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2012 Tail of the Dragon Trip  (6/25-7/1) (Read 11339 times)
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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #480 - 09/19/11 at 22:22:50
 

Come on, Kim, you wouldn't drool unless I took pics of the greeter kitty at the place I ate lunch at, a cute little orange rag a muffin that came up to get him a head rub and borrow him some hamburger meat.

The most beautimus thing I've seen so far was the clouds rolling over the top of Pisgah ridge and spilling down over the roadway like a waterfall of white mist.   From a short distance out, it reminded me of shooting the curl inside a big wave of white water.  

Of course, I was riding at the time -- both hand on the handle bars and all that ....

Cameras are not always handy nor are they able to catch all the beauty because the person running them can't make it do correctly.   Look sharp in this picture and you will see the iridescent blue and purple hummingbird hovering over the outlook sign ....




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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #481 - 09/20/11 at 18:40:51
 
 
 
Ok, we started the day with a free breakfast -- Fresh Cooked Belgian Waffles with butter jam and warm maple syrup.   And coffee, lots of good hot coffee.   And little danish.  And little muffins.  And bananas and apples.  We then took the road maps out and hunted up some places to go and things to do.  





Here are a couple of pics of the HEATED indoor jacuzzi and heated pool that allow guests to play in the water all year long.  Not too shabby for $29.99 ain't it?







We didn't leave until 10:10 AM because it was raining lightly during the night and we waited until the roads began to dry out before leaving.  Of course it rained on us within 15 minutes of staring out, but just a sprinkle that was over inside 15 minutes as we got to rolling good.





First stop was Bryson City which contains the infamous Road To Nowhere.   Here is pictorial proof we went to Nowhere and returned alive to tell about it.  The mysterious third person (who chooses not to be named) who went to Nowhere with us and he held the camera for the group shot that he didn't want to be seen in for fear of his life wife.  

(something about not getting caught out lying to his significant other about where he was that day, or something like that)





On the road to Nowhere the wildlife is not used to you being there.  MMRanch scared two squirrels really badly -- and he rolled the third one under his rear tire which he says he didn't even feel.  

This pic is the guilty squirrel killer returning from disposing of his little victim ....   Kim, you would have loved that little squirrel, he was a cute as a button -- you would have wanted to cuddle him and rub noses with him he was so durn cute.   I wanted to take some pics of him for you but MMRanch wouldn't let me ....

Then we went up Hwy 28 Fontana road to Fontana Dam and took some pics of the SECOND HIGHEST DAM IN THE UNITED STATES.  The only one taller is Hoover Dam ....   this little boy was built in just 2 years during WWII under A-1 FULL MILITARY TOP SECRET classification as it was the secret power source that powered the TOP SECRET Oak Ridge uranium separation plants for the atom bomb.  









The visitors center was added in the 1950s after the TOP SECRET classification was dropped since folks realized 6 little towns had disappeared off the map and literally 10,000 people were relocated by the Army.  

The visitor's center had a top secret secondary purpose that is still pretty much a secret -- if you look at the telephoto pic carefully you can see the underside of the visitor's center has multiple windows (lighting lab space or offices) and you can still see some freight containers stacked on the bomb proof concrete pad that is hidden under the visitor's center.     Also note the dual spaced out bomb resistant thick-assed concrete pads that shielded this underground warehouse space -- the "visitor's center" is really spaced out pretty far laterally and it is REALLY REALLY well constructed, don't cha think?

We also noted that the parking lot for the visitor's center has spaces for 200 cars on that side and a secondary parking lot with about the same number of spaces on the other side of the road that has some sort of tunnel access point on it that doesn't even show up on the other side of the road at all.   There is a bunch of stuff at Fontana Dam that is underground apparently -- and around 400 people worked there at one time while it was still webbed in military security during the height of the 50-60's cold war era.  

I also noted that the three huge articulated overflow water gates have no visible outlet associated with them .... where they go to or what they actually do on the way out is a mystery as well.    But they were huge and the big valves were built out of stainless steel during war time, so whatever they did was pretty important to the guys who built them ....





We then ripped up Hwy 28 to the Dragon, ripped up the dragon and stopped at the turn around point to take this scenic pic that we all remember.   Then it rained on us a bit as we ripped on into Tennessee heading towards Gatlinburg and the $29.99 hotel for day #2.

