Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

2 fast 2 curious

07.31.2009 by David Murray // 4 Comments

IMG_2136 Riding a motorcycle on the Cabot Trail on Cape Breton on the northeast tip-top corner of Nova Scotia
is psychedelic near-madness.

I’m climbing on a winding coastal road, and before I can
lock the sights and other sensations into my memory, I’m tearing along through
high pine trees on top of the mountain.

What happened?

Slow down!

The bike is hanging on a wet switchback by its gears and
brakes and I’m having to dare myself to get out of second. Just as I begin to
trust the tires and myself, I’m flying through a lush valley and then down at
the water, cruising around an ocean cove.

And on and on like that, moment-to-moment for a few hours.

Don't try this at home—and definitely don't try it on the Cabot Trail.

And actually, all of motorcycling is like that. From inside
a car, you have time and detachment to see things and decide to remember them
and imagine how you’ll describe them when you get back home.

Whipping through the air on a motorcycle, there’s altogether
too much happening. All the senses are working at once. And working hard.

I see cows in the paddock but an argument ensues when my
nose swears it’s a pig farm.

I feel the cool before I smell the fish before I see the
lake.

It’s raining now, but the wind got heavier five minutes ago.

Buzz past a lawn, smell fresh grass clippings, ride through
rode construction, smell fresh dirt, pass a logging truck, smell the wood, ride
into town, smell for your lunch.

I couldn’t tell you what the Molson brewery in Montreal looks
like but I remember how it smells.

Pine fumes are such a powerful intoxicant that I worried
that if I was pulled over I would fail a sobriety test. (A Mountie spokesman reported
that the American was riding at three times the legal limit of exultation.)

The instantaneous deep heartwarmth of an occasional sunburst on a
cloudy day.

The quick whiff of wood smoke.

And the one you have to earn: the salty air of the Atlantic
Ocean.

Riding down a tiny asphalt path of a road so close to the
farms it seems we’re riding on them. The horse loam transforms the Triumph into
Taffy, the leather-mouthed orange pony that I rode when I was eight. I’m riding
her bareback, charging up hill and flying down dale and galloping, galloping,
galloping, desperately, angrily, joyfully. She thinks she’s running away with me. No, I’m running away with
her!

Because it is so overwhelming, riding a motorcycle is
constantly frustrating. I’m aware I’m taking in too much too fast and I realize
my billowing brain will leave me with few words, and only a useless
emotion-memory, impossible express to anyone who doesn’t ride and unnecessary
to explain to anyone who has.

"Couldn't you just slow down a little and savor it?" a friend asks. Umm ….

The only way to alleviate the anxiety and pain is to lump
all this infinite experience together and tell myself that I’ve seen it,
smelled it, heard it, felt it all before.

But if I do, I will dismiss the smell that I can’t assign.

“What is that?” I ask myself
in those words inside my helmet and I inhale deeply, twice and three times and
fill my chest with it and let it seep into me.

By process of elimination I finally recognize it as the
summer fragrance, encountered more frequently but less gratefully in my youth,
of happiness itself.

Categories // Murray Cycle Diaries

Comments

  1. Joan H. says

    July 31, 2009 at 12:52 pm

    I haven’t ridden a motorcycle more than a couple times in my life; but I’ve ridden in the basket of a dogsled, and on snow machines, and bicycles, and this piece brought back many memories. Cresting a hill on the dirt road back of where I grew up, I came upon a fox, as startled as I was by the encounter. Riding snow machines with my husband from Dawson City to Tok in -30 March cold, we rounded a bend and saw what looked like hundreds of snowballs bouncing on the road, until they took flight: a flock of winter-white ptarmigan. On one of my few motorcycle rides, behind my brother on an overburdened Honda 100, on yet another dirt trail, we came around a bend and a huge brown bear reared up on its hind legs, a giant beside us as we scrambled to restart the bike, which of course had stalled. Or the smells and sounds of camping–coffee brewing in fresh morning air.
    What an evocative story, David. Very nice.

    Reply
  2. David Murray says

    July 31, 2009 at 2:47 pm

    Right, Joan. Any time spent away from these wretched machines is potential yarn-making stuff.
    But: TWO OF YOU on a Honda 100 in bear country? You’d have been safer on skateboards!

    Reply
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