Post on 07-Mar-2016
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&THE JOURNAL OF THE
&&Medals Motorcyclesy
[ three Olympians with a passion for bikes ]
AM_03_2010_pp001_Cover_Final.indd 1 1/20/10 6:19 PM
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23
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 2 1/21/10 11:47 AM
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AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 3 1/20/10 3:22 PM
18 Protecting The Ride Western Off-Road Riding
In The Crosshairs
20 Living It Kawasaki Z1000 And
Your Views On Motorcycles
25 Connections The Call Of The Track
30 Adrenaline AMA SX: Dungey Rising
34 Heritage Yamaha YZR500: A Two-Stroke
Grand-Prix Weapon
51 Go Ride What To Do, Where To Go
36 Medals & Motorcycles Olympic Athletes Use
Motorcycles For Fun And Cross-Training En Route To This Month’s Winter Games
44 The Journey, Not The Destination
On A Ride From Dallas To The Pacifi c, One Rider Finds More Than Just The Country
March 2010
Volume 64, Number 3
Published by the
American Motorcyclist Association
13515 Yarmouth Dr.
Pickerington, OH 43147
(800) AMA-JOIN
AmericanMotorcyclist.com
American Motorcyclist magazine (ISSN 0277-9358) is published monthly by the American Motorcyclist Association, 13515 Yarmouth Dr., Pickerington, OH 43147. Copyright by the American Motorcyclist Association/American Motorcyclist 2010. Printed in USA. Subscription rate: Magazine subscription fee of $10 covered in membership dues; $15 a year for non-members.
Postmaster: Mail form 3579 to 13515 Yarmouth Dr., Pickerington, OH 43147. Periodical postage paid at Pickerington, Ohio, and at additional mailing offi ces.
Cover Olympic hopeful Shannon Bahrke photographed by Tom Bear Navigation Photo Mosquito Pass in Colorado with Leadville, Colo., in the background and Jim Noteboom on the XC BMW. Photo by Gary Schmidt.
06 Snapshots Your Images, Your World
10 Letters You Write, We Read
12 Rob Dingman Sitting On The Sidelines
Is Not An Option
58 Charles SasserLone Riding
VIEWPOINTS THE LIFE
FEATURES
Navigation
4 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 4 1/20/10 3:22 PM
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 5 1/20/10 3:23 PM
1) Lee De Leonard of Waterville, Maine. 2) Garrison, Minn., race by Sue LeClair of Braham, Minn. 3) David Krise of
Lander, Wyo. 4) Kodi Hoffman of Pittsgrove, N.J., posing. 5) Steve Jovais and Gloria Meehan in Cottonwood Pass,
Colo. 6) Sloan Essman of Houston. 7) Tim Hilslamer riding near Superior, Ariz.—Terry Zechman of Glendale, Ariz. 8)
AMA and Durty Dabber members from Mill Hall, Pa., visiting the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum: Lynn, Lana,
Steve, Colleen, and Tommy.—Tommy Wise of Mill Hall, Pa. 9) “My nephew, Jeremy Christen, at St. Joe State ORV
Park in Park Hills, Mo. I’ve been riding 40 years and the grin on this kid’s face reminded me of what off-road riding is about. No cool gear or fully prepped bike
needed for fun!”—Jeff Henderson of Collinsville, Ill. 10) Robert Nichols and his son, Aiden, of Berlin, Md. 11) “A track day at New Jersey Motorsports Park’s
Thunderbolt track. That’s me on the Aprilia Futura!”—Jeffrey Meyers of Niskayuna, N.Y. 12) Taken in Death Valley during a big storm.—Ken Blasor of Chandler,
Ariz. 13) Submitted by Steven Hauptman of Southfield, Mich. 14) Bob Fiesser of Highlands Ranch, Colo., “with one of the locals” in Krumholz, Czech Republic.
321
Snapshots
Congratulations, Gary! You’re the winner this month! Gary
Grant captured the moment when his daughter, Christy, waved
to an unknown rider on the Bear Tooth Highway, between
Yellowstone National Park and Red Lodge, Mont.
6 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 6 1/21/10 10:33 AM
Got an image that represents what’s cool about motorcycling? Send your high-resolution photos, name and mailing address to submissions@ama-cycle.org.
We’ll pick one standout photo next month and send the photographer a prize pack of AMA gear. Editors decisions are fi nal. No purchase necessary.
4 5 6
7
11 12
3 13 14
10
8 9
There’s more where these came from! We get way more cool photos than we can publish here, and now you’ll fi nd them all
online, searchable and divided by category. Just visit AmericanMotorcyclist.com and click on the “Gallery” link on the left.
March 2010 7
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 7 1/20/10 3:24 PM
SS
Editorial officES
American Motorcyclist
13515 Yarmouth Drive
Pickerington, OH 43147
(614) 856-1900
submissions@ama-cycle.org
Grant Parsons, Managing Editor
James Holter, Associate Editor
Bill Kresnak, Government Affairs Editor
Mitch Boehm, Contributing Editor
Mark Lapid, Creative Director
Nora McDonald, Production Coordinator
Jen Muecke, Designer
advErtiSing
Bob Buchanan, Advertising Manager
(310) 505-3241, bbuchanan@ama-cycle.org
Ray Monroe, Advertising Manager
(815) 885-4445, rmonroe@ama-cycle.org
Misty Walker, Advertising Assistant
(614) 856-1900, ext. 1267, mwalker@ama-cycle.org
All trademarks used herein (unless
otherwise noted) are owned by the AMA
and may only be used with the express,
written permission of the AMA.
American Motorcyclist is the monthly publication of the American
Motorcyclist Association, which represents motorcyclists nationwide.
For information on AMA membership benefits, call (800) AMA-JOIN or
visit AmericanMotorcyclist.com. Manuscripts, photos, drawings and
other editorial contributions must be accompanied by return postage.
No responsibility is assumed for loss or damage to unsolicited material.
Copyright© American Motorcyclist Association, 2010.
aMa Board of dirEctorS
Contact any member of the AMA Board of
Directors at www.AmericanMotorcyclist.
com/whatis/trustees.asp
Stan Simpson, Chairman
Cibolo, Texas
Jim Williams, Vice-Chairman
Irvine, Calif.
Jon-Erik Burleson, Assistant Treasurer
Murrietta, Calif.
John Ulrich, Executive Committee Member
Lake Elsinore, Calif.
andy goldfine, Duluth, Minn.
charles goman, Winder, Ga.
Perry King, Northern California
Michael lock, Cupertino, Calif.
Maggie Mcnally, Albany, N.Y.
arthur More, Surprise, Ariz.
Jim viverito, Chicago
toM BEar, Photographer Since we first used Tom’s
photographic services more than a year ago, we’ve
been blown away by his ability to make the ordinary look
spectacular, and his work appears in these pages whenever
we can make it happen--which in this case is the cover shot
and opening spread of Olympic athlete Shannon Bahrke.
PEtE coPE, Writer Proving that motorcycle journeys can
be as much mental as physical, Pete shares some insights in
this month’s touring feature.
JEn MUEcKE, designer Looking to thin the herd a bit,
Jen put a few bikes up for sale in January, including a ’00
MuZ Baghira and a ’67 Benelli/Wards Riverside cafe racer,
which, of course, put the rest of the staff in “motorcycle
planning” mode.
MarK laPid, creative director Mark jumped into the
fray headfirst, salivating over the Baghira despite others best
efforts to convince him that the Benelli is exactly the vintage
racer he’s been looking for. He may or may not be coming
around.
nora Mcdonald, Production coordinator With the
thaw on the way, Nora has rededicated herself to bolting up
the final bits on the CB360. It’s almost done, she swears.
It’s just hard to maintain motivation when there’s snow on
the ground.
Bill KrESnaK, government affairs Editor Shocked
to discover that the GSX-R1000 was celebrating its 25th
anniversary, Krez fondly remembered both his GSX-R750
and his 1100—and immediately started dreaming about
getting another Gixxer.
grant ParSonS, Managing Editor Grant figures one of
the great things about having a couple motorcycles—even
junky ones—is the massive domino-effect trades he can
create entirely inside his own head that start with what he
owns, and ends with a garage full of perfect motorcycles.
Delusional is what the guy is sometimes.
JaMES HoltEr, associate Editor Speaking of stalled-
out projects, James is chagrined to find that he’s way behind
on his Yamaha IT250 project. He really needs to dig into the
giant box of IT250 puzzle pieces he bought off eBay.
other contributors include: Don Cook, Chris Humphrey,
Jeff Kardas, Jim Kimball, Brian Martin, Shan Moore, Stephan
Sarzetakis, Charles Sasser, Basem Wasef
(800) AMA-JOIN
AmericanMotorcyclist.com
contributors and Staff
PctB cS
It’s prepackaged excitement,
turnkey thrills, ready-made routes
through America’sToughest
gT h t roads
andgnarliestg
litrails.
gil
gYeah, we give you
a map, but where you go with it is
up toyou.For more information, see the schedule
on page 55 or visit the riding section of
AmericanMotorcyclist.com.
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 8 1/20/10 3:24 PM
EVERY WOMAN SHOULD FEEL THIS
WAY. MARCH IS WOMEN’S GARAGE
PARTY MONTH AT DEALERSHIPS
NATIONWIDE. A WOMEN-ONLY
EVENT WHERE YOU’LL LEARN
ABOUT RIDING AND MEET
LIKE-MINDED SOULS.
GRAB LIFE BY THE
HANDLEBARS.
For dates and dealersnear you visit :h-d.com/garageparty
© 2010 H-D. Harley-Davidson, H-D, Harley, and the Bar & Shield logo are among the trademarks of H-D Michigan, LLC.
“ ANYTHING IS POSSIBLE
WHEN I’M ON MY
HARLEY-DAVIDSON.®
I FEEL LIKE I CAN
CONQUER THE
WORLD.”
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 9 1/20/10 3:25 PM
WHAT A GREAT EVENING
Congratulations! The 2009 AMA Hall of
Fame awards ceremony and banquet in Las
Vegas was a big success. My husband and
I were choked up at least a half-dozen times
during those speeches. Really neat! What a
great group of inductees. Thanks again for a
great evening.
Kathy Weida, Vice President
All American Racers Inc.
Dan Gurney Alligator Motorcycles Inc.
A FIRST-CLASS EVENT
Thanks so much for all the hard work
you did putting together the Hall of Fame
banquet. What a huge success! We don’t
know who was in charge of doing all the
different tasks, but we know you were all
very helpful to us. We were both shocked at
how many people attended. It truly was a
fi rst class event.
Gary and Denise Mathers
AMA Life Members
Nos. 124015 and 284324
Hendersonville, N.C.
EASY IS GOOD
The pre-made postcards in the February
issue of American Motorcyclist that made
it simple for AMA members to sound off on
the lead issue with
children’s motorcycles
was a fantastic idea.
It just doesn’t get any
easier than that. Thank
you, and well done,
AMA!
Trish Moran
AMA No. 874864
Garden City, Minn.
ADVICE FOR THE ROAD
In the Ask the MSF column, February
issue, the question was asked, “What can I
do when I drive my car that will make me a
better rider when I’m on my motorcycle?”
The advice given was good, focusing
on maintaining 360-degree awareness,
scanning for dangers around you and
practicing safe, attentive driving at all times
in the car.
I wanted to add something to this advice.
One thing I found, while taking the MSF
advanced course, that does not come
naturally for me is looking through the curve.
I tend to look at the road a short distance in
front of me. I now practice looking through
the curve while driving my car.
I will actually look through the side
window on some freeway ramps.
This initially creates a very strange,
uncomfortable feeling, but this training has
helped me do a better job of looking through
the curve while riding.
Hope this helps somebody.
Steve Reichman Sr.
AMA No.1078237
Perkasie, Pa.
OTHER WINTER HAZARDS
Great MSF article on winter riding! I would
like to note, though, another, perhaps less-
obvious winter hazard I have encountered
in the months where road-clearing activity
is happening: mud/salt-covered brake lights
and turn signals on cars.
Particularly in bright sunlight, the mud and
muck can cause car lights to appear very
dim, if they’re visible at all. Because of this,
it’s hard to tell when another vehicle brakes
suddently. So I make it a point to always
leave an extra large space cushion. Same
goes for dodging the snow and/or ice sheets
that can come sliding off of the roofs of
vehicles in front of you.
Also, in rural areas of some states,
unmarked snowmobile crossings can also
be a hazard, so keep a vigilant eye on the
roadsides. It might not be just deer running
around out there.
Ellen Flanagan
AMA No. 940122
Amenia, N.Y.
BIKES STILL RESONATE WITH
REGULAR PEOPLE
Fully a dozen years after Ultan Guilfoyle
and I selected the machines for ‘The Art
of the Motorcycle’ at the Guggenheim,
the success of that exhibition continues to
bring motorcycles to the attention of the
larger non-motorcycling public. The latest
example can be seen on the webpage of the
American Association for the Advancement
of Science (AAAS): www.aaas.org/
programs/centers/pe/chopper/.
As is indicated there, very shortly the
AAAS will launch a major campaign that
will use an electric chopper to interest the
general public in science.
Motorcycles and science—it’s a symbiotic
relationship that benefi ts everyone.
Charles Falco
AMA No. 362880
Tucson, Ariz.
ROAD ETIQUETTE?
I’ve always been a lone rider, and I’m
always looking for that one road that makes
you turn around and ride it again. The other
day, I was out and
saw a group of bikes
heading down a road
I’ve yet to try.
I wondered, though,
if it would be rude to
follow them? I never
want to interfere with
another’s ride. What’s
the golden rule here?
Ian Adams
AMA No. 1090295
Oklahoma City
Good question, Ian. We’ve seldom been
put off by other riders when we’ve dropped
in behind them for part of a ride. Not saying
it doesn’t happen, but way more often than
not, if we happen to wind up riding with
others and pull into the same stop later,
we’ve been welcomed. It’s just part of the
common bond that motorcyclists share.
Generally, it’s a good idea to give riders
you’re unfamiliar with a little extra cushion on
the road. And, as with all group rides, don’t
get sucked in beyond your limits. Ride your
own ride, even when riding with others.
ANOTHER DISTRACTION TO
CONSIDER?
With awareness of distractions on the
AMA’s mind, I’d like to add self-canceling
turn signals to the list of distractions to be
remedied for motorcyclists.
More specifi cally,
I’m concerned over the
lack of self-canceling
signals on many bikes.
There are half a dozen
proven technologies
for making them, and
they won’t add an
awful lot to the cost of
a bike. Why don’t the
bike manufacturers fi t
all bikes with them?
Mike Bradley
AMA No. 1081756
Oakland, Calif.
CABLE BARRIERS
I would like to comment on Mark
Bloschock’s article about cable barriers. For
15 years I was a fl ight medic on board Dade
County, Fla.’s Air Rescue helicopters.
Based on fi rst-hand observation, I can
recommend cable barriers over other types.
I recollect three situations where a cyclist
went down and slid along the top edge of a
corrugated-beam-type barrier. All sustained
massive lacerations: an open chest injury,
Send your letters (and a high-resolution photo) to submissions@ama-cycle.org;
or mail to 13515 Yarmouth Drive, Pickerington, OH 43147.Member Letters
Trish Moran
Mike Bradley
Ian Adams
10 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 10 1/20/10 3:25 PM
a mid-femoral amputation, etc. Accidents
involving concrete wall barriers brought
about everything from abrasions to massive
fractures and blunt trauma. Fatalities were
the result in several. I do not remember any
critical injuries involving cable barriers.
Robin Pomerantz
AMA No. 664900
Newnan, Ga.
NOPE, IT’S A STREETFIGHTER
In the January edition of American
Motorcyclist is a short interview with Bob
Parsons discussing his love of motorcycles,
and the wedding cake he had made in the
form of a full-size Ducati. The picture of the
cake bike is clearly a Ducati Streetfi ghter, so
I was amazed when the set-up paragraph
for the interview described it as a Ducati
Monster. Come on guys; I could see that
sort of thing from a non-motorcycling
publication—but not from you!
Dave Ryan
AMA No. 430460
Pittsburgh
Right you are, Dave. Funny thing, though,
both a Monster cake and a Streetfi ghter cake
taste the same!
On Facebook? Us, too. Become a fan of the
American Motorcyclist Association and you could be leaving comments like these:
Rocky Lopes Cage drivers don’t see us motorcyclists
anyway, so the last thing they need to have in their cars
is an internet-connected “infotainment” system. Sheesh!
I commend the AMA’s position on this important issue
affecting the safety of all motorists, especially us
bikers!—in response to an AMA news release urging caution on
technology that contributes to distracted driving.
Gary Semo Lets push for cell service not working inside a vehicle
when the car is running. Or some variation of that. Hands-free is
bull. It’s the thought involved in the conversation that distracts
you.—on the same subject.
Shar Zoden Sonnenberg This is such a ridiculous
ban! Does the government seriously believe the kids
are going to be licking or sucking on the metal in these
vehicles? Whoever proposed this ban should be fi red
because they don’t have the commonsense they were
born with!—on the federal lead-content limits in kids’ products
that are affecting the sales of youth motorcycles and all-terrain
vehicles.
Ryan Horst I’m a West Virginian. Just wanted to let you
guys know that the same day I read the article about
the ban on youth bikes (in the January ’10 issue), I sent
my governor, Joe Manchin III (an avid motorcyclist), a
letter asking him if there is anything his offi ce can do to sway our
senator’s minds.
Buzz Kanter Hi AMA, and thanks for what you do to represent
American motorcyclists. RoadBike magazine (www.roadbikemag.
com), a supporter of the AMA, just signed up here on Facebook.
RoadBike is a high quality print magazine for motorcycle cruisers
and touring riders, too. (Kanter is also an AMA Hall of Famer—ed.)
Digvijay Singh Jansana Sweet!!—in response to the
announcement of the AMA’s free live timing and
scoring on AMASupercross.com for every round of
the ’10 Monster Energy AMA Supercross, an FIM
World Championship series.
Get AMA news—and chat with fellow members—on Facebook. You
can also get the latest info at AmericanMotorcyclist.com.
www.facebook.com/AmericanMotorcyclist
LETTER OF THE MONTH TWO PICTURES, 30 YEARS
I have been riding and competing in off-road competition since the mid
’60s. When my boys—Donald, AMA No. 437346, and Dale, No. 562790—
wanted to ride I purchased two 1975 TY80 Mini Trials bikes and took a year
off from riding trials (riding a 1975 TY175) and enduros (riding a 1972 380cc
Greeves) to ride with them and teach them what I knew about off-road
riding.
As time went on, our interests were not always the same, but we
always found time to ride together, sometimes
in competition events, sometimes on weekend
camping trips.
The fi rst picture was taken in 1979, in western
Pennsylvania, close to where we live. The second
picture was taken this past year (2009) at an
Observed Trials event in Florida. The pictures were
taken by my wife. Carol, who has been a super
team supporter all these years.
Dennis Ziolkowski
AMA Life Member No. 180142
Crafton, Pa.
Congratulations! You’re our letter of the
month, and you win a free AMA T-shirt!
March 2010 11
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 11 1/20/10 3:25 PM
As I refl ect on the unprecedented attacks on
motorcycling in 2009, and the enormity of the challenges
ahead, I have reached an inescapable conclusion: No
longer can any motorcyclist afford to sit on the sidelines.
The days are gone when we can page through bike
reviews, get recommendations from friends, buy a used or
new motorcycle, and just go riding. Not if we expect to do
so in fi ve, 10 or 20 years.
If this sounds like “Chicken Little” thinking, let me
awaken you from this simple children’s story. Enjoy riding
off-road on public land? Last year, we lost 2 million acres
to inappropriate federal Wilderness designations, and
there are many more millions of acres being targeted in
Congress right now. OK, you tell yourself, I can always go
riding at my local MX track. Not so fast—every week we
learn of MX tracks in urban areas under threat of closure
due to noise complaints.
Think street riding is immune to restriction? The same
excessive sound complaints that threaten tracks are
causing cities large and small to target street motorcyclists
with unfair ordinances and laws, while allowing other loud
noise emitters to remain unchecked. Street riding is also
under attack from safetycrats who point to the increase
in motorcycle crashes and fatalities on our highways and
demand action, especially when automobile fatalities are
at historic lows. The AMA opposes straight pipes; strongly
advocates the voluntary use of protective gear, including
helmets certifi ed by the manufacturer to meet the DOT
standard; and welcomes the expanded availability of
anti-lock braking. But are you ready for mandated OE-
exhausts, infl atable riding suits, airbags and roll cages?
Impossible, you say? All it takes is a stroke of the pen.
That’s what happened last year when President Obama
signed into law the Revolutionary War and War of 1812
Battlefi eld Protection Act, which validated the biggest
Congressional land grab in modern history by designating
more than 2 million acres as federally protected
Wilderness—the majority of which didn’t meet the original
Congressional defi nition of Wilderness—with virtually no
public debate or scrutiny. Or in 2008, when then-President
Bush signed into law the Consumer Product Safety
Improvement Act (CPSIA). Six months later, the lead-
content provisions of the CPSIA resulted in the Consumer
Product Safety Commission’s ban on the sale of youth-
model dirtbikes and ATVs, forcing families to choose
adult-sized machines for their kids—putting them at great
risk—and devastating a segment of the motorsports
community, already reeling from a major recession.
Sitting On The SidelinesIs Not An OptionBy Rob Dingman
We no longer have the luxury of tearing down
organizations like the AMA that are trying to save
motorcycling. It’s time to stop blaming those who don’t
ride your kind of bike, or hang with your crowd, or share
your political beliefs, and recognize that anyone in power
who does not ride a motorcycle cares little about the future
of motorcycling in any form. If we expect to preserve our
sport and our lifestyle for our and future generations, we
must close ranks like there’s no tomorrow.
How? If you’re reading this, as an AMA member, you’re
already part of the solution. But there are not nearly
enough of us to withstand these multi-pronged attacks.
Many AMA members like to think we are the National Rifl e
Association (NRA) of the motorcycling world, yet we only
have 245,000 members out of 20 million estimated riders.
The NRA has more than 4 million members, not to mention
a Constitutional amendment that protects their rights.
There is no Constitutional right to ride a motorcycle. It’s a
hard-earned privilege that we must step up and defend.
The bottom line: Each of us has to recruit more
members for the AMA army. We all have friends who ride
but are not members. Persuade them to join. Also, only
buy from motorcycle businesses that support the AMA.
Tell those that don’t that they risk losing your business.
Now is the time to join forces and stand shoulder-to-
shoulder on the front lines.
Rob Dingman is president and CEO of the AMA.
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From the President
12 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp002-013.indd 12 1/22/10 10:01 AM
TRIP INTERRUPTION COVERAGE. One thing Charlie St. Clair, Executive Director of Laconia Motorcycle Week, knows is the
road can be pretty rough if your bike breaks down. That’s why Progressive offers Roadside Assistance for only $10 a year and
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anywhere you are in the country, you’re covered. Call 1-800-PROGRESSIVE or call an independent agent.
has been riding torallies since 1972.
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Protecting the Ride 16 • Living It 20 • Connections 25 • Adrenaline 30 • Heritage 34The Life
14 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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Husqvarna named Marque of the Year for 2010 AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days: AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Kent “The Rhinestone
Cowboy” Howerton, a versatile motocross racer of the 1970s and early ’80s, is just one of the legends who rode Husqvarnas during their stellar
careers. Others include Hall of Famers Malcolm Smith and Dick Burleson. To learn more about the AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days’ celebration of
all things Husky, see page 22. Photo by Jim Gianatsis
March 2010 15
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The AMA is monitoring several new congressional bills that have the potential to close off-highway riders out of public land in three states.
Those bills are:• In Montana, S. 1470, the Forest Jobs
and Recreation Act introduced by Sen. Jon Tester (R-Mont.)
• In California, S. 2921, the California Desert Protection Act of 2010, sponsored by Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.); and H.R. 4304, the Beauty Mountain and Agua Tibia Wilderness Act of 2009, introduced by Rep. Darrell Issa (R-Calif.)
• In Colorado, H.R. 4289, the Colorado Wilderness Act of 2009 sponsored by Rep. Diana DeGette (D-Colo.).The Tester bill would designate 600,000
acres in Montana as federally protected Wilderness, shutting out off-highway riders, bicyclists and others.
“The AMA appreciates Sen. Tester’s effort to reach out to the off-highway vehicle (OHV) community in an attempt to make this bill better for every user of our public land,” says Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for government relations. “But the AMA opposes this bill as it is currently written. We ask that Sen. Tester work with the AMA and other groups to address rider
concerns so that families can continue to enjoy OHV trails in a responsible manner.”
The California Desert Protection Act of 2010 would create the Mojave Trails National Monument, involving 941,000 acres between Joshua Tree National Park and the Mojave Preserve along historic Route 66 in San Bernardino County; and the Sand to Snow National Monument involving 134,000 acres between Joshua Tree National Park and the San Bernardino National Forest.
It also would designate 250,000 acres near Fort Irwin as Wilderness, and would designate a “special management area” involving 76,000 acres in eastern Imperial County. Plus, the measure would add about 74,000 acres to the National Park system, barring off-hihgway riding, and would designate four existing OHV areas in San Bernardino County as permanent OHV recreation areas.
The AMA is studying the proposal, but some of Feinstein’s fellow lawmakers have already expressed some concerns.
Rep. Jerry Lewis (R-Calif.) indicates he is still studying the full impact of the proposal, but notes that it appears to lock up tens of thousands of acres that are not suitable for protection. The staff of Rep. Howard McKeon (R-Calif.) indicated the
congressman wants to be sure that the Johnson Valley OHV area isn’t impacted.
DeGette’s bill in Colorado would designate 34 areas totaling 850,000 acres as Wilderness, including 72,397 in Handies Peak, 20,025 in Browns Canyon and 38,594 at Redcloud Peak.
Meanwhile, Issa’s measure would designate as Wilderness more than 21,000 acres in northern San Diego County.
These are just a few of the bills in Congress that would close millions of acres of public land to off-highway riding.
Riders need to let their federal lawmakers know that they enjoy motorized recreation and want a full public debate, with citizen input, before any more land is designated as Wilderness, Moreland says.
People can contact their federal lawmakers by going to AmericanMotorcyclist.com > Rights > Issues & Legislation. There, you can find the names of the members of your congressional delegation as well as their addresses and telephone numbers.
You can also send a pre-written letter from there. Individuals can also sign up for the AMA Government Relations Department’s Action E-list to be notified by e-mail when their support is needed to make a difference on important issues.
Western Off-rOad riding in the crOsshairsLegisLation targets Land in Montana, CaLifornia and CoLorado
act now to help protect your
right to ride on public land.
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For the sixth straight year, the AMA will provide free sound-testing kits to 10 qualified organizations through its Government Relations Department sound-testing grant program.
The program awards a kit that includes a sound meter, tachometer, an instructional DVD and manual, a spark-arrester probe, personal protective equipment and a certificate for a free annual recalibration of the meter from the
AMA Again Awarding Sound MetersKey Tools For Educating
Riders on Sound
David Strickland
David Strickland, senior Democratic counsel to the U.S. Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, breezed through his Senate confirmation to serve as administrator of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA).
President Barack Obama nominated Strickland to the post in early December, and the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee, chaired by Democratic Sen. Jay Rockefeller of West Virginia, held Strickland’s nomination hearing Dec. 15.
Strickland’s nomination went before the full Senate on Dec. 24 for final approval.
“We’ve dealt with Mr. Strickland on a variety of issues over the years and have found him to be thoughtful and accessible,” says Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for government relations. “We believe he will exhibit these same qualities while carrying out his responsibilities as the head of NHTSA.”
The traffic safety agency was established in 1970 to carry out safety programs previously administered by the National Highway Safety Bureau. The agency is a part of the U.S. Transportation Department and is responsible for saving lives, preventing injuries, and reducing economic costs due to road traffic crashes through education, research, safety standards and enforcement activity.
U.S. Senate Committee Staffer Leads Federal Traffic Safety AgencyThe National Highway Traffic Safety
Administration Has A New Leader
meter supplier.“Few other factors contribute more
to misunderstanding and prejudice against the motorcycling community than excessively loud motorcycles,” says Royce Wood, AMA government affairs manager. “With accurate sound testing, riders will know how loud their bikes are and can get advice from the testers about how to quiet down their machines.”
With a new in-the-field sound-testing procedure for streetbikes—SAE J2825—now in place, the sound meters can also be used to test on-road motorcycles.
For more information on the sound meter grant program, contact Wood at (614) 856-1900, ext. 1225; or e-mail rwood@ama-cycle.org.
Like motorcycle dealers around the nation, Mark Forszt, who owns four Harley-Davidson dealerships in northern Indiana, is feeling the bite of the sour economy, with his bike sales down about 25 percent.
And what doesn’t help is the fact that, under Indiana law, it is a misdemeanor to sell motorcycles and cars on Sunday.
Forszt wants to change that.He has enlisted the aid of state Sen.
Ed Charbonneau (R-Valparaiso), who has introduced legislation to repeal the law. Charbonneau cites the proposal as a way to help small business and increase state sales tax revenue.
Dealer Wants To Change The LawMotorcycle Sales on Sundays are
Illegal in Indiana
March 2010 17
The Life | Protecting the Ride
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The federal Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) has given a break, at least temporarily, to the makers of kids’ dirtbikes and all-terrain vehicles (ATVs).
In December, the commission voted to delay until Feb. 10, 2011, the requirement that makers of products for children 12 and under have those products certified by a government-approved independent lab that they contain little or no lead.
The testing is a requirement under the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA), which bans the making, importing, distributing or selling of any product intended for children 12 and under that contains more than 600 parts per million of lead in any accessible part. That threshold dropped to 300 parts per million on Aug. 14, 2009, and will drop to 100 parts per million after Aug. 14, 2011.
With no way to quickly test and certify that their products met those limits, motorcycle and ATV manufacturers told their dealers to stop selling machines intended for kids 12 and under because the machines contain lead in some components, such as valve stems and batteries.
While the CPSC move means that youth dirtbike and ATV manufacturers don’t need to go through the certification process yet, they still must abide by the CPSIA lead limits. The CPSC had previously voted to delay enforcement of the lead-limit requirement in the law until May 1, 2011.
CPSC officials have said they supported the delays to give CPSC staff more time to draft the rules needed to carry out the CPSIA, and to keep from forcing children to ride dirtbikes and ATVs that are too large for them to ride safely because smaller machines would otherwise be unavailable.
The latest vote, says Sean Hilbert, president of Cobra Motorcycles, which produces competition-level mini motocross bikes, buys the industry some time.
“The delay officially makes producing and selling bikes legal for us,” he says. “However, it doesn’t change our plans, since we were going to keep selling under the stay of enforcement anyway. Our real deadline is May of 2011 when the current stay of enforcement ends.”
Inez Tenenbaum, who took over the
Federal Product Safety Agency Delays Enforcement of Lead TestingAgency Will Still Ultimately Enforce
Law That Bans Lead In Kids’ Bikes
reins of the CPSC as chairman in summer 2009, told the Associated Press that she is committed to enforcing the CPSIA. And she said that her agency has a new tool to do that. The maximum civil penalty her agency could impose for violations was previously $1.8 million, but on Aug. 14 that jumped to $15 million.
“Those, if the circumstances warrant it and the facts support it, will be used by the CPSC to make sure that people comply with that law,” she said in an interview with Associated Press reporters and editors.
The Coalition for Safe and Responsible ATV Use, made up of Honda, Suzuki, Kawasaki, Yamaha, Arctic Cat, Bombardier and Polaris, said in September that “due to the risks of selling under the (enforcement delay), many manufacturers and dealers are no longer selling youth-model off-highway vehicles, and there is now a limited availability of these products for consumers.”
The AMA is working with members and other groups to change the law so kids’ dirtbikes and ATVs can be sold.
“The law is so flawed in so many areas that lawmakers must act to fix it,” says Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for government relations. “We need to ensure that the voice of youth riding is heard among all the various interests that will be clamoring for changes.”
Join the more than 100,000 AMA members who have used AMA tools to contact their lawmakers and urge them to change the law to allow kids to enjoy outdoor recreation on their dirtbikes and ATVs. Contact information for your elected officials is available at AmericanMotorcyclist.com. Go to Rights > Issues & Legislation, and enter your zip code in the “Find Your Officials” box.
The AMA fights for motorcyclists’ right to ride in a variety of ways, and one way is to support politicians who support motorcyclists.
That means electing officials who are willing to stand up and say “no” when legislation that threatens the motorcycling lifestyle is proposed.
To support friends of motorcycling, the AMA has what is called AMPAC—the AMA’s Political Action Committee.
“AMPAC supports the campaigns of congressional candidates and political leaders who advocate on behalf of motorcyclists,” says Ed Moreland, AMA vice president for government relations. “It’s important that we support these lawmakers so that they will support us.”
While a contribution of any amount is greatly appreciated, anyone donating $25 or more will receive a collectible AMPAC pin. Those who donate $500 or more earn elite status in the Leader’s Circle and receive a commemorative bronze belt buckle.
For information, or to donate, call the AMA Government Relations Department at (202) 742-4303, or e-mail Sheila Andrews at sandrews@ama-cycle.org.
Helping Those Who Help MotorcyclistsAMA Raising Funds To Get Friends
Elected To Office
18 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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Bike Week in Daytona Beach, FL is known far and wide asone of the greatest festivals in America that's enjoyed
by bikers world-wide. It's a passage and a passionmany look forward to year after year.
With 10 days of fun activities and thousands of things tosee and do, its easy to find yourself in bikers paradise
at Bike Week. Wake up to the Daytona Beach areasunshine while you take in some of the
most spectacular bikes and interesting people.The manufactures and vendors you know and love will be
here too along with a few new surprises.
Need help planning your stay? No problem. Let our profes-sional travel staff find your perfect lodging right here in theDaytona Beach area. We've even got on-line searches andspecial event pricing to make it even easier to fully enjoy
your spring Bike Week get-away.
Find out more about this incredible event go to
www.GetNews.BikerBeach.com
Look up to minute information follow us onTwitter@BikerBeach & FaceBook.com/bikerbeach
Or call us on Biker Beach Bike Week hot line at
1-866-250-6181
ARIZONA
Arizona Game and Fish offi cers will be stepping up OHV registration compliance enforcement. The OHV decal program requires the annual purchase of a $25 OHV registration decal for most all-terrain vehicles, side-by-sides (utility vehicles), dirtbikes and some sand rails. Decals can be obtained online at ServiceArizona.com, any Motor Vehicle Division offi ce or MVD third-party service providers. The fi ne for not having the decal is $250.
ILLINOIS
House Bill 4701, introduced by Rep. Dan Brady (R-Bloomington), would require all motor vehicles operated on a highway—not just motorcycles, motor-driven cycles, and motorized pedalcycles—to use headlights or daytime running lights at all times.
INDIANA
Senate Bill 111, introduced by Sen. Timothy Lanane (D-Anderson), would make
it a Class C misdemeanor to use a handheld wireless communications device to transmit a text message or electronic mail message while operating a motor vehicle. It also would provide enhanced penalties for repeat offenders or if another person is injured or killed. Consistent with the AMA position on distracted and inattentive motor vehicle operations, SB-111 holds vehicle operators more accountable for their actions.
NEW JERSEY
Assembly Bill 4164, sponsored by Asm. Ruben Ramos, Jr. (D-Hoboken), would provide an exemption from the sales-and-use taxes for sales of recreational safety helmets, including those worn by motorcyclists. Also, Assembly Bill 4244, sponsored by Asm. Vincent Prieto (D-Secaucus), proposes a $150 penalty per violation for alteration of equipment or the performance of equipment of any vehicle that has been approved at an offi cial inspection facility with the intent to defeat
the purpose of the inspection. The bill also would make the operation of any such altered vehicle a violation.
NEW MEXICO
The New Mexico Off-Highway Vehicle Alliance (NMOHVA) plans to use more than $322,000 in federal funds and $126,000 in matching contributions for trail work in the Cibola National Forest. NMOHVA will use the money to construct new trail segments, rehabilitate existing trails and install signs on more than 60 miles of trails. The group’s partners include the Sandia Ranger District, New Mexico 4 Wheelers, the Black Feather Trail Preservation Alliance and R&S Powersports.
WISCONSIN
Assembly Bill 544, introduced by Asm. Spencer Black (D-Madison), would prohibit the installation, sale and distribution of wheel weights and other wheel balancing products that contain lead.
Statewatch
The Life | Protecting the Ride
AM_03_2010_pp014-019_Uber_Protect.indd 19 1/20/10 5:50 PM
Judging by the look of it, the all-new 2010 Kawasaki Z1000 appears to have pumped up the muscle and trimmed down the fat. Chiseled with confi dent linearity, the naked bike oozes resolve from its ominous headlamps to its vectored tail section. And fortunately for Z1000 fans, these visuals are a rather accurate representation of the Z1000’s thoroughly re-worked underpinnings.
With more guts and 22 fewer pounds to haul around, you’d think the $10,499
Z1000 would accelerate with noticeably more hustle. And you’d be absolutely right. During a day of riding along the central
California coast, we were taken aback by the Z1000’s sharply tuned chassis.
Some may wonder about parts of the styling, like the stubby and decidedly controversial gold rose exhaust cans, and the shovel-like front cowl. But more seasoned riders will look past the Kawasaki Z1000’s styling cues and savor
Bike Impression
RIDING IT: KAWASAKI’S 2010 Z1000 MORE MUSCULAR LOOKS,
AND MUSCLE TO BACK IT UP
NOTABLE• 1,043cc inline four is bumped up 90cc• Horsepower jumps from 125 to 138• Torque is now 81.1 pounds-feet • Chassis is 8.8 pounds lighter
its newly found dynamism and entertaining on-road persona. There are, after all, worse ways to age gracefully.—Basem
Wasef
See the full riding impression on AmericanMotorcyclist.com.
20 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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AM_03_2010_pp020-025_Uber_Living.indd 20 1/20/10 5:51 PM
Steve Hauptman has been riding
streetbikes 31 years and has owned six
motorcycles. He’s been riding his ’08
Z1000 for two years. Here’s his take on the
previous version of the Z1000.
I’m an old-school high-performance bike rider, and the naked bike segment is right up my alley. What I like most about my Z1000 is its light weight and short wheel base, and that Kawasaki didn’t skimp on horsepower.
Power-to-weight is very similar to most liter sportbikes, which translates to similar quarter-mile times.
Money, I’m sure, factors into the choice of suspension pieces used on the Z1000. The bike handles well out of the box but defi nitely doesn’t have the feel of a true
sportbike like the ZX10. A softer-sprung
suspension is fi ne for the majority of the
people who buy one of these bikes. Most
will use it for touring and commuting, not
as a track bike.
Brakes are good, not great like the
ZX10’s brakes. The ZX10 has the best
brakes I have ever felt on a streetbike,
period. Again, some compromises were
made for the sake of price.
I’m sure people looking to purchase a
Z1000 wouldn’t want to pay a price close
to the ZX10, so a lot compromises had to
be made. I am looking for a totaled ZX10
with a good front end and rear shock. I
have read that it’s almost plug-and-play to
add that to my Z1000.
Shawn Isbell: My son rides a TT-R125 and beats that bike up. It is a great starter bike for a medium-sized rider with enough power to grow into.
Brett Hardy: I ride a TT-R125LE and have a blast on it. It is big enough to feel more like a “real” bike than the 110s, and smaller and more fun around the yard than my YZ250. It’s so quiet the neighbors don’t know I’m riding. Between me, my wife, brother, and niece and nephews we have seven TT-Rs. My two brothers and I rode TT-R125s on the 50th annual AMA District 23 (Minnesota) enduro just for kicks, and had a blast. I have also MX’ed mine a couple of times just for laughs. I’m on my third TTR, but all of them are still being ridden and have held up great. I’m a 43-year-old A enduro rider and AMA life member. My other rides are an ’05 YZ250, V-Strom 1000 and a Hawk GT.
Annette Brisbin: I had a TT-R125. good bike to learn on, but the suspension is terrible! And I’m not very heavy. Probably a good bike for a 5 or 6 year old, though. Lots of fun to play with, but to actually ride, I’d go CRF150.
Michael Ball: I have a 2003 TT-R125. I paid $2,000 for her, and I put about $2,000 more in her to race short track. I got most of my ideas from Thumpertalk.com. I got most of my stuff from BBR. New stiffer rear spring, 17-inch wheels with 125 motoGP tires (softest at a low temperature slicks), new O-ring chain with a sprocket set for easy acceleration, and new stiffer aluminum frame support. I increased the motor from 125cc to 150cc, rejetted her and added a high-compression cam.
David Ceniceroz: The KTM 990 is not for everybody, but perfect for those who need a double shot of adrenaline with their commute to work and a kick in the pants every weekend. Likes: Sexy, fast, nimble, precise. The V-twin LC8 does everything well—road, track, trail and technical dirt—just pick your tire. Dislikes: FI system is bug-ridden. Maintenance is intensive. Overall: Best bike I have ever owned.
Mark Gengler: Love the seat height, angular design, upright sitting position, low center of gravity, power (dropped a tooth on the counter sprocket), auxiliary 12V access in the glove box, precision braking, supple fully adjustable suspension and the color! Hate the buffeting windscreen, numbing seat, blinkers, tedious maintenance. Battery is too weak.
