Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Bonneville Black by Plastidip

I bought my Triumph Bonneville on the 12th of October 2007, and I confess when my wife asked why I didn't buy another Suzuki to replace the one that had given me trouble free service for 20,000 miles I was at a bit of a loss. It was with trepidation I paid $8,000 for the brand new motorcycle and set off on a new adventure. 73,000 miles later I can only say it was a inspired choice, led by physical beauty and sustained by perfect performance.

Yet all is not well, every Eden has its serpent, and my Bonneville shows signs of corrosion despite my best efforts. It is inevitable after all that life under my house in essentially open air surrounded at close quarters by salt water will lead to this:

And this:

This bike was sold as a Goodwood Green standard Bonneville, lacking the chrome of the upscale T100 ($2000 extra!) and not equipped with the black powder coated engine cases that I craved, so it came with what they call brushed aluminum engine covers.

I had the thought of buying factory fresh black powder coated engine covers for $375 plus taxes etc...or on my mechanic Jiri's advice I could have taken the cases to be powder coated next to his motorcycle shop for quite likely far less money. That was when I read an entry in the Triumphrat website, for Bonneville owners and fans.

Triumphrat is one if those nerdy websites devoted tI spending money on motorcycles, but not riding them much. It's filled with threads about how to add everything except miles to the bike, not least because resale value is terribly important to people who buy motorbikes, give them cute names and then park them out of fear of wearing them out. I read it periodically to see what I can glean and occasionally I contribute if I have an experience to share rather than simply an opinion to pontificate about. And then I read about something called Plastidip. I surrendered to plastidip - Triumph Forum: Triumph Rat Motorcycle Forums

There was no experience reported using plastidip on the engine so I paid a visit to the ACE shop on Summerland Key and came home with a twelve dollar aerosol (including tax) of matt black Plastidip. Hmm.

Let me say here and now I am a fourth rate painter. I have no patience, no interest in prep work and every interest in getting the job done and going riding. All of which makes me terrible when it comes to paint and brushes and getting the best finish. I did my best, secure in the knowledge if it doesn't work I can peel the plastic coating straight off the metal and all I've wasted is some time and a very few dollars.

So far it looks not too bad at all and the heat generated on my commutes hasn't abused the paint to peel as was suspected by those too fearful to try it.

I cannot say it looks perfect or even close to good but I can say it looks a lot better than the corrosion it covers and in the hands of a proper dedicated painter it could look superb.

Much as I love my Bonneville I spend money to keep the internals perfect and for all it shows signs of age miles and corrosion, hadi the time I would ride it to California to or row without a second thought. It's that solid and reliable a bike.

It looks better in photographs than it does in person and I am sure time and road grit and the scuffs of daily riding will not improve the finish. I may yet do the job properly and powder coat it but for now...resale value is zero anyway, in a world of six year old Bonnevilles with five thousand miles on them (how is that possible?).

There she is, made ugly and cluttered and purposeful by bags and windshield, thus supremely capable and also comfortable with my custom Sargent's saddle, Motorcycle Seats - Sargent Seats - Aftermarket Motorcycle Seats The Bonneville is easy to handle and fun to ride and soon I shall try my hand at painting the exhaust pipes to hide a little more evidence of miles and corrosion.

It's the least I can do for the best motorcycle I have ever owned in 43 years of riding, not named, ridden hard in storms floods and winds mountains and freeways and enjoyed every day of these last six years.

 

