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The Kawasaki KMX 200 before being prepped for possibly it’s last ride if it broke down in the jungles of Cambodia or Thailand, could not be repaired and had to be abandoned. BAR FINED IN THE FIRST JUNGLE – Chiang Mai, Thailand The Cult Bike “No Stranger To Danger Expedition” was sexed on Loi Kroh Street, brought to a short time sputtering stop. On the eve of the planned departure the prepped Kawasaki KMX 200 was on a shakedown ride. A stop at BTS 2000 Travel office had the lady “Big Boss Boong” looking at the motorcycle and describing it as “sexy.” That was a new twist, a new description. To verify the description the bike was later parked on Loi Kroh where a flock of night doves swarmed around it. I asked one of the professionals surrounding it if she thought it was sexy. Her name was Pee. She answered, “Yes, sexy, very sexy. You handsome man. Where you from? What your name?” I answered, “My motorcycle is from Japan, the only one in Thailand. Me, I am from an Indian reservation in Montana, the only Big Indian Boom-Boom in Thailand. Do you want to go for a ride?” She laughed, then answered, “I work now, you pay my bar fine?” Laughing, I replied, “I no pay your bar fine. You pay bar fine for me.” The whole covey of doves were now laughing. I saw that Pee was confused though. I tried to help her understand what I was proposing. I explained the Kawasaki KMX 200 was known as the “Cult Bike” around the town of Chiang Mai and to members of the inner circle of motorcycle reprobates riding out of the Bat Cave operated by Wrong Way Rob. I told her it had been meticulously prepared over the previous month for a long and arduous expedition into the jungles along the Thai and Cambodia borders. I carefully explained that if she wanted to go for a short time ride for a little fun, she would have to pay for the pleasure, starting with 400 Baht ($25.00 USD) for taking the Cult Bike out, the same as the bar fine would be to take her out of the bar for a short time. I tried to help her understand that like her rice canoe, there were only so many times or kilometers the unit could be used before it became worn out, that prepared as it was, it was now in its prime. The rice canoe analogy she understood like all working professionals understand the letters A, T, and M. A deal was finally negotiated and the Cult Bike had the first of its many adventures, although it was more like a warm-up lap rather than a real race. As the Cult Bike was ridden out of the urban concrete jungle of Loi Kroh, it was followed by jealous cries from the tittering birds left behind. |
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The Expedition had started but a few hours later the 17 horsepower, high revolution engine sputtered and stopped, nearly out of gas. The Kawi, Pee and me were almost completely spent. Switching to stored power, a Reserve, we slowly came back to life. Limping to Loi Kroh and arriving at closing time the crowd cheered even though they could tell there was very little power and we were on the last dribbles of reserve. Good-byes were said and the 6:00 AM departure time next morning was rescheduled for several hours later. ATTACKED IN THE NIGHT – Thailand Jungle The first hours of riding next morning were uneventful, giving me time to reflect on the send-off I had received the night before. Fully loaded, the Kawasaki was happy at 90 kph, ripping along at 6,000-7,000 rpm. Every 80 k’s I would have to start looking for petrol because of the small gas tank but it would give me a nice break about once an hour. With six gears I was able to maintain my speed up hills and if I wanted to pass a truck or slower moving vehicle I could kick it down a cog and zip around. The 200-cc engine was performing flawlessly. This photo was taken at the first gas stop out of Chiang Mai. The Cult Bike and I would be on the road for at least the next three weeks. While neither it or I were new, in the luggage I carried what I planned to need traveling solo, without the benefit of a chase truck, mechanic or Kawasaki repair shop for the nearly 4,000 kilometers. I also had a pretty good stash of medical supplies knowing that in Cambodia hospitals are where people go to die, not get repaired. Forty kilometers after a 7/11 lunch and gas stop my gut started to rumble. My personal exhaust chute chugged and I knew things needed to be gotten rid of before I could reach the next pit stop. A tentative eruption from my bottom end caused me to pull off the road, barely get the side stand down and run for the bushes. I heard the Kawasaki fall over as I ran away but bowels moving were more important to me than turning around and picking it up. As I dashed into the bush I was pulling off my gloves, helmet, and trying to get out of my riding armor and my suspenders down. The twitches of my sphincter were seconds apart as I stumbled behind a tree, dropped my pants and squatted. I let go with a blast and groaned with relief. Then I felt something moving under my right boot. Wondering WTF? I looked down and saw my foot was on top of a snake that was withering, trying to get out from under my boot. I had pushed its head into the soft jungle. In my rush to get my colon cleared I had squatted before looking and now saw one meter of very mad Siamese or King Cobra inches from my exposed baby soft back end. A bite from one of these snakes can kill an elephant. I thought about doing the tough-guy thing, like slowing lifting my foot, grabbing the cobra behind the head and throwing it as far as I could. I chose to do the other manly thing: I screamed as I jumped up and forward as far as I could. There