We ate dinner and met up with BigZuk in Pigeon Forge.   Pizza was good and we got to spend some good company with BigZuk who we will meet up with tomorrow AM.

Gatlinburg and Pigeon Forge are totally tourist oriented, fun to ride through but we really didn't stop and do very much -- too tired !!

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« Last Edit: 09/23/11 at 20:46:27 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #482 - 09/20/11 at 20:00:54
 
Hay Wait a minute !

I'm not the only "Anti animal right activist".     I know for a fact that there were a uncountable amount of Hogs who lost there lunch today to a old fellow riding Granny's motorcycle.   And  there were at least two fresh kill possums in the road behind OldFeller today.
Now, I can't say for sure who hit them first (limited sight distance) being I refuse to pass on a double yellow (unless the speed-limit isn't being met and its unquestionably clear).  

At one point today we came up behind 6 cars piled up behind a motorcycle ,  it was embarrassing !   A bike holding back cars --- it's  just wrong   ...  anybody who has seen Grand-paw on Grandma's bike  knows how that went.  Fortunately most of them turned off before I had to start passing too.

The biggest rain we had was crossing the Dragon .   I think we went up to the rain instead of the rain coming down to us.    I believe its the first time ever we crossed the Dragon at the legal speed limit.  but even then the rear tire didn't allways follow the front in a safe manner.

Wish everybody could have been there !   Shocked
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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #483 - 09/23/11 at 05:35:19
 

MMRanch, anti-animal rights activist extraordinary

Riding at the front of the pack with the rest of us as witnesses to all the little forest furry critters that were confused by the bright headlight and did the instinctual double back zig-zag right under his wheels ....

I can testify that he never rode over anything on purpose and he always honked, braked and tried to evade if he saw them first.

But he still scared hell out of 2 squirrels, smushed one totally and then managed to run over a chipmunk of all things.

.... the braking part didn't help them any, BTW.

This unusually high animal kill ratio has to do with where we rode, which were the smallest black lines we could find, and the cloud cover, which was immersion style.  The animals were feeding on the shoulder of the road, saying "Nobody comes by here very much so we aren't used to traffic and here comes motorcycles racing around the turn leaned way over surprising me totally and I go do my little instinctual zig-zag thing."

.... splat !!  

Plus, we are inside a cloud so nobody can see very far, neither biker nor critter.

Now, I never rode over anything on purpose but cars, panel vans, mac trucks, sports cars, sports bikes, TONS of Hurleys and on Fontana Dam Road I finally rode over a Ducati !!!  

My very first Ducati !!!

Living critters, not so much, but I will admit that you don't always see them if you do run over them because you are eyes forward and you are always running over pebbles and acorns all the time and you get used to them little sudden unexpected "bumps".   And in my case there wasn't ever anybody right up close behind me to say what actually happened.

Wink
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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #484 - 09/23/11 at 05:40:36
 

Cumulothelioma, a rare coughing disease that comes from breathing in cloud material deep down inside your lungs.

Remember this, it comes into play later on in the story.    Now, back to the tale of the trip ....  where were we?

Ah, Gatlinburg ....
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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #485 - 09/23/11 at 06:54:38
 
 
 


We stayed at the River Bend Lodge or some such name, at a HotWire price of $29 -- and this was the lesser of the hotels we stayed at for $29 on the trip and it wasn't bad at all by any means although it was the least good of the group we sampled.   $29 HotWire hotels, I am not skeered of them any more and would use the service any time I went anywhere that I wasn't carrying my wife.

(women expect more than a 2 star hotel going on a vacation -- remember that -- your motorcycle buddies don't care one little tiny bit as long as there is a bed in there)

Speaking of beds, this place had the best durn sleeping bed you ever slept on -- MM wanted firmer (like the bed on the first night) but this one suited me jest fine.   He's used to sleeping on the ground, Scoutmaster and all ....





Parking was excellent as we stayed in room 107 and the view from our room was good too -- somebody had a chalet set up on the side of the mountain up over our heads that we could look at and admire.



