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Bill Hagan

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Everything posted by Bill Hagan

  1. Indubitably, along with his personal security detail. Oh ... and thanks, docc. Bill
  2. Yo ... you gonna start a new thread for the 2014 Raid? Bill
  3. Start it, Il Duce. Just posted on our calendar, tho Kathi and I may "raid" Columbia sooner. Expect about as much warning as Yamamoto gave Pearl. Bill
  4. Whenever docc and you all want. I'm retired ... and only have 52 weeks off this year. Unfortunately, it seems we have entered another Ice Age. Damn, I miss global warming. Bill
  5. Ok, here's what the one has to say, lifted from wildguzzi, where I posted it first, as rumors there of my death were gathering steam! ========================================= That would be me, Bill. Hagan. Here's the (really, really long) story Mike Craven said in the "Bill down" thread -- http://wildguzzi.com/forum/index.php?topic=64757.0 -- would come "straight from the horse's mouth." That was kinder than he put it to me in person, but, hey, this is a family website. The BLUF (Bottom Line Up Front) is that, as Mike said, I low-sided the Griso in a sandy patch in a curve on SR 42 in SW Virginia. I am fine ... but wish I were finer; the Griso "needs work," but it will be ready to ride again soon, too. The details: Kathi and I have had a great time at 6 of the 9 South'n Spine Raids ... http://www.v11lemans.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=17941 ... and the 3 we didn't enjoy were the ones we missed, mostly because of my exile to the tundra in '11 & '12. We made plans to attend this one, and were saddened later to see the conflict with Wayne's Georgia campout. Still, we thought we'd catch up with some of those folks on Sunday or again later, as we still spend quite a bit of time in Atlanta helping with my mom. Anyway, on Thursday, 12 September, we headed out. I was on the Griso; Kathi in the Fit, as she was going to do a week with Mom, then I would relieve her the following week. The plan was for us to ride to Grassy Creek, N.C., to stay with Guzzisti Joe & Sally Martin at their place, http://www.zydecomoon.com/. The next day, Friday the 13th, we would continue on to Tellico Plains to have a fine time at the Lodge at Tellico, http://www.lodgeattellico.com/, with the others. What a grand ride this first day was, mostly via Virginia and West Virginia SR 259 to Virginia SR 42. Kathi would have had more fun in the MIni, but the Fit is a C-130 of small cars and can carry lots of the stuff we needed, e.g., Kathi's riding gear for the 'Raid, and my change to warmer gear when we got to Tellico Plains with the expected (and hoped for) temp drop. We both love SR 42, and have driven or ridden it numerous times. So, I knew about the 90˚ curve at Simmonsville, one of those classic "both city limits signs on one stick" sort of places. Here's how a buzzard sees it: http://goo.gl/maps/6WNtW They, vultures, and ambulance drivers (I decline to add lawyers to this list!) no doubt know it well, as I suspect high-school seniors and older drunks have been killing themselves there regularly since D. Boon (and I don't mean Dennes) first trod the Old Cumberland Gap Road. I was riding southbound, and it was about 5 p.m. The sun was bright and low in the sky, and I was glad I had the HJC modular with the dark visor and internal dark drop-down. For the last several miles, I kept raising and lowering it as my directions of travel and the conditions (frequently) warranted at this time of day. I like the ease of that internal visor, especially the quick deployment instant retraction, as the road and scenery are grand, but deliver more changeups than Pedro Martinez in a tight game. As I neared the spot, I descended a grade, all in the shade. To call this a curve is a misnomer. It is an intersection, i.e., one of those "turns" that is so sharp it may as well have a stop sign. The sign says "15 mph" and, unlike so many where such warnings are a joke or a notice that one can go twice that speed, this one means business -- and I knew it. So (and I'd pass a polygraph on this), I was quite likely at or even below that speed. What made me even more concerned as I approached was that, unlike the dark downhill I was on, the turn was in blinding light. The contrast was vivid. About 20 meters out from the corner, I flipped down the dark inner visor to be better prepared for the jolt when I faced the sun after negotiating the curve. Just as I started the roll-out in the dazzling sunlight ... FLASH! BANG! YIKES! ... I was on the ground, zooming along on my butt and other parts, with the motorcycle sliding ahead of me in a classic "low sider." I had hit sand, absolutely invisible as I had approached. Those stories about time standing still are not, as we all know, quite true, but there is an odd dimension to those moments that seem minutes. I recall the stunning surprise of the very loud thump when the Griso hit the pavement. And, I actually had a strange image of being on a luge, as I was almost face up and sliding on the right side