First we drove around the area while Mike pointed out many of
the sights
(yawn) and then we twisted the throttles and headed south.
With no
itinerary or map and no timetable we had only to find a place
to sleep
each night. We rode to the Ohio river and stopped at the town
of
Ripley. There we stayed in an old house run by Glenn and his
wife,
Whatshername. We had to share a very large room with several
beds.
Mike snored so loudly that the Sheriff came by twice to see if
someone
had smuggled a steam locomotive up to the second flow of the
150 year
old house.
Glenn and
whatshername run the place and Glenn has had
several
careers. Each one pretty well ended when he told he boss to
"shove
it". Glenn has had his ups and downs with boarding guests
and every
once in a while he has to tell someone to "shove
it". Actually, almost
all of Glenn's stories ended up with him telling somebody to
"shove
it". Mike wrote the line down, planning to use it in the
future. Since
this was the first time that Mike's new bike had slept
outdoors by
itself, Glenn agreed to let Mike haul down all the mattresses
in the
place and put them around his bike (and Eric's) in case they
got sleepy
and fell over. (See picture.)
We ate at a typical Ohio river diner. Everything was fried,
including
Marty the cook who was on his third bottle of Sloe Gin for the
day. It
was good cookin'.
Next morning we set out after Glenn and whatshername cooked a
breakfast
of all the sugar they had in the house. Whatshername wore a
dust rag on
her head so Mike would not make fun of her bald spot. (See
picture)
We rode off to the general good wishes of the towns literate
souls, both
of them. Most of our days were spent just riding around, back
and forth
across the river. After a while Eric got tired of swimming
across
carrying his bike so he finally sprung for the $2 to cross on
the ferry.
(See picture of Mike asking the captain if he can sit at his
table for
dinner.)
We really didn't have any mishaps except when we drove off
road to
investigate a covered bridge. We road those 800 behemoths up
the side
of a mountain to a spot that was all loose gravel and slanted.
Eric
eventually tipped his bike over (no harm) and Mike helped him
by
laughing for about an hour.
In Marietta, Ohio we spent the night at the Buckley house
where Mike
tried to push Eric's bike over while parked in the front. (See
picture) Once again, there was only one bedroom available and
it was
rented only after Eric took out a full page ad in the Marietta
Gazette
to proclaim for the 4th time on the trip that he and Mike were
NOT GAY!
During the night, many of the fabled church bells of Marietta
were sent
to ringing by the incessant and mighty snoring of Mike
Bernier. The
owners claimed several thousand dollars of structural damage
due to the
racket.
We rode extensively through the back roads of West Virginia
and
experienced many days of fine riding. Mike, ever the
gentleman,
exercised a pick-up line on several of the WV beauties that he
encountered on the back roads. He would smile nicely then
compliment
them. "Nice Tooth!" he would say.
We stayed a night at a very nice house in WV where the lady
that cooked
and sent us to our rooms was name (maiden name) Connie
Williams! It was
the house where she grew up and Eric slept in that room and
Mike slept
in the other end of the house. But that night Eric was again
awakened
by loud snorts and snores even though Mike was far away behind
several
closed doors. Every time he would drift off into a sound sleep
that
damned snoring would start up again and wake him up. (It was
so loud
that even after Eric returned home to FL, Mike's snoring still
would
wake him up on occasion.)
In the morning Connie took a picture of
Mike and Eric before they roared
off. (See picture.) However, her camera was very old and poor
and it
made Eric look overweight and less handsome than in real life.
Some of the riding was in the rain and Mike finally had a
chance to try
out his thousand dollar rain suit. Several truckers whistled
at him and
asked if he knew Ralph Lauren personally.
In Pleasant Point WV we stumbled into a real fine dining
establishment.
Us with dirty jeans, tee shirts, helmet head hairdos, and road
odor.
They gave us their finest table. I would never have dreamed
that they
reserve a table by the dumpster for dignitaries but that's
what they
said.
We traveled as far east as Wheeling where we toured a gallery
of WV art
objects. Eric bought a glass vase and Mike talked a girl out
of a free
bottle of water.
We ended up back at Mike's house with about a thousand miles
in saddle
and some very pleasant times. We both agreed we will pick a
different
part of the US next year and attack it. You are all invited.
Recording Secretary, Class of 66 Adult Events Committee