Breakfast was donuts, toasted bagels and cereal (no fresh cooked Belgian waffles) but it did the trick for us.   We had lots of company from little old ladies on vacation from Ohio and Wisconsin who wanted to know where we came from and why we were wearing leather at breakfast and all ....  I watched them little old ladies eyeballing MM's butt sticking out of his chaps and got I a me good morning coffee chuckle out of it ....  

They wuz remembering stuff from their wicked checkered pasts and lusting after him, I do believe.

Wink





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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #486 - 09/23/11 at 08:06:47
 
 
We then got some sun peeking through dry skies around 10:00AM (every morning in the mountains is kinda drizzly it seems like) and we then proceeded from Gatlinburg up through Pigeon Forge to up to the slightly higher elevation neighborhood where Bigzuk lives.





Now, I wish I had a pic that turned out better of his downhill neighbor who has a set of dual tire long skinny assed ramps going over from his steeply elevated back yard going over straight and flat into the attic level of his garage (where he parks his riding lawn up over over the rafters).  

Cheesy    Suchlike stuff gives you a grasp of what living on a steep mountain side is really like.

Zuk met us at his garage level  (? floor #1 level?) of his mountain clinging home.   His driveway explains why he only will own a 4 wheel drive vehicle and I cannot imagine what it takes to get up the thing when it gets icy in the winter time.





This is MM explaining to Zuk what was wrong with his Sportster today -- brake light was fluttering on all the time because the master cylinder wouldn't push his lever far enough forward for the switch not to make.  They rigged that up with a bungie cord so it worked better, then we went inside (up the elevator) to the second story deck (some of these pics were actually shot from the third story deck, but I forget which ones).






Now, Kim -- are you paying attention?   Here is Zuk's current adopted child Sassy who is our entry for "cute" for the trip.  

Forget that we actually ran over more chipmunks, squirrels and other cute cuddly stuff than you guys ever even saw (wow a flower) -- this is our official entry for the cute classification.






That is Zuk's tiny but perfectly proportioned 6.25 pound Doberman Pincher who likes to bounce up to chest high up in front of you to get your attention, then bounce up into your lap when you sit down to get rubs and cuddles and climb up to your shoulders to lick your ears.  

Sweet, cute, yes -- but let me tell you, somebody drove by the front of the house in a delivery van and wammo -- she was a Doberman all the way, aggressively protecting the house.   Let me tell you, if she went for your throat, she could definitely jump up high enough to get to it .....  pocket attack dog she was when she wanted to be.

Zuk has chest high child proof doors set up contain his little beastie and he has mesh over the outside face of his decks to protect her, although when she wanted past the gates she simply bounced over them like bouncy bouncy Tigger would.    If she actually wanted to get on top of the deck railings, it was easily inside her bounce zone too ....   Well trained though, she would not get on a table surface, but would go for your shoulders with a quick bounce off at your waist to get a four legged boost to get up there.

(I surmised that the bouncing in front of you thing mean we were supposed to catch her in mid-air, but I never did that as I didn't want to surprise her -- and she did just fine anyway on her own to get up on your shoulder to lick your face and ears)



Zuk was feeling poorly, so we stayed a while and chatted and got him to help us plan out a good riding path up to Linville Falls that got maximum good ride time on some really really good roads (some of which don't have names on a map, and we couldn't even find them on a map anyway).  

Zuk got to feeling better so he relented on the ride, grabbed him some stuff and he led the way on up to Linville Falls ..... he couldn't resist the most excellent ride he had laid out !!!




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« Last Edit: 02/16/12 at 07:03:08 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #487 - 09/23/11 at 09:19:36
 
 
We rode a lot of first class bike roads on the way to Linville Falls and Zuk led at a pace that made them truly challenging.   Like I said, he rides better than I do, so I was struggling to keep up and MM was falling behind because he simply refuses to go double the posted speed limit and he is reluctant to pass large stuff on double yellow lines.  

I got the full benefit of the Zuk School of Late Braking and Hard Accelerating, something I always attend religiously whenever I go to the mountains.   It makes you a better rider, really it does.







We didn't stop for much other than gasoline and piss stops and we rode a half dozen roads I couldn't name or find again if you put a gun to my head, but it was a total blast and we spent until dusk reaching Linville Falls having ridden through drizzly misty stuff (clouds actually, we ran hard through a bunch of silly clouds -- let's call them what they were).

