Paddock Days - Part 3 - Race day
This series of articles was originally published at: http://www.realclassic.co.uk/
Part 1 can be found here: https://oldandireland.blogspot.com/2018/11/paddock-days-part-1-getting-mobile-on.html
Part 2 can be found here: https://oldandireland.blogspot.com/2018/11/paddock-days-part-2-practical-jokes-and.html
In my early days knocking around the Paddock there were still a few of the more occasional residents that I knew only vaguely. Their bikes however were well known and a constant source of interest. And it wasn’t just me, with meticulous nightly inspections being carried out by wandering groups or interested individuals either with or without the owners’ presence. Walking the line of parked bikes was always something of a ritual.
Part 1 can be found here: https://oldandireland.blogspot.com/2018/11/paddock-days-part-1-getting-mobile-on.html
Part 2 can be found here: https://oldandireland.blogspot.com/2018/11/paddock-days-part-2-practical-jokes-and.html
In my early days knocking around the Paddock there were still a few of the more occasional residents that I knew only vaguely. Their bikes however were well known and a constant source of interest. And it wasn’t just me, with meticulous nightly inspections being carried out by wandering groups or interested individuals either with or without the owners’ presence. Walking the line of parked bikes was always something of a ritual.
Amongst a row of fairly
standard and well known bikes the exceptions stood out. A yet to be repaired scuff from meeting the
tarmac, often told of recent events long before the owner had a chance to put a
spin on his folly, while something unknown pointed to new faces or a change of
wheels. Either would be good for a bike
swap and a blast, a simple ten minutes of road time that could cement
friendships for life. Then there were
the specials. A set of expansion pipes,
rear sets or dropped bars, usually part of a work in progress as funding
allowed, provided hours of discussion on the relative merits of what should be
done next and what performance improvements could be extracted from a
particular model. Few bikes stayed
standard for long, but despite the best efforts of many, no bike came close to
the aesthetic perfection and immaculate preparation achieved by Rust. Although always second hand, his bikes were
never seen in less than perfect condition, and while many of the rest of us ran
scrappers that were continually in need of mechanical tinkering, the
reliability and performance of his bikes was absolutely never in doubt.
Now at that time he was
running a Kawasaki triple, and it was resplendent, both its frame and its
bodywork, in a coat of red paint even deeper, and more lustrous than his own
well cared for locks. The alloy and
chrome sparkled whether lit by sun or street light, and along the smooth,
flowing lines of the tank the maker’s name, Kawasaki, was sign written in huge
chop stick script. This bike stood out, attracting
onlookers like moths to its red flame wherever it was parked. Beyond its impressive visual presence, I
never did get to know what modifications lay inside.
It was early in the year and
as evening drew in, the town was becoming quiet. During those troubled days in Northern
Ireland, when the shops shut in the evening not many people hung around: most
seeming to prefer the comfort and safety of their own homes. Add to this a spring night not yet with the
true warmth of summer, and even here in the supposedly safe commuter belt
outside Belfast the streets were largely abandoned to us, the dislocated youth.
Our number that evening was
boosted by the last distant stragglers from a Kirkistown race meeting who after
tea time fish and chips, were milling around the Paddock checking out the bikes
before they headed home. Of course, they
could not fail to stop at Rust’s, and I noticed fingers pointing out various
bits and pieces on it. They were one and
all mounted on Yamaha’s; and since brand loyalties ran deep not everything that
was said was guaranteed to be complimentary.
As dusk progressed a few of our own got involved with the visitors but before
long their discussion escalated. Soon it wasn’t just Kawasaki’s prowess but our
own territorial honour that had to be defended. It was at this point that Rust
was called in.
The easy going Rust broke off
from his own conversation with a sigh and ambled over, no rush, not a care in
the world. At first he just listened,
lightening the mood of the critics with an occasional smile or laugh at their
comments but nothing much more than yes or no answers escaped him. Despite this the two camps were becoming polarised
behind their chosen spokesmen. Still Rust
said little and remained at ease with the world, silencing occasional supportive
interruptions from behind him with a raised hand. I couldn’t tell whether he was just not
taking the things seriously or if perhaps he had the whole situation under
control. At last he spoke.
“There’s only one way to
settle this you know?”
“aaAlright”, spluttered the
visitor, taken aback.
“So you’ll race? You can choose the route.” Replied Rust
nonchalantly.
The visitor backtracked. “But you know the roads, you’ll have an
advantage.”
Rust smiled, looking up
towards Fred Blair, (he of Yellow Submarine fame and a long standing friend of
Rust’s since their schooldays). “We could
even things up, I’ll take a pillion?” Fred
didn’t look happy, but neither did he flinch.
I’m sure that this
testosterone fuelled rivalry has been going on since people first learned to
ride horses, and while there was no juke box here for timing, the coffee bar
racers from a decade or two before would easily have recognised the scene. The visitor could not help but rise to the
bait and Rust appeared happy to play the line, confident of his own ability to
reel his opponent in. His adversary could not reasonably refuse the challenge.
Routes were discussed with
some exasperation on our part, as the visitors indeed did not know all the suggested
roads. There was mention too of tax
books but nothing came of it; the race was to be for honour alone. Eventually a simple course was agreed,
following the shore road out of town through the Ballyholme suburbs until it
met the town’s ring road. The bikes were
then to blast a fast section on this dual carriageway before turning right,
following the road directly back into town, a total of around 5 miles. Representatives from both sides were sent off
to appropriate corners to ensure compliance and fairness.
As we waited a few minutes
for the marshals to get into position, the tension was rising. As usual word had made it to a few nearby
watering holes where drinks had been abandoned and a small audience was
scrambling to get a ringside seat.
Engines were being warmed as in one corner the visitors discussed
tactics, while in another our two heroes talked quietly, already saddled for
the off. On the hour the bikes lined up
at the end of the Paddock, the two pilots exchanged glances and suddenly the
starters arm dropped. Revs ricocheted
off the walls as the bikes surged forward.
There was a brief jostle for position as each rider tried to get the
best line around the first corner at the old customs house. The Yamaha slipped ahead, and then they were
gone from sight. As their two stroke
mist dissipated in the Paddock we listened to the rapidly departing engines;
trying hard to work out positions and to will Rust on. Then with distance, came silence. Those left behind in the Paddock were
momentarily silent too, listening hard for a last hint of what might be
happening out there.
My own thoughts had turned to
an incident from my childhood when my family lived along the road the racers
had just taken. On weekends the sound of
bikes or cars travelling much too quickly past our home was far from
unknown. The road was cut into a steep
slope, with the houses set above this, raised above the tarmac on a bank
protected by a stout Victorian stone wall. On one of these weekends my mother
who was a nurse had been called out to help with a bike accident, her skills
keeping that rider alive until the ambulance came for him. Months later he had returned to thank her,
providing an entertainment of appalling revulsion and avid fascination for us
children by demonstrating the plate that had been set into his skull. For some strange reason after that, my mother
had never wanted either my brother or I to get bikes. I gave quiet thanks for the helmet law we
lived with, hoping too that those involved in the current hedonism would made
it round in one piece.
In the Paddock the few
minutes of waiting seemed endless. Some
small groups paced back and forward endlessly while others had moved over to
the end of the street where the bikes would reappear. Only a few lowered voices threatened the
silence as everyone strained again to hear the first hint of the returning
bikes. Somewhere in the distance there
was a brief and very faint rise of engine note as the bikes crested a far off
hill, then another short moment of quiet.
Suddenly the screaming
engines were heard again as they raced down High Street towards us. The noise was confused; no single bike was
clearly discernable. Things must be close, and with headlights showing first it
was difficult to make out for certain who the leader was. The atmosphere was instantly tense,
expectant. Then a cheer rose from the
group watching at the end of high Street as a bright red bike slowed, checked
in case of traffic, then accelerated again to cross the white road marking at
end of our domain. Rust’s Kawasaki was
immediately surrounded while a second or so later a more dejected looking
Yamaha pulled in.
The marshals too were not far
behind, having left their posts to follow as soon as the two bikes had
passed. Even from where I stood it was
easy to make out that the rider of the lone Yamaha sitting at the Paddock
entrance was not best pleased. As a few
brave souls walked over to console him he nodded them towards their bikes,
signalling his wish to be away. They
uniformly complied. Only at the last
moment before their departure did he nudge his bike through the crowd around
Red and pass a few words to him from within his helmet. Their subdued group then rode off for home.
Meanwhile back slaps and
congratulations were still the order of the day for Red. When, eventually, there was space for them to
dismount, I noticed Fred looked a little pale.
His hands were visibly shaking as he pulled off his thin gloves. It can’t have been an easy trip for him on
pillion, and it is certainly not a position that I would have considered
filling. Then at second glance, I noticed
that he had been hanging on to the back of the back of Red’s bike so tightly
that the inside of his fingers were bleeding.
As I say, there were two heroes in this particular race.
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