of my back, feet first. I did not tumble or flail, but pretty much just followed the Griso. A single car was nearing in the northbound lane, but came to a stop as Griso and I started our road show. The Griso was in the opposite lane, facing me, lying on its right side. I jumped up as soon as I came to a stop, worried about traffic behind me -- luckily, there was none -- squashing me. After making sure that all my visible parts were attached and seemed to be moving, I ran over to the Griso. The occupant of the car was still inside. I remember thinking how odd that seemed. I considered trying to bring the Griso upright by myself, but realized I had better not, especially as I was unsure how hurt I might be, tho I seemed OK. Maybe two large bubbas would ultimately emerge from that car. Nope, a lady got out. Finally. She was way more shaken than I was, too. I joked that I must have given her quite a show. She appeared as if a dead man had just spoken to her. But what a great lady she turned out to be. She came over to help me get the Griso up on its wheels, but I said we needed more assistance. Then a pickup started to go around and "Jill" would have none of that. She stopped it and essentially ordered the driver out to help. I think he was headed to pull over and do that anyway, but Jill made sure of it. We got the Griso up; Bubba drove away. About this time, Kathi arrived. You may imagine her state when she saw what was going on. She was way more worried about me than I was. I do recall being ... erm ... animated. No doubt adrenalin. Jill then offered for us to come to her home to get settled or store the Griso, etc. No LEO arrived and we had no cell phone service. I seemed uninjured and the Griso looked rideable. We talked it over and, after thanking Jill, Kathi and I decided to go on to Blacksburg and get a room for the night. We would consider our options after a good night's sleep. We let Joe & Sally know, too, and groaned when they told us of the shrimp gumbo that we would have shared. That ride-on plan worked for about 100 meters. I had no rear brake. Hmmmmm. Not that I use it much, but it was disconcerting to press the pedal and have it almost disappear. Ah, the brilliant minds at Mandello had decided to affix the pivot point for the brake lever on the bottom-most part of the large "pork chop." Yup, that rib broke. Oh, well. Ride on. It is interesting how little one does use the rear brake. I think I tried once in the 20 or so miles to Blacksburg. I am now convinced that I really don't care to crash like this, as interesting as the experience actually was. At my age, 66 -- thus the title of this thread -- all such dismounts are unpleasant. Thankfully, I wear ATGATT -- and now will ensure the "Always" is so. The helmet and armor did their work well. At risk of sounding melodramatic, the damage to my helmet makes me think this might have been an RIP event without it. Sans ATTGAT, I would still be in ICU. As it was, I was at the motel, having a nice meal with my worried wife. I became less and less worried with each drink. Back in the room, we reassessed my physical condition. I also had the benefit of Dr. Phillip Haynes, the leader of the SSR, who helped me with all of the medical pieces, especially with his and Kathi's concerns about possible head injury. I satisfactorily answered all of his questions and we all felt better about that. I was suffering no real pain (even before the bourbon!). I had two abrasions, one the size of a nickel, the other deeper and a bit larger, as if an elongated half-dollar. I cleaned those with warm water and soap. I had a hyperextension of my left arm, much as if I had thrown a fastball pitch at 100% effort without a warm-up. My right foot was an obvious problem. In my boot, I had been able to walk without much awareness of an issue, but once off, load-bearing was, if not painful, close. But it was not swollen (much) nor discolored (much). Kathi saw elephant swelling and technicolor bruising. I saw little of that. Another indicator is that I took no pain meds. OK, OK, yes, there was the corn-based kind! Oh, and Kathi applied ice as suggested by Doc Haynes. I can, as most of you know, whine self-servingly and otherwise make excuses for my failures, including riding errors. But, I am hard-pressed to figure out what I might have done differently to avoid this event beyond staying at home and playing cards. SR 42 had been remarkably free of road debris for 150 miles thus far, so a large patch of sand was unexpected if not even unforeseeable. I was not speeding and took the curve at a prudent rate. I transitioned abruptly from a descent in full shade to a slow turn in full sun, which was also low on the horizon, making the sand in the roadway invisible to me. Throttle maintenance alone would have brought about traction loss, much less a normal roll-out, which was what I thought appropriate and what I was executing when I found myself visiting the pavement. Had I taken the turn a few inches to the left or right, I would not even have known of the issue, but my line -- slightly inside of the center -- went into the