was nothing pretty about my get-away. When I landed it was head first and my pants were still below my knees. Rolling and thrashing two or three times I got as far away as I could before worrying about what might make me a eunuch or using toilet paper. I stood, pulled my pants up and hustled back to the downed motorcycle, not looking back to see where Mr. Snake was, just wanting to be out of the jungle, his turf, and back on the pavement, my turf. After using a hand full of cleansing wipes I got myself sanitized, then dressed. Picking up the motorcycle was my next chore. When I did I noticed there was no return spring pressure against the throttle. The plastic coupling to the carburetor and the oil injector had been jammed against the expansion chamber and melted. I was screwed. It was nearly dark when I started to work on trying to make something to connect the cables. Darkness fell and I tried working while using my flashlight, but nothing I cobbled together would work. Depressed, with no water and a pissed off snake somewhere nearby, I decided to push the bike to an abandoned sala (bamboo rest stop/ shop area) across the road and sleep there for the night, try to think through a fix for the cable and deal with it at first light. At least I would be off the ground a foot or two, hopefully above all animals that slithered. I slept in my clothes, wearing my helmet and gloves. It was cool where I was, somewhere above Phitsanulok. Sleep was fitful because I kept thinking about Mr./Mrs./Miss Pissed-off Cobra and whether they would cross the road looking for me or if it had friends on my side. Several times I heard animals moving through the bushes but when I turned on my flashlight I could see nothing and things would quiet down. Around 2:00 AM I awoke when I heard the motorcycle fall over. Sitting up I turned on the light and saw 10-15 pair of eyes looking at me from near the motorcycle. It had been pushed over by a group of monkeys, white-handed gibbons. They were trying to tear open the tank bag where I had left some uneaten cookies and chips that I had planned to eat for breakfast. I started to yell and run at the monkeys. They scattered, and then as I got closer to the motorcycle they started to circle me. I kicked at them, and they tried to grab me, hissing and yapping. Next we were in a pitched battle, them ducking in and out of my reach and me trying to kick them. They were quick little bastards, darting in and out, sometimes yanking at parts on the motorcycle, sometimes snatching at my pants. I finally connected with one of the slower ones and booted it about 10 meters away. As it flew, then landed it howled and screeched but stayed where it landed. The others backed away. I started to run at them and yell. It was a standoff. Finally they group melted into the bush and I was alone. The motorcycle had suffered some damage. The windscreen was cracked and the gas line had been ripped off and was missing. In the morning I would use the breather hose off the battery to replace the missing gas line, glue the crack in the windscreen, and fashion a connector for the throttle cable out of a piece of a soda can. I was back on the road by 8:00 AM, but it had been an ugly 15 hours at that toilet stop. As I rode I remembered what Prince Charles once said when asked what he had learned in his many travels, “ Always use a toilet when you see one.” Had I done that at my last gas stop I would have never met Mr./Mrs./Miss Pissed-off Cobra and its friends, the Nasty Monkey Clan. |
RING JOB IN THE LAND OF SMILES – Back to Thailand “Ring-ring-ring-ring-ring-ring” at 9,000 rpm, then “SCRUNCH!” Like an old farang (Western male tourist) experiencing coitus stop-us while mixing heart pills, Viagra, Mekong Whiskey and Chang beer with a 20-year old spinner on top, the Cult Bike’s heart stopped. The piston seized at 100 kph. The fix-job I had done on the carburetor and oil feed cable in the jungle days before had come loose and the oil was not mixing with the gas. That is OK in a four stroke engine, but was death to my two stroke pumper. My Zen could have been worse. The heart attack had happened 25 kilometers from Pattaya where Barry BBQ and I had booked rooms for the night. A friendly pick-up truck owner and his wife were happy to help me hump the Cult Bike into the back of their truck, carry us into town and drop us at the hotel. The Cult Bike gets a little rest the last kilometers into Pattaya. I felt a bit like a Harley-Davidson owner, my bike being in the back of a pick-up truck. But in my case it was more like a triumphant success parade after a long ride because I was sitting on the Cult Bike, keeping it from falling over. As we passed buses filled with tourists, truck drivers and cars of curious onlookers they would wave and I would wave back. We arrived at the hotel just as Barry BBQ drove his bike into the parking lot, almost exactly at our proposed ETA of 17:00. As he unpacked his BMW, alone and unattended, I had a crowd made up of motorbike taxi drivers, my pick-up driver and his wife, and three or four bar girls helping me unload mine, all yak-yaking in Thai. Everyone laughed as I showed them how the piston stopped going up and down by using my index finger on one hand poking in and out through my circled thumb and index finger on the other hand. It was like a small party, a “Welcome Home! Job Well Done!” celebration. Of all the places I had been stranded with broken motorcycles on the globe, one could say it could have been worse this time. On the flip side, I think the only place better would have been at the Kawasaki factory in Bangkok as the doors opened on Monday morning. Instