Apocalypse Rally, part4; Garage Sale

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nocattle
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Joined: Sun Oct 22, 2006 3:58 am
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Apocalypse Rally, part4; Garage Sale

Post by nocattle »

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Reminder that the 2009 Apocalypse Scooter Club is hosting it's 4th annual scooter rally July31-Aug3 in Calgary Alberta, Canada kicking off with an evening of Ska bands at the Ironwood Bar and Grill so polish your dance shoes and practice snapping your braces.

For detailed info see our website. There are events, prizes, a raffle, and of course group rides.

We have rally packs available for $20, which includes rally shirt, patch, cassette audio tape of scooter music and various assorted goodies.

Billeting for out of town guests is still available.

For the 2009 ApocalypseSC Garage Sale Rally we will be keeping all of our rides in Calgary. The nature of a Garage Sale theme is for us to hit up a few garage sales during our rides. We cannot plan our routes exactly as the sale addresses won't be published until that weekend. Our itinerary posts our firm destinations but some mid-ride garage sale stops will be on done the fly.

As always our arrival/departure times are merely approximate. Do not be upset if the group rides are running a little behind in getting there or leaving..

If you get lost or separated from the group, or if you want to meet up mid-ride, or if you break-down, or need an escort to find and deliver you, CALL. There are a few phone contacts in your rally pack numbers of local ASC members who should know what is going on and how to find the assistance you require. If there is no answer, please be patient. We won't answer the phone when in mid-ride or if otherwise engaged with a beautiful girl. Your phone call will be returned asap.

We will not be following the group with an emergency vehicle. Should you need a tow, the ASC has access to a few different trailers/trucks and can come rescue you eventually. There are members carrying a minimum of tools,zip ties, coathangers, and we can get you gas, air or a jumpstart if needed. Please don't abuse this service.

I've seen all sorts of group riding styles. Some focus on safety, some on craziness. You don't have to be either extreme. For what it's worth, these are ten rules that make my group-ride-time enjoyable...

#1 follow the leader. Leaders can change/rotate but everyone follows the leader. Usually the slowest bike leads, or a bigger bike rides slow.
#2 Everyone should ride in staggered formation, especially around curves. Otherwise if somebody drifts from their line, it is a dangerous situation.
#3 stay as a group. Give space to who you are following but don't lag behind giving too much room. Leader will and must listen for the horns of those caught behind at a light or whatever. The group ahead pulls over and waits for those left behind to catch up.
#4 plan the route. At the very least tell everyone the destination. When this is not done you might loose riders and piss folks off.
#5 Stop-go-stop-go isn't fun. It might seem like great promotion to ride down Main Street, waving at everyone, but it's not a fun ride stopping at all the lights. Curves and hills with fewest stops and changing scenery make it fun. Sometimes it leads through residential or countrysides.
#6 Keep left turns to an absolute minimum. Lead the group straight when you can, turn right when you can't go straight. This aids the group to stay as one and should make for longer periods between stopping.
#7 use blockers. Most rides in the west use blockers when it is safe to do so. When entering or crossing an intersection, one blocks traffic from the left, one blocks traffic from the right, so that the group can proceed as a whole. There is no reason to come to a complete stop if the blockers are doing their job. The idea is to not put the ride in a dangerous situation. Don't block major intersections, emergency service vehicles, and especially cops.
#8 On occasion an impatient car will butt themselves into the middle of a group. No matter what, never react in anger. The scooter directly in front of the car slows to a snail pace, so either the car changes lanes and the group is back together, or the group behind can scoot around the offender to rejoin the group.
#9 No stunting. When you're in a group, everyone's safety depends on nobody loosing control. No jumps, no wheelies, keep hands on the handlebars and watch what you're doing. Beware of foxy short skirts and the huge potholes they distract you from.
#10 Understand scooters as opposed to other bikes. Scooters are primarily urban vehicles with limited power. Air-cooled vintage bikes are best with varied speeds. They require air flow to keep running, yet don't enjoy long periods of full throttle either. 4stroke 50cc's physically can't keep the race pace. The inner city is naturally the best scootering environment.

As always, you are responsible for your behaviour. You are legally obligated to have valid license, insurance, registration and to follow the Hwy Traffic Act. The ApocalypseScooterClub is not going to be your bitch.

Please patron our generous sponsors.

