested a point of interest, for a Kodak moment or just for a fag break. And, when we arrived at our destination, we stayed up late, drank (too much), played pool, laughed (a lot), and generally had a good time. We were, after all, on holiday.
It was not that we didn’t regret what had happened. Our conversations revolved around little else: what might have been or how we would have done things differently. We tried to organise a group dinner at Prince George but, by that time, too much water had passed under the bridge. Our leader was reportedly heartbroken that we didn’t want to ride with him. Unfortunately, it never occurred to him to ask himself “why?” .
The fact was that, having been on the road for over three weeks since leaving Chicago, the whole group was exhausted. Leaving behind the heat of the desert in California, no one needed 6am starts or 5pm dinners. Perhaps the worst crime of all, was the rigid adherance to a daily timetable to which no one else had any input. There was simply no time for relaxation, sight-seeing or technical issues. Deviate from the schedule for any reason, and you were on your own.
Much as George wanted to keep the group together, that has never been the ethos of the Mother Road Rally, for which he acted as Rallymaster for the first time this year, and from whence the Alaska ride originated. In our experience, one of the nicest aspects of that 2,448-mile ride, was the tendancy for the main body of riders to disperse into smaller groups over the course of the week. The trip is never without problems. People regularly have flat tyres, oil leaks and flat batteries. They take detours, run out of fuel, drop their bikes and lose their wallets. Sometimes, this year in particular, they hurt themselves. Always, they can count on the support of the friends they make on the road and, despite the Rally’s disclaimer, no one is ever left behind.
Non-biking friends often fail to understand the appeal of a motorcycle road trip. To them it is all dirt, discomfort and black leather. An attempt to recapture one’s youth: a poor man’s answer to the mid-life crisis. But those people forget that a trip of this length is not lightly undertaken and is never cheap. Add together to cost of a full spec touring motorcycle, fuel, lodging, subsistence and, for us Europeans, travel, and you could probably buy yourself an off-peak timeshare on the Costa Brava. Hence, every one of our travelling companions on this trip comes from a professional background of one sort or another. And, since Americans are almost unique in having no statutory right to paid holiday, they either need to be retired or in a position to dictate their own leave.
None of us are children. When things go wrong, we manage. It’s what we do, or have done, every day of our working lives. It would be arrogance to assume otherwise.
5 Responses to “Postscript”
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30/07/2009 at 07:53 pm
Brigid,
Nicely Done!!! You have a gift of putting into words, actions that the rest of us feel but don’t know how to relate. As to the type of riding we do, it is unique. We are like mercury, we start out as a group, split off in many different blobs and congeal back to parts or the whole at both planned and random intervals. I believe it is why we keep riding the same roads over and over. It is always something and\or someone new every day. It is not about the road, or the bikes, or the schedule, it is about the PEOPLE and it is about the RIDE. The first casality in a battle is the battle plan, anticipate it, except it, keep moving forward modifying the plan as events unfold before you. Being leader just plain sucks. I love the idea that every day requires a new leader. We are too free spirited and individual to have one leader for too long. Joanne and I are sorry we missed this adventure with you guys. As of right now I am committing to Alaska in 2 years, the difference next time is that we will build in allot more time. Time to rest, time for broke bikes, time to site see, time to enjoy. The Mother Road Rally is a hectic week, everyday pushing to get to the hotel, everyday seeming to be late, everyday spending 12 hours on the bike. That is good for that one week, trying to do that over 4 or 5 weeks is asking for trouble. In closing we would just say that we would ride anywhere and anytime with you and John.
Doug & Joanne
06/08/2009 at 01:04 pm
“Mercury” … I like that. Sums us up perfectly. Thanks for being such great friends. We too would ride anywhere, anytime with you two. Looking forward to planning more adventures. Probably 2012 for us …
John & Brigid
21/08/2009 at 02:45 pm
Brigid, That was a good and acurate summary but a little sad to read. I must add that the “mutiny” was in no way planned but seemed at the time the only option available to ensure the whole group didn’t go their separate ways. You are absolutely correct in saying we stayed up too late, drank too much and got up too late, but wasn’t it such great fun. It was a holiday after all and that’s what you do.
For us Europeans, yes it is a costly trip between shipping/flying the bikes over, our own flight costs and the other expenses like insurance etc, not to mention the amount of planning that has to be done beforehand. I think that this is the main reason why we, not just want to have a good time, but absolutely need to.
We had a good time when we took the oportunity to do so, and I’ve no regrets about that. We enjoyed John and yourself in our company and will remember the many laughs we had. I certainly look forward to riding with you again (without a rigid schelule of course, LOL) and for myself and Jim, it will probably be 2012 also.
Keep well friend and keep in touch.
Willie
21/08/2009 at 09:49 pm
Ah, the curse of the blog writer … It’s all very well keeping up a daily log while on holiday, but a bummer to finish off when it all goes Pete Tong. Referring to our group as “mutineers” was a bit of literary licence. It seemed a little more polite than some of the other names we came up with! Though, with my reputation for tact and diplomacy …?
It was sad that the trip ended the way it did. But, for us, after all the other stresses and aggravation, those last few days were absolutely priceless, and I hope we have come away with some new and lasting friendships.
Hope to buy you a Guinness when we’re next over. Take care.
Brigid
29/08/2009 at 05:35 pm
Hello Brigid and John
Can you believe this august 29th and I read this post for the first time today. (even got Florence to read it too lol)
Brigid, I take my hat of to you very nice post, I’m 59 yrs old and still learning about people. There are LEADERS and there followers , but if the people are NOT compatable in some way there will be NO leader and NO follower. It is Human respect, and the fact that (example) I like you as a human being, that would make me say ” go ahead Brigid you lead and I’ll follow” Take that respect away and my attitude would definetly change. Clasic case of TIT for TAT
i TOO LOOK FORWARD TO RIDING WITH YOU AND jOHN AGAIN
CHRIS SANFILIPPO