Duane Nienow: This bike is the most fun ride of any I’ve experienced. The Adventure is somewhat intimidating off-road but as long as you use discretion and common sense you will be OK. Just turn off the ABS. The bike is an absolute joy to ride on the street and any type of dirt road. The thing eats the twisties like no other bike short of a full-on racer.
Jeff Dennis: I feel the 990 is more dirt-savvy than most of the dual-sport bikes on the market. I have ridden the red clay of Alabama and Georgia, the rocks of Colorado and the desert terrain of Utah. It lives up to its name.
Member Review
2008 Kawasaki Z1000
Member Review
KTM 990 Adventure
GOT ONE OF THESE? Honda’s GB500. Kawasaki’s W650. Yamaha’s GTS1000. Kawasaki’s KLR 650. What do these bikes all have in common? They’re all cult bikes, and they’ll all be featured in a future issue of this magazine. If you own one—or owned one—take a minute to e-mail us about what you liked, and what you didn’t—and please include a high-resolution photo of yourself. Send to: submissions@ama-cycle.org.
Member Review
Yamaha TT-R125
March 2010 21
The Life | Living It
AM_03_2010_pp020-024_Uber_Living.indd 21 1/22/10 10:14 AM
You’ve seen Husqvarna motorcycles rule the woods in the early 1970s and ’80s. You’ve seen them make a comeback in recent years. Heck, you’ve even seen them ridden by legendary AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Malcolm Smith in the iconic “On Any Sunday.”
Now you can see some of the best vintage and modern Huskys in person, because the famed brand has been named Marque of the Year for America’s premier gathering of vintage motorcycles: AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days, this July 9-11. The event, which attracts motorcycle fans of all ages, eras and brands, takes place at the Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course in Lexington, Ohio. Ticket information is available at MidOhio.com.
“Arguably the most dominant off-road racing brand in the United States for a generation of racers, Husqvarna has recently returned full force to AMA Racing national competition,’’ says Tigra Tsujikawa, AMA special events and marketing manager. “We’re pleased to showcase both Husqvarna’s history and the company’s renewed investment in motorcycling’s present and future at this year’s AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days.”
Adds Husqvarna Motorcycles North America President Mark Brady: “Husqvarna Motorcycles is delighted to be the AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days Marque of the Year for 2010. Launching
the new decade with this prestigious recognition is indeed an honor. Everyone at Husqvarna Motorcycles is very much aware of the great history of the brand, and we are determined to bring back the glory days.”
As part of Husqvarna’s participation in AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days, fans will be able to get up close and personal with the marque’s moto-history, from its genesis in Sweden in the early 1900s to the high-tech off-road, motocross and dual-sport bikes the company sells and races today.
While educational displays and seminars at AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days will focus on Husqvarna’s rich history, the machines also will be among the many brands that amateur racers put on the track in the multiple racing disciplines that are part of the weekend’s competition.
In addition to vintage and post-vintage competition in motocross, trials, hare scrambles, roadracing and dirt track, AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days will feature North America’s largest motorcycle swap meet. Also on tap: bike shows, demo rides of current production bikes, motorcycling seminars, stunt shows, the new-product Manufacturers’ Midway and club corrals featuring marque and regional clubs.
Proceeds from AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days benefit the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum.
For more detailed information, just go to AMAVintageMotorcycleDays.com.
Celebrate Husqvarna’s History at AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days
Husky Is Marque Of The Year For 2010
Ask The Motorcycle Safety Foundation
The Proper Way To Park
On The Street
You Ask: “When I park on the street, I always make a point to back in at an angle. When a buddy asked why I did that, I couldn’t answer with much more than, ‘That’s what I’ve been told.’ Is that still the recommended practice?”
The MSF Responds: Our basic advice for parking in a parallel parking space next to a curb is to position the motorcycle at an angle with the rear tire gently touching the curb.
There are two reasons. First, many roads are sloped from the center down toward the curb. If you were to park parallel to the curb, your tires could be lower than the sidestand pad, so your bike might stand too upright and could fall over to the right.
Second, if you were to park perpendicular to the curb, the front tire might jut out into the traffic lane. A careless driver looking for a parking space could knock your bike over.
So, the angled technique should work in most conditions. Plus, it positions your bike for easy entry back into traffic. Note that some states or cities may require a different parking procedure. Also, if the parking space has a meter, there may be a limit on the number of bikes that can park there. Don’t forget to the feed the meter, too!
Got a question for the MSF? E-mail
submissions@ama-cycle.org.
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The fun starts here.
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dealer, visit www.yuasabatteries.com.
Buy Yuasa Batteries Online!Now you have the power to purchase our most popular Yuasa batteries at www.yuasabatteries.com. Have them shipped directly to you, or to your nearest dealer location for pick up.
When it comes to motorcycle names, some are brilliant—Daytona, Bonneville, Ninja, Fireblade and Rocker come mind. Then there are the names that might have sold well, but leave you scratching your head:
Ducati Indiana: This was a machine built by Cagiva with a Ducati motor, a Ducati tank badge and a name that happened to be a mostly fl at Midwestern state.
Honda Rune: An ancient letter-like symbol, or an incantation?
Yamaha Virago: The dictionary defi nes Virago as “a loud, domineering woman,” or “a woman of great stature, strength and courage.”
Kawasaki Vulcan: “Seems logical to me, captain.”
Suzuki B-King: Did anyone not think “Home of the Whopper” when they fi rst heard the name?
BMW 650GS: OK name. Except for the fact that the engine is an 800cc motor.
Yamaha Seca: A reference to the famed Laguna Seca Raceway? But without “Laguna,” we’re left with only the Spanish word for “dry,” or in Portuguese, “drought.”
Hodaka Road Toad and Combat
Wombat: Only Hodaka could raise the funky name to a self-aware art form.
Got another questionable name? E-mail:
submissions@ama-cycle.com.
9 Motorcycle Names
That Make You Wonder The Ducati Indiana?
The editors say: According to Publisher and Editor Jerry C. Smith, Motorcycle Times is a regional motorcycle magazine serving Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West Virginia and Washington, D.C. “As expressed in our current slogan, ‘Giving Voice to the Motorcycling Community,’ almost all our contributors are local riders. Over
Worth Reading
Motorcycle TimesThe Voice Of The Mid-Atlantic
January/February 2010
FREE
This Copy Courtesy Of
The Mid-Atlantic Motorcycle Magazine
Ride Well & Have A Happy New Year!
the years, nearly 400 individuals have contributed their thoughts, emotions, stories, photos, poems and cartoons to the Motorcycle Times.”
What it’s about: The emphasis is more on motorcyclists and motorcycling than motorcycles, along with an event calendar. It’s a place for mid-Atlantic motorcyclists to communicate their concerns, contact their compatriots, comment about controversies, compliment and cajole.
Find it: It’s free through hundreds of mid-Atlantic motorcycle shops, and online at MotorcycleTimes.com.
The Life | Living It
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Gallery.AmericanMotorcyclist.com We receive many more pictures from readers than we ever could fi t into the Snapshots area of this magazine. Now we’re putting everything we get up on our new online gallery. Check it out.
RedBullUSA.com The latest Travis Pastrana stunt: In case you missed it, everyone’s favorite AMA-Motocross-racer-turned-rally-driver-turned-daredevil jumped his car 269 feet for a new world record on New Year’s Eve.
Offi cialBikeweek.com Looking for everything you need to know to do Daytona Bike Week, right? You’ll fi nd everything here, at the city’s offi cial website, including a detailed day-by-day calendar.O
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What will 2010 bring for those of us who live for two wheels? We asked for your thoughts on our Facebook page, and AMA members delivered:
Chris Clark A title for Kevin Windham.Tony Rabano Another title for James
Stewart!Denis Cammerato Green technology
will continue to evolve in 2010, but we are still years away from it being an affordable solution, and likely even further
away from it being adopted by traditional motorcyclists. Not many bikers will be willing to trade the rumble of their engine for the whoosh of an electric motor.
John Adamo Roehr went green today. Electric is the future of American motorcycles. Zero, Brammo, Electric Motorsport, Roehr, Motoczysz, Mission Motors, Electric Moto. When was the last time you could name this many American motorcycle manufacturers?
Donovan Dixon Maybe not this year, but soon I think more people will realize that “green” is a scam and things will get more back to normal.
Shane Spence Some like sportbikes, some like Harleys. Maybe in 2010 people will stop saying their make or model is fastest or best. Let’s all come together as riders and not brand owners.
Scott Dabson I think in the coming years we’ll see direct injection, and a move back to a more reasonable engine size, whatever that may be.
Donald Mclaughlin If everyone involved in youth sports doesn’t act on the
youth motorcycle ban, we will lose a generation of riders, and that is very sad. The ban comes back in 2011. Even if you don’t have kids and are
not interested in youth sports, please call your Congress members and insist
they repeal the youth motorcycle ban. I predict we repeal the youth ban with lots of help from AMA members!
Tim Rose Harley will hold the marketing position, metrics will hold the road and buyers’ hearts, and Victory will emerge even stronger as a true brand. And Indian once again made a bad year choice for coming back onto the market.
Pat Baldassari This might be a little ambitious, but I believe Buell is going to make a comeback!
Chester Nodier More cool bikes, and fewer places to ride them.
Rob Rosenberger I predict we will see more performance exhaust systems that offer less noise.
Bob Dewey I predict that I am going to ride. ;)
Your Predictions For Motorcycling In 2010The Crystal Balls Come Out
24 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
The Life | Living It
AM_03_2010_pp020-025_Uber_Living.indd 24 1/20/10 5:52 PM
Dispatch
The Call Of The TraCkWho hasn’t Felt the Urge to go racing at one
time or another? by Stephan Sarzetakis
You look down and can almost see your heart pounding through your leathers, you can feel the sweat start to bead up, and your palms become shaky from the adrenaline. You look around and see the other 29 roadracers all looking the same way you do. “Can this be real?” you say to yourself. “Is this really what I do for fun?”
The first few moments are always the nervous ones, the ones where you begin to doubt yourself, and ask yourself whether you should even be there. Then you think, “If this is my first time, what
about the other people? How many of them have done this before?” The smell of exhaust begins to make you light-headed, and you close your visor.
You shift down from neutral into first and start the warm-up lap. You take the first turn following the rest of the pack. You think that you’ve begun to calm down when, in fact, you are getting more nervous. Your whole body goes numb. You want to win, but you want to be able to enjoy the experience and not miss a detail.
Suddenly you realize that you have
missed the details of the track during the entire pace lap because you have been so focused on your own fears.
As the race light goes green all your fears, thoughts and adrenaline go with it as you come up to speed. You begin your assault on the first competitor, diving into a hairpin left turn. You manage to get your knee down, knowing that there is only 1/2 inch of plastic and leather protecting your skin from becoming shredded beef. You pass him with no trouble. Finally, the straightaway. You get on the throttle and manage to pass three bikes. You steal a look at your speedometer: 168 mph.
You slowly work your way up through the rest of the pack, drafting behind other bikes to get the best drives down the straights. At the halfway point, you’re in the top 10. You keep working your way up, rider by rider.
With four laps to go, you get more and more aggressive in your quest to get on the podium. You are only in fourth place. With two laps left, you’re in third place. You stay focused on your target, the second-place bike. Suddenly in turn two you see him slide out in front of you. You let off the throttle and pick a line that will be one that avoids the fallen bike and rider. It works.
Final lap. It doesn’t get better than this—you and three other bikes are running four-wide to the finish line. You crouch down behind your windscreen hoping for any advantage. Your throttle is pinned and you’re hoping for more. You see the checkered flag waving in the wind. It takes forever to reach it.
All your work pays off—you take first place! On the podium, champagne flows, camera flashes go off, and a massive trophy is placed in your hands. The crowd cheers. Sponsors line up to have you sign a contract, the confetti starts to fly, and…
…the salesman asks if you need any assistance.
Wait—salesman?Oh, right! You snap out of your
daydream and realize you’ve been sitting on the bike in the dealership for a lifetime of five minutes.
Sounds like you want a new motorcycle.
“can this be real?” you say
to yourself. “is this really
what i do for fun?”
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The life | Connections
March 2010 25
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Kenny Eggers, one of the top racers on the West Coast during the 1950s and a member of the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame, died in December. He was 80.
Eggers won the Bay Meadows Mile AMA National in San Mateo, Calif., in his rookie expert season, and he earned fame for winning the AMA national road race at Willow Springs Raceway in 1954, the fi rst motorcycle race ever held there.
Eggers was born in San Jose, Calif., on June 13, 1929. A neighborhood friend had a motorcycle and Eggers learned to ride his friend’s bike when he was 12.
He paid $40 for a 1927 Harley when he was 14 years old. He learned to slide by riding fi gure eights in the gravel parking lot of a neighborhood school. Eggers met legendary tuner Tom Sifton when he went to Sifton’s San Jose dealership to fi nd a piston for his bike. Sifton hired the young Eggers as an apprentice and put him to work assembling Cushman scooters until Eggers joined the Army in 1947.
After getting out of the service, Eggers honed his skills by riding in the hills with the “San Jose Bunch” that included such talented riders as Bob Shavs, Al Rudy, Larry Headricks and racing legend Sam Arena. He started watching local dirt-track races, and before long entered his fi rst race on a short track in Belmont, Calif.
In the late 1940s, Eggers began winning Northern California races. He turned amateur in 1950 and won a slew of amateur races across the country.
Eggers continued winning after turning expert in 1951. The biggest win of his career came on July 1 of that year in San Mateo, Calif., at Bay Meadows. Riding
Kenny Eggers, 1929-2009 A FLAT-TRACK SENSATION
Hall of Famer
a Sifton-tuned Harley-Davidson, Eggers shocked the best riders in the country by winning the AMA 20-Mile National, the fi rst race on a mile oval that year.
Eggers fi nished runner-up to Bobby Hill at the national championship Mile in Springfi eld, Ill. He ended his season by fi nishing second to Dick Klamfoth in the half-mile in Shreveport, La.
When the AMA Grand National Series was inaugurated in 1954, Eggers fi nished fi fth in the series opener at Daytona
Beach, riding a BSA Shooting Star for Hap Alzina. That same year he won the road race national at Willow Springs.
Despite the fact that the carburetors on Eggers’ BSA fl ooded on the starting line and he was last off the line, he blasted through the fi eld and won the race over Ed Kretz and John Gibson.
Eggers retired in 1990 and lived with his wife, Kay, in San Jose. He had three grown children. He was inducted into the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame in 1998.
What it is: An awesome tribute to one of motorcycling’s coolest characters—actor, racer and AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Steve McQueen—in the form of a Troy Lee Designs off-road helmet that is offi cially licensed with the Steve McQueen estate.
What’s cool: Just about everything. The $525 helmet, available in June, is being produced in a limited edition run of just 700. It features McQueen’s face on one side of the helmet and on the other an image of the actor riding a motorcycle. There’s even a color-matched special helmet bag available.
The future: This lid is just the fi rst of what Troy Lee Designs says will be a series of Steve McQueen helmet styles that will roll out over the next three years.
Get it: TroyLeeDesigns.com.
Cool Stuff
A Hall of Famer HelmetSteve McQueen Graces New Troy Lee Designs Helmet
The Life | Connections
26 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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February, 1986—History Comes
Alive It was the 100th anniversary of the building of the fi rst gasoline-powered motorcycle, and the AMA celebrated in grand style—with a parade lap of famous racers taking turns aboard a replica of the 1886 motorcycle originally built by Gottleib Daimler.
At a special ceremony in Anaheim, Calif., World 500cc Roadrace Champion Freddie Spencer, AMA Superbike Champion Bubba Shobert and AMA Flattrack Champion Chris Carr took turns aboard a replica of the Daimler “motorcycle” built by a talented group of Ohio fabricators.
“It was neat getting a feeling for just how far motorcycling has come in 100 years,” Shobert said. “It vibrated a bit, but I guess it was nothing if you compared it to a horse!”
Want to search past issues of American
Motorcyclist On Google Books? Visit
Books.Google.com and search for
“American Motorcyclist.”
Throwback
A Look At Past Issues On...
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Bikes don’t get much more exclusive than this machine, a one-off Yamaha R1 in special Valentino Rossi Livery that was built by AMA Motorcycle Hall of Famer Don Emde to raise funds and awareness for Friends of Riders for Health.
If you like what you see, you’ll have a chance to buy the machine at auction later this year in a fundraiser for the charity, which provides health care to remote African villages using motorcycles and motorcycle ambulances.
More info at FriendsOfRiders.org.
Cool Stuff
All For A Good CauseDon Emde Offers Benefi t Bike
The AMA is pleased to announce the addition of a new advertising manager for American Motorcyclist magazine.
Bob Buchanan joins Ray Monroe on the sales staff and will be based in California.
A 20-year veteran of the action sports industry, Buchanan most recently was a regional sales director for Fox Racing, and he brings his extensive industry knowledge and experience to the job. Buchanan is also an avid rider, both on the street and in enduro and desert racing.
“American Motorcyclist magazine is in a unique position within the motorcycling industry,” Buchanan says. “It’s a publication that reaches to the core of the country’s motorcycle enthusiasts—the riders who care enough about the sport to help ensure its future by becoming AMA members. American Motorcyclist has a reach and an audience that are second to none, and I look forward to working with companies to help them exceed their goals with American
Motorcyclist.”For contact
information, please see page 8.
Buchanan Joins AM Advertising TeamIndustry Vet And Avid Rider
Bolsters Sales Force
March 2010 27
The Life | Connections
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The Crotona Midnight Run is
billed as the oldest AMA timed
road run, and it dates back
to 1911, when the Crotona
Motorcycle Club first staged it.
It goes off at midnight in New
York in the dead of winter (Feb.
27 this year), which makes for an
interesting challenge.
For an inside look at the 92nd
running of an event that’s run
almost every year except during
World War II, we caught up with
Dick Roberts, the road captain of
the Ramapo Motorcycle Club, which took
over the run from Crotona in recent years.
American Motorcyclist: What’s the
main attraction for riders?
Dick Roberts: Mostly, it’s the
accomplishment of doing the run. It starts
at midnight in middle of February, and all
finishers get a medallion. But just to finish
the run is the bottom line. When you finish
in the morning, you think, man, I really
had a good time. And then you can say
you actually did the Crotona midnight run.
People take pride in it. Last year we had
90 riders.
AM: What’s the secret to doing well?
DR: It really takes patience. You’re
operating at a scheduled speed of 30
miles per hour. That’s not exactly quick,
but if a traffic light turns red and you have
to stop, the clock doesn’t stop ticking.
You should be able to do this safely
without ever exceeding the
speed limits. There are a number
of checkpoints, and you have
two points taken away for every
minute you’re early, and one point
for ever minute late. Everyone
breaks for food and to warm up
at the halfway point, and if all
goes well you’re done at 6 a.m.
AM: Why do you keep doing
it?
DR: It started off as a long-
distance ride, run by the Crotona
Motorcycle Club. Somewhere
along the line it evolved into a road
enduro. I help organize it because I really
appreciate the history of the run. It’s 92
years old, and I’d like to see it go to 100
years. I love it when people come up at
the very end and say they’ve had a great
time. That takes care of all the organizing,
staying up all night and everything else. It
should be a good time for everyone.
AM: I’m sure gear has changed a lot
over the years.
DR: To keep warm, basically riders are
using electric gear. But as far as making it
so they can see the route sheets at night,
Rube Goldberg would be thrilled to see
what they do. It’s everything from light
bulbs in tomato cans to very technical
things that are illuminated from inside. And
some of them only work for about the first
five miles!
Info: RamapoMC.org.
3 Questions With
The Crotona Midnight Run
It takes hardy riders, both back in the
day (top) and more recently, to master
the Crotona run
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AM_03_2010_pp025-029_Uber_Connect.indd 28 1/20/10 5:57 PM
Open or Close Your Garage Door withand a Double Click of YourHigh Beam Switch.• No batteries
• Easy do-it-yourself installation
• Weatherproof
• Works with any garage door opener
To order, visit us at
www.F2Ptechnologies.com
or call 866-249-7427.
Use AMA member promo code: AMA2009 to save 10%.
Proud supporter of the AMA.
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The AMA is pleased to release the certifi ed results of the AMA North Central Region election for the AMA Board of Directors. Candidate Jim Viverito was elected, receiving 61 percent of the votes. Current board member Bill Werner received 39 percent.
“We heartily welcome Jim Viverito to the AMA Board of Directors,” says AMA President and CEO Rob Dingman. “Jim joins the board at an historic time as the AMA increases its advocacy efforts, expands its menu of member benefi ts, improves amateur racing and implements a new association management system that will better serve the needs of all members.