thick of it, and that was that. Down. The Griso? From front to back, the list I made includes, and all on the right side: Stelvio hand guard ground down; valve cover toast; "pork chop" and brake lever busted up; and the spool for maintenance stand ground away. The CARC guard worked like a champ, keeping it scratch free (and possibly the bike from being totaled). Had some unhappy conversations with AAA; the "Premier Plus with RV" category gives you one 200-mile tow ... but, gotcha, not for motorcycles, and Winchester Motor Sports was 214 miles from Blacksburg. Travman generously and genuinely offered to drive a truck down to get it, but we finally decided I would ride the Griso back, with Kathi following and watching for parts (or me!) to fall off. We took US 11, a nice road and certainly more pleasant than I-81, almost the entire distance. Not a hitch. Left it with WMS. I must interject here that I have been very impressed with Karl, Mike, Mark, and others at WMS. They have been courteous, solicitous, professional, and competent in the several contacts I have had with them in the past couple of months. I am happy to leave my Griso in their hands. OK, yes, I have some pix. But, no, not of the dismount. After several photos of the ride, the slideshow shifts abruptly to the scene of the accident and then of some showing the damage to my gear. We are sad that we missed the SSR, but it is a great blessing to be practically unhurt after a motorcycle accident. Next year. Yes, I am as tired of writing all of this as are the two of you who got this far reading it. Thank you all for your support and kind words in that first thread. The pix? Here: http://tinyurl.com/Griso-Sliding The (maddening) photobucket slideshow requires you constantly to move your curser to keep the captions displayed. Bill P.S. One last point. For those of you who understand medical terminology -- I don't, but looked it all up -- the X-rays revealed that I sustained a "mildly comminuted minimal corner fracture of the distal ventral tibia." Sounds awful, and does mean I had a broken foot ... but only in the most slight sense. I got a doctor's note to show Kathi that essentially says I can do anything I want, but not if it's a chore on her long "honey-do" list.
  6. Fueled, oil checked, new tires at correct pressures. Kathi? Uhm. Not quite ready. Actually, she is, but insists in that sweet -- but velvet-gloved, iron-fist way -- that I go down and spend some time on the torture devices in our exercise room (I call it our "GITMO room") before we go. "Bill, it'll be three or four days before you exercise again." She sees that as a problem; I see it as an opportunity. OTOH, her fervor has led to my dropping some of my geo-bachelor- acquired weight of the past two years while I was exiled to the steppes. Oops. Thread drift. I'm just stalling. Anyway, here's the Griso a few minutes ago, primed for launch. Off to the treadmill ... see you all tomorrow. Bill
  7. Indeed. When I see that photo, and, especially, the (now-gone; sigh) Ballabio on the right with those gentle green peaks in the background, I am reminded of Karen Blixen's line in her memoir, Out of Africa: "I had a farm in Africa at the foot of the Ngong Hills..." Lordy, sipping coffee in Cross Junction at 5:30 a.m. That sort of musing means I need another cup! Going down to the garage in a few minutes to ensure the Griso's new tires have the correct PSI. Then, to wake Kathi and finish packing her car. Sadly, for various logistical reasons related to eldercare duties in Atlanta following the SSR, she'll be in the Fit, that C-130 of cars, not the dashing little Mini. We plan to launch c. 9 a.m. (he says, dreaming of a reality not to be!). Spending tonight in Grassy Creek, N.C. with friends, then Tellico tomorrow. Anticipate touchdown c. 6 p.m. See you all then. Bill
  8. As with childhood done well, the SSR is never really over. And, of course, you could come over for #10. Flight and Tellico room are on you, but suspect that, lodging, beer, and BS before and after Raid likely available from many Guzzisti gratis. We live about 70 minutes from Dulles. Fly into there and you can stay with us and take your pick of Griso, Norge, or EV as a mount for SSR. Ditto return. Bill
  9. Howdy, John. Of course I remember ... but did not make the connection; thanks for the reminder. As much as we love Virginia and the upland east coast generally, we will always be grateful that my job "forced" the temp move to the midwest. The "driftless" region of SW Wisconsin, NW Illinois, SE Minnesota, and NE Iowa will always call me. http://i127.photobucket.com/albums/p149/billkathi/Wildguzzi%20Sump/IMG_7392.jpg[/img We look forward to seeing you. I actually may have some gaskets around; will look. Definitely bringing some "multiple corn," as opposed (tho I am not!) to single malt. Oh, uhm, make other tub plans. Bill
  10. John, I'm working on your options. Watch your cell for text message. I think LowRyter has forfeited his shot at "Longest Distance" award since he is obviously getting help in lodging and who knows what else from the Raid leader. OTOH, if he'll buy a round, I'm OK with it. Bill