Tuesday, June 11, 2013

Three Conversations In Savannah

By  way of preface I should relate a conversation I had, the unwitting victim as I was of a motorcyclist encountered at a gas station in Virginia on my recent trip up the Eastern Seaboard. I was letting Cheyenne stretch her legs a little after I secured the pump nozzle in the car's tank and  strolling around the building I came across a battered orange Harley Sportster. Most obvious were the deep dents in the tank, but closer observation showed a non standard front fender, crusty rusty scratches in the chrome of the headlamp shell, and various minor signs of a not terribly recent crash. The owner came by, dressed in a leather vest, shorty helmet and flashy boots and without preamble launched into a very long winded story about the errant young man  in a car who crossed lanes and crunched the Harley head on, such that the rider flew through the air and had his limbs and innards rearranged requiring massive prolonged surgery to pull his legs out of his torso and set his liver, kidneys, stomach and lungs in their proper places. At a bill of 1.3 million dollars. "His insurance covered you no doubt," I butted into the endless monologue with my usual health care preoccupation. " Oh no, " he replied cheerfully, "He had the bare minimum coverage and my VA paperwork got lost and I ended up with a million dollar bill." He smiled cheerfully like a man who was ignoring the bill and had not yet filed for bankruptcy, as one does in this sad state of affairs. "But the good news is," he added looking skywards forced to take his penetrating eyes off mine for the first time in this  lengthy narrative (that I have much abbreviated though it may not seem so), "...I found my heavenly Father," he smiled beatifically. "I am an atheist, " I said stoutly, "and a devout believer in single payer health care. As it is my insurance is paying your bill," I was merciless. "We aren't a socialist nation," he said after he recovered from my blind side, with an unsaid nod toward my Euro-accent, land of the infidel socialist single payers... "Fair enough," I said, "but that only works if the monopolistic corporations decide to honor their obligations and pay what they owe and not hire people to deny claims of the sick and injured." I tried to break it off but he kept blathering as I shoved Cheyenne in the car and  inserted myself behind the wheel. The freeway beckoned, as this "quick stop" had turned into an interminable lecture, an attempt at proselytizing and an utter waste of my time and breath. That's why I hate engaging strangers in small talk, things always seem to get away from me and I know better and I am left with jangled nerves. It was only when he turned back, finally, to his Sportster did I see the Christian Riders logo on the back. Every time a Christian tries to convert me I love Judaism more. Jews don't believe in missionary work and prefer to keep their religion to themselves. Good people.
I found an extraordinary level of interest in my dog when strolling River Street in Savannah last Wednesday evening. People, strangers all obviously, came up to Cheyenne unsolicited and petted her and made a fuss of her and treated her like the princess she usually is only in my eyes. She took it all in stride, pausing when I got stuck talking to a few of those strangers. "Come on Daddy, lots to see!" was the theme of the evening.
One man came up to me, petted my dog and asked about her. "You're not from Key West," he said in that patronizing way people have, thinking they are being witty, not realizing how many times I've heard that stupid witticism. "No," I said, "I'm from the place where your ancestors emigrated from..? Where your aunt lives..? ..Where you were stationed in the military..?" I had exhausted my list of reasons why perfect strangers feel free to ask me about the source of my non Key West accent. He smiled. "English wife," he said. "So you are from Savannah," I riposted trying to nail down his provenance and get the subject off mine. I hate explaining I'm Italian who went to school in England of mixed parentage, unknown father etc... etc... and yes I speak Italian. Phew, it's a long story.
"She died," he said, "But she liked Savannah so I think of it as home..." From this unpromising start we had a wildly fun conversation. Surprise!
I failed of course to take a picture of the middle aged white man who engaged me in conversation, taller than me, mild mannered and with a cheerful smile. He said his second wife was South African, which got us going on accents, as I tried to do my version of a dour Afrikaner and he laughed at my successful mimicry. Then we agreed that Dutch and by extension Afrikaans were ugly glottal languages. Cheyenne was quite bored but it was my turn to sniff the gutter, as it were, and have fun. We discussed the variations between South Africa and Australasia and he remarked how, when working in Holland and Britain he had never been able to tell the difference between a New Zealander and and Australian. I by turn admitted to him my  bigotry... I find Australian accents hard not to imitate, partly because of their absurdly wide vowels but partly also because they have an odd tendency to abbreviate everything and all abbreviations end in a 'y'. We parted famous friends and my dog got to walk again. 
Not for long as we were waylaid by a remarkably toothless little old woman, who in all likelihood, had she had a roof, nourishment and a less arduous life might well have looked younger than her likely age. As it was she sold palm weavings on River Street and she inveigled my dog into stopping so of course I ended up  listening to her patter about the rose as symbol of peace etc...which must be true because Cheyenne seemed to enjoy it, looking up at the sun weathered parchment-like face and the mobile, toothless mouth puckered like an invertebrate poised above her bright blue sweater. I have no idea what my dog was thinking but I forked over  some bills for a nicely garnished palm rose which I promptly  forgot in my motel room that night. Grrr...
The last stop was perhaps the oddest of all, walking along the edge of the riverfront admiring the view a young African American man came up as though importuning "Sir!" for some predictable thing or change or something. But no! Once again my elderly yellow dog, so often the object of abject fear was desired... "Can I pet your dog?" he asked with a  big grin on his street musician's face. Sure, I replied, though she's not really interested. Happily he paid no attention to me and to my astonishment Cheyenne, the blissfully uninterested dog that heeds no one or no other animal fell immediately and completely under his spell. As he ran his hands gently over her head down her neck and across her back she stood obediently as I have never seen her do with a stranger and let him touch her as he wished. He must have seem my astonishment as he smiled and told me they call him -predictably- a "dog whisperer." He deserves the title as Cheyenne was his for a few minutes, trapped under the spell cast  by his hands. Once again I was too astonished to remember to take a picture...and soon enough he was gone back into the crowd with a smile and a wave, content to have touched my old yellow Labrador.
That was particularly odd because there is some cultural deficit among blacks in North America where dogs, particularly large ones are to be feared above all. I don't know if it is a myth passed down the generations based in the cruelties of history where humans have used dogs to enforce human cruelties or what. Also it was odd as Cheyenne never lets anyone touch her. But there it was, and I saw it happen.
Cheyenne's  grand finale after so many friendly encounters in a place where it seems every single person wanted to pet her, and not all of them were dog whisperers by any means, after we returned to Bay Street towards the car she caught me unawares and plunked herself down in a large puddle in front of God and everybody and proceeded to wallow and drink her own bath water to the astonishment of passers by who crowded to photograph the hippopotamus-dog. Now that's the Cheyenne I know and love!

