Sunday, September 20, 2009

Destination: Anadarko, OK


A couple weekends ago I took a quick ride out to Anadarko to "photo tag" this mural. I've grown rather fond of finding these things in small towns across America. This one is particularly impressive because it's so long (and it also fatures an old Indian motorcycle). Expect more murals in the weeks and months to come. If you know of a nice one somewhere, feel free to email me with a photo of your own. (It'd be nice if there's a motorcycle in the photo as well!)

Anadarko, Oklahoma ... motorcycles old and new.


I was riding the wrong bike for this photo. Not actually in Anadarko ... just on the way home.


Back at Road's End, I entrusted the Beemer to my security detail. Have I mentioned Lucky Dog has an assistant now? This is Gracie.

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Saturday, September 19, 2009

Texas Rose

With age comes the inevitable loss of people close to you. I suppose this is a phase of life we all must go through, part of the great journey, and as I approach the half-century mark I should prepare myself for more of it.

Earlier this year, I lost my father. I haven't written yet about the regret I feel for all the time we never had together, for all the things I should have told him. I didn't get to say goodbye, as I was diving in the Turks and Caicos. By the time I found out he was in the hospital, he was already gone. Getting home ... well, nothing moves fast in the Caribbean. I'm not sure I'll ever be able to write about the loss in any meaningful terms -- which says just how poor of a writer I am -- but I will say here that I took some of his ashes with me to Alaska. Not to scatter them (though I did briefly consider sprinkling a bit of him here and there, letting his molecules fuel good things on a broad geographic scale, and would have done so had I been so moved during the trip), but more just to take him along. It was a trip he'd have never made with me while he lived. He wasn't fond of traveling and certainly didn't share my love for motorcycles. But I wanted -- needed -- his company. Can't explain it any better than that and don't intend to. Perhaps he'll accompany me on other adventures. Time will tell.

What I wanted to write about here, however, was someone else to whom I had to recently bid farewell. Growing up, I had a second mother. Granny Kay we all called her. She was Katy Rose Smith, my best friend Dalton's mother. She died late last year. Like my father, gone before I knew she was going. This past week, I rode down to the Gulf Coast to visit my mother. On my way home, I made a point of passing through DeKalb, TX where Granny Kay is buried.


DeKalb, TX under stormy skies. The Wikipedia entry says Dan Blocker (Hoss Cartwright of Bonanza) was born there. With a population of only a couple thousand, it's a town where people still ride horses down main street in a quiet summer evening. (I was passed by several as I stopped to take this photo.)

Oak Grove Cemetery. About half the size of a football field. Just west of town.


The Cordell (her maiden name) family plot.


"Mother to Many" ... including yours truly ... no truer inscription was probably ever penned.


In care of Heaven.

The back of her headstone. These words were taken from an inscription I had written to her many years ago.

Katy Rose was one of the most caring people I have ever had the privilege of knowing. She loved everyone and everything, creatures great and small, good and bad, ugly and beautiful, with a capacity and heart seen in so few people. A simple country woman, yet eloquent and common-sense smart. There was nothing she couldn't do. No one she wouldn't stop to help. Texan and proud of it, she always saw the good in people and made people want to be better just for her approval and company.

Goodbye, Granny Kay. I love you. I miss you.

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Friday, September 18, 2009

New Ducati Hypermotard 796


Bound to be loads of fun, but I think I'll stick to my 1100.

News source: Hell for Leather Magazine.

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Yamaha Dispels YZ450F Rumors ... Kinda

The changes for the 2010 YZ are actually quite radical -- and, to be honest, make me want one! -- but Yamaha continues to display its sense of humor with this cute advertisement featuring all their top riders.

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"We're small, but we're not bugs..."

A Norwegian public safety announcement asking drivers to watch out for motorcycles. It's the twisted sort of thing you'd never see on the boob tube in the States. I have to admit I laughed when I watched it, but I'm more than a little twisted myself. Maybe they don't find it humorous in Norway? Maybe it shocks them into being safer drivers? Or maybe it's the sick humor aspect of it that makes it work...?

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