RoSPA Riders Magazine - Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists
Transcription
RoSPA Riders Magazine - Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists
Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Magazine Issue 19 June 2012 www.rospariders.co.uk In this issue: Classifieds I 2 Editorial 3 Meetings etc. 4 Group activities 4 Committee 4 Charity Track Day 5 Chair’s Corner 6 Holiday event 7 Membership Report 9 MAGPAS 10 A biking legacy 11 To infinity and Beyond16 Garden Party 25 Bunkered? 26 Testing & Training 26 Paul’s Clinic 27 Memorial Ride 27 Members’ small ads 28 Diary dates 2012 29 EAA Bike Show 29 RoADAR Rideout 30 Baltic rides? 31 Classifieds II 34 Inside - another mega-tour of some excellent biking roads, described by Jaques Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists Page 2 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 June 2012 Classifieds I Total Advanced Training Advanced motorcycle training email: totaladvanced@tiscali.co.uk Phone: 07813 167749 Based in Essex, we provide professional advanced motorcycle training for London and the South East. We offer a range of post-test courses from ‘back to biking,’ which is aimed at confidence building, through to riders wishing to undertake the highest advanced qualification; namely, the RoSPA Gold. The Chief Instructor, Mick Jones, is a highly respected and qualified retired police motorcyclist holding advanced IAM and RoSPA Gold qualifications. He is a Driving Standards Agency qualified instructor and a member of the Driving Instructors Association. He holds a Diploma in advanced tuition and is currently a Regional RoSPA Examiner and a Bike Safe Assessor. Training will be conducted by Mick in person or other suitably qualified instructors. We provide excellent tuition and use state of the art technology with a camera bike filming the training. For a small fee, a personalised DVD can be produced for riders to view their achievement. Total Advanced is the only training company recognised by Equity Red Star Insurance who will discount riders who achieve our advanced accreditation qualification. Prices range from £50 - £160 for a full day’s training. Page 3 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Editorial Hello again – and welcome to the 19th edition of the RoSPA Riders magazine. As I write this, I’m not sure when you will receive it, as I will have been on holiday at a time when I would normally be producing the bulk of the magazine and June club night, when the magazine would normally be distributed, is a ride out. After the April club night, as I cycled toward home across the Police sports club field as usual, it started to rain. As I passed the headquarters building I reached into my pocket for my gloves and put them on before I reached Sandford Road. Head down, against the rain, I pressed on and at some point heard a ‘clunk’ from the rear of the bike. ‘Probably a stone’ I thought as I carried on. When I got home I reached into my pocket for my keys and there they were, gone; definitely not there, or in any of my other pockets. As I keep my keys in the same pocket as my gloves, I supposed I must have dropped the keys when I pulled the gloves out. Then I remembered the ‘clunk’ from my bike. Could that have been the keys dropping? No sign of keys anywhere on the bike, so back I went to the clubhouse, in the rain, at the double, keeping an eye out at the point where I had put my gloves on. Try as I might, though, I couldn’t visualise the point at which I heard the ‘clunk’. Despite retracing my route to the clubhouse (partly on foot with a torch in hand) I couldn’t see them. I was getting a bit concerned as I have one of those Tesco mini key ring Clubcards and as I was passing Chelmsford Prison, hearing the shouts of the inmates, I recalled a TV scam program I once saw, wherein a researcher called Tesco saying they had ‘found’ a keyring and thought they could return it to the rightful owner. Tesco actually gave out the address! It was starting to gnaw at me as I approached home but, when Mara let me in, I remembered that after I got the bike out of the garage, I had gone back into the house to replace the batteries in my front light. Yep – you guessed; the keys were in the house all along. There was an item on the radio shortly afterward, wherein a learned academic recommended repeating out loud, the name of lost objects as you search for them. Apparently this helps jog your memory. Some wag emailed into the program saying that he had been walking around the house saying ‘marbles, marbles, marbles…’ Perhaps I should give it a try – Ed. Disclaimer Notice: The articles published herein do not necessarily represent the views of the Essex Rospa Advanced Motorcyclist Group. They are the opinions of individual contributors and are published with a view that free expression promotes discussion and interest. Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists Page 4 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 June 2012 Meetings etc. Group activities Group social night 19:30 on the 3rd Thursday of the month, February December. Essex Police Sports Pavilion, St Margaret's Road, Springfield, Chelmsford, Essex, CM2 6DN. Group annual dinner Christmas dinner? Bah – humbug. Join us on the 3rd Thursday in January for an evening of variety: chicken chunder, posh nosh or bargain burgers? You choose. Propose a venue and we’ll vote on it! Group social rides 09:30 on the 3rd Sunday of the month, 9:30 a.m. at Boreham (BP) Services, CM2 5PY If there are any changes or additions, meeting places and/or times will be announced at Group Night. For most up to date information, please see our website and/or our newsletter. Newsletter Advertising Please contact the Editor to change contents. Personal small ads are free to members. Please send them to the Editor. Committee Chairperson Sandra Murphy chairman@rospariders.co.uk Secretary + Regalia Jaques DeKlerk secretary@rosparders.co.uk Treasurer Solveig Hart treasurer@rospariders.co.uk Membership Sandra Murphy membership@rospariders.co.uk Training Paul Collins training@rospariders.co.uk Publicity Kevin Stranks Webmaster Steve Bancroft web@rospariders.co.uk Ride co-ordinator Richard Parker followme@rospariders.co.uk Newsletter editor Members Steve Webb Gary Carter Peter Layley Phil Reader George Brown Ashley John news@rospariders.co.uk Life Member Raffles Deputy training officer Page 5 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Charity Track Day At the time of writing, this event hadn’t been made available on the website www.havenshospices.org.uk/trackday but by the time we go to print, it should be there. The club has been invited to place a stand at the Ford Supercar Trackday to promote our good works. So; please come along, bring your bike for the display, promote the club, join in the fun and have a go – you can even ride round the track. There is a lot to do during the day, so the more people we have to help out, the more time you will have to wander round and take it all in. Contact Kevin Stranks or Smurf to offer help. Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 6 June 2012 Chair’s Corner Your new committee has met twice already since I last wrote, and I’m pleased to report that there are lots of new things planned. We are already starting to see the benefits of fresh ideas, with many more events being arranged for Group Nights – well done all of you who participated in the slow riding skills evening at the May Group Night. We hope to run more of these in the future, so keep an eye out for the dates. This Sunday (24th June) we have George Brown’s picnic ride. This is something I’m really looking forward to, and have been thinking of all the things I could take for the picnic since George announced it. Being a regular attendee at the Bulldog Bash I’m getting quite good at packing the bike, but not as good as some we’ve seen there! I’m also looking forward to the Super Sausage Supper at Steve Webb’s on the evening of Thursday 19th July. We held this for the first time last year, and attendance was so good that Steve and Mara have kindly offered to run it again. If you are able to attend, please let Steve know so that he can ensure sufficient food and drinks are available. I’d like to say a special thank you to Mara, who does all the cooking and arranging (with a little help from Steve), and for welcoming us to your home. (Aw, shucks – Ed) Sunday 1st July is the second Jane Wilson memorial ride. Full details can be found in the magazine and on the website. A donation of £5 per bike is requested, but all proceeds go to Essex Air Ambulance so a very worthy cause, as well as joining together all three Essex advanced motorcycle groups. Don’t forget Sunday 22nd July is the date for the rearranged Essex Motorcycle Show at Colchester. I’ve had a lot of members confirm they will be coming along to help man the stand – thank you to all of you, this is greatly appreciated. So have you been getting out on your bikes much? I know the weather hasn’t been great, and you’ve probably all had enough wet weather riding practice to last a lifetime, but if you have good kit and can find some decent roads (not many of those in Essex) you can still have lots of fun. If you haven’t been out much, try to book some time in your diary on the 3 rd Sunday of the month to join one of Richard Parker’s monthly social rides – they are great fun, and open to all members. Ride safe, and have fun. Smurf Page 7 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists June 2012 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Holiday event If anyone is heading to the southwest for a holiday - it's worth a visit to Poole Harbour on a Tuesday for Bike Night - we have been a couple of times and when the weather is good, huge numbers of bikes turn up! Coles Miller Solicitors sponsored ‘Dream Machines’ is a fully marshalled event, with a £1 entry charge per night or £6 for a season armband (on sale at the Welcome Centre on Poole Quay). It is selffunding and once all event costs have been deducted the surplus is donated to charities selected by the volunteer marshals. The entire Quay is closed off to all traffic, except bikes. Numbers of motorbikes regularly exceed 1000. The display features a wide range of models and makes, many of which are custom bikes. There is a weekly competition for the Bike of the Night, picked by a local judge, and a season Best Bike at the end of September. See the link: http://www.pooletourism.com/go.php?structureID=pages&ref=N4D9C41C9 B7A94 and sample pictures below. Most pubs do offers on food, soft drinks and shandy. Sue Whitford Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 8 June 2012 Page 9 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists June 2012 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Membership Report 75% of 2011 members have renewed. Whilst this seems quite high, it’s a lot lower than usual – are we doing something wrong and not offering enough for existing members? If you have any suggestions on how we can improve, please send me your thoughts. On the positive front, we’ve had 10 new members this year so are on track, and the waiting list for Associates to be assigned their one to one Tutor is greatly reduced. Membership figures as at 13th April are: Associates Full Total 29 82 53 Welcome to the following new members: Peter Littlemore Simon Wall Congratulations to the following for their test passes: Name Grade Tutor Babis Gakis Gold Ashley John Steve Webb Silver* N/A Examiner Paul Roberts *Denotes Retest Active Tutors: Ashley John, Peter Layley, Sandra Murphy, Paul Osborne, Richard Parker, Brad Pearman, Geoff Preston, Phil Reader, Peter Spindley, Kevin Stranks, Jaques de Klerk & Anthony Greenwood Smurf Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 MAGPAS Page 10 June 2012 Page 11 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 A biking legacy By Sue Whitford I guess most of you get asked at some point in a conversation – how did you get into motorbikes? I certainly do. Although there are more of us now, we female bikers are still in a minority and sometimes something of a novelty. Although most wouldn’t admit it, we secretly like the attention! Unlike most, it was my parents that got me onto two wheels. Normally they are of the discouraging nature but when I started college, it was too far to walk and I had to walk halfway for the bus – so when I was 17 my parents bought me a little Yamaha Passola 50cc scooter. It was bright yellow with a little basket on the front. I know, I know........most of you wouldn’t dare admit to having something so naff as your first bike but it got me from A to B and I even commuted into the West End on it for nearly 2 years. I must have been mad! I then got fed up with always being the last away from the traffic lights – although that hasn’t changed! – so I got a little Honda 125, passed my test Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 12 June 2012 and I was away. 30 years on (oops that gives the age away) and 13 bikes later here I am still trying to figure out how to ride. My Dad had bikes when he was younger and I only recently realised that I still had no idea how he had got into bikes or what he had ridden. I only knew of a weekend away in Wales with my mother on a bike – (more later) so I asked him about his bike history and this is what I got. My Dad is now 80 and my parents retired to northern France 12 years ago. His first bike in the early 1950’s was a BSA Bantam 125cc. He couldn’t quite stretch to a car at the time and a bike was in his budget for getting around on. Apparently like an early Ford car you could have any colour as long as it was green ! It had leg shields and a full windshield with two rear view mirrors on the top edges. In those days there were no crash helmets and he drove with a fur lined leather hat with a peak and a pair of gauntlets. Although this is not his bike, it is a similar one. In those days there were no flashing indicators and he had to use hand signals; also, cars had little indicator arms, one on each side of the vehicle, that came out and lit up to indicate which way they were turning – if you could see them that is. Page 13 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 To get a licence there was just a single test – riding and highway code together. He remembers that an emergency stop was when the tester made you drive round a block and you had to apply the brakes when he stepped off the curb and held his hand up – goodness knows what happened if he picked on the wrong motorcycle! Filling up with petrol on a 125cc bike was easy as petrol stations had pumps for these with ready mixed petrol and oil and an attendant to deliver it to you. He remembers that some of the bikes had clutches with cork inlays and if your clutch was slipping all you did was take it out and clean it with petrol and let it dry. Talk about DIY maintenance! He then had a BSA 250 – a rigid frame with no springs. This was the bike that my parents toured North Wales on in 1954 - before they were married! The picture shows my mother stood next to the bike and was taken not far from Barmouth in the Snowdon National Park (and for those that don’t know - it’s not far from Biker’s Retreat!) Apparently they had quite a good time except for when it rained, when they had to cover their shoes with plastic bags (who hasn’t?) Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 14 June 2012 My father has assured me that the landlady of the B&B they stayed in made sure that they were in separate bedrooms and at either end of the house. How times have changed! His last bike was a Francis Barnett 125. Then my brother and sisters and I started to arrive, so that put an end to his biking days for quite a few years. He then bought his first car, a Morris 8, for which he paid £12 ten shillings (£12/10/-) and then found 10 shillings (10/-) under the back seat! I am not sure if my getting into bikes inspired him again but around the late 1980’s, he bought a sorry looking Kawasaki Z200 which he proceed to do up (see the before and after photos) with the idea of using it to commute to work on. It took him a couple of months to get it into a decent condition. He had only been riding it for a couple of weeks when he was knocked off on a roundabout by a lorry that didn’t see him. He ended up in hospital. Unfortunately he never rode a bike again. I’m glad I got this history from my Dad as it puts him in a whole new light to me – he always was adventurous and loves travelling but this gives his life a bit more of ‘an edge’! Sue I remember replacing the worn clutch cork inserts. You had to boil them in water to soften them before pressing them into place in the clutch disc. They were ‘surfaced’ afterward by rubbing them on a sheet of sandpaper that was placed on a flat surface (we used a sheet of glass). Then you had to re-soak them in oil before you re-assembled the clutch - Ed Page 15 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists Page 16 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 June 2012 To infinity and Beyond Well maybe not, but the Alps at least! – By Jaques DeKlerk “Aah but for a Mountain Pass or Hairpin Bend” I did say and as we all bolted off the train in Calais, I was assured that once we reached Austria, many a twist and many a turn would fill our eyes! At less than two months old at the end of May, I thrust poor Kermit (my wee ZZR) in at the deep-end and we two headed off for a play in the Austrian Swiss and Italian Alps - a bikers heaven! To get there, we first had three days of steadily more progressive riding to put under our belts and this, Kermit certainly did enjoy, France can be a little boring but we found great swathes of back roads with little traffic and we all had the roads to ourselves for some top end fun. On day two, crossing into Luxemberg and then Germany, we ventured and rode the entire length of the famous B500 in the legendary Black forest Schwarzwald; mile upon mile of twisty, turny, sweepy, curvy roads got all our egos flowing for the delights to come. Ahhh, the Black Forest and it's seemingly endless number of sweeping trails and deserted roads. Not on our visit; it was a public holiday and full of traffic, from coach to car to motorcyclist. Kermit and I still found the ride a dream. Every opportunity to overtake taken, every bend enjoyed, I thoroughly enjoyed the glass smooth sweeping sections elevated above the forest with a dramatic switchback run back through the forest to Baden Baden. By the time we crossed into Austria on day three, Kermit had begun to enjoy just a little too much, his teasing of the K12 and K1300s, as well as the VFR1200s and 2 new Multistradas on tour. On the flowing curves Kermit thoroughly revelled in chasing and on occasions passing, his German, Italian and Japanese biking friends. Bikes: they do like to play, like meerkats they all zipped, zagged and zoomed around one another, trying to prove who was the leader of the gang. Only the restrained riders such as “Moi” kept the two wheeled hooligans to reasonable antics, Kermit was not happy at my control, but at our lunch stop, I had a stern word or two with him, as did the other riders with their steeds “Think and ride, never just ride” we told them! Page 17 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 After lunch, the roads started to turn into some of the most twisty roads this side of the Alps. Kermit chose to heed my words of riding with thought and controlled his progressive nature - keeping to less than light speed. By the time we reached our hotel in Platz, Kermit and all his biking buddies were lost for words, they, and all their riders, were worn out from the ever increasing turns, twists, hairpin bends and altitude changes experienced in the afternoon. And if the bikes were speechless due to the roads, the riders (well not me of course) were speechless at the location, the excellent Hotel Weisseespitz, our first main hotel for the trip, a superb 4 star hotel situated in a most beautiful area south of Innsbruck and just a few throttle twists away from some jaw dropping Austrian and Swiss scenery and breathtaking roads. Our second main hotel on the tour, was to be the Hotel Gran Paradis at Campitello di Fassa, a mere 155 mile hop over 3 flowing and undulating mountain passes over the Alps to the Dolomites. From here on in and for the remainder of the tour, the roads became rather challenging for Kermit and each dawn as I wheeled him out for the stunning variety of European mountain pass roads, he would dim his lights and reduce his idling growl to a whimper, in terror of what roads and passes I was to lead him down and anticipation of what I was going to put him through. So, what can be said about the Alps? Well - here is my synopsis of just a few of the passes travelled on Kermit’s trip; 2 from Austria, 2 from Switzerland annnnnnnnnnnnd YES, you’ve guessed it, 2 from Italy and I hope I am able to give you all a flavour of the variety of roads and scenery for you all to enjoy if, or rather WHEN you choose to venture to the Alps:The Kaunertal Glacier Austria: The highest glacier in Tyrol. Though not flowing, at a reasonable pace even Kermit could enjoy it, a GTR or grand tourer would thoroughly enjoy it. The glacier road runs from the village of Feichten in the valley of Kauner at 1273m above sea level up the brink of the “perennial ice” at a level of 2750m. 29 hairpin bends and an altitude difference of almost 1500m stretched over aproximatly 19 miles, a joy for the eyes rather than the ride, but you’ll love it all the more for at less pace, the stunning glacier deserves respect. Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 18 June 2012 Picture 1: Kaunertal Glacier The Grossglockner Austria: I’ve done this pass 4 times previously and its 38 miles never cease to excite me. And for Kermit, this is the perfect flowing road; panoramic, with wide hairpin bends enablling Kermit to easily keep with the sports-bike brigade, the road is a toll road and concludes at the Pasterze Glacier, which you can walk on; absolutely amazing. This is the highest mountain and the largest glacier in Austria, at 3798m. Picture 2: Großglockner-Hochalpenstraße Page 19 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 The Fluelapass Switzerland: Top Gear’s Jeremy Clarkson voted this “probably the best road in the Woooooorld” Well I can agree for sheer opportunity to open Kermit up, this is mind-blowingly fantastic, pinpoint accuracy is required for the road changes round every bend and drops and falls without much notice, if not 100% on the day or the weather is less than perfect, I’d leave this pass for another time! Be warned: the Swiss police are extremely strict and, if caught progressing, Kermit and I may have been writing this from a Swiss cell. So; scan the environment and ask the locals if they’ve seen police before taking a free spirited run up this great road. The pass also takes you within a few hundred meters of the Rhone Glacier, source of the Rhone river. Here you can park up and walk up to and actually inside the glacier itself… Ratings The Julier Pass Route Switzerland: This pass is 64 miles of Kermit heaven and comes equal with either the Grossglochner and Fluelapass. It peaks at 2284m and, I’ve been told, is a classic “Swiss motorcycling route”. Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 20 June 2012 Picture 3: Julier Pass The scenery is rather barren, but in this there too is beauty, just of a diffening type, the tundra-like landscape impressed me and the summit had two leaning columns placed here by the Romans!! The Pordoi Pass Italy: What a revelation for scenic value and a mere 10 miles from our hotel, the Pordoi pass marks the border between the Province of Trento and the Province of Belluno. With 28 hairpin bends and flowing roads, it caters for the biker more than any other pass I have ridden; from naked to sportsbike, to Grand or hyper tourer, this is a route that can be enjoyed at pace, or for the view and, to top it off, there is a cable car to take you to the summit at over 2900m. The pass road itself, rises to 2239m and is the highest surfaced road traversing the Dolomites. The ride can be extended to take in a number of other pases too, for a rounded run. What more could one want? Page 21 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Picture 4: Pardoi Pass Picture 5: Pardoi Pass Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 22 June 2012 The Stelvio Pass Italy: This pass I found second only to the Passo Pardoi in scenic value. It is great to say I have now ridden it, though I feel it is best suited to the GS, Multistrada, KTM 990 and the like brigade, rather than Kermit or any form of sports-bike. The 48 hairpin bends climbing from less than 700m to 2501m, it was the toughest and most rewarding mountain pass I have thus far ridden, climbing over 1800m, but the road is uneven and, unless on a different sort of bike, I feel there are greater biking mountain passes to enjoy. Page 23 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 So there you have it, though I must admit Kermit may not have been the best choice of bike for the roads travelled on this tour, we two still did our Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 24 June 2012 best to show those bikes best suited to the environment (the short and upright bikes) our taillights, oh and exhausts as we past. Kermit found it damned hard work, squirming under hard braking and progressive acceleration, being flicked about over many a hundred of hairpins and having to severely curtail his wish to zip and zoom off. I found the roads, passes, scenery and countries visited truly enjoyable, though tiring. With the ZZRs power and length, like any hyper-tourer, extra though and care must be taken especially at speed before the wrist is turned, as unlike the short light machines, accuracy and positive action is essential in order to be safe and come home safe. The many mountain pass twists and turns experienced in the differing European countries, the rare straights, numerous hairpin bends and stunning scenery, had me grinning from ear to ear & shouting in my helmet full of cheer. It really, honestly couldn’t have been much better - not legally anyway! Page 25 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists June 2012 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Garden Party ERAM REGALIA If you would like to buy a polo shirt or sweatshirt embroidered with our group logo please speak to Steve or Sandra at group night, or post a message on the forum of www.rospariders.co.uk Polo shirts at a reduced price of £9.50 – sizes M, L, XL and XXL Sweat shirts are £12.50 – sizes M and XL Other sizes can be ordered. All colours available as long as it’s black! Buying and wearing the Regalia is for a good cause as it supports Advanced Motorcycling which we all love. Thank you for your support! Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 26 June 2012 Bunkered? Testing & Training RoSPA Advanced Tutor Training Tutor training will be provided by the Groups Advanced Tutors on a structured three day programme. Interested Gold and Silver RoSPA Riders can train to become approved tutors and share their skills and experience by helping to train associates. This is a worthwhile exercise and has many benefits other than the obvious ones. It may be that you haven’t ever considered tutoring others and, possibly, you don’t think you are suitable for the task. Please don’t let that put you off - give it some consideration. You may well find that you have hidden talents and that you find you enjoy helping others to become as good as you are after all, you will have obtained a Silver or Gold in the first place! Talk to Paul Collins or Phil Reader at a group night or contact Paul on his public email address: training@rospariders.co.uk Page 27 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Test ready? Has your tutor advised you are test ready? If so, Smurf has a supply of test application forms. You can also obtain these from RoSPA HQ or download from the website. The full link address is: http://www.roadar.org/drivers/info/membershipapplication-form.doc. If you are not reading this on a PC, go to www.roadar.org and follow the link. If you submit your application through the Group, ERAM can claim £3 from HQ towards Group funds. Please make a cheque out to Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists for £54. Paul’s Clinic No, nothing to do with unmentionable diseases, but an offer from the club (and Paul Collins) to assist with any matters of riding that can be addressed by demonstration or examination at the club premises. If you have any queries, or you would like some advice on aspects of slow riding, U-turns or other topics, please let Paul know and it can be addressed ‘offline’ – either in a corner somewhere or possibly in the club car park. It is sometimes better to have a one-to-one and, if practical demos are called for on some subjects, it is better to be able to deal with the bike, rather than verbally or on paper. Don’t be afraid to ask… Memorial Ride This year’s Jane Wilson Memorial Ride will be Sunday July 1st, meeting at Boreham McDonald's 9am for 9.30 departure. The ride will lead us to the Super Sausage as before and will end there to allow a bit of choice for the remainder of the day. We may run a return route to Finchingfield if there is sufficient interest. We will, as before, provide ride leaders and tail enders for 3 or 4 groups. A donation of £5 per bike will be requested with all the proceeds going to Essex Air Ambulance. Please mention this to any of your friends who may have not read this, as all are welcome - including associates. John Warren (CADAM) Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 28 June 2012 Members’ small ads That page heading is not a euphemism! It is an opportunity for you to sell those unwanted items, or plead for where you might be able to buy those hard to find items (or hope someone will take pity on you and offer them for free, á la Freecycle…) Wanted Small motorised bike – anything considered (even a moped). Contact Steve: news@rospariders.co.uk For sale 4 cylinder vacuum balancing gauges & accessories. Any sensible offer. Contact Steve: news@rospariders.co.uk Interlude Page 29 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists June 2012 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Diary dates 2012 Date Event information June 10th WSB Round 7: Misano 16th London BikeSafe 17th Custom Motorcycle Show, Beaulieu 21st Club night group ride 22-24th BSB Knockhill 24th Pillion picnic ride July 1st Jane Wilson Memorial Ride 1st WSB Round 8: Motorland Aragon 6-8th BSB Oulton Park Intl. 19th Club ‘Garden Party’ 20-22nd Brands Hatch GP 21st London BikeSafe 22nd WSB Round 9: Brno Aug 5th WSB Round 10: Silverstone 25-27th BSB Cadwell Park 26th WSB Round 11: Moscow International Raceway Sep 7-9th BSB Donington Park 9th WSB Round 12: Nurburgring 16th Essex Air Ambulance ride to Harwich 21-23rd BSB Showdown TT Cct, Assen 23rd WSB Round 13: Portimao 28-30th BSB Showdown, Silverstone GP 29th London BikeSafe Oct 7th WSB Round 14: MagnyCours 12-14th BSB Showdown, Brands hatch GP 20-21st 19th Carole Nash Classic Motorcycle Mechanics Show, Stafford County show Date Event information ground Got any dates you want to add, remind or tell me about? news@rospariders.co.uk of course… EAA Bike Show We’ve had this notification from Wendy Marcon: ESSEX MOTORCYCLE SHOW (BikeSafe) - NEW DATE I am delighted to confirm the new date for the show is SUNDAY 22ND JULY. Wendy Marcon Trust Events Manager Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists Page 30 RoSPA Riders Issue 19 June 2012 RoADAR Rideout RoADAR Mega-Ride-Out 7th July 2012 at The National Motorcycle Museum Birmingham, B92 OEJ (off J6, M42) Sponsored by Arrive for 12 noon, Saturday 7th July There is a dedicated car park set aside for RoSPA on arrival. Dining facilities and toilets are available in the self-service restaurant. Special entrance rates for the Museum: £6.95 and £4.95 for concessions There will be a raffle for all who attend, to enter for two Garmin satnavs (supplied by Garmin). Page 31 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Baltic rides? Has anyone considered a ride, or already ridden through the Baltic? We have just arrived back from a bus trip to the major cities and tourist spots of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania via Tallin, Palanga (Pärnu), Klaipeda, Kaunas, Riga and Vilnius. I was pleased to find how good and how empty the main roads were and the smaller ones we travelled along seemed to offer no real problems, albeit a trifle bumpy in places. Although the ‘In your pocket’ guides issue dire warnings regarding local traffic behaviour and this seems to be backed up by many internet travel experiences, no-one seemed in any hurry to get anywhere soon. Maybe this extract from Riga In Your Pocket will explain things? “Latvia has some of the world’s worst drivers. It’s not that they can’t steer or press the brake pedal, but for some reason Latvians can’t master the art of parallel parking. It’s more likely a reckless streak that allows grown men and women to act like children behind the wheel. Passing on blind curves is shockingly common, red lights are ignored by most BMWs and pedestrians on crosswalks tend to become targets for wannabe F1 drivers in tricked out Mercedes jeeps. If, like many locals, you enjoy driving while intoxicated, you should bear in mind that all perpetrators, including foreigners, face a mandatory ten-day jail sentence and a 500Ls fine. The speed limit is 50km/h in towns, 90km/h on the open road and it is strictly enforced. Speed traps are prevalent and bribes are not recommended. Parking meters are all over Riga. Traffic police will clamp your car and demand a fine on the spot for running out of time, or will fine you for being parked illegally. Old Riga is now accessible to nearly all motor vehicles, but the authorities have made it impossible to drive from one end to the other having divided the town into four different sections. Many streets have been changed to one-way streets and certain areas, such as Doma and Līvu squares, have become pedestrian and bicycles zones. Naturally, the city has lost loads of revenue by opening up the old city, but now charges equally exorbitant parking fees that can only be paid with an SMS text message sent from a Latvian mobile phone number, so most tourists are prohibited from parking their rented cars in Old Riga.” This extract regarding Vilnius also seems somewhat threatening: “The common or garden Lithuanian driver is notable for possessing certain eccentric habits almost unheard of in the West. A typical, edge-of-the-seat adventure sat beside a local Lewis Hamilton comes with lashings of tailgating, cutting lanes and dangerous overtaking manoeuvres. It comes as no great surprise to non-Italian Westerners who’ve been in the country for more than a couple of days to learn that Lithuania has the highest rate of road fatalities in the European Union. If you’re unfortunate enough to be involved in an accident in which any material or personal damage occurs, you must leave your vehicle exactly where it is, call the police (tel. 112) and wait for them to arrive. Even if your car is obstructing the flow of traffic, don’t move it until the police get there and have danced about the wreckage with a tape measure and some lollipops, drawn some little pictures, and given you the all-clear. Not only is leaving the scene of an accident an offence, but the lack of an official police report will give insurance Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Page 32 June 2012 companies the excuse they’re looking for not to pay. Seat belts must be worn and headlights must be on at all times while driving. All vehicles must be fitted with a small fire extinguisher and carry a first-aid kit, a reflective road-side warning triangle and a reflective safety vest. You must have your vehicle registration papers and licence with you at all times. During the winter, you’ll also want to make sure you have an ice scraper and maybe a brush for getting all the weather off your car before you set off. Winter tyres are mandatory between November 10 and April 10. In and around town the speed limit is 50km/h unless indicated otherwise. Elsewhere you can drive at 90km/h on asphalt roads and 70km/h on dirt roads, and on highways you can drive at 130km/h until November 1, when you’ll have to stick to 110km/h.” Granted, not all the foregoing is relevant to bikes and much of it is common sense, but I guess it pays to swot up before you go. I found a clip on YouTube where the Mayor of Vilnius used a 6-wheel armoured vehicle to crush a car, illegally parked on a cycle track. I can sympathise with that… There was a great contrast between the cities of the three countries and vast amounts of open space and woodland where you travelled for mile after mile with little apparent change of scenery and some good, long straight roads. Any bends that deigned to make their presence felt were smooth and flowing. The relevant authorities really seem to be pushing the boat out to make the main resorts and cities into popular and pleasant destinations – clean, tidy and modern. One word of advice that will probably not be offered by tourist guides, regards the particularly vicious and large mosquitoes. Prevention is a must, as a cure takes a lot longer to effect than a good repellent spray takes to apply! The food is excellent, on the whole, whilst prices range from very high in Tallinn to very reasonable in Vilnius with comparable quality. If you are of a mind, then beers of nations can be found and the local microbrewery industry has a strong presence in all three countries. We travelled with, amongst others, two Australian couples, one of whom, Rocky, (now in his 70’s) had made a career of traversing Australia umpteen times: up, down, left & right (and inside out, for all I know) on his Gold Wing and/or BMW tourer. He must have travelled millions of miles doing runs like the Black Dog ride (http://www.blackdogride.com.au/) to raise awareness of depression. Strangely, he suffered a lot from the cold whilst riding across the desert and, like me, found it difficult to keep his hands warm and was trying to source a pair of neoprene over-mittens. I always think of Australia as being overbearingly hot, but I suppose that is just one of the stereotype impressions I have. It may also be the reason he can’t find the mittens in Oz! One night we attended an open session at a festival in a market square in Riga, joining locals who were dancing to traditional folk music. We got talking to a bunch of motorcyclists who were on a ride from Germany to Page 33 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Moscow. One guy (I didn’t remember his name) lived in Cologne so the one way distance had to be at least 2,700 km if they were going via Latvia and another 2,500 if they went straight back. It turned out he had bought his first bike, a Norton Commando, at Gus Kuhn Motors. He subsequently returned to buy a Triumph Trident. Had it not been late and getting cold by the time we started the conversation, I might have taken a few notes but, in any case, it was not until we were on our way back that I thought of writing this up. We also went to Turaida Castle (it seems mandatory for most tourists) where there was a small ‘art’ piece in the grounds. It depicted an army of ‘warriors’ that were made from various pieces of junk metal and local stone. It was only on the way back, that I noticed that one character, named Talrits, was endowed with an unusual backpack – an old bike petrol tank. I would say that motorcycling is not unpopular in the Baltic but the majority of bikes we saw were cruisers or chops, with only a few sports bikes thrown in. Anybody fancy organising a trip? Steve Webb Classifieds II Paul Collins is Chief Instructor and owner of his own advanced rider training school Perfect Control. The school specialises in advanced riding skill tuition and all post-test motorcycle rider training. Using radio communications, Perfect Control give on-road, real time tuition, with advice and correction given at breaks in road sessions, skills check sessions, briefings and session critiques. Structured training courses are: Back-2-Bikes, skills improvement training, DSA enhanced rider scheme, advanced riding techniques and training to RoSPA, IAM & DIA standards. Perfect Control offers great opportunities for riders of all abilities to improve their skills and continue their development. CONTACT DETAILS: www.perfectcontrol.co.uk Mob: 07941 803043 Email: rockape.pc@virgin.net Page 35 June 2012 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 Essex RoSPA Advanced Motorcyclists RoSPA Riders Issue 19 June 2012 01702 338843, or philhreader@aol.com Keys cut for bikes, cars and domestic Motorcycle physical security products Locks and safes supplied and fitted Advice freely given Also: Page 36 Baglux 20% off products: Tank bags, tank covers and accessories