Tuesday, May 26, 2015

An Abandoned Adventure To Adelong! - 24 May 2015


 It was a balmy six degrees when I arrived at Nicholls for the start of our adventure.  The skies were clearing to what would be a beautiful day.  I even contemplated stripping down to a T-shirt and opening the vents on my jacket, but Kipper gave one of those looks that said “Are you bonkers?”  We wandered over to say hello to a growing crowd.  It was a big turnout for Adelong.  What a great day we had ahead of us.  There was quiet murmur as we approached.  Eyes flickered downward, feet shuffled, and people seemed to move quietly away from the chosen ride leader.  Ian Paterson, aka ‘The Tall One’, aka ‘Jimmy’, stealthily moved towards us, ostensibly to say g’day.  I was too slow to duck and too old to weave.  Quick as a flash, I was elected to the holy position of ‘Scribe-for-the-day’.  Suddenly, I knew why everyone else had avoided TTO, aka ‘Jimmy’.


TTO proceeded to announce to all that as it was well-past the appointed departure time, we should get a wriggle on.  He asked for a tail-end-Charlie and ended up with a tail-end-Kipper.  The group were being particularly unhelpful today.  Many continued to chat amongst themselves as TTO gave his ride instructions to those within beating distance.  Some pretended to be listening intently but were clearly picking next week’s Lotto numbers.  The rest of us ignored his ramblings and prepared for departure, now some 15 fashionable minutes late.  I heard someone ask “Where are we going again?” and thought I saw a tear of resignation start to form in the corners of TTO’s eyes.  Such is the pain of leadership.  We departed Nicholls in an orderly fashion, some 18 bikes and a couple of pillions eagerly heading towards Yass.  The intrepid travellers in no particular order were as follows:



Ian being studiously ignored
Ian Patterson (Ride Leader aka ‘The Tall One’ aka ‘Jimmy’) on a Honda GL 1800

Darryl Cullen on a Suzuki 1250s Bandit

Alan and Lyn Munday on a Yamaha FJR 1300

Robert McNeilly on a Honda VFR 800

Peter Arday on a Honda ST 1300

Ewan Ward on a Honda ST 1100

Andrea Lanagan on a Suzuki Boulevard and winner of the ‘Crash-bar-left-in-a-tree’ award

Garry McCurley and Natalie TeBay on a Honda VFR 1200

Gary Thomas on a Suzuki DL 650

Chas and Jen Towie on a Honda ST 1300 and NOT winners of the ‘Most-reliable-bike-of-the-day’ award

Janet Mulgrue on a Suzuki AN 650

Kerry Mulgrue on a Honda ST 1300

Mark Mitchell on a Honda VFR 800

Mike Kelly on a BMW R 1200 RT

Chris Dietzel on a Kawasaki GTR 1400

Andrew Campbell on a Kawasaki ZX 14 R

Marilyn Starick on a BMW 800

Mick Beltrame and Kipper on a Victory Cross Country (Scribe and Tail-end-Kipper)

Harden lineup
 I was thrilled to have taken Kipper’s advice to stay warmly dressed as the temperature went from the balmy six degrees to a chilly four degrees as we approached Yass.  The usual fog accompanied the usual low temperatures either side of the township.  Why did they choose a fog-filled cold hole to build that town?  It’s one of those things in life one must ponder occasionally.  We pondered for about 20 minutes as we slowly cold-soaked our respective body-cores, and then broke into clearing skies and warming temperatures.  It was almost into double figures by the time we reached Harden, but I doubt anyone looked as they scrambled for hot tea, hot coffees, hot food, hot anything!  I had the urge to warm my hands in hot liquid while Kipper peed on the grass.  No ………… not that liquid.  I wanted a coffee, so I wandered on to a quieter café and ordered a hot long black. 



Our morning tea was another leisurely affair, much like the leisurely start.  By the time we brushed the food from our chests, mopped up the spilled drinks from our chins and suited up, it was another 30 minutes gone from the ‘overtime’ clock and I knew this was going to be a long day.  Lunch was looking like it would be a 1 pm affair, if we were lucky.  Hold that thought.  Sometimes, your luck runs low on helpfulness.  The run from Harden to Tumut is a mix of sweeping ups and downs, some sharp bends, some rough patches, some blindly crested roads and some narrow strips of tarmac.  In the mix are a lot of turns and poorly marked route options, so TTO (‘The Tall One’ aka ‘Jimmy’ if you’ve forgotten already) had asked for corner markers all the way from Harden to Adelong.

