Well.... my riding experiences started at a very young age as our family transport was an outfit... thumper + double adult chair.
various thumpers and various chairs...all made by my Dad, but the memory i'll share today goes this way.......(It might get boring.. )
i'm 12, my mother had died 2 years previously, and i had a pretty good relationship with my Father... so, wherever we went it would be in the outfit. The outfit at this time comprised a 1936 500cc (Marston) Sunbeam and a single seat homemade chair. The old fella had 3 'beams at the time couple of 350 s/v's and the ohv 500, he rebuilt them himself and they were always very well turned out. (It is strange now i think about it.... the 'beams were 20 years old at the time Dad rebuilt them [which, at the time I thought was amazing].... the SRX's i now play with are 25 years old! )...ok.... so...It's 1956... summer... and me and Dad are off to the lake district on the 'beam... me map reading in the chair (the old fella had rigged up intercom... throat mics and earphones) i remember we toured the lake district for 10 days doing B&B's, was great fun... setting off home on the Friday morning (i was due to leave for scout camp on the Saturday) quite suddenly the outfit started to struggle on the hills, finally grinding to a halt 10 miles from windermere....
I learn't a few new words (Dad was a great swearer) .. he quickly established that the clutch had burned out... not good news...
A fairly comprehensive tool kit was kept in the chair, so roadside repairs were not a problem... first we had to unload the sidecar then unbolt it from the chassis and lift it off, as it was the only way to get clear access to the primary chaincase and clutch.... that sidecar was blummin heavy for a 12 year old!... while the old man was sitting on the chassis dismantling the clutch an AA man on his 350 beeza + boat box chair hauls up (yes... i think the old man was a founder member of the AA!) a long discussion took place as to the best approach to getting back on the road, it transpires that the AA man knew a Sunbeam owner in Windermere, so he'd head off and see if he had any spare clutch plates. In the meantime the clutch was removed and the corks (yup, actual corks, about 1/2 inch in diameter 20 or 30 to a plate, 4 or 5 plates) what was left of them, popped out. hour and a half later the AA man returns followed by the local sunbeam owner on a solo 350. No... he hadn't got any spare plates and the 350 plates wouldn't fit.... but... his friend was a chemist in windermere and he could get the required number of corks of the correct size (once the length had been reduced) from him... it just remained for the corks to be boiled so that they could be eased into the holes in the plates.... so off went the Sunbeam owner to get the corks, out came the primus stove and billy can, and was pleasantly boiling by the time a bag load of corks arrived, appropriately trimmed and boiled the plates were populated with corks accompanied with a lot of swearing and blowing of fingers by Father, AA man and Good samaritan. ( it took 3 lots of boiled corks, over 2 hours) the plates were then levelled off on some sandpaper and the clutch re'assembled.... it was then realised that 1 plate would have to be left out as the whole lot was too thick with the new corks. Adjusted up as best as possible everything was put back, primary chaincase oiled up... chair back on (AA man did my bit!).. loaded up... thankyou and goodbyes to Good samaritan Sunbeam man... and a promise by the AA man that he'd stay with us for 50 miles to see us out of the lake district.
We'd been by the roadside for 7 hours... and I don't remember us eating or drinking... i think we must have done.... with the AA man behind us we were making good progress when to old man came on the intercom and said 'you know in all probability we'll have to stop and put in the extra clutch plate'.... whatever you say dad!... it's now 7 in the evening.... and would be dark when we got to fit it!
well, at some stage i must have fallen asleep.... woke up at gerards cross about midnight, we'd stopped at a caff, and i remember having a coffee and a pork pie, and the old man saying he thought the clutch would hold out.... set off fairly quickly for our Surrey home, and arrived a 4am.... the old man looked knackered (i guess he'd have been about 50, and pretty fit at the time) bushed as he was... he had me up at 8 and packed and ready for scout summer camp.... I'm pretty sure that it was this and other adventures we had that gave me my optimism and 'stickability'.... at no time did it occur to him to give up ... not in his nature.
Oh... and for the first 2 days of Scout camp i was sick as a dog..... i blamed that gerrards cross pork pie... i avoid gerrards cross to this day!.