We got to Linville Falls Camp Ground and the guy there told us we'd better go get some dinner before everything closes at 8:30 PM, so we did.



This is the Hardrock Cafe, where we ate meatloaf special with 3 veggies and a pair of the best biscuits you ever ate for dinner.   Best meal of the trip so far (and I was exhausted and hungry and ready for it, lemme tell you).   They closed the place up around us but let us finish our dinner and talk a bit in peace, so we left them a nice tip, put our jackets on and went outside .....





..... into the frick'n Twilight Zone !!!    

You missed out on the solid white background outside the cheerful windows of the dinner scene with Zuk and MM chatting third pic up -- them clouds we had been eating all afternoon crept back up after to haunt us as zombie clouds which wouldn't let us see our bikes in the parking lot and only let us see the faint glow of headlights and tailights of the occasional traffic on the road as it silently drifted past ....  

We had mebbe 3-5 miles to ride to get back to the campground and it was Surrealistic and Scary to say the least.   I wiped my face plate 10 times in that 3-5 miles just to get the mist off so I could kinda see -- mostly.   There was no sound, even the bike noises didn't go very far in the solid air.

We missed the turn off to the camp ground even though we were in first gear and we were looking for it -- it was that cloudy and dark and murky.  

On the way up the driveway to the camp ground we got bushwacked by fallen limb on the road that wasn't there an hour or so ago when we left to go get dinner, and MM got attacked by a kamikaze  zombie chipmunk that tried to bite his rear tire as we crept on up the driveway.    

Undecided

Creepy stuff, let me tell you ...   that little death squeal from the chipmunk just fit the ambiance of the night perfectly.    

The campground was deserted and it had occasional street lights and foot level path lights that glowed weakly in the fog as we bore left and kept left and crept on back to the very very back to find the Outpost Camping Cabin where we were staying.   I was a waiting for the vampires and the zombies to shuffle out of the dark and come after us, but they never made it out until later on, when it was time to GO FIND THE BATHROOM on foot ....

You can get lost on foot in a large campground area when looking for the head, you know.   When the clouds fly so low they put a London fog to shame and you arrived by headlight power and there ain't no headlights any more ....

Ask us, we can tell you all about it.   Flashlights don't really help very much in suchlike conditions, and on the second trip out around 3:30 AM I didn't even have one of those.

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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #488 - 09/23/11 at 10:42:00
 






We had gotten pretty wet from all the fog riding all the previous afternoon, so we had spent some time in the cabin drying out clothes and such over the large oil/electric radiator heater, which actually did such a good job of warming the cabin up we had to cut it off around midnight.   We didn't go to sleep until around 2ish from yakking and laughing -- too wound up from the ride up the mountain.





Got up around 10AM to the standard white sky drizzly mountain morning, so MM decided to try to do him some Hurley maintenance -- he had sprung his primary engine to transmission 3 wide CV chain some trying to keep up with the Savages and it was slapping his cases some.  So he knelt in the wet gravel and went through the drill of adjusting his primary HiVo chain drive .....

it's a hurley, what did you expect ??

Anyhoo, we set out around 10:15 to go get some breakfast from the Hardrock Cafe, which was excellent once again.   2 eggs, bacon, hash browns or grits, toast or biscuits, bowl of gravy on the side.

After eating breakfast we went down the Parkway and took the 266 exit and ran 266A (the Diamondback) all the way from start to finish.  Reminded me of the Fontana Dam road, except this one was sliding off the mountain in places (3-4 levels of cracks and gaps where the roadbed was slipping).   Made it interesting anyway.

When we were done with the Diamondback we got a quick lesson in why YOU DO NOT FOLLOW THE TOURIST MAPS THEY GIVE YOU AT PLACES LIKE THIS .....  we took the correct turns to get on to 80 to go to Mt Mitchell and we found ourselves back at the Hardrock Cafe.  These maps kinda route you around on back to themselves so you can stay there again that night once you find yourself out of daylight, confused and needing a place to stay.

Cheesy

Smarter now for the experience, we consulted a NC Gov. roadmap, regrouped and headed out again for Mt. Mitchell.



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« Last Edit: 09/23/11 at 21:46:00 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #489 - 09/23/11 at 12:30:27
 

MM was a little bit pissed off by this time (he had really trusted that stupid tourist map that lied to us) and he was up in front at the time so he decided that he wanted to see if he could lose us some since he got his Hurley all tightened up and it wasn't slapping on the primary drive chain any more.  

We found this out later on when we were lined up taking a piss at the Mt. Mitchell downstairs bathroom after the ride up.

"Did you guys have any problems keeping up with me?"   "No, it was a good pace, fast enough to be interesting but slow enough so you could notice the scenery"  "Oh"  "Yeah, it was good, I had to downshift a few times but no, I was always just back of you."

He 'fessed later that he had given it all he had to the point he was breaking his rear tire loose on the straight aways and he was skidding his front tire on the wet pavement on the turns.

But it answered his real question -- his 600 pound 1,200 cc Hurley Sportster can eat our cake BAD on any dry pavement straight away where he can get out of second gear into 3rd to run 3rd on up, but below that the Savages rule up in them thar mountains ....  

.... and in the really curvy mountains, that's about where you stay in 2-3 gear all the time with 4th only on the straightaways.

But he since won't do "double the posted speed limit" he loses most of that advantage to a respect for legal speed limits (and fear of a scraped up hide, too).   And he has to fight hard to get that 600 lb motorcycle around a tight curve to the point he can lose tire traction way way way before we do.  

Effectively, his 600 pound 1,200 cc Sportster is a close performance match for a Savage until the curves get really tight, then he loses ground all the way.

Which wasn't what he expected to happen at all, so now he plans to do a high performance engine rebuild on his old Savage this upcoming winter and then come springtime he might find a used Sporty adding some good dollar value to his checking account.


===================================


Anyhow, we had finally made it to Mt. Mitchell.



Here is the peak of Mt. Mitchell, you can see the sorts of nasty strong winter winds that hit the peak during winter blizzards from the damage the trees take.



Neither Zuk or I wanted to walk the extra 600 vertical feet straight up to the tippy top to see the grave site (I had used all my pain drugs up and Zuk was not getting very much relief from his although he had quite a few left -- so I bummed one of his and took it and it worked just fine for me).



Sister peak that is 36 feet shorter than Mt. Mitchell.   Still pretty tall and you can see the clouds going through it.   While we were up there in the parking lot it actually snowed a few flakes on us while we were going through these clouds -- it was COLD up there to be sure, but I sure didn't expect to see an occasional fat snowflake blowing on by my face.









And, here is the proof shot of the intrepid Three Musketeers with Mt. Mitchell snow clouds moving along behind us ....




We split up from the Mt. Mitchell parking lot with Bigzuk and MMRanch heading towards Tennessee and Oldfeller going the other way towards North Carolina.  

To prove that he really loves us, the Good Lord God kept us safe the whole trip and He kindly provided us with a last serving of pork chops delivered right up to the mountain top for us to eat on the way back down .....

Cheesy




Anyhow, we left the Mt. Mitchell parking lot at 4:15 PM and I rolled into my garage at at Fayetteville at 10:45 PM.  

I was one very tired but quite happy puppy.

Grin   Grin   Grin
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« Last Edit: 09/23/11 at 17:13:30 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #490 - 09/23/11 at 20:25:01
 

Friday Report

Friday I got up at 11:00 AM feeling wrecked & wretched -- all drugs had worn off in the night and the middle of my feet were swollen and they flat ached from the pounding the foot pegs dealt out to them on the long haul back home.  Left hip joint was shot bad, left leg was numb and tingly most of the day before calming down some in the afternoon.   Back was talkin' to me too -- all I have to say is Zuk's painkillers were effective as I felt none of this on the way back home, so I am thankful for that too.

It rained on and off all day long, so I feel I took the right path by cutting out on Thursday afternoon and getting back on home before the steady rain started.

MM and Zuk, how did you do getting back to Zuk's on Thursday night?

MM you didn't get rained out on Friday getting home, did you?