Corner marking is an art.  Kipper is an expert at marking corners and proves it every evening when we go walking, so I eagerly awaited his stamp of approval on what I believed was an excellent job of corner marking by the corner markers.  They parked in sensible places, clear of traffic.  They were visible and near the corner.  They waved to make sure they were seen.  They didn’t move off until they were sure that ‘Tail-end-Kipper’ was in sight and ready to turn.  I’d have thought a 10/10 was the very least they deserved.  Alas, Kipper was only mildly impressed.  He gave them a good (but not excellent) 8.5/10.  Marks were deducted because they failed to mark the corners by actually leaving their mark!  Kipper said he didn’t see one damp patch on any corner.  I tried to explain that people don’t mark corners that way, but he wouldn’t have a bar of it.  C’est la vie.  And speaking of bars ………………………..

There are times when rides just don’t go to plan and the unplanned happens.  I shall try and save any further embarrassment for our intrepid riding colleague, but there are salutary lessons to be learned here.  We had a very lucky escape for Miss Andrea on one of the tricky diminishing radius and steeply crested narrow corners on the Brungle Road about a dozen or more kilometres from Tumut.  I was too far back as Tail-end-Kipper too see the event take place, but I was waved down as I approached the left-hander where a few of the group were salvaging the bike from the high-side of a dirt embankment and long grass over on the right side of the road.  The rider was thankfully upright and seemed ok.  It was a low-side slide into a soft-banked and treeless table-drain.  There was no on-coming traffic.  The gear being worn did what it was supposed to do, although it’s a bit ‘used’ now.  The bike was parked at a farmer’s house as it wasn’t rideable.  Andrea was relatively unhurt and rode pillion into Tumut.  It wasn’t my place to ask ‘why’ or ‘how’ and I won’t do any guessing in this ride report.  It could have been far worse, and wasn’t

The front few of the group had missed the event and ridden on without knowing that most of us were parked.  A lot of time was spent trying to get the damaged bike straight enough to ride, but it wasn’t possible.  It had to be left behind in a farmer’s yard.  A broken section of the bike’s crash bars was left hanging in a tree.  A reminder perhaps?  A blight on the environment?  Adelong was looking unachievable.  Most of the group headed off to Tumut to find fuel and reassess the day’s lunch plan.  Some of us decided we liked the spot so much that we would sit around in the sunshine a little longer.  The usually reliable (so I’m told but don’t believe) Chas and Jen Honda decided that it had had enough.  Maybe it got scared?  Maybe it didn’t like not going to Adelong?  Maybe Chas and Jen had been cruel to it.  The roads had been pretty rough in places.  Either way, it decided not to start.  No amount of bump-starting was going to change its mind!  Bugger.   

Chas steed fails to proceed, Alan M attenpts a laying on of hands
 Chas rolled the bike down the hill to a safer driveway and we had a play.  Nope.  No good.  Call the NRMA.  We killed another half hour or so fiddling with some inadequate jumper leads I carried and getting a jump-start from the VFR.  We also avoided the biting green-ants on the ground.  Kipper had a sleep.  He’s a useless helper when it gets mechanical.  The NRMA arrived in good time.  The bike started easily with a heavy-duty jumper pack carried by the NRMA chap, so we headed to Tumut for fuel, food and a trip direct to home.  Unfortunately, the bike died while idling at the service station and would not restart again, so we were back to square one, except that the square had moved a dozen kilometres from Brungle into Tumut.  So much for Honda reliability.  We let the others having lunch in the main drag know the story while we got the NRMA called out again.  Marilyn arrived and was carrying a portable jumper pack that worked great and enabled the Honda to start.  The NRMA chap turned up too late, but it was decided that there was a fair chance that if the revs were kept up on the bike it would enable it to get home

Did the Honda get home?  I hope so.  I left with Kipper as he had had enough of not seeing Adelong and was getting weary from all the stops.  Chas and Jen had a goodly number of escorts for the run back to Canberra, so we left in advance of the bulk of the group.  Our time as tail-end-Kipper was over.  I didn’t see Andrea in Tumut, but hoped she was ok and not feeling too bad about trashing the bike or feeling too sore in the shoulder where her gear was heavily damaged.  For her, it was a lucky escape.  This was not the ride we set out to do today.  We had to abandon our adventure to Adelong after a series of unfortunate adventures on the way.  What wasn’t abandoned was the willingness of people to help, the general camaraderie of the group and the many offers of advice, support and assistance. Even those who bore the brunt of the adventures seem to have held their good sense of humour, at least on the outside.  The temperature was falling rapidly as I hit the ACT border and it dropped into single digits as I turned into my street.  What a day.  What an adventure.

Mick B