Monday, June 10, 2013

Trees, Parking And Street Signs- Streets of Key West.

A sunny day and a skyline filled with frangipani and a flame tree in the background. A good day to be in Key West.
The signage was up all over the place on Duncan Street next to the late Tennessee William's home.
At first I thought it was his place judging by the title over the door but I think his was next door, in those days the playwright lived on the edge of town, if you can imagine.  
In what used to be fields we now have New Town where I saw a bevy of useful scooters, including the one with the ice chest on the back. Those are the one typically adapted to commercial delivery use, and very sensible they are too.
However the manufacturers are still trying to sell us their factory built delivery "trucks" like this massive model with room for several American-sized large pizzas in the box. I wish more communities would view two wheelers as useful tools.
Parking is always a crisis in Key West and sometimes it seems like residents help to make it so. Check out some of these gruesome parking styles in New Town where pedestrians (like me) can actually find a real sidewalk to use. One has to be adaptable and...walk around.
Selling a palm tree, says I to myself? No such eccentric luck I find out as its a boat on a trailer in the driveway that is actually on offer. 
Of all the improbable and unlikely gate ornaments to come across in Key West...a lion holding a shield. Very Old World I'm sure.
The Montessori school is identified by its rather cute benches.
There is a tennis pro giving lessons at Bayview Park and he is identified by his shop. I would rather eat worms than play tennis, but it's my loss.
Key West street scenes; nuff sed:

There was actually a gate to be blocked, but off to the side, making the sign a little less eccentric than appeared at first. I told you parking is a hot button issue in this small town. And below we see, in a parked Jeep a commercial plastic bottle of precious hydration fluid. God forbid we walk two steps without water.
This small meadow is on Eisenhower at the site of a relatively new development with magnificent landscaping, much enjoyed by my dog (I had the usual plastic bag at the ready even though she didn't actually shit there. Thank you for worrying).
More street scenes:
And a couple of covered cars, used during winter tourist season, now resting for the summer.
No wonder parking is a hot issue when part time residents essentially abandon their cars on the streets for a whole long hot summer. We should go north and park at random in people's suburban neighborhoods for the summer and see how they freak out. Oh well we are nicer than their neighborhood associations are, I guess.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Elegy In A Country Churchyard

I live in the sub tropics just north of the Tropic of Cancer but I grew up in a world of temperate climates and literature. Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So when Cheyenne and I drove through this little village in eastern Pennsylvania I figured we should stop and catch our breaths after our long drive from Ramrod Key. It was a good idea.

The day was perfect, the temperature finally started approaching a spring-like seventy degrees and a gentle breeze kept the air fresh and dry. Cheyenne liked it for her reasons as we strolled down Church Lane...

...enjoying the shady overhang of trees not commonly found at home.

I enjoy cemeteries, quiet places of contemplation and around here they have the rather odd habit apparently of just planting people higgledy-piggeldy in open fields.

Thanks to the proclivities of the majority of owners who prefer not to pick up after their animals, dogs generally aren't welcomed in graveyards, not least as the spiritual attributes of dogs are in some doctrinal dispute to put it politely, Do Animals Have Souls - Do Animals Go to Heaven? So I don't walk Cheyenne among the very interesting headstones of the cemeteries I come across.

It was the sort of perfect day under the sun that required some sitting in the convenient lawn chair you carry in the trunk of your car for just such occasions.

I picked a tick off Cheyenne's eyebrow, it's little legs waving as I crushed it's carapace between my nails (I'm pretty sure ticks, far from having souls are instruments of the devil) and we sat and tried to remember why we like living in the flatland of palms and mangroves.
St. Paul's United Church of Christ, Trexlertown, Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania The web is amazing, almost as astonishing as the fact they say they have been here 225 years, far long than Key West, founded only in 1828.

 

Then we got back on the road, following the little blue arrowhead on the phone's GPS screen back to the freeway and the 1200 mile journey home. It was an excellent pause.

And all too soon we were back to this for a couple of days.

Apparently it rained in Pennsylvania the day before we arrived and I don't doubt it rained afterwards. The drive home was a long series of rainstorms as Tropical Storm André ravaged Tampa Bay. But it's the rain that makes these lovely places so green. That and the winter snows of course. Brr!