“I also want to thank Bill Werner for his distinguished service to the AMA board, and wish him well in his future endeavors,” Dingman adds.
Viverito is an AMA Life Member with more than four decades in motorcycling. His experience runs from amateur to professional racing, and includes more than 30 years of road riding and touring. A vocal member of grassroots motorcyclists’ rights organizations, Viverito’s background lends itself well to the AMA’s mission of promoting the motorcycle lifestyle and protecting the future of motorcycling.
“I look forward to working with the AMA board and the staff of the AMA, and representing the members of the North Central Region for the betterment of motorcycling,” Viverito says.
Viverito was to be seated at the Feb. 13 AMA Board of Directors meeting.
Viverito Elected To AMA BoardRepresents North Central Region
What’s it like to pilot a streamlined motorcycle at nearly 368 mph for 30 seconds? What’s it like to work at building that machine for 30 years?
Breakfast With ChampionsEat With The World’s
Fastest Motorcyclists
Get the answers to both questions—and plenty more—at this year’s AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Breakfast at Daytona, March 5, where the guests of honor will include motorcycle land-speed record-holders Chris Carr and Denis Manning. The 22nd annual Breakfast at Daytona is a fundraiser for the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame.
Manning is the moving force, and Carr is the rider, behind the pair’s absolute
land-speed record of 367.558.“People think that this is a lot of work,
and it is—it’s been 30 years of effort leading to this point” says Manning. “I may never make the Fortune 500 chasing land-speed records, but for us, it’s a real passion.”
The breakfast is 8 a.m. at the Daytona Hilton on March 5. Tickets are $49 prior to March 1 and $55 at the door. Info: 800-AMA-JOIN (262-5646), ext. 1234.P
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AMA SuPercroSS: Dungey rISIng KID DOES GOOD
Don’t take anything away from reigning champ James Stewart. The San Manuel Yamaha rider once again wowed fans everywhere with blazing speed with his win at round one of Monster Energy AMA Supercross, an FIM World Championship, in Anaheim, Calif., on Jan. 9.
But it was Rockstar Makita Suzuki rider Ryan Dungey, not Stewart, who raised those same fan’s expectations for the 2010 season.
Dungey did something few riders, let alone class rookies, have done. He led the first 16 laps of the 20-lap main event, at times gapping Stewart. Although Stewart passed Dungey on the 17th lap, the first 75 percent of the race sent notice to the fans and industry alike that the 20-year-old Dungey is ready for the next level.
Then, the following week in Phoenix, Dungey demonstrated that his Anaheim ride was no fluke. With Stewart slow to recover from an early race crash, Dungey won the second round rather easily, taking the points lead in the process.
Dungey had a superb 2009 on the smaller displacement bikes, racing his way to the 2009 AMA Supercross Lites West Region Championship and the AMA 250 Motocross Championship outdoors. He also led AMA Team USA to an
unprecedented 20th Motocross of Nations World Championship, winning the MX1 class on a Suzuki RMZ450 in the process.
But outdoor performance on a 450 doesn’t always indicate indoor big-bike prowess. Few rookies make the transition so smoothly, so quickly on the tight, technical, big-air tracks in Monster Energy AMA Supercross.
“I was able to put down some clean laps at the beginning of the race, but I got out of my flow toward the end,” Dungey says. “I think (Stewart) might have messed up at the first of the race, which allowed me to gap him. But then I messed up, which allowed him to get back around me. I tried to make a little effort there at the end, but I just couldn’t get it done.”
What Dungey has done, however, is breathe even more competitive life into Monster Energy AMA Supercross. For a nation of fans looking for the Next Big Thing, you may have found him.
Going to a round of Monster Energy AMA Supercross, an FIM World Championship, will always be the best way to experience one of motorsports’ greatest shows.
When you can’t get to the stadium, you can rely on free live timing and scoring at AMASupercross.com to deliver lap-by-lap action from the track.
Between practice, heat races, the last-chance qualifiers, and the main events, you can also read race reports, check out photo galleries and catch up on rider interviews.
One of the sport’s premier shooters, Jeff Kardas, is at each round freezing and posting the on-track action, while longtime motorcycle race reporter Shan Moore will be tracking down riders for their perspective.
You’ll also find the official series media guide, rider numbers and biographies, schedule and ticket information, the official series rulebook, as well as rider bulletins and competition notices from AMA Racing.
It’s Almost Like Being ThereLive Timing & Scoring At
AMASupercross.com
The Life | Adrenaline
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For some, vintage racing is an excuse to compete on an older bike — in other words, affordably. For others, it represents a rolling history of motorcycle competition, a museum at speed.
The 2010 AMA Racing Vintage National Dirt Track Championship targets both goals with a historically accurate rulebook that won’t break the bank by allowing expensive, non-period modifications that violate the spirit of vintage racing.
“Much of AMA history was written on oval dirt tracks across America, from the original factory Class A racing in the 1920s to the Class C production-based structure that emerged shortly after,” says AMA Director of Racing Joe Bromley. “The AMA was there from the beginning, and this organization is in a unique position to lay claim to the history of this sport and give it the recognition it deserves on the national stage.
“We started that process in 2009 with the first-ever AMA Racing Vintage Grand Championships, which were part of AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days,” Bromley adds. “In 2010, AMA-sanctioned vintage dirt track will return to AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days, but as part of the AMA Racing Vintage National Dirt Track Championship—a true national series that further elevates the heritage of our sport.”
Vintage racing expert Don Miller, owner of MetroRacing.com, is the technical adviser of the AMA Vintage National Dirt Track Championship Series. Miller says that the class structure reflects the diverse eras of dirt track’s history while avoiding
non-traditional modifications that violate the spirit of a vintage meet.
“As a vintage motorcycle enthusiast and lifetime dirt-track fanatic, I was thrilled when I was asked to help with the development of the series rules,” Miller says. “I poured over old AMA rulebooks, competition bulletins and old photographs to make sure that this series stays true to the heritage of AMA Dirt Track Racing. This series is a great step in preserving motorcycling’s past by promoting historically correct racing in the spirit of this first American motorcycle sport. I hope to see everyone at the races.”
Promoters supporting the new series include Steve Nace Racing; the Orangeburg Motoplex, owned by former pro dirt tracker Ed Salley; the Square Deal Riders, the 2009 AMA Racing Club of the Year; the Waco Eagles Motorcycle Club, an AMA-chartered club since 1951; and AMA Racing.
The 2010 AMA Racing Vintage National Dirt Track Championship Series begins on Feb. 28 at the new short-track facility at the Daytona Flat Track in Daytona Beach, Fla. The 10-round series includes stops in South Carolina, New York, Ohio, Illinois and Texas.
Class rules and equipment regulations for the new championship series are available in an AMA Racing Competition Bulletin at AMARacing.com > Archived Results & Rules > AMA Racing Rules > Competition Bulletin: AMA Racing 2010 Vintage Dirt Track Classes.
The schedule can be found on page 54.
What amateur motocrosser hasn’t dreamed of one day racing in the Lucas Oil AMA Pro Motocross Championship?
One way to make that dream a reality is to hone your skills at AMA Racing Pro-Am events. It’s here where up-and-coming racers earn the points, purse money and contingency support to help them climb the competitive ladder.
“With around 40 races on the calendar and at least $150,000 in guaranteed purse available to the fastest amateur motocross racers on the planet, we’re confident this schedule will prepare these young racers for the next level,” says AMA Director of Racing Joe Bromley.
Bromley adds that one factor in developing the current schedule was the increased minimum age requirements for a pro license.
“In 2010, the minimum age to acquire a professional license rises to 17, and in 2011, that will increase to 18,” Bromley says. “What that also means is that many of today’s top amateurs will spend more time in the Pro-Am ranks. That reality pushed us to create a schedule that best suits the up-and-coming A-class rider looking to build skill and confidence to race with the professional racers at the national level.”
AMA Racing Pro-Am motocross events are open to both professionally licensed and A-class amateur motocross racers. The events allow amateurs to gain experience on America’s top tracks and prepare for pro-level speeds.
To be considered for a pro motocross license, competitors must have at least 75 advancement points (at the time of application) in AMA Racing Pro-Am motocross events in a continuous 12-month period. Points are based on overall finishes in either the 250 Pro-Am and Open Pro-Am classes. Points from each class won’t be combined.
For the schedule, see page 54.
New National Series Goes RetroAMA Racing Vintage National Dirt Track Championship Is Set
AMA Pro-Am Motocross Gets UpgradeMore Support In ’10
The Life | Adrenaline
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The new Husabergs are very cool in several ways. Borrowing most of their parts from parent company KTM’s proven line of thumpers, the Husaberg engineers aren’t afraid to still do things their own way—an upside-down motor, air filter in the gas tank, plastic (cross-linked polyethylene) subframe, etc.
Although reviews of the bikes, which come in 390cc, 450cc and 570cc displacements and in enduro and cross-country trim, have been positive, a national championship-caliber rider hasn’t tested the machines on the national stage.
That all changes this year when eight-time AMA National Enduro Champion Mike
Lafferty lines up for his minute on the 2010 Husaberg FE390. In search of a record-setting ninth title, Mike isn’t willing to compromise on anything in his program. His willingness to ride the very different ‘Berg is telling.
But what does he really think? We caught up with him to find out.
Circles and Arrows
It’s Different. It’s Fast. It May Win A National TitleMike Lafferty Doesn’t Mind Things A Bit Whacked
“It handles quite a bit differently. Not like a Japanese bike. Being linkage-less, it has the same kind of feel in one sense, but the way it transfers power is different. The motor makes the bike handle differently than what I’ve been used to from the past 15 years.”
“With the motor where it is, positioning the crank like that, that makes a major difference in handling. There was a bit of a different feel when the bike dropped into a hole to get the rear end to squat, but we’ve basically worked that out with setup. Actually, my baseline setup with the KTM worked real well. We cut a half a year off testing because of that.”
“Not sure on the concept behind the plastic subframe. It’s light. It looks like it takes up a lot of room, but I’m used to it.”
“When I got the bike, I weighed it. The weight’s the same as the KTM400 that I’m used to, but it carries 20 more pounds in the rear. That takes 20 pounds of steering mass off the front end, and it steers so effortlessly.”
“The fuel-injection, I freaking love it. I hope I never have to jet a bike or see a carb again. We installed a racing ICU map and that was it. I was scared at first with the F.I. and all, but it’s unbelievably easy. There’s no popping or banging, and it starts right up every time.”
“I wasn’t sure about the air filter under the front of the seat. But now that I’ve ridden the bike, it stays much cleaner. I don’t change my air filter as much as I did, and I’m starting to feel pretty guilty about it.”
“If you want to get the fuel tank off, you do have to do some work. That’s a bit of a pain. The air filter boot wraps around, and you have sensor wires and fuel lines that you have to route and unplug. But it does carry more fuel toward the center of the bike instead of out front.”
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The Life | Adrenaline
32 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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N
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Setting up websites, forums and,
now, social media pages has become
silly simple over the past few years. It’s
no surprise to see stars everywhere
becoming their own webmasters, so to
speak. Racers are no different. Here are
a few hot spots online where you can
connect with your heroes.
DestryAbbott.com:
The former AMA National
Hare & Hound Champion
and current contender for
Monster Energy Kawasaki
runs a pretty active forum.
If you log on at the right
time of the year, you
might land a killer deal on one of Destry’s
old race bikes.
Ricky Gadson’s
MySpace page: Read
posts and check out
personal photos from
one of AMA Dragbike’s
biggest stars at MySpace.
com/rgsportbikezone.
Ricky’s current mood after
another championship? “Accomplished.”
Gary Nixon’s Facebook page: Nixon
often complains about the hassles of
keeping up his page, but he still keeps it
up with pics and witty posts. Old fans also
contribute classic photos. Classic Nixon
status update: “Still trying… I hate the
Face thing, use my e-mail.
(Doing) good AS CAN BE
EXPECTED. I WAS AT
LAGUNA I THINK. GARY
#9.”
Become No. 9’s friend
at http://www.facebook.
com/people/Gary-
Nixon/685121679
Winning three out of the first four
rounds is one way to show you’re serious
about taking a title. That’s the message
Tyler Bowers is sending to both fans and
rivals when it comes to the 2010 AMA
Arenacross Championship.
Following up a win at the series’ first
’10 doubleheader in Grand Rapids, Mich.,
with a sweep of Baltimore’s two rounds,
the Babbitt’s Monster Energy/Ti Lube
Kawasaki rider has built a solid points
lead with increasingly dominating rides. In
the final Baltimore round, Bowers raced
mostly unchallenged in the 25-lap main
and now holds a 16-point advantage over
his teammate Chad Johnson.
American Motorcyclist (AM): Tyler,
how did the Babbitt’s ride come together?
Tyler Bowers (TB): Denny (Bartz, team
manager) stepped up and offered me a
deal, and it was awesome—it was like the
week before (the season preview race in)
Des Moines. I signed everything, and got
the bike Tuesday. I rode Wednesday, then
that night drove from California to Des
Moines. It was like 27 hours, and not very
fun at all. I got there pretty tired from the
trip, but the bike was amazing...
AM: Are you feeling a lot of pressure
from winning so soon?
TB: No, not really. I knew coming into
this series two of the guys that were
definitely in my head as the biggest
competition were Josh Demuth and Chad
Johnson. Then I show up at the first round,
and they’re on my team... I don’t really feel
pressure just because I know how I can
do. I wouldn’t say that I’m the fastest guy
on the team, because even if you are the
fastest, it takes a lot more than that to win.
AM: What have you learned from your
teammates?
TB: Josh is hilarious, and he’s totally
different than what I ever imagined. I grew
up in Ohio, too, and I remember watching
Josh when I was on 50s. He was all tatted
up selling all this. But he’s different now
that I’ve met him. He’s a lot cleaner than
I ever thought he would be. He’s a good
guy, and I’m happy to be teammates with
him and Chad. The way that they handle
themselves, they’re complete opposites,
but they’re both just perfect. You can’t ask
for better teammates.—Jim Kimball
Direct ConnectionFind Top Pros Online
Bowers On A RollLays Early Claim To Arenacross Points Lead
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Cam
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Gad
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ones
March 2010 33
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There aren’t many opportunities for mere mortals in the motorcycling world to get up close to a bona-fi de 500cc Grand-Prix racebike. After all, they cost $1 million or more to build, and are the fastest roadracing bikes on the planet.
But you can get close to this one.This Yamaha YZR500 battled on the
world stage from 1992 through 1996 in the FIM 500cc World Motorcycle Championship, now known as MotoGP. The bike also competed in the famed Isle of Man TT, which features a 37-mile road course where riders race at speed, sometimes just inches from stone walls.
In fact, this YZR500 still carries the livery it wore in that race, including the number 6 that indicates it qualifi ed sixth in its class in the ’98 TT, ridden by Welshman Nigel Davies.
Built by Harris Performance Productions of Hertford, England, this YZR features a works V-four, twin-crank, two-stroke motor, and is one of about a dozen built from 1991 to 1993.
The 499cc motor pumps out a claimed 170 horsepower at 12,500 rpm.
To handle all that power, the bike has extraordinary chassis bits, including an Öhlins steering damper and suspension,
Brembo front brakes, a Nissan rear brake, and Dymag wheels.
The bike also has carbon-and-steel brake discs and pads, and carbon brake disc covers with cooling scoops. The dry weight is a featherlight 287 pounds.
This bike is just one of many signifi cant motorcycles now on display at the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum at AMA headquarters in Pickerington, Ohio.
It is owned by the AMA Hall of Fame, thanks to the generosity of Gary Coleman of Atlanta, Ga., who donated the motorcycle in 2008.
Heritage
YAMAHA YZR500 ROADRACERA TWO-STROKE WEAPON FROM THE GRAND-PRIX WARS
Ph
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Heritage features the machines and people of the AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum in Pickerington, Ohio. The Hall of Fame is a 501(c)3 non-profi t corporation
that receives support from the AMA and from motorcycling enthusiasts. For info and directions, visit MotorcycleMuseum.org, or call (614) 856-2222.
AM_03_2010_pp034-035_Heritage.indd 34 1/21/10 11:09 AM
March 2010 35
AM_03_2010_pp034-035_Heritage.indd 35 1/20/10 6:01 PM
Bein
g t
he b
est
in t
he w
orl
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n t
he w
inte
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Can
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this
mo
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ard
wo
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ded
icatio
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nd
sacri
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Fo
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it a
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Pars
ons.
Port
rait
By
Tom
Bear.
36 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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March 2010 37
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It was 2007, and Olympic silver
medalist skier Shannon Bahrke
was working through one of the
occupational hazards of life as an
elite-athlete mogul master—a blown-
out knee from a ski crash.
Knee rehabilitation following surgery is a
painful, arduous process. Looking to let off
a little steam one afternoon, she stopped
by the Salt Lake City bicycle shop run by
her boyfriend, Matt Happe. It was a slow
day, and he and some friends were racing
pitbikes in the vacant lot next door.
“They had bought a bunch of 50cc
motorcycles and totally souped them up,”
she laughs. “My boyfriend is 6-foot-4,
and to see him on a 50cc bike was pretty
funny—I thought that thing was going to
explode.”
The riders suggested she take a turn on
the makeshift track.
“I have a lot of crazy friends, and they
talked me into it,” Bahrke says. She put on
her knee brace, suited up and gave it a go.
She was instantly hooked.
“I thought, ‘Oh, my God, I have to get
one of these!’” she says. “They were so
easy and simple to ride, and not scary at
all. You look at motorcycle races on TV, and
everyone’s doing these huge jumps, and
that’s just crazy. But this little 50cc was not
intimidating. I could just get on there and do
it and get the hang of it quickly.”
It was the start of a beautiful relationship
that soon had Bahrke buying her first
motorcycle, a Yamaha TT-R125 followed
by a Honda. Now, her bike is an important
tool in her training as an world-level athlete.
She figures it’s good practice for mental
focus, body positioning, cardio training
and more on her regular trail rides. And as
many motorcyclists know, it’s a great stress
reliever.
“I really can’t imagine being without a
motorcycle now,’’ she says.
In fact, Bahrke, who at presstime was
aiming for a berth on the 2010 U.S. Olympic
ski team, is not alone among Olympians in
her love of motorcycles. Several members of
the U.S. Team are motorcyclists to the core.
For luge racer Tony Benshoof,
motorcycles are a great counterpoint to
luge, where he’s usually found hurling down
runs on the high side of 85 mph on a sled
the size of a large doormat, steering by feel
alone. He favors enduro machines for the
woods, and rides his Harley-Davidson on
the street.
“For me, I like the complexity of
motorcycles,” he says. “Road bikes are
great, but with off-road bikes, there’s a lot
more going on. There’s balance, they’re
nimble, you can jump them higher. They’re
just fun.”
For freestyle skier Jeret Peterson, whose
signature ski-jump trick involves a seemingly
impossible three somersaults and five twists,
motorcycles are a way to take a break,
kick back and relax. Though he’s raced
motocross, these days he prefers the laid-
back attitude of his Honda VTX1800.
“From the first time I rode, I loved the
freedom a bike gave you to go wherever you
wanted,” he says. “You didn’t have to stay
on the road, you could run over rocks—you
could do anything.”
And while these three athletes won’t be
on motorcycles while they’re competing
on the world stage this month at the 2010
Winter Olympic Games in Vancouver,
Canada, from Feb. 12 to 28, you can bet
that come spring, they’ll be firing up their
bikes and heading out just like the rest of us.
Shannon Bahrke is shooting for what will
likely be her last Olympics after a 12-year
run that has taken her to the top level.
The current U.S. National Champion in
dual moguls took silver in the 2002 Winter
Olympics in Salt Lake City, and she’s a
2003 World Cup Champion. She sticks to
a withering training schedule throughout
the year that involves daily four-hour
workouts in the gym, lots of skiing and
regular appointments with trainers and
chiropractors. It’s a full-time job, and Bahrke
remains extremely focused—which is why
she finds it somewhat amazing that she’s
become a die-hard motorcyclist.
“I consider myself a really big wuss, and
the fact that I do the crazy sport that I do,
and ride motorcycles, and want to get into
car racing, I really have no idea where that
came from,” she says. “With bikes, and with
mogul skiing, once I did it, it was like, ‘This
is the best thing!’ I fell in love with it.”
March 2010 39
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40 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp036-043_Feature1.indd 40 1/20/10 6:04 PM
Bahrke eventually settled on her current
bike, a Honda CR85. “Yeah, it’s kind of a
kid’s bike,” she laughs. “But I’m short, and
where we ride in the mountains, you need
to be able to get your feet down.”