  11. Two "Unguzzisti" will join us this year: George (ST13) & Dennis (KawCon14). Naturally, they will have to survive initiation rites and the up-down vote, but, based on my previous road experiences with them, they should fit right in. Both always carry plenty of bail money. Bill
  12. That pic is scary. OTOH, my Griso just got some new shoes for the 'Raid. Kathi will drive down and I'l ride. She is spending the next week doing eldercare chores with my mom in Atlanta; I'll spell her the next week. While she MUCH prefers the Norge or even EV for longer jaunts, she says she (thinks she) can handle being a pillion on the Griso for Saturday's day ride ... so long as there is enough wine ... or margaritas ... or something suitable ... for the recovery event that evening. I will ensure there is. WE are, btw, leaving Cross Junction (in the rain, I fret) on Thursday. RON with (Guzzi) friends in N.C. near West Jefferson, then plan to arrive at the lodge Friday afternoon c. 5 p.m. Bill
  13. I'll make it easier for you. 423.253.2506 http://www.lodgeattellico.com/ Bill
  14. Noted. That, Sir, will cost you a shot or two of a "better" bourbon. Bill
  15. Funny. No, wait a minute. Not. OBTW, the weather outlook is disturbing. Dry as a bone until ... yup. "Practiced" riding the Griso today. Having it reshod with new rubber on Friday. Seemed a shame to turn in with sidewalls left. They are a bit thinner now. Bill
  16. Uhm ... docc, you do mean you'll find room among the bachelors, right? Kathi thinks this will be a romantic weekend, and if that lowryter guy ends up in our room and snores, that'll tear it. Bill
  17. What? One month from our group mugshot and no reminder post from docc? Bill
  18. Great piece. I "stole" it and posted on wildguzzi. Thanks. Bill
  19. Summer's heat can be brutal, but September should be OK: http://www.weather.com/weather/wxclimatology/monthly/graph/37385 Besides, on the high ground of the Cherohala -- http://www.cherohala.org/ (and not there when you visited last) -- we'll be covering our mesh. Uhm. Just noticed. "Rear cylinder." With your 30-years-hence pert jugs, should be no problem at all. Bill
  20. You stay at home that day? I'd worry about meteor strikes hitting the house.
  21. Well, rats. Just when we CARCians were about to take over, another Vertebral shows up. Sheesh. Look forward to seeing you ... and that RC, my favorite of the spines. Upstate "Empire State" (where, btw?) has its many (including paved) charms, but Tennessee and anywhere along the Appalachian spine -- there I go again, and also forgetting that includes N.Y. -- is grand two-wheels country. September loometh ... OK, eventually. Best, Bill
  22. Second docc's motion. And commotion. Finally got around to calling Walt to reserve a room. Gotta love a place like this: "You want your usual room?" Yup. This weekend, getting the Griso its 6K service with Jim Barron at Rose Farm Classics in Woodstock, then taking in the Slimey Crud Run in Wisconsin. All on a predicted wet and cool few days, darn it. But, to make that damp easier to accept, Jim says I can take one of the new Cali 14's for a ride while I'm there, Yee ha! Then, on 15 May, Larry LaHue flies up from Florida to help me ferry the Griso and Norge to their new home in Virginia. Then, the only big decision between then and September is which of the harem's choices goes to the SSR. Leaning toward the Griso, but I'm also buying place and show tix on the other two. Bill
  23. Well, aren't we honored! Actually, I know that this is for Kathi, but as the head of her security detail, always happy to tag along. Will call Walt today; take it from your update re restaurant that you "prepped" him about this "non-event." I will -- Lord & creek, etc. -- have retired by then and we will happily be ensconced in our (Iron) Cross Junction home, as, btw, where I am this moment for the next several days, "practicing" for retirement. I am pretty good at it, too. Anyway, consistent with our eldercare duties for my mom in Atlanta, will be at Tellico at least by that Friday afternoon. Not sure what Guzzi we'll bring. Kathi has decreed that the Griso is not a LD tourer for her pillion posterior , but (so to speak), I'd like to introduce it to the Cherohala, etc. So, Kathi may drive the Mini or Fit down, too, as she's fine with day rides on the Griso. Anyway, very much looking forward to seeing all. Bill & Kathi
  24. Lordy. Lordy. Lordy. Kathi is visiting me out here on the American tundra; we just ran through almost all of your photos. She loves Italy as I do ... and, ever the good wife ... humors me with my passion for Guzzis, too. I return home to Virginia this summer. With three Guzzis in the garage (one always runs ) and an extra bedroom or two, you are most welcome to visit. We look forward to your next trip to the USA Thanks for the photo essays. Bill
  25. Hmmmmmm. Last person that used a litotes in responding to something I did ... fired me. Hired me back same day, but I have been wary of that figure of speech ever since. Bill
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