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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #491 - 09/24/11 at 08:36:43
 
Old feller, the pics of where you all rode
as well as stayed are very nice. You guys
did well for $29.99 per night. Wow that
jazuzzi and pool looked inviting..
You guys were very lucky to have the time
and weather to enjoy a great time.
Sorry to hear your back, hip and foot gave
you some problems on the last lag of the trip.
I do hope your feeling better now.
You did good to get in this ride in the time allowed.
Again I will concede only that you win for "your  area".
We both have beautiful areas to ride and enjoy.
It is great we both were able to enjoy some time with
other riders and post the pics.
Now time to start thinking of next year rides.. No the
Dragon does not count. That is a ride you take every
or just about every year. The next one has to be a
place you have never ridden before..
You have plenty of time to think of it and plan
for it.. lol...
Oh and you were right, the only thing I would drool
over is the critters... The 4 legged ones not the
2 legged ones..  Grin Grin Grin Grin
Hugs and again thanks for sharing this with us..
Come out west someday and ride the trails with us..Smiley kim
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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #492 - 09/25/11 at 00:39:42
 


OK guys, the cute little girl rode on the back of her Daddy's bike.

So we cannot ever win for cute -- the little girl is unbeatable for that.

(We is all Daddys and them cute little girls always win in our books)

I for one will not take a cute little girl as a rider on the back of my bike on a serious ride up where the air is thin and the road is curvy ....   (shudder)

Sorry guys, we will always lose because I'm too durn chicken, the thought of doing that last trip with a little girl on the back of somebody's bike jest makes me shiver all cold down my spine.

We can win for everything else, but because we cannot carry a little girl into constant mortal danger, we lose.  

Heck, the cumulothelioma would flat put them in the hospital along with the wind chill and drizzle and such like.   Little girls are not built to take such type stuff ...  they lack the snips, snails and puppy dog tails for it.  

Sugar and spice jest melts when the clouds hit it ....


Tongue


Hmmmmmmm  ....     Kinda sounds like a rigged contest to me ??     I mean, we'd have to take a granddaughter with us and we like them too much to ever go do that.  

(shudder)

Can you even IMAGINE the amount of shite you would catch for even mentioning that idea?   You'd never survive it.


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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #493 - 09/25/11 at 01:23:06
 
Old Feller, I was once a lil gal, I would have
loved for my father to ride me on the back
of his bike. To have those memories and
had the chance to gain experience thru
him, is something no text book or
anyone could teach me.
Lil Suzuki Princess is very loved and well
taken care of. Her Dad makes sure she
is dressed for the weather and has all
the gear on as well.
She is secured to him and as long as he
stays on the bike, so does she.
Yes something could happen to her on the
bike, then again it could just as easily happen
in a cage.
What age then do you think a gal should
start riding a bike? Why should it be
any different for a boy than a gal? kim
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Oldfeller--FSO
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Re: 2011 Tail of the Dragon Trip
Reply #494 - 09/25/11 at 01:43:35
 
 
Kim,

First, I don't think you guys did anything wrong taking your little girl on a nice picnic ride in good weather.    Yes, she will always pleasantly remember holding on to her Daddy and looking at all the pretty scenery.

What you guys did was very pleasant and safe .... great memories.


==================


In stark contrast, if she had been behind me, or Zuk or MM she would have been plumb terrified of what was going on with the engines screaming on downshifts, the grinding of the footpegs, slamming right-left-right on turns where the weeds by the roadside were tapping on her shoulder as she went by, winding up the engine while waiting behind a panel van looking for a section to pass him, grabbing on just as tight as she could while the air was blasting by in the occasional downhill straight sections where we were reaching for 100mph but not looking down to see if we got there .....  really not very pleasant memories for a little girl at all.    

Being bone little girl tired and still never stopping except to get gas and use the bathroom.  

The dead animals, the twilight zone ride, the cold, the wet, the mud flying off the tires, the bits of possum guts strung out over the license plate holder.   Walking out in the foggy dark to go to the bathroom without a flashlight KNOWING that zombies like that sort of weather ....

Our trip would have scarred a little girl for life.





(our style little road trips have terrified grown men who didn't really grasp what they were getting into before they went -- ask Southpaw, he can tell you all about it ...)
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« Last Edit: 09/25/11 at 05:11:32 by Oldfeller--FSO »  

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