Trail riding is her latest passion. She
rides often with friends, with her favorite
trails in the area around Moab, Utah. More
than anything, she notes, motorcycles have
expanded her horizons.
“It’s just so much fun—I never knew
you could go all these amazing places
on a motorcycle,” she says. “I’ll ride the
Slickrock Trail (outside Moab) on my
mountain bike, and it’s just way more
enjoyable on a motorcycle. My head
doesn’t feel like it’s going to explode, and
my muscles don’t want to die. It’s great.”
Bahrke finds plenty of crossover
between skiing and riding. The main thing:
You must be 100 percent focused in both.
“You have to be completely on it,” she
says. “Skiing, you’re always reacting and
trying to recover from your mistakes. It’s
the same thing with motorcycling, so it
really helps with my sport—being prepared,
looking ahead, trying to go faster than you
should. There’s a lot of overlap.”
Then there’s the mental training she gets
out of it. Riding with all guys, she often
finds herself having fun pushing hard at the
beginnings to keep up.
“I ride way above my head for the first
half-hour, trying to keep them in sight, and
that’s crazy, because they’re way faster
than me,” she says. “But throughout the
day, I get more confident, and I realize I can
do it. It’s good to realize that.”
It’s refreshing, Bahrke notes, to try an
entirely different sport like motorcycling—
and start from the bottom.
“It’s neat to work at something and see
improvement quickly,” she says. “For me,
the learning curve is small in skiing, and
sometimes progressing is so frustrating.
Something like moving my hand forward
a half-inch is like a really big change. But
on a motorcycle, I’m still so new that when
I’m out on the trail and maybe I fall or don’t
do something the way I want, by the end
of the day I’m doing it seamlessly. There’s
such a sense of accomplishment.”
Motorcycling, she says, has become
a big part of her life. “I just encourage
everybody to try it,” she says.
“You watch people like Travis Pastrana,
and it seems so intimidating. But there
are so many levels that you can do. You
can start on a 50 like I did and get the
TT-R bike. It’s not hard. It really seems
like there’s room for everybody on a
motorcycle, she says.”
If you’re looking for thrills on ice, you
could do a lot worse than the luge. The
small, two-runner sleds are steered entirely
by leaning. When you’re riding one well,
you’re not even looking forward, using
the feel of the track and your peripheral
vision to keep yourself on target as you hit
speeds upward of 85 mph.
One of the best in the world on a luge
is Minnesotan Tony Benshoof. He remains
the highest-ranked American singles luger
in Olympic competition, with a fourth-place
in the 2006 Games in Turin, Italy. He also
holds records for the most international
medals won by any USA Men’s Singles
athlete and most U.S. National titles won.
Given his adrenaline-charged world, it’s
no surprise that he once had a serious love
affair with sportbikes.
“I started on dirtbikes, riding around the
farm, building jumps and things, but when I
was 18, I got into sportbikes with a Honda
CBR600RR,” he says. “To be honest, I got
so many speeding tickets when I was in my
early 20s that I had to give it up!”
Ultimately, he decided to keep his
need for high speed on for the mile-long,
convoluted sled runs, where he is the
Guinness World Record-holder for fastest
speed on a luge sled (86.6 mph) at the
track in Park City, Utah. These days,
Benshoof spends his time on his Harley-
Davidson, and until he sold his latest off-
road bike, enduro machines for trail riding.
Like Bahrke, he sees some real
crossovers between motorcycling and luge.
The key factor in both? Traction.
“On a modern sportike, I think you get
close to the feelings you get on a luge,’’ he
says. “If you take out the engine element,
the principals are very similar. If you’re
going fast around a corner, you’re pushing
the threshold of friction and traction.
“With a luge, you’re constantly pushing
how little of an edge you can be riding
before you’re out of control,” he says. “That
balance point between in and out of control
is where the fastest runs come from. It’s
the same off-road on a motorcycle.”
Benshoof is away from his home in
Minnesota for six months at a time, when
he’s competing around the world or training
at the Olympic Training Center in Lake
Placid, N.Y. For several years, he’s taken
his dirtbike or his Harley-Davidson with him
to training.
“Personally, I look at riding motorcycles
as cross-training,” he says.
“When you’re running singletrack, there’s
a lot going on,” he continues. “The faster
you ride, the more forward you have to
look and think. Things are coming at you
quickly, and you have to prioritize them
very fast—you know, ‘Which of these
things can I forget about?’
“There’s a lot of that that’s the same with
luge,” he says.
Also, the Harley-Davidson has been a
great escape. There are several athletes
and trainers at the center who ride, he
says, and they’ll often get together and
head out for a cruise.
Benshoof readily admits to missing
riding—especially lately since he sold his
most recent enduro bike to be sure he’d
avoid injury before the Olympics. But he is
100 percent psyched to be focused on the
Olympic Games for now.
“I feel good about our chances,’’ he
says. “The track in Vancouver is my style
of track. It’s technical, and there’s small
margin for error, and that fits my style.
We’re definitely looking forward to it.”
In the world of elite-level skiing, the
athletes closest to freestyle motocross
riders are aerial skiers, who launch from
massive ramps to pull flips, spins and
twists before time runs out and the snow
comes screaming toward them.
Few aerial skiers go bigger than Jeret
“Speedy” Peterson, whose signature trick
is a three-flip-and-five-twist combo he
calls the “Hurricane.”
Bikes, he says, were a natural from the
first one he bought in eighth grade—a
Suzuki RM80 with a blown engine.
“I wasn’t able to have motorcycles when
I was really young,” he says. “By the time
I was in eighth grade, I was kind of able
to do what I wanted. It took about three
months to fix it back up. I was stoked the
first time I kicked it and it fired up.”
He would ride with a friend who had
a dirtbike, and eventually moved up to
motocross racing as he got older, all the
while skiing in the winters.
“I just liked the adrenaline and sense
of freedom of both sports,” he says. “I
was definitely better on skis. I had to stop
motocross racing a while ago. On the
motocross track, I had the guts to go big,
but I didn’t have the brains for the brakes.
So I switched to trail riding.”
Like Benshoof, he also rode on the
street, on a CBR600RR, but found it much
easier to keep himself in check after he
bought a Honda VTX1800.
“The cruiser is definitely the choice for
me,” he says. “The VTX makes me smarter.
I get to enjoy the relaxation a little more
than the adrenaline.”
Not surprisingly for a guy who spends
a lot of time in the air pulling off seemingly
impossible stunts, Peterson is blown away
by freestyle motocrossers. Learning the
hurricane took months of practice in the
Olympic Training Center’s ramp and pool.
Watching someone like Pastrana pull a
double-backflip on a motorcycle, he says,
is amazing.
Even more amazing, he says, was the
time Pastrana came out to the training
center to try out the swimming pool.
“I taught him how to flip on skis and he
March 2010 41
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taught me how to do a backfl ip on
a bike. He was doing things on the
ramps the fi rst day that it takes
some people two or three years to
do,” he says.
For Peterson’s part, learning
the backfl ip on a bicycle/tricycle
contraption came quickly as well.
“The fi rst two tries were horrendous,”
he laughs. “But I really stuck it the next
two tries.”
Talk to these athletes, and you really get a
sense of the sacrifi ce it takes to contend to
be the best in the world.
They’ve been focused on these Olympic
Games for the past four years—and on
some level for much longer than that.
They’ve left behind normal lives and normal
jobs to pursue their dreams. Because of
that, all three have plans for after the games.
And all their plans call for motorcycles.
Vancouver will likely be Bahrke’s last
Olympics. She’s focused on expanding the
coffee-roasting company she founded two
years ago, Silver Bean Coffee. And she’s
looking for some more fun on two wheels.
“Everything is going to have to fi t in
somehow,” she says. “I really want to try to
do some Supermoto racing, where you’re
doing asphalt and dirt. That looks like a lot
of fun. And I’ll start doing a lot more jumping
on my dirtbike on the trails. I’ve kind of kept
that in check with the Games coming up.”
Benshoof says he plans to get a new
enduro bike after the Olympics. He’s also
got a very specifi c plan involving his Harley-
Davidson and his coach.
“I’ve been thinking of a few motorcycle
trips. My coach, who’s from Lichtenstein,
recently bought a Harley-Davidson, and
we’ve talked about going to Sturgis. That
will just blow his mind.”
And Peterson? He’s already thinking of
new motorcycles.
“I’ve always wanted a Harley, but there’s
a lot of other bikes out there that I think are
neat, too,” he says. “Getting a custom bike
would be pretty cool. I would love a chopper
that you could actually ride.”
Plans for new rides, new adventures and
new bikes? On one level, at least, these elite
athletes are just like the rest of us. •
42 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
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Friday, March 5, 2010
8:00 - 10:30 a.m. (Breakfast at 8:30 a.m.)Hilton Daytona Beach Oceanfront Resort
100 North Atlantic Avenue
Daytona Beach, Florida★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to hear two AMA Hall of Famers swapping captivating stories
in a forum that is as rare and intimate as it gets.★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
Al l proceeds f rom th is event wi l l he lp fund the
AMA Motorcycle Hal l of Fame exhib i t expansion.
The AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum is administered by the
American Motorcycle Heritage Foundation, a non-profit public foundation
devoted to the preservation of America’s motorcycling heritage.
Tickets are just $49 in advance ($55 at the door)
Call (614)856-2222 Now! MotorcycleMuseum.org
AM_03_2010_pp036-043_Feature1.indd 43 1/20/10 6:07 PM
The Journey. Not The Destination.
Words & Trip Photography By Pete Cope. Portrait by Andrew R. Slaton.
On A Ride From Dallas To The Pacifi c And Back,
One Rider Finds Much More Than Just The Country.
44 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp044-049_Feature2.indd 44 1/20/10 6:07 PM
OK, so things weren’t
going according to
plan. But I learned long
ago that adventure is what
happens when your plans
go out the window.
And at that point, my plans had
definitely gone out the window.
I was standing on the side of a
rocky Colorado hill, in a miles-long
gnarly, narrow, rutted, switchback
gravel road, looking down at my
Buell Ulysses, which suddenly
had no clutch and no way to go
forward.
And this was just the first day of
a trip that was definitely throwing
me a few curves, but would
ultimately teach me a few things
about life and about myself.
At the age of 4 I’d had the hook of
motorcycling set so deep that I knew I’d
never shake it. A quick ride around the
block on the tank of my uncle’s Kawasaki
would lead to a lifetime of moto-hysteria.
By 14 I became a fixture at my local dealer
scheming how I’d bungee a sleeping bag to
a bike and disappear for a few weeks.
I’d done a few Iron Butt endurance rides,
and ridden plenty of miles since I got my first
bike at 18. What I hadn’t done was take a
few weeks to go across the country on my
own schedule with my own agenda. Work
and life have always conspired to derail
my plans and keep me busy. But when I
realized that the U.S. round of MotoGP at
California’s Laguna Seca Raceway was the
weekend before a rally I really wanted to
attend out West, I decided to go for it.
Besides, I figured it’d be good to get
away and sort through a few things in my
head. Motorcycle journeys always seem like
a good way to do that, and frankly, I had
been feeling a little down lately about a few
parts of my life and my work.
What I felt really good about, however,
was my recent marriage to the most
wonderful woman in the world, who would
be joining me later on the trip.
So on a Wednesday in July, I headed out
from Dallas on my fully loaded Buell Ulysses
for the first leg to Colorado. My friend,
Robert, joined me on a BMW K1200LT. By
late afternoon we had made it to Trinidad,
Colo. We were just a quick ride away from
Robert’s cabin in Weston. He had warned
me about the road up to the cabin, but
he said he would be leading on the LT.
No sweat, right? Well, no. The rutted,
switchback driveway soon claimed the LT,
which fell over with both wheels pointed
uphill. It was one heavy sucker for the two of
us to lift, but somehow we managed.
But the hill wasn’t through with us. I had
stopped a few times to make sure Robert
was upright and to help pick up the LT. Each
time, I had to re-launch my overloaded bike.
On the final launch the bike wouldn’t move,
even with the motor pinned. When I put the
bike in gear to get off, it rolled backward,
and I ultimately dumped it.
Great. Robert went up the hill and
retrieved me with his Jeep, towing me up
the hill while I zig-zagged to keep tension on
the tow straps. By the time we crested the
summit, I decided to take a deep breath and
enjoy what was left of the day.
Hey, being broken down on vacation
beats work any day.
The next day, we trailered the Ulysses
100 miles to the nearest dealer in Pueblo.
I checked into the La Quinta, which I think
is Spanish for “the place right next to the
interstate where you stay when your bike
breaks down.” Or something like that.
Since it was Sunday and nothing was
open, I spent the day by the pool with a
frosty beverage, and watched “Dogfights”
on the History Channel. Not a bad day.
Day three started with a free ride from the
helpful folks at Pikes Peak Harley-Davidson/
Buell about 45 miles down the road, and I
was soon good to go. It turns out that the
mechanic who did the 15K service I’d had
performed before I left hadn’t adjusted the
clutch correctly.
My plans had me in Utah that night, and
475 miles of slab later, I was burning a hole
in the night with my Hella lights and rolling
into Moab, back on track.
Since it was dark when I came in, I didn’t
know what to expect. When I opened
my curtains in the morning, I was blown
away by the mountain views straight out
of a Roadrunner cartoon. I headed out
for Arches National Park like a kid running
downstairs on Christmas morning.
To stay on schedule, I went to everything
before noon: Balancing Rock, Delicate Arch,
Double Arch, Petrified Dunes, the Tower of
Babel and a bunch of other mind-blowing
sights. There really was too much to see,
but now I know it’s worth a return trip.
On the road to California, I got to thinking about the two types of
riding that I love.
The first is that super-intense all-
encompassing type that forces you to not
think at all. You must be fully engaged,
anticipate and react. There isn’t time to think
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about how much work the backyard needs
or whether or not you remembered to clean
the gutters. You must focus entirely on the
task at hand. I really enjoy that kind of clarity,
and find it surprisingly peaceful.
The second kind of riding I enjoy is
different. It’s when you find a great section
of road and let your mind wander. It’s
like meditation. The difference is that at
a relaxed pace, your mind has time to
work in the background. I often come to
huge realizations about myself, my life, my
relationship and work.
I headed northwest on 95 toward
Glen Canyon and Hanksville. At a scenic
overlook, I pulled over for a break, and the
gears in my mind started turning.
Too often as of late I had let things get
me down when I shouldn’t have. I know that
happiness is a choice, but I also knew that
I was forgetting that choice, day to day. If
things in your life make you unhappy, you
have to decide to deal with them or change
them. I knew I had to focus on the little joys
and simple pleasures that surround all of us.
I fueled up at the Hollow Mountain Gas &
Grocery in Hanksville—a Phillips 66 station
with a convenience store that is completely
inside a mountain, with an interior entirely
of exposed rock. It’s just like Disney World,
except it’s real.
That night I made it all the way to
Beaver, Utah, after getting caught in a freak
hail storm that took me from near heat
exhaustion to shivering cold.
After taking a hot shower, I walked
down the street as the sun set on a perfect
summer night. I walked through the center
of town and watched a group of kids on
their bikes. It brought me back to my own
childhood and summers long past, when
there was nothing better than a hot summer
evening fading into a perfect sunset,
watching the sun drop deep against the
horizon, knowing all the while that you didn’t
have to go to school the next day, or the
next.
I felt like I had something in common with
those kids that night. We shared that sense
of freedom you get on those long summer
breaks from school.
The next morning, I was
headed out across Nevada. I had lived in
Reno for two years before I moved to Texas,
so the area was familar. I headed down the
Extraterrestrial Highway—Nevada Route
375 that passes near the famed Area 51.
Rachel, the “town” that is closest to Area
51, appeared out of the desert, and the
sticker-covered “Extraterrestrial Highway”
sign proved too good a photo op not to
stop. Unfortunately, when I leaned the bike
to park it, the sidestand bolts sheered off.
The Creative Parking Rodeo had begun.
I rode the couple hundred yards to
Rachel’s main attraction, a restaurant calling
itself the Little A ‘le Inn, leaned the bike
against the wall and walked into Weirdoville,
U.S.A.
The place was full of U.F.O and alien
posters, and tons of crazy bumper stickers,
some dealing with aliens and others political.
I couldn’t tell if the people here were in on
the joke, or they really believed in aliens.
My guess is somewhere in the middle, but
which side of the middle is open for debate.
The sidestand issue forced another
change in my schedule, and I soon found
myself headed for Reno. Luckily, I had
some friends in town from when I used to
live there, and I soon had a new plan. The
ride was a grind through the desert and
the speed-trap towns of Lee Vining and
Tonopah. I made it to Reno just in time to
hook up with my friend at a nearby bike
night.
It was great catching up with old friends,
but I was forced to come face to face
with my limitations as far as the trip was
concerned. With time getting tight, my
planned loop through Yosemite was out.
Instead, I rolled with the changes.
By 11 a.m. the next day, I had the
sidestand fixed, and was headed over
Kit Carson Pass on Nevada Route 88.
Thankfully, the road got twisty and I could
really have some fun. I had a short ride
planned for the day—less than a tank of
gas. Surprisingly, this turned out to be my
second-favorite riding day of the trip.
I took my time passing through Kirkwood
and stopped for lunch at the Kirkwood Inn—
the half-pound burger with Monterey Jack,
green chilies and bacon was awesome. I
didn’t hurry all day. It was a rare feeling on
the trip for me. As the Chinese philosopher
Lao Tzu said: “A good traveler has no fixed
plans, and is not intent on arriving.”
I was getting closer to being a good
traveler. This trip was already helping me
reconnect with myself, who I am, what I
want to be, and was awakening my spirit
from too many days sitting in front of a
computer punching keys.
Back on the road, the rest of the day
reminded me of why I love my Buell. It
has acres of abundant torque, excellent
suspension and a great chassis that helped
me rail apex after apex with confidence.
And when the road turned ugly on Omo
Ranch road on my way to connect to
County Highway 16, the inside of my helmet
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started to sound like a girls-only elementary
school classroom with a substitute teacher.
Uncontrollable giggles.
Next up: The Laguna Seca round of
MotoGP. My plan was to be a volunteer, and
sleep in a volunteer “dorm” in a gym. I soon
discovered the volunteer organization was
overwhelmed. Eight hours into a four-hour
shift, I discovered this would not meet my
requirements for “vacation.”
I changed my plans. A move from the
gym to my tent at the nearby fairgrounds
improved things a bit, but the nights
(and days) there were still pretty loud and
rowdy. The highlight of Laguna Seca was
definitely hanging out at the races all day
and Cannery Row all night. The final race
came off great—shame that Honda’s Nicky
Hayden couldn’t pull off the win—but I sure
had fun.
As the races ended, I had a chance to
get into a hotel room that didn’t cost a
fortune. I got the world’s best shower and
some great sleep for the first time since I
rode into Monterey.
Day 10 of the trip, and I was
on the road again, headed down the Pacific
Coast Highway towards San Diego, where
I would meet up with my two little brothers,
eat their food, sleep on their couch and pay
them nothing for the pleasure.
It was a cool, overcast morning typical of
Northern California. The fog was hovering
over the coastline. I was alone with my
thoughts in my helmet, still reveling in the
festivities of the weekend.
The road was great, full of nice sweepers
that were relaxing and enjoyable. The last
time I had done this trip was on a Harley-
Davidson Road King Custom. It had tons of
torque, a nice relaxed riding position and the
rumble of that big V-twin pushing me from
apex to apex.
I missed my Road King.
Then I rounded the corner and came to
a stop for construction. Filing to the front, I
was welcomed by a pack of bikes awaiting
permission to continue their journey. As the
construction flag worker dropped the flag.
we all took off. As the order sorted out, I
caught up to a pack of three bikes I felt
confident riding with. A Ducati 1098s led,
followed by an older 900SS and a brilliantly
ridden BMW RT touring bike.
The road was spectacular, full of twists,
turns, peaks and valleys. Anticipating and
reacting consumed every lobe of my brain. I
was at peace.
I didn’t miss my Road King anymore.
The four of us ran for a solid 30 minutes
of unbridled fun, and when they pulled off
for a stop, I kept on rolling.
L.A. was the usual maze of freeways and
traffic. I put my head down and worked my
way through the mess. Soon I was south
of L.A. and alone in my helmet again. I kept
thinking: It’s amazing how motorcycling for a
few days can clear your head.
The things that had been bothering me
at work and elsewhere came back, and
I was forced to come to some powerful
self-realizations. I do know that if I don’t
like something that I can change it. I have
the ability to take chances and change
the world around me. If I hate it, I have
to change it or stop complaining about
it. Beyond that, I’m not willing to waste
precious hours in this existence being
miserable.
When I arrived in San Diego, a huge
mental burden had been lifted from my
shoulders. Soon I was with my brothers,
and all was right with the world.
