Honda CBR1000 |
Joel Haley |
Triumph 955 ST |
Ern Reeders (lead #1) |
Honda CBR1000 |
Ian Payne |
Suzuki GSXR1000 |
Lyn Duncan |
Honda CBR1000 |
Paul Southwell |
Suzuki GSXR1000 |
Chris Pointon |
Honda CBR954 |
Breht Emmerson |
Yamaha TRX850 |
Tony Raditsis |
Honda CBR929 |
Ben Warden (lead #2) |
MV SPR750 |
Dave Ward (rear rider) |
Honda VTR1000 |
Dean von Schill |
|
Cameron Stevens |
The roads north of
The ride up to Whittlesea through Warrandyte,
Kangaroo Ground and Hurstbridge is a nice warm up as I roll into the Caltex servo with a comfortable 10 minutes to spare to fuel
up. After a quick hello to a few
regulars, I give Ben and Ern a hand counting the number of bikes which I figure
was 11. Ben said 12 but I counted twice
and was sure it was 11 only to be told he counted 12 heads and pointed out Dave
Ward’s MV tucked away in the back corner in the shade. I had to look twice as the “dark” paint job
in the sunny morning light almost made the bike invisible amongst the bright
coloured “plastic fantastics”.
Ern briefed us on the route with a warning to
watch out for sand on corners and confirmed that the rear rider was to be Dave
on the MV. “Yeah, right”, I
thought. Turns out he was running in the
bike after an engine rebuild ($8500 of new parts after a shim bucket disintegrated
at a ride day a couple of months ago. New pistons, rings and
complete head - under warranty).
Usual high speed freight train up through
Kinglake West, and the fast sweepers to Flowerdale. Turning toward Strath Creek and into fog
cooled the pace down a touch as misted visors cut down visibility. Joel, however, had no problems seeing the
road and had obviously well and truly run in Fireblade
II as he rocketed past, head down, bum up.
The down side, of course, was that he spent a fair bit of time cooling
his heels corner marking.
North from Strath Creek to Kerrisdale,
then back toward Yea with the sun trying to break through. North toward
Rather than continue on to Yarck for a break, we
turned left towards Gobur for a pleasant meander along a quiet back road in
brilliant sunny weather. Back on to the
After the usual photo session (I wonder if Ben
ever appears in a photo) and a brief discussion of Sol’s efforts at Telstra we
are back to business and onto another of my favourite roads, the section
between Merton and Gooram. Smooth, mid-speed sweepers, undulating and with good camber. I was following Chris on the GSXR1000, watching
him overtake a Hyundai on the outside of the first, tight, left hander. While marvelling at his daring riding, I failed
to look where I was going until I ran out of road! I rolled off the brakes as the TRX ran on to
the gravel shoulder. After washing off a bit of speed, I rejoined the road before
grabbing the brakes to tip into the corner. Phew!
Just
before Gooram, we turned back towards Strathbogie. With Ern’s warning
of sand on the corners and with the narrow roads, I cautiously dropped down
into Polly McQuinns where they have constructed a new
bridge. Just on the other side of the
bridge I saw Ern’s silver Triumph being hauled out of the shallow ditch on the outside of
the turn. Ern was OK but very annoyed with
himself. A little too
quick with little traction as the front topped out and no braking power. It’s debatable as to whether the crash Oggy knobs saved the bike from serious damage or caused
more. The bike was surprisingly intact
apart from a bit of missing upper fairing. Ern decided to retire from his leading
duties as his thumb was a little swollen and the visor too scratched to safely
continue (rhs side thumb swollen, wrist x-rayed, no scaphoid damage, rode home
ok, Ian accompanied till Whittlesea).
Ben decided to capture the moment digitally, so we lined up behind Ern
and the damaged 955. I thought it was a bit cruel asking Ern to smile for the
camera.
Ben now leading, we continue on to Euroa for
lunch, stopping at the BP servo. While
everyone was fuelling up, Paul did a reconnoitre of
the town. Then we are informed we are moving to the Caltex
up the road as the food is much better. I
had just started my coffee as everyone disappeared. I didn’t feel like hanging
about so wedged the cup between the triple clamp and clutch cable and slowly
cruised up the road. I watched the negative air pressure behind the screen suck
the coffee back out of the lid, thinking, I should slow down. The food may have
been better but it wasn’t quick. Someone ended up with a cold hot chocolate
while waiting.
North up the Doom Freeway towards
It turns out I performed the last corner marking
at Yea as we turned towards Flowerdale and Kinglake West. I waited for Dave on
the MV to fuel up and then followed him as he shadowed the Fireblades
of Paul and Joel towards Junction Hill. Not
having much of a chance keeping up with that lot, I had a lonesome ride to the
finishing point at Kinglake West, just in time to catch Lyn quietly slip a
couple of Bundy and Cokes into the duck tail of the Suzuki. Apparently she’s
had a can explode due to the vibration and there’s still a fair way to go
before she can put her feet up and celebrate another great ride.
Tony Raditsis