Questions? Please reply to korhag@yahoo.ca and I'll get back at you.

sincerely, Kory Haggert
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Angelo
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Post by Angelo »

Kory, thanks for posting this. There is so much knowledge here. I would hope that everyone read this a few times.
�Long live vintage motorcycles that are too tough to die...�

- Dustin Kott-
nocattle
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Joined: Sun Oct 22, 2006 3:58 am
Location: calgary

Post by nocattle »

Just between you and me, to be honest it's a bit of a do as I say, not an as I do post. Or what we do. Daaren is allowed to ride standing up with no hands. And I can't promise to not squirt gun folks while riding. But I'm glad it's helpful.

Over the last year I've tried to take a few clues from experience. Seeing what other clubs are doing, and done.

There are different group riding styles preferred by different people. Some keep the destination as the focus, taking the main streets directly as if riding in a car. I feel it's more fun to take the longer winding road less travelled because I'm on my scooter enjoying the bike and the ride.

I think the riding is the lowest common denominator at a scooter rally. I don't care if I'm chatting to Angelo and Shannon at the greatest Fish/Chip Shop in all Alberta or at some dive bar. As long as we have a great ride together with other scooterists.

Plan9 rally taught me a lot. And the Edmonton Crudes in general. We have very different clubs. But your mistakes were lessons learned. And what you guy did really well were noticed.

I totally get why a ride way down to the lake was thought of as a good idea at the time. A 200-250cc automatic would have no issues. And that's why I like my GT200. But a ride like that treats a scooter like a motorcycle of much larger displacement. Which is fine, to be out in the sun, riding someplace nice, but that's not why I choose scooters OVER motorcycles. A bike, any bike, is way more fun when being pushed (not literally) to it's limits. Better to zig, zag and zip full throttle on a small bike then go quarter throttle on a big bike. Unless you're on 12" wheels you won't get that feeling of flickability. (Of which I'm sorry Angelo but my ET2 still has flickable in spades over the long Lammy). And that's just a matter of understanding the bikes. (BTW, the Lammy has it's own charm that the ET2 lacks)

Can I just say that residential traffic circles are the best thing to happen to scootering ever. I go out of my way to hit them. The tighter and slower the speed the better. Full on fun.

I was talking to a few folks at Plan9 about rides. We ride twice/week in Calgary so we have some experience of what works and what doesn't. The demographic of the club really aids the frequency of our riding as Noel seems to be the only active member with kids. We went for a really quick ride through some twisties trying to beat the rain one night and Rummy (Ryan from Ed) remarked that it was the best ride ever. It was one mile long!

But Crude City seems to do some things really well. I really appreciated the escorting back to where I was staying. That was totally awesome.

And your workshops that John puts on posts about seem really helpful. I'm learning my modern Vespas through trial and error. Getting there. I would have much better success of finding personal help with a P-series. This is why I'm leaving my Lammy to be worked on be Daaren. Seems an awful fickle beast and I can't afford to screw-it-up.

No wonder your scooters are all so pretty. Even painting it up as a tribute to Kiss, lol. At least Calgary has the Jaguars. AceFace Sting to our Apocalypse Jimmy. lol.

If Calgary had filmed Quadrophenia, an Apocalypse member would have climbed down the cliff and rode home on the remains. Cause there wasn't really anything wrong with it. It was only a 100ft drop. Nothing a ball hammer, coathangers and black krylon couldn't fix.
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jbcollier
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Post by jbcollier »

Cory,

I am coming down just for the Saturday. I am going to leave bright and bouncy and be there for breakfast at your place. Is it possible to park for the day near your place a Volvo station wagon and a small trailer?

Thanks,

John
nocattle
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Location: calgary

Post by nocattle »

Yes, My address is listed in the itinerary and I have two street parking passes as needed. Only two. I doubt bikes will need them, but your car will.

There is a free public parking between the bridge and the ice cream store. And if you don't know where that is, you will when you get here. 1 block away and a short walk. You might prefer that. You decide.
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jbcollier
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Post by jbcollier »

Free parking = good.

One block which way? North, south, east west?

Thanks,

John
nocattle
Posts: 109
Joined: Sun Oct 22, 2006 3:58 am
Location: calgary

Post by nocattle »

if you come here You'll see the ice cream store cause this is a one way. lol
But north
Beside the river (where the bridge goes over) lol
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jbcollier
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Post by jbcollier »

Great! Thanks Cory.

Can someone please tell Daaren that I desperate to see his ss90?
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jbcollier
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Post by jbcollier »

Thank you Calgary. I had a great time. Enjoy the rest of your rally!
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