Headed out of San Diego
the next day, I realized it was an important
turning point in the trip. It was my first day
heading east. East toward my wife, April,
and my friends at West Fest, a motorcycle
rally around the ADVRider.com community.
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East toward my home and my dogs. East
toward my future.
It was hot, but my Camelback took the
edge off. I laid down the miles. I rode on
to meet my wife at my mom’s place in Los
Alamos. The plan was to hang out at West
Fest in Sipapu, N.M., do some riding and
have a good time. The next morning, I
ditched the gear I wouldn’t need and made
room for April’s stuff. We hopped on the
bike and headed out toward Sipapu.
When we arrived, I was surprised at how
many friends I had made in the short time
I have been active on ADVrider. April was
surprised at how many people she knew,
as well. It was great to be among so many
good people. It was an awesome night.
We were on our way back
to the rally site after spending the next day
in Taos, when I saw a U.S. Forest Service
road that looked like a potential shortcut. It
seemed like a good idea at the time—the
best idea I had had all day.
It wasn’t. In fact, it was on that trail that I
learned that a man has got to know his own
limitations. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
The bike was loaded down with gear and
two people. In the early going, the road was
a breeze. It was steep in spots and muddy
in others, and there were even some rocky
parts. It was probably about twice as difficult
as any road I’d ever ridden. Prior to this
trip, the extent of my off-road experience
had been bouncing up and down on the
dirtbikes at my local dealer. Now, I was
starting to feel like a real adventure rider.
At a crossroads, I punched the address
for the rally site into my GPS. Hang a right, it
said. Go 2.5 miles to home.
Worst case, I knew I could get 2.5 miles
even if I had to carry my bike on my back.
Soon, we were happily cruising off-road,
two-up, with a 17-inch front wheel, street
tires, steering geometry and wheelbase
similar to a GP bike and loaded down with
supplies for the weekend.
The trail got hairy. Fast. The mud got
thick, the front tire loaded up and started
wandering. The bike started to slide away
from me. I tried my best to keep it up. I put
my right foot out and gave it everything I
had. The problem was that we were still
moving. I caught my right foot between the
bag and the ground. Backward.
I heard it pop twice. Loudly.
We went down, and I rolled off the bike
and onto my back. After a moment, my
eyes met my wife’s. I caught her wince, and
I saw the look that a parent tries not to give
when they see their kid is hurt. Neither of us
said a word. I didn’t let on how bad it hurt,
but I knew it was bad. It wasn’t blackout-
level pain, but the world sure got woozy for
a bit. Not good.
It took me a bit to gather up. Eventually,
we were ready. April helped me get the bike
back up. I climbed on and she hopped on
the back without giving it a second thought.
1.8 miles to home, I thought. I can do this. I
didn’t think of turning around.
Half a mile later, I dropped it again in
some roots. The third time I dropped it, April
volunteered to walk alongside until it got
easier. Things had gone from bad to worse.
I was struggling to stand on my seemingly
broken foot. Exhaustion was setting in.
The two of us could barely pick up the bike
when it fell. Under way, the ruts were deep
enough that the bags rubbed on both sides.
After hours of struggling, I checked the
GPS again. 2.8 miles to home, the GPS lied,
adding an extra mile to the previous reading.
We kept plugging on. The sun was starting
to set.
The trail got even worse, with boulders
and rocks the size of basketballs. I was
exhausted. I dropped it again—1.7 miles
to home. I dropped it again—1.6 miles to
home. I dropped it again. I couldn’t catch
my breath, and I couldn’t stand on the pegs
anymore. We stopped to rest and take
stock of our situation.
I told April my foot was probably broken.
We had one of those discussions that only
a husband and wife who are good friends
can have, where we discussed options.
We had only about two hours of light left,
we were high up in the mountains and the
temperature was dropping. I knew I was
done. I couldn’t go any farther with the bike.
April is an amazing woman. Ultimately,
she decided she would walk the final miles
out and get some help from our friends.
Waiting there for what seemed like an
eternity, shivering in my Olympia jacket, I
had plenty of time to think about my bad
decisions. Each one of them had raised the
stakes. I should have turned around the first
time I fell. Instead, each time I rolled the dice
and came up with snake eyes.
That’s a lesson in life that I continually
seem to be forced to learn the hard way, I
thought, as the day grew darker and colder.
I spent the time trying to not think about
what could have happened to April.
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As I sat in the pitch black of the night, I
heard someone down the trail say, “Mate...
is that you?” Salvation!
The Brit who appeared introduced
himself as Lyndon, a friend of another friend,
Anthony, who was walking up behind him.
They had to leave their KTM 950s a ways
down the trail because it got so bad. Oddly,
that made me feel at least a little better.
Lyndon got the bike down the trail to
a massive tree that had fallen over and
blocked all access—had I been able to keep
going earlier, it surely would have stopped
me. The three of us actually had to lift the
bike over the waist-high tree. From there,
we met up with Kevin, another volunteer. I
couldn’t thank them enough.
Just before midnight, I came out of
the woods to see my wife, standing there
waiting. I didn’t have words. I muttered
something about never splitting up again.
She agreed, and was awesome enough
not even to punch me in the face.
My friend, Jeff, was waiting with his truck,
and I rode back in the passenger seat,
totally defeated.
I was banged up, but I learned the next
day the foot wasn’t broken, so I spent the
final day of the rally around camp. I found a
cold stream to soak my foot, and my new
bride and I spent a wonderful day talking,
enjoying a few cold drinks and generally
having a good time.
We talked about my trip, my job, my
thoughts and feelings on this voyage
and our future plans. On that cold, dark
mountain everything that was sloppy in my
life had come into sharp focus. I had never
felt closer to her.
What mattered was what was good in
my life. My relationship with my wife, our
great house, our families, my dumb dogs,
her crazy cat, having our health, our future
together—that’s what matters. Not the trivial
but the essential. The day was perfect.
I could move my foot slightly, and the
swelling was coming down. For her part, my
wife got a “you are going to do whatever I
say because you stranded us on a mountain
and made me walk out by myself” card.
Since then, I have been to a birthday
party for a 2-year-old, a wedding, several
gatherings of her family and the circus—all
with a huge smile on my face.
The next day, it was time to head
back to reality. April got the better end of the
deal and caught a flight out of Albuquerque
home. I had about 675 miles of hot, boring
road ahead of me. It still beat work.
More time alone in my helmet, with a
stream of consciousness running through it.
Dallas had seen so much rain this
year that it never really felt like summer
had arrived. With this trip, I felt like I had
squeezed an entire summer into two weeks.
Even better, I had turned the corner to start
appreciating all the things that make me
who I am. All the things I want to change
weren’t magically fixed, but I was able to put
them in perspective.
I was choosing to fix them or make them
better. I was choosing to be happy and not
miserable. After all, I had the hard parts
figured out already.
In Clines Corners, Texas, I stopped for
fuel and ran into a friend from the rally.
His bike had been sidelined with a motor
problem, and their return home in a rental
truck had been delayed. We decided to
team up and dash back to Dallas on the
freeway. It was blazing hot and boring, but I
was glad not to be stuck in that truck.
We rode and rode. We would ride until
my reserve light came on, then fill up, slam
a Gatorade and a water, and pound out
another 160 miles. We had a great day
inventing new hand signals and making fun
of each other.
As my journey came to an end, I decided
to stop delaying and start planning to have
my own family. I also decided that I would
ride with my family and show them the
world from the seat of a motorcycle.
It was a great trip. I had figured out a lot
about myself and a lot about what I was
willing to put up. There are limitations in
this life. Limitations to what my body will
do, limitations to my skills on a motorcycle,
limitations to what I’m willing to put up with
in my personal and professional life.
But I also knew that I can move some of
those limitations around, and be as good a
man as I want to be. There is no reason not
to be the best person I can. I have all the
reasons I need around me. My family, my
friends, my colleagues and my wife.
Eventually, I rounded the last corner and
was home. It had been fun, crazy, painful
and dangerous, all rolled into one. It was
also the end of the best trip ever, but only
the start of putting my life, my mind and my
spirit back on track. It was 5,000 miles that I
wouldn’t have done any differently. •
March 2010 49
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Member Benefi tsThank you to our sponsors and partners for your
continued support of the American Motorcyclist Association.
AmericanMotorcyclist.com/joinama
PROFORMANCEUSA.COM
MOTORCYCLEADS.COM
SM
SM
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AM_03_2010_pp050_MemberBenefits.indd 50 1/20/10 6:05 PM
1Monster Energy AMA Supercross, an FIM World Championship, is in full swing. James Stewart, Chad Reed and the rest of the best Supercross racers on the planet will be in Indianapolis Feb. 20; Atlanta Feb. 27: Daytona
Beach, Fla., March 6; Toronto, Canada, March 13; Arlington, Texas, March 20 and Jacksonville, Fla., March 27. Check out the full schedule on the next page.
2 Meet the fastest motorcyclists in the world—Chris Carr and Denis Manning— at this year’s AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Breakfast at Daytona March 5. Manning built the land-speed-record bike, and Carr was the pilot, setting a new record last year of 367.558 mph in the measured kilometer. For more info, see the story on page 27.
3 For a real adventure, check out the Death Valley 350 presented by Countdown that is set for March 27-28 beginning in Ridgecrest, Calif. The ride goes from
Ridgecrest to Beatty, Nev., and back on mostly graded dirt. Knobbies are recommended. Info: District37AMA.org or (775) 884-0399.
4 The AMA Pro Racing Superbike Championship series gets under way at Daytona International Speedway on March 3-5 and then moves to Fontana, Calif. March 26-28. for the full schedule, see page 53.
5 The 73rd running of the Sandy Lane Enduro hosted by the Meteor Motorcycle Club is set for March 21 in Greenbank, N.J. The event features 70 miles of South Jersey trails. Info: Meteormc.com or Michael Reighn at (856) 287-8170.
6 The gladiators of the AMA Arenacross Championship series will be in San
Antonio, Texas, Feb. 20-21; Fresno, Calif., Feb. 27-28; Reno, Nev., March 5-7; and then they head to Council Bluffs, Iowa, March 12-14; Dayton, Ohio, March 20-21; and Denver March 26-28. For the full schedule, see page 53.
7This Feb. 27, 28 and March 1, amateur dirt-trackers will race for No. 1 plates on the new Daytona Flat Track dirt-track course. Then, March 2 will feature the Vet/Senior Shootout that will include classes for vet/senior amateurs and pro exhibition classes. More info at AMARacing.com. COMING UP
Start making your plans now to enjoy Arizona Bike Week at WestWorld in the town of Scottsville April 1-5. There will be rides, bands, food and more. Info: AZBikeWeek.com or Ralph Wilson at (480) 644-8191.
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A few of the hundreds of AMA-sanctioned events this month, detailed on the following pages.
Go Ride
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March 2010 51
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ALABAMA
MOTOCROSS
MAR 27 (Y): PELL CITY: NATIONAL; 2 DAY EVENT: VICTORY SPORTS INC, SAM R GAMMON; 4 PM; MILLCREEK MX PARK /I-20 EX 156/GO SOUTH; (423) 323-5497; VICTORYSPORTSRACING.COM
CALIFORNIA
ROAD RUN
MAR 20: ACTON: 2 DAY EVENT: SHAMROCK ROAD RIDERS, DALE BRASSFIELD; 7 AM; CRAZY OTTO’S /CA HWY 14 TO SANTIAGO ROAD ONE BLOCK NORTH; (818) 486-3736; SC-MA.COM
MAR 27: SAN JOSE: P & D PROMOTIONS INC, PETE FRANCINI; 5 PM; SANTA CLARA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS /344 TULLY RD; (408) 249-4336; SANJOSEINDOOR.COM
POKER RUN
MAR 6: CORONA: PASADENA MOTORCYCLE CLUB, JEFF; 7 AM; INDIAN M/C /1611 POMONA RD #C; (626) 483-2271; PASADENAMC.COM
MAR 14: STOCKTON: PORT STOCKTON M/C, BILL WOLLNER; 2 PM; 728 S LAUREL ST; (209) 948-5918; PORTSTOCKTONMC.COM
ADVENTURE RIDE
MAR 27: RIDGECREST: 2 DAY EVENT: COUNTDOWN, JERRY L COUNTS; 8 AM; MOTEL 6; (775) 884-0399; DISTRICT37AMA.ORG
SHORT TRACK
MAR 25 (G,T): SAN JOSE: INDOOR; 3 DAY EVENT: P & D PROMOTIONS INC, PETE FRANCINI; 5 PM; SANTA CLARA COUNTY FAIRGROUNDS /344 TULLY RD; (408) 249-4336; SANJOSEINDOOR.COM
SCRAMBLES
MAR 14 (S,T,Y): LUCERNE VALLEY: HUNTINGTON BEACH MC, JIM J HRUBY; BESSIMER MINE ROAD /I-15 BEAR VALLEY RD EX, RT HWY 247 BARSTOW RD; (661) 510-3245; HUNTINGTONBEACHMC.COM
HARE SCRAMBLES
MAR 20 (S,Y): HOLLISTER: VINTAGE; 2 DAY EVENT: GHOSTRIDERS MC, RICK ARAUJO; 6 AM; HOLLISTER HILLS OHV PARK /7800 CIENEGA RD; (408) 265-2122; GHOSTRIDERSMC.NET
HARE & HOUND
MAR 7 (S,T,Y): EL CENTRO: NATIONAL; ROADRUNNER OFF-ROAD RACIN, KIRK HESTER; SUPERSTITION OFFROAD AREA /”THE DIP”; (760) 275-9852; RODRUNNEROFFROAD.ORG
COLORADO
ARENACROSS
MAR 26 (M,Y): DENVER: 3 DAY EVENT: FELD MOTOR SPORTS, JAYME DALSING; 10 AM; DENVER COLISEUM /4600 HUMBOLT ST; (800) 216-7482; ARENACROSS.COM
DELAWARE
POKER RUN
MAR 21: NEW CASTLE: MOTORCYCLE
ACCIDENT VICTI, LEO SINCAVAGE; 10 AM; MIKES FAMOUS HARLEY DAVIDSON /2160 NEW CASTLE AVE; (302) 658-8800; MOTORCYCLEACCIDENTVICTIMS.ORG
FLORIDA
ROAD RUN
MAR 3: DAYTONA BEACH: DAYTONA 200 MOTORCYCLE CL, TOM CLAUSEN; 9 AM; ALLIGATOR ROAD TOUR /3602 INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY BLVD; (386) 748-1678; DAYTONA200MC.COM
MAR 21: FT LAUDERDALE: CHARITY;: BIG BIKE RIDERS ASSOCIATI, DR EDWARD N SZERLIP; 7:30 AM; CHRIS EVERT CHILDRENS HOSPITAL /1600 S ANDREWS AVE/CELEBRATION OF SMILES RIDE; (954) 346-3343; WERIDE4KIDS.COM
MYSTERY RUN
MAR 5: DAYTONA: DAYTONA 200 MOTORCYCLE CL, TOM CLAUSEN; 9 AM; 3602 INTERNATIONAL SPEEDWAY /1/2 MI WEST OF I-4 ON HWY 92; (386) 748-1678; DAYTONA200MC.COM
SHORT TRACK
MAR 1 (S,Y): DAYTONA: NATIONAL; AMERICAN MOTORCYCLIST ASS, TAMRA JONES; 10 AM;; (614) 856-1900; AMERICANMOTORCYCLIST.COM
MAR 2 (S,Y): DAYTONA: NATIONAL; AMERICAN MOTORCYCLIST ASS, TAMRA JONES; 8 AM;; (614) 856-1900; AMERICANMOTORCYCLIST.COM
ENDURO
MAR 4 (S): DAYTONA BEACH: NATIONAL; DAYTONA DIRT RIDERS, STEVE PETTENGER; TOMOKA FARMS RD /3 MI W OF US 92/W OF INT’L SPEEDWAY; (386) 615-0722; DAYTONADIRTRIDERS.ORG
IDAHO
HARE & HOUND
MAR 21 (S,Y): MURPHY: NATIONAL; DIRT INC, BILL WALSH; 12 PM; RABBIT CREEK TRAIL HEAD /HWY 78 TO TOWN/FOLLOW SIGNS; (208) 459-6871; DIRTINCRACING.COM
ILLINOIS
MOTOCROSS
MAR 13 (S,Y): DU QUOIN: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: PARADISE MOTO-PARK, DOUGLAS COCHRAN; 6 AM; 7598 GREENS MKT RD /1.7 MI W OF JCT HWYS 14 & 51; (618) 542-6203; PARADISEMOTOCROSS.COM
OBSERVED TRIALS
MAR 28 (S,Y): BYRON: NORTHERN ILLINOIS TRIALS, JENNIFER MAUPIN; 9 AM; GERMAN CHURCH RD /BYRON MOTOSPORTS PARK; (630) 690-1625; NITROTRIALS.COM
INDIANA
MOTOCROSS
MAR 14 (S,T,Y): WABASH: WABASH CANNONBALL MOTORCY, STEVE W HENSON; PO BOX 59 /595 W 250 S, WABASH; WABASHCANNONBALLMC.COM
MAR 20 (S,Y): ROSSVILLE: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: WILDCAT CREEK MX,
The following pages list AMA-sanctioned events for this month, up to date at press time. Current listings are in the Riding and Racing sections of www.AmericanMotorcyclist.com.
The biggest events—pro races, national-championship amateur competition, and major rides and rallies—are highlighted in color boxes.
For these series, we list all of the remaining events for the entire year.
Then there are the local events, the backbone of the AMA’s riding and racing calendar. These events are listed by state and are broken down by type, so you can quickly find the ones near you.
