"Ex-biker?" I hear you say. Yes, it's true, my insurance lapsed last month and I'm too broke at the minute to renew it. When my CB500 sells (it's on Ebay now) I will be without a taxed and MOT'd bike, but I'm not worried. I've ridden most days for the last 20 years and a little break isn't so bad. This hasn't been an entirely bad thing as it has meant me getting stuck into working on bikes instead of just hooning around on them.
I have been slowly rebuilding my GB500 and that has been a lesson in how low my standards have been. I thought it looked quite nice by the time I wheeled it out for the recent classic show, but in daylight it looked like a bag o'shite. I just don't do clean motorcycles and as I am doing up three bikes to sell I have had to learn sharpish.
I've been pondering what sort of biking I will be doing now that I don't use a bike for work and I have to admit I'm not sure. Part of me wants a red hot sporting single to go sportsbike hunting on, but equally I'd be happy with a nice little single sidecar outfit.I'd also really like a little trials bike... decisions, decisions.
Another thing I've given up on recently is the internet. I first starting using the 'net in 1997 and I must have spent months of my life on it since then. It got to the point where my computer use was affecting my family life so it had to stop. How did we manage before the 'net though eh? I've started to think of email as a millstone and I get stressed when I think of how many emails I must have stacked up in my inbox by now...and frankly I'm too scared to look.
Do you think it's a common trait of middle age that a bloke starts thinking of ripping the phone and broadband connections out of the wall in the (vain) hope that life would be more peaceful?
Anyway, got to go, the kids need their goodnight story: "And yet despite a break of 11 years children, Mike the Bike thought that he would once more attempt the TT races..."
GC