Here’s a guide to what you’ll find in these local listings:
MOTOCROSS
MAR 6 (S,Y): BREAUX BRIDGE: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: DIRT BIKE MIKE LLC, ; 6 AM; 1640 MILLS HWY; (870) 342-5373; DIRTBIKEMIKE.COM
Event Class (Competition events only)S - Standard (Amateur classes)Y - Youth ClassesT - ATV classesG - ProgressiveM - Pro-Am classes
Date
Sign-in Time
Location/City
Type of Event
Contact Phone NumberDirections
Event Promoter
THE GUIDE TO EVENTSDEMETRIUS KNOP; 6 AM; 6390 S WILDWOOD /I-65 TO LAFAYETTE/SR26E TO TOWN; (765) 379-2482; WILDCATCREEKMX.COM
MAR 27 (S,T,Y): AKRON: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: READS RACING, CAROL KLINGER; 5 AM; HANGTIME MX /13253 E ST RD 114; (574) 893-1649; READSRACING.COM
IOWA
ARENACROSS
MAR 12 (M,Y): COUNCIL BLUFFS: 3 DAY EVENT: FELD MOTOR SPORTS, JAYME DALSING; 10 AM; MID AMERICA CENTER; (800) 216-7482; ARENACROSS.COM
LOUISIANA
MOTOCROSS
MAR 6 (S,Y): BREAUX BRIDGE: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: DIRT BIKE MIKE LLC, MICHAEL L LAMBERT; 6 AM; 1640 MILLS HWY; (870) 342-5373; DIRTBIKEMIKE.COM
MARYLAND
MOTOCROSS
MAR 6 (S,Y): BUDDS CREEK: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: BUDDS CREEK MOTOCROSS PAR, JONATHAN E BEASLEY; 6 AM; BUDDS CREEK MX PARK /27963 BUDDS CREEK RD; (301) 475-2000; BUDDSCREEK.COM
MAR 14 (S,Y): BUDDS CREEK: BUDDS CREEK MOTOCROSS PAR, JONATHAN E BEASLEY; 6 AM; BUDDS CREEK MX PARK /27963 BUDDS CREEK RD; (301) 481-6148; BUDDSCREEK.COM
MAR 27 (S): BUDDS CREEK: VINTAGE; 2 DAY EVENT: BUDDS CREEK MOTOCROSS PAR, JONATHAN E BEASLEY; 6 AM; BUDDS CREEK MX PARK /27963 BUDDS CREEK RD; (301) 481-6148; BUDDSCREEK.COM
MISSISSIPPI
ENDURO
MAR 7 (S,Y): LAUREL: RIDGE RUNNERS ENDURO TEAM, GEORGE WALTERS; DESOTO NATIONAL FOREST; (601) 649-6418;
MISSOURI
MOTOCROSS
MAR 27 (S,Y): HUNTSVILLE: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: HLR MOTORSPORTS INC, STEVE HALTERMAN; 8856 HWY BB; (660) 263-4321; HLRMOTORSPORTS.NET
NEVADA
ARENACROSS
MAR 5 (M,Y): RENO: 3 DAY EVENT: FELD MOTOR SPORTS, JAYME DALSING; 10 AM; LIVESTOCK EVENT CENTER /1350 N WELLS AVE; (800) 216-7482; ARENACROSS.COM
NEW JERSEY
ENDURO
MAR 21 (S): GREENBANK: METEOR MOTORCYCLE CLUB IN, MICHAEL D REIGHN; (856) 287-8170; METEORMC.COM
MAR 28 (S): SHAMONG: SOUTH JERSEY ENDURO RIDER, DAVID BROGDEN; 8 AM; INDIAN MILLS DEER CLUB /RT 206S/ATSION RD; (609) 268-9272; SJER.ORG
NORTH CAROLINA
MOTOCROSS
MAR 5 (S,T,Y): FLETCHER: INDOOR; VICTORY SPORTS INC, SAM GAMMON; WESTERN NC AG CENTER /I-26 EX 40@ASHEVILLE AIRPORT; (423) 323-5497; VICTORYSPORTSRACING.COM
MAR 6 (S,T,Y): FLETCHER: INDOOR; VICTORY SPORTS INC, SAM GAMMON; WESTERN NC AG CENTER /I-26 EX 40@ASHEVILLE AIRPORT; (423) 323-5497; VICTORYSPORTSRACING.COM
OHIO
MOTOCROSS
MAR 14 (S,Y): BLANCHESTER: DIRT COUNTRY, CINDY KING; 6901 RT 133 /3.5 MI S OF TOWN ON RT 133; (513) 625-7350; DIRTCOUNTRYMX.COM
MAR 21 (S,T,Y): MARYSVILLE: AMERICAN MOTOSPORTS LLC, MATTHEW D EASTMAN; 7 AM; 24400 YEARSLEY RD /FROM MARYSVILLE TO SR 31N TO SR
347 W; (937) 358-2427; AMERICANMX.COM
MAR 28 (S,T,Y): SUGAR GROVE: CENTRAL OHIO COMPETITION, JANET FOUT; 6 AM; 9171 BUCKEYE RD /6 MI E OF LANCASTER/LEFT AT LIGHT; (740) 983-3937; COCRMX.COM
HARE SCRAMBLES
MAR 14 (S,T,Y): LITTLE HOCKING: WILDWOOD LAKE RACEWAY, BRENT WINDLAND; 7 AM; 2392 WILDWOOD LAKE RD /SR50/7 TO SR555 TO WELCH RD TO WILDWOOD LAKE; (740) 989-2866; WILDWOODLAKERACEWAY.COM
MAR 27 (S,T,Y): NEW LEXINGTON: KRASH RACING DIRT PARK, JAYME KONKLER; 8 AM; 7250 TWP RD 219; (740) 605-2711; KRASHRACINGDIRTPARK.COM
MAR 28 (S,T,Y): LOGAN: HOCKING VALLEY MOTORCYCLE, KEVIN FLEAHMAN; 8 AM; 13121 JAKE TOM RD /US RT 33 EX SR 328/FOLLOW ARROWS; (740) 385-7695; HOCKINGVALLEYMC.COM
ENDURO
MAR 21 (S): RAY: CHILLICOTHE ENDURO RIDERS, TOM MEEKER; 8 AM; 33428 HEADLEY RD /US50 E. 20 MI E OF CHILLICOTHE RT ON KELLY RD; (740) 773-6115; CHILLICOTHEENDURO.COM
ARENACROSS
MAR 20 (M,Y): DAYTON: 2 DAY EVENT: FELD MOTOR SPORTS, JAYME DALSING; 10 AM; ERVIN J NUTTER CENTER /3640 COL GLENN HWY; (800) 216-7482; AENACROSS.COM
PENNSYLVANIA
CARNIVAL RUN
MAR 28: REAMSTOWN: GARDEN SPOT MC, JOHN SNYDER; 9 AM; 1840 N READING RD; (717) 336-5451; GARDENSPOTMC.COM
SHORT TRACK
MAR 21 (S,T,Y): HANOVER: TRAIL-WAY SPEEDWAY, BRAD J HOSTETTER; 9 AM; 100 SPEEDWAY LANE /5 MI W OF TOWN OFF PA RT 116; (717) 359-4310; MOTORAMAEVENTS.COM
MAR 27 (S): SPRING RUN: TWO WHEEL PROMOTIONS, VICKI FLOWERS; 3 PM; 17911 DRY RUN RD W /PA TURNPIKE EX 189 RT 75 N, 641 W TO DRY REIN; (717) 368-5902; PATHVALLEY.COM
MOTOCROSS
MAR 7 (S,Y): MAR 21 (S,Y): SHIPPENSBURG: DOUBLIN GAP MX PARK INC, ROD YENTZER; 8 AM; 100 REASNER LANE /6 MILES NORTH OF DOWNTOWN SHIPPENSBURG; (717) 249-6036; DOUBLINGAP.COM
MAR 14 (S,Y): MAR 28 (V,Y): FREDERICKSBURG: SLEEPY HOLLOW MOTO CROSS, ERIC SWARR; SLEEPY HOLLOW MOTO CROSS PARK /2 MILES E OF FREDERICKSBURG US ROUTE 22 EAST; (717) 653-4830; SLEEPYMX.COM
MAR 21 (S,Y): BIRDSBORO: PAGODA MOTORCYCLE CLUB, RANDY KASTLE; 7 AM; 441 RED LANE /422 TO 82 TO LINCOLN RD TO RED LANE; (610) 582-3717; PAGODAMOTORCYCLECLUB.COM
MAR 27 (S,T,Y): MARKLEYSBURG: 2 DAY EVENT: DBL SPORTS PROMOTIONS, BUDD LITTLE; 6 AM; ROARING KNOB MOTORSPORTS CMPX /RT 40 20 MI E OF UNIONTOWN; (724) 929-5396; DBLSPORTS.COM
MAR 27 (S,Y): SHIPPENSBURG: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: DOUBLIN GAP MX PARK INC, J YENTZER; 8 AM; 100 REASNER LANE /6 MILES NORTH OF DOWNTOWN SHIPPENSBURG; (717) 249-6036; DOUBLINGAP.COM
SOUTH CAROLINA
MOTOCROSS
MAR 20 (S,T,Y): BLACKSBURG: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: VICTORY SPORTS INC, SAM GAMMON; IRON CITY MOTORSPORTS PARK /120 HENSON RD; (423) 323-5497; VICTORYSPORTSRACING.COM
TEXAS
MOTOCROSS
MAR 7 (S,Y): HOCKLEY: SWMX PROMOTIONS, KEVIN BARNELL; 5:30 AM; 18034 KLEB ST /HWY 290 WEST TO BECKER RD NORTH; (832) 541-2251; SWMXPARK.COM
ENDURO
MAR 28 (S,Y): LUBBOCK: NATIONAL;
52 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp051-055_Calendar.indd 52 1/22/10 10:35 AM
MOTORCYCLE SHOWS
CYCLE WORLd InTERnaTIOnaL MOTORCYCLE SHOWS MotorcycleShowS.coM
Feb. 19-21: Chicago: Donald E. Stephens Convention Center; Rosemont.com
Mar. 3-10: daytona Beach, Fla.: Ocean Center; OceanCenter.com
MUSEUM EXHIBITS
aMa MOTORCYCLE HaLL OF FaME MUSEUM MotorcycleMuSeuM.org
The Hall of Fame is located on the AMA campus in Pickerington, Ohio, and is open 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. seven days a week. Closed: Easter, Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year’s Day.
MotoStars: Celebrities + Motorcycles: Priceless machines, memorabilia and tales from celebrities’ favorite adventures. On display through April 2010.
awesome-ness: The life and art of Arlen Ness: King of Choppers.
aMa Motorcycle Hall of Fame: Bikes and memorabilia recognizing those who have made significant contributions to all aspects of motorcycling.
Founder’s Hall: Honoring the Hall of Fame’s generous contributors.
aMa PRO RaCInG
2010 MOnSTER EnERGY aMa SUPERCROSS, an FIM WORLd CHaMPIOnSHIP SupercroSSonline.coM
Feb. 13: anaheim, Calif.: Angel Stadium, TicketMaster.com, (714) 940-2000
Feb. 20: Indianapolis: Lucas Oil Stadium, TicketMaster.com, (317) 262-8600
Feb. 27: atlanta, Ga.: Georgia Dome, TicketMaster.com, (404) 223-9200
March 6: daytona Beach, Fla.: Daytona Int’l Speedway, DaytonaInternationalSpeedway.com, (800) PITSHOP
March 13: Toronto, Ontario: Rogers Centre, TicketMaster.com, (416) 341-3000
March 20: arlington, Texas: Cowboy Stadium, TicketMaster.com, (817) 892-4161
March 27: Jacksonville, Fla.: Jacksonville Municipal Stadium, TicketMaster.com, (904) 633-6100
april 10: Houston: Reliant Stadium, TicketMaster.com, (832) 667-1400
april 17: St. Louis, Mo.: Edward Jones Dome, TicketMaster.com, (314) 342-5036
april 24: Seattle: Quest Field, TicketMaster.com, (206) 381-7500
May 1: Salt Lake City: Rice-Eccles, TicketMaster.com, (801) 581-UTIX
May 8: Las Vegas, nev.: Sam Boyd Stadium, TicketMaster.com, (702) 895-3761
aMa PRO SUPERBIkE CHaMPIOnSHIP
March 3-5: daytona Beach, Fla.: Daytona International Speedway
March 26-28: Fontana, Calif.: Auto Club Speedway
april 16-18: Braselton, Ga.: Road Atlanta
May 14-16: Sonoma, Calif.: Infineon Raceway
June 4-6: Elkhart Lake, Wis.: Road America
July 16-18: Lexington, Ohio: Mid-Ohio Sports Car Course
July 23-25: Monterey, Calif.: Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca
aug. 13-15: alton, Va.: Virginia International Raceway
Sept. 3-5: Millville, n.J.: New Jersey Motorsports Park
Sept. 24-26: Birmingham, ala.: Barber Motorsports Park
LUCaS OIL aMa PRO MOTOCROSS CHaMPIOnSHIP MXSportSproracing.coM
May 22: Rancho Cordova, Calif.: Hangtown Motocross Classic
May 29: San Bernardino, Cailf.: Glen Helen Raceway
June 5: Wortham, Texas: Freestone Raceway
June 12: Mt. Morris, Pa.: High Point Raceway
June 19: Mechanicsville, Md.: Budds Creek Motocross
June 26: Lakewood, Colo.: Thunder Valley Motocross
July 3: Buchanan, Mich.: RedBud
July 17: Milleville, Minn.: Spring Creek Motocross
July 24: Washougal, Wash.: Washougal Motocross
aug. 14: new Berlin, n.Y.: Unadilla
aug. 28: Southwick, Mass.: Moto-X 338
Sept. 4: delmont, Pa.: Steel City Raceway
aMa PRO FLaT TRaCk CHaMPIOnSHIP aMaproracing.coM
March 3: daytona Beach, Fla.: Daytona Flat Track
March 4: daytona Beach, Fla.: Daytona Flat Track
May 1: Prescott, ariz.: Yavapai Downs Mile
May 29: Springfield, Ill.: Springfield TT, Illinois State Fairgrounds
May 30: Springfield, Ill.: Springfield Mile, Illinois State Fairgrounds
June 5: Gas City, Ind.: Gas City Short Track, Gas City I-69 Speedway
June 19: Lexington, ky.: The Red Mile
June 26: Lima, Ohio: Lime Half-mile, Allen County Fairgrounds
July 10: Lake Odessa, Mich.: I-96 Half-mile, I-96 Speedway
July 25: Castle Rock, Wash.: Castle Rock TT, Castle Rock Fairgrounds
July 31: Calistoga, Calif.: Calistoga Half-mile, Calistoga Fairgrounds
aug. 7: Hagerstown, Md.: Hagerstown Half-mile, Hagerstown Speedway
aug. 14: Grove City, Ohio: Beulah Park Half-mile
aug. 22: Peoria, Ill.: Peoria TT
aug. 28: Indianapolis, Ind.: Indiana Mile, Indiana State Fairgrounds
Sept. 4: Springfield, Ill.: Springfield Short-track, Illinois State Fairgrounds
Sept. 5: Springfield, Ill.: Springfield Mile, Illinois State Fairgrounds
Sept. 11: Minneapolis, Minn.: Canterbury Park Mile
Sept. 18: knoxville, Iowa: Knoxville Half-mile, Knoxville Raceway
Oct. 9: Prescott, ariz.: Yavapai Downs Short-track
Oct. 10: Prescott, ariz.: Yavapai Downs Mile
aMa naTIOnaL CHaMPIOnSHIP SERIES
aMa aREnaCROSS CHaMPIOnSHIP SERIESarenacroSS.coM
Feb. 20-21: San antonio, Texas: Alamo Dome, TicketMaster.com, (800) 884-3663
Feb. 27-28: Fresno, Calif.: Save Mart Center, TicketMaster.com, (559) 347-3401
March 5-7: Reno, nev.: Livestock Event Center, TicketMaster.com, (775) 688-5750
March 12-14: Council Bluffs, Iowa: Mid America Center, TicketMaster.com, (712) 323-0536
March 20-21: dayton, Ohio: Ervin J. Nutter Center, TicketMaster.com, (937) 775-2060
March 26-28: denver, Colo.: Denver Coliseum, TicketMaster.com, (720) 865-4220
aMa RaCInG/naTC OBSERVEd TRIaLS naTIOnaL CHaMPIOnSHIP SERIES
May 1-2: Tishomingo, Okla.: Robert Shaw, Texhoma Trials Club;
(580) 504-6750; roshaw@cableone.net; TexhomaTrialsClub.com
June 19-20: Exeter, R.I.: Bob ONeil, Stepping Stone Ranch; Rhode Island Trials Club; (508) 285-6074; trialsriders@hotmail.com; RITrialsClub.com
June 26-27: Cayuta, n.Y.: David Reed, (607) 796-9558; District 4 Trials, District4Trials.org
July 24-25: Pueblo, Colo.: Stan Hensley, (719) 564-6476; Rocky Mountain Trials Assoc (RMTA), webmaster@rockymountaintrials.org; RMTA.org
July 31-aug. 1: norden, Calif.: Mike Codde, (530) 426-3635; Sacramento P.I.T.S., Inc.; dsrinfo@donnerskiranch.com; DonnerSkiRanch.com
aMa RaCInG naTIOnaL HaRE & HOUnd nationalhareandhound.coM
Feb. 14: Spangler Hills OHV, Ridgecrest, Calif.: Four Aces MC, Richie Wohlers; (805) 358-2668; richie@fouracesmc.org; FourAcesMC.org
March 7: Superstition OHVa, El Centro, Calif.: Roadrunner Off-Road Racing, Kirk Hester; (760) 275-9852; roadrunneroffroad@hotmail.com; RoadRunnerOffroad.org
March 21: Murphy, Idaho: Dirt Inc., Bill Walsh; (208) 459-6871; braaap@cableone.net; DirtIncRacing.com
april 10: Jericho, Utah (no aTVs)*: Sageriders MC, Kari Christman; (435) 851-1138; dezchik111@yahoo.com; Sageriders.com
april 25: Johnson Valley OHVa, Lucerne, Calif.: Vikings MC, Alex Rodriguez; (760) 834-5006; alex@arrowdevelopment.net; VikingsMC.com
May 15: Jericho, Utah: Sugarloafers, Rob Davies; (435) 743-4180; offrdsp@hotmail.com; SugarloafersMC.com
Oct. 10: TBa: SoCal MC, Justin Shultz; (949) 981-6776; justins@bgainsurance.com; SoCalMC.com
*The U.S. Bureau of Land Management does not allow ATV competition at these locations.
aMa REkLUSE naTIOnaL EndURO CHaMPIOnSHIP SERIES PRESEnTEd BY MOOSE RaCInG nationalenduro.coM
Feb. 21: Greensboro, Ga.: Garrett McKey, Cherokee Cycle Club; (678) 231-5858; SETRA.org
March 4: daytona Beach, Fla.: Steve Pettenger, Daytona Dirt Riders; (386) 615-0722
March 28: kalgary, Texas: Kelly Simmons, Lubbock Trail Riders; (806) 548-1260; LubbockTrailRiders.org
april 18: West Point, Tenn.: Paul Traufler, NATRA; (256) 837-0084; NATRA.DirtRider.net
LUBBOCK TRAIL RIDERS INC, KELLY SIMMONS; GLASS RANCH /4 MI W OF INTERSEC. HWY 261 & HWY 651; (806) 548-1260; LUBBOCKTRAILRIDERS.ORG
VIRGInIaMOTOCROSS
MAR 13 (S,T,Y): PETERSBURG: 2 DAY EVENT: VMP MX, STEFFANIE EDEN; 6 AM; 8018 BOYDTON PLANK RD; (804)
732-7888; VMP-MX.COM
MAR 20 (S,T,Y): DISPUTANTA: 2 DAY EVENT: SOUTH FORK MX CLUB, TONY FOWLER; 6148 BAXTER RD /20 MIN FROM PETERSBURG OFF I-95; (804) 221-3689; SOUTHFORKMX.COM
MAR 27 (S,T,Y): DILLWYN: 2 DAY EVENT: ACTIONTOWN MX CLUB, CARL REYNOLDS; 257 SPROUSES LANE; (434) 836-7629;
BIRCHCREEKMOTORSPORTS.COM
GRand PRIX
MAR 28 (S,Y): SOUTH HILL: VIRGINIA CHAMPIONSHIP HAR, DARRYL DALTON; (273) 957-4155; VCHSS.NET
CROSS COUnTRY
MAR 21 (S,T,Y): AXTON: LONE RIDER PRODUCTIONS, TIM NORRIS; 12 PM; 400 MOVIE MOVERS EAST /US 58 15MI. W OF DANVILLE N ON MOVINE MOVERS;
(866) 967-8927; VXCS.ORG
WaSHInGTOnMOTOCROSS
MAR 20 (S,Y): RICHLAND: QUALIFIER; 2 DAY EVENT: HRMC INC. HORN RAPIDS MOT, RAYMOND L COFFMAN; 6 AM; HORN RAPIDS MOTORCYCLE COMPLEX; (509) 496-2958; HORNRAPIDSMX.COM
March 2010 53
AM_03_2010_pp051-055_Calendar.indd 53 1/22/10 10:35 AM
May 16: Park Hills, Mo.: Michael Silger, Missouri Mudders; (636) 639-6373; MOMudders.com
June 20: Upton, Wyo.: Paul Douglas, Inyan Kara Riders; (307) 468-2840; NationalEnduro.com
July 25: Moorestown, Mich.: Jeff Hunt, Lansing Motorcycle Club; (231) 267-9534
Aug. 22: North Berwick, Maine: Peter Anania, Seacoast Trail Riders; (603) 436-4331; SeacoastTrailRiders.org
Oct. 2: Matthews, Ind.: Doug Spence, Muddobbers MC; jspence@me.com; Muddobbers.org
GEICO ENdUrOCrOss ENDUROCROSS.COm
July 17: Las Vegas, Nev.: The Orleans Arena
Aug. 14: Guthrie, Okla.: Lazy E Arena
Aug. 27: Indianapolis: Pepsi Coliseum
sept. 11: Everett, Wash.: Comcast Arena
Oct. 30: denver: Nat’l Western Complex
Nov. 20: Las Vegas, Nev.: The Orleans Arena
CAN-AM GNCC sCHEdULE GNCCRaCiNG.COm
Feb. 27 - March 2: River Ranch, Fla.
March 6-7: Washington, Ga.
March 20-21: Morganton, N.C.
April 10-11: Union, S.C.
April 24-25: Hurricane Mills, Tenn.
May 8-9: Yadkinville, N.C.
May 22-23: Somerset, Pa.
June 5-6: Millfield, Ohio
June 26-27: Snowshoe Resort, W.Va.
sept. 11-12: New Berlin, N.Y.
sept. 25-26: Lafayette, Tenn.
Oct. 9-10: St. Clairsville, Ohio
Oct. 23-24: Crawfordsville, Ind.
AMA drAGBIkE CHAMPIONsHIP sErIEs amaDRaGBiKE.COm
March 5-7: Valdosta, Ga.: South Georgia Motorsports Park
April 10-11: Commerce, Ga.: Atlanta Dragway
May 15-16: Martin, Mich.: US 131 Motorsports Park
June 12-13: Montgomery, Ala.: Montgomery Motorsports Park
July 31 - Aug. 1: Indianapolis: O’Reilly Raceway Park
sept. 10-12: Atco, N.J.: Atco Raceway
Oct. 9-10: Norwalk, Ohio: Summit Motorsports Park
Nov. 12-14: Valdosta, Ga.: South Georgia Motorsports Park
AMA rACING EAst HArE sCrAMBLEs amaRaCiNG.COm
March 7: No Youth: Washington, Ga.: Rita Coombs, Racer Productions; (304) 284-0084; GNCCRacing.com
April 11: No Youth: Union, s.C.: Rita Coombs, Racer Productions; (304) 284-0084; GNCCRacing.com
April 18: Youth Only: Berwick, Pa.: Duane Fisher, Evansville MX Park; (570) 759-2841; EvansvilleMXPark.com
May 1-2: dorchester, N.J.: Dennis McKelvey, Tri-County Sportsmen; (609) 390-3772; TeamHammer.org
July 17-18: Valley View, Pa.; Tiffany Tobias, Rausch Creek Powersports; (570) 682-4600; RauschCreekRacing.com
July 31-Aug. 1: Catawissa, Pa.: Mike Soudas,
High Mountain Dirt Riders; (570) 954-7799; HMDR.org
Aug. 7-8: Hill City, Minn.: Paul Otto, Range Riders MC; (763) 229-1177; RangeRidersMC.org
Aug. 28-29: Cortland, N.Y.: Cindy Davis, Knobby Acres; (607) 756-5277; WYNOA.org
sept. 18-19: Lynnville, Ind.: Kenny Moore, IN, IL, KY Enduro Riders; (812) 549-8385; Blackcoal.org
AMA rACING WEst HArE sCrAMBLEs amaRaCiNG.COm
Feb. 13-14: Paicines, Calif.: Charlotte Gomes, Salinas Ramblers; (831) 594-6136; SalinasRamblersMC.org
March 13-14: Cow Mountain, Lake Port, Calif.: Jeff Bauer, SCSCA; (707) 480-0792; AMA-D36.org/events
March 27-28 - Nixon, Nev.: Jeff Henning, WSRA; (775) 851-1527; WesternStatesRacing.com
April 17-18: Chappie-shasta OHV Area, Calif.: Kurt Schneider, Redding Dirt Riders; (530) 245-0342; ReddingDirtRiders.com
June 19-20: Elkton, Ore.: Toni Bamford, ETRA; (541) 688-5428; ETRA.net
Aug. 21-22 - Big sky, Mont.: Jamey Kabisch, Lone Peak Racing Big Sky XC; (406) 223-0478; BigSkyXC.com
Nov. 6-7: rancho Cordova, Calif.: Ed Santin, Dirt Diggers North MC; (800) HANGTOWN; HangtownMX.com
AMA VINtAGE NAtIONAL dIrt trACk CHAMPIONsHIPs sErIEs amaRaCiNG.COm
Feb. 28: short track, daytona Beach, Fla.: Daytona Flat Track; AMA Racing; Ken Saillant, (614) 856-1900
March 2: Half-Mile, Volusia, Fla.: Volusia Speedway; Steve Nace Racing; (270) 442-7532, Stevenaceracing.Com
April 17: short track, Orangeburg, s.C.: Orangeburg Motoplex; Ed Salley, (803) 664-2942, Orangeburgmotoplex.Com
April 18: tt, Orangeburg, sc.: Orangeburg Motoplex; Ed Salley, (803) 664-2942, Orangeburgmotoplex.com
June 26: short track, Harpursville, N.Y.: Square Deal Motorcycle Club; Don Miller, (607) 725-3069, Squaredealriders.com
July 9: Half-Mile, Ashland, Ohio: AMA Racing; Ken Saillant, (614) 856-1900, AMARacing.Com
July 24: Mile, du Quoin, Ill.: AMA Racing ; Ken Saillant, (614) 856-1900, AMARacing.com
July 25: Half-Mile, du Quoin, Ill.: AMA Racing ; Ken Saillant, (614) 856-1900, AMARacing.com
sept. 11: Half-Mile, Waco, texas: Waco Eagles Motorcycle Club; (254) 875-9955
sept. 12: Half-Mile, Waco, texas: Waco Eagles Motorcycle Club; (254) 875-9955
AMA PrO-AM MOtOCrOss sCHEdULE amaRaCiNG.COm
Feb. 21: Litchfield Park, Ariz.: Arizona Cycle Park; (623) 853-0750, ArizonaCyclePark.com
March 7: Hesperia, Calif.: Competitive Edge; (909) 456-10701, RideCEMX.com
March 8-13: Whitney, texas: Bama Cycle Park; (817) 270-1814, LakeWhitneyMX.com
March 21: Blacksburg, s.C.: Victory Sports; (423) 323-5497, VictorySportsRacing.com
April 11: sanford, N.C.: Devils Ridge Motocross; (919) 776-1767, DevilsRidgeMotoX.com
May 2: Blountville, tenn.: Victory Sports; (423) 323-5497, VictorySportsRacing.com
May 9: Walnut, Ill.: 4P Promotions Inc.; (815) 379-9534, SunsetRidgeMX.com
May 16: Longon, ky.: Victory Sports; (423) 323-5486, DanielBooneMX.net
May 21: sacramento, Calif.: Dirt Diggers North MC; (800) 426-4869, info@hangtown.com, HangtownMX.com
AM_03_2010_pp051-055_Calendar.indd 54 1/20/10 6:03 PM
May 23: Bloomingdale, Mich.: Dutch Sport Park; (269) 521-7800, dspmx@msn.com, DutchSportParkMX.com
May 30: Athelstane, Wisc.: Pine Ridge Raceway; (715) 856-6612, PineRidgeRaceway.com
May 31: Brush. Colo.: Sweney Cycle Park; (970) 768-0518, SweneyCyclePark.com
June 5-6: Hesperia, Calif.: Competitive Edge; (909) 456-1070, RideCEMX.com
June 6: Wortham, Texas: Freestone County Raceway; (713) 880-5533, FreestoneMX.com
June 13: Mt. Morris, Pa.: Racer Productions; (304) 284-0800, RacerProductions.com
June 21: Mt. Carroll, Ill.: MC Motopark; (815) 238-1614, reidabook@centurytel.net, MCMotoPark.com
July 4: Buchanan, Mich.: Red Bud Recreation; (269) 695-6405, RedBudMX.com
July 11: Kingsbury, Ind.: Motoland, (218) 988-6686, Motoland.com
July 11: Delmont, Pa.: Bellco; (304) 284-0080, RacerProductions.com
July 11: Blountville, Tenn.: Victory Sports; (423) 323-5497, VictorySportsRacing.com
July 16: Millville, Minn.: Spring Creek MX Park; (507) 753-2779, SpringCreekMX.com
July 25: Washougal, Wash.: Washougal MX Park; (360) 837-3975, WashougalMXpk.com
More Pro-Am MX events at AMARacing.com
AMA RIDING SERIES
AMA BMW NATIoNAl ADvENTuRE RIDING SERIES AMADirectLink.coM/roADriDe/ADV/
Apr 17-18: Bybee, Tenn.: JB SAKI Promotions, John Strange; jbsaki@gmail.com
May 1-2: Buck Meadows, Calif.: Family Off Road Adventures, Lawrence Borgens; FamilyOffroadAdventures.com
May 22-23: Zaleski, ohio: Buckeye Dualsporters, BillKaeppner; Kaeppnerswoods.com
June 5-6: Bixby, Mo.: Midwest Trail Riders Assn., Robert Kaufman; RideMTRA.org
June 5-6: Custer, Mich.: Great Lakes Dual Sporters, Jeramey Valley; www.goldsmc.com
June 5-6: lock Haven, Pa.: Durty Dabbers, Nils Mantzoros; Durtydabbers.com
June 12-13: Wabeno, Wis.: Wisconsin Dual Sport Riders, Duane Baer; WIDualsportRiders.org
June 12-13: McCloud, Calif.: McCloud Dual Sport Adventures, Mike Lingsch; McCloudDualsportAdventures.com
June 19-22: Fairbanks, Alaska: Aerostich Tours, Roger Pattison; AerostichTours.com
July 10-11: McCloud, Calif.: McCloud Dual Sport Adventures, Mike Lingsch; McCloudDualsportAdventures.com
Aug. 21-22: McCloud, Calif.: McCloud Dual Sport Adventures, Mike Lingsch; McCloudDualsportAdventures.com
Aug. 21-22: Columbus, Ind.: Stoney Lonesome MC, Nathan Gaskill; Stoneylonesomemc.com
Aug. 23-27: North Cascades, Wash.: Sound Rider!, Tom Mehren; Soundrider.com/dsport
Sept. 11-12: Cadiz, Ky.: KT Riders, Jesse Thomas; ginny42211@yahoo.com
Sept. 11-12: logan, ohio: Nutcracker 200, Buckeye Dual Sporters, Bill Kaeppner; kaeppners@verizon.net, Kaeppnerswoods.com
Sept. 18-19: McCloud, Calif.: McCloud Dual Sport Adventures, Mike Lingsch; McCloudDualsportAdventures.com
Sept. 25-26: Wolverine, Mich.: Great Lakes Dual Sporters, Jeramey Valley; GLDSmc.org
Sept. 25-26: Wabeno, Wis.: Wisconsin Dual Sport Riders, Duane Baer; WIDualsportriders.org
oct. 2-3: Refro valley, Ky.: 4-Fun Trail Riders, Vicky Stephenson; 4FunTrailRiders.com
oct. 9-10: McCloud, Calif.: McCloud Dual Sport Adventures, Mike Lingsch; McCloudDualsportAdventures.com
oct. 23-24: Chatsworth, N.J.: Meteor MC, Mike Reign; MeteorMC.com
Nov. 6-7: Port Elizabeth, N.J.: Tri-County Sportsmen, E. Polhaumus; TeamHammer.org
AMA KTM NATIoNAl DuAl-SPoRT TRAIl RIDING SERIES AMADirectLink.coM/roADriDe/DS/
May 1-2: Renfro valley, Ky.: Renfro Valley Dual Sport Ride, 4Fun Trail Riders,, Vicky Stephenson, (859) 363-8332; rvstephenson53@fuse.net; 4FunTrailRiders.com
May 22-23: Zaleski, ohio: Hanging Rock 200, Buckeye Dualsporters, Bill Kaeppner, (740) 380-3050; kaeppners@verizon.net; Kaeppnerswoods.com
June 5-6: Bixby, Mo.: Show Me 200, Midwest Trail Riders Assoc., Robert Kaufman, (314) 434-5095; ridemtra@hotmail.com; RideMTRA.com
June 5-6: Custer, Mich.: Whiskey Creek Classic, Great Lakes Dual Sporters, Jeramey Valley, (989) 751-6863; ridemtra@hotmail.com; GLDSmc.org, RideMTRA.com
June 5-6: lock Haven, Penn.: Durty Dabbers Nat’l Dual Sport, Durty Dabbers, Nils Mantzoros, (570) 748-9456; DurtyDabbers.com
June 12-13: Wabeno, Wis.: Ride for Research, Wisconsin Dual Sport Riders, Duane Baer, (920) 350-2030; bigwoods200@hotmail.com; WIDualsportRiders.org
June 19-20: Bend, ore.: China Hat Dual Sport National, Lobos MC, Billy Toman, (503) 656-5801; n7wxd@aol.com; Lobosmc.com
July 24-31: Newberry, Mich.: 26th Annual Six Days of Michigan, Cycle Conservation Club of Mich., Lewis Schuler, (517) 781-4805; ccckids@verizon.net, CycleConservationClub.org
Aug. 21-22: Columbus, Ind.: Buffaloe 500 D/S Adventure Ride, Stoney Lonesome MC, Nathan Gaskill, (812) 343-9772; ngaskill3@yahoo.com; StoneyLonesomemc.com/DualSport/index.html.
Sept. 11-12: Cadiz, Ky.: LBL 200, KT Riders, Jesse Thomas, (270) 522-3703; ginny42211@yahoo.com
Sept. 18-19: Sterling, Ill.: Cow Patty Cruise, Brushpoppers MC, Jack Sumption, (815) 622-4099; tgerken@wireless.essex1.com, BrushPoppersmc.com
Sept. 25-26: Buck Meadows, Calif.: Yosemite Dual Sport Adventure, Family Off Road Adventures, Lawrence Borgens, (209) 649-3633; lawrence@familyoffroadadventures.com, FamilyOffroadAdventures.com
Sept. 25-26: Wolverine, Mich.: Ted’s Chandler Hill Challenge, Great Lakes Dual Sporters, Jeramey Valley, (989) 751-6863; info@gldsmc.org; GLDSmc.org
Sept. 25-26: Wabeno, Wis.: Big Woods 200, Wisconsin Dual Sport Riders, Duane Baer, (920) 350-2030; bigwoods200@hotmail.com; WIDualsportriders.org
oct. 9-10: McArthur, ohio.: Baby Burr Nat’l Dual Sport, Wisconsin Dual Sport Riders, Enduro Riders Assoc., Steve Barber, (614) 582-7821; sbarber@att.net; EnduroRiders.com
oct. 23-24: Chatsworth, N.J.: Meteor Ride in the Pines, Meteor MC, Mike Reign, (856) 287-8170; sbarber@att.net; Meteormc.com
oct. 23-24: Study Butte, Texas: 13th Annual Terlingua Nat’l Dual Sport Ride, Trail Riders of Houston, Jack Jennings, (713) 248-7222; captjack530@aol.com; TRH-cycle.org
Nov. 6-7: Port Elizabeth, N.J.: Hammer Run, Tri-County Sportsmen, E. Polhaumus, (856) 785-2754; mdreighn@msn.com; TeamHammer.org
ALL PROCEEDS WILL BENEFIT THE
AMA MOTORCYCLE HALL OF FAME
MUSEUM a 501(c)(3) charitable
organization dedicated to preserving
the history of motorcycling
AMERICAN EXPRESS, VISA, MASTERCARD or
DISCOVER accepted or call and reserve your ticket and
pay by check or money order.
The drawing will be held during AMA Vintage Motorcycle Days 2010. The winner need not be present at the time of the drawing. Rules for this raffl e are available wherever tickets are available or by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to: AMA Motorcycle Hall of Fame Museum, 13515 Yarmouth Drive, Pickerington, OH 43147
&
$5 donation per entry, fi ve entries for $20.More information: (614) 856-2222
WWW.MOTORCYCLEMUSEUM.ORG
1965 HONDA CUB C100All original, never sold or titled, with 1 mile on the odometer.
1969 HONDA CB750 FOURRestored by Vic World of World Motorcycles.
ENTER TO WIN:
2010 RAFFLE BIKES
a 1965
HONDACUB C100
& a 1969 HONDA CB750 FOUR
AM_03_2010_pp051-055_Calendar.indd 55 1/20/10 6:03 PM
56 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp056-057_Market.indd 56 1/20/10 6:02 PM
AMERICANMOTORCYCLIST.COM/RIGHTS
GET INVOLVED
Adventure New Zealand ............56
Aero Design ...............................56
AMA BMW Adventure Series ......8
AMA KTM DS Series .................54
AMA Hall of Fame
Breakfast at Daytona .................43
AMA Hall of Fame
Raffl e Tickets .............................55
Americade .................................59
AMSOIL .......................................5
Best Rest Products ...................56
Bike Bandit .................................3
Black + Gray ..............................56
Black Book ................................56
BMW ............................................2
Bohn Body Armor ......................57
Cycoactive .................................56
Daytona Beach ..........................19
Deltran Battery Tender ...............27
F2P Technologies ......................29
Federal .......................................28
Foremost Insurance ...................60
Gerbing Heating ........................29
Harley-Davidson ..........................9
JC Motors ..................................33
Manic Salamander ....................57
Matrix MotoSports ....................33
Motorcycle Tour Conversions ....57
Progressive Insurance ...............13
Super-Visor ................................57
Touratech ...................................56
Whitehorse Gear ........................56
Yuasa .........................................23
ADVERTISER INDEX
March 2010 57
AM_03_2010_pp056-057_Market.indd 57 1/22/10 8:55 AM
Guest Column
The day after being discharged from the military, I set
forth on a shiny new red 80cc Yamaha to see the world,
slay dragons, rescue maidens and become a famous
journalist. I traveled on that little bike for a year from coast
to coast, from Seattle to Miami by way of Canada and
Mexico, living in a tent and working odd jobs. I became a
Miami cop, an Army Green Beret, a combat correspondent
and a NASA Journalist-in-Space fi nalist.
Eventually, I published over 50 books and thousands
of magazine pieces. While I may never recapture the
innocence of that glorious fi rst year of questing, I still look
to a motorcycle whenever I feel the urge to experience the
freedom and adventure of the open road.
As a professional writer, I often fi nd myself in jerkwater
corners of the world either running toward or away
from action. During the Sandinista-Contra dustup in
the 1980s, I had my teeth shot out in a fi refi ght on the
Honduran-Nicaraguan border. Bleeding and in pain, I rode
a Honda 250 along dark mountain roads to seek help in
Tegucigalpa. That was a memorable ride.
Others were not so dramatic—although riding narrow
English lanes on the “wrong” side of the road comes
close. The proprietor from whom I rented a Honda 500 in
London offered some sage advice: “Drive aggressively,
ignore the gestures.”
A deluge caught girlfriend Nita and I while we were
hiking the English moors. Soaked, we pulled into the next
B&B, where a kindly lady took us in.
“Poor dears, come in before you catch your deaths. I’ll
brew up a spot of tea.”
People seem to open up when you’re not cocooned off
from the world. In Scotland, I pulled into a fi sh ’n‘ chips
where the fare came wrapped in newspapers.
“Where are you aboot to on the motor, lad and lassie?”
The entire village turned out to welcome two American
strangers on a motorcycle.
I prefer to ride mostly alone or with a lady behind me.
People are often intimidated by numbers. Had a group
of bikers pulled into the Scottish pub, they would
have had it to themselves.
Jamaica, however, might have been a good
time for a group. Girlfriend Teresa and I found
ourselves lost in Kingston on a 90cc scooter that
couldn’t have outrun an assertive Schwinn. Shady
characters eyed us like starving pilgrims looking
over a pair of turkey drumsticks.
Considering the price of fuel, I ride a motorcycle
for business and pleasure. If I have a writing
Lone RidingLooking Back On 45 Years Of Motorcycling By Charles Sasser
assignment somewhere, I stuff my blue Honda Shadow
600 with gear and roar off. Working is almost as much fun
as biking out to New Mexico for trout fi shing.
I rode to Langley AFB, Virginia, to interview subjects for
my new book Predator (Zenith, 2010). While researching
None Left Behind (St. Martin’s, 2009), I made the 2,800-
mile round trip to Fort Drum, N.Y. Soldiers of the Army’s
10th Mountain Division mobbed my bike.
“You rode that from Oklahoma? How old are you?”
I’m 67—but I suspect when I’m 87 I’ll still be hitting the
open road with the wind in my face and the good earthy
scent of the land in my nostrils, a “lone rider,” free and
easy with a good motor between my knees and adventure
lying around the next curve.
Charles Sasser has been a full-time freelance writer/
journalist/photographer since 1979.
Ph
oto
Chris H
um
phre
y
58 AmericanMotorcyclist.com
AM_03_2010_pp058-060_Guest.indd 58 1/20/10 6:01 PM
Not just another Rally.It’s a Motorcycle Vacation!
Lake George, NY June 7-12th
Pre-Registration Opens in early February.Register Early and Save $$.
www.tourexpo.com or call 518-798-7888
Bowling ThunderMusic, Music, MusicGenuine Rodeo Field Events
Manufacturers’ Demos
Whitewater Rafting
Horseback Riding
Riding Demonstrations Lake George Cruises
Largest Multi-brand Rally
6 million Acre Adirondack Park
Gigantic TourExpo Tradeshow
MinTours
Balloon Glow
Legendary Roads
Ph
oto
Chris H
um
phre
y
AM_03_2010_pp058-060_Guest.indd 59 1/20/10 6:01 PM
Foremost® Insurance is a proud sponsor of Larry Pegram and his Ducati 1098 R in the 2010 AMA Superbike Championship series.
Foremost is a leading insurer of motorcycles. We offer coverages bikers want and competitive rates. For a no-obligation estimate,
go to Foremost.com or call 1-800-237-2060 and mention customer priority number M092.
Find out more about Larry Pegram and the rest of the
Foremost Racing team at ForemostRacing.com.
And on the street. . .
Foremost Insurance Company Grand Rapids, Michigan, Foremost Property and Casualty Insurance Company, Foremost Signature Insurance Company and American Federation Insurance Company 5600 Beech Tree Lane, Caledonia, MI 49316. Credit photo to smrmagazine.com Form 9002499 11/09
Motor Home • Travel Trailer • Luxury Motor Coach • Motorcycle • Off-Road Vehicle • Snowmobile • Boat • Personal Watercraft • Collectible Auto
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AM_03_2010_pp058-060_Guest.indd 60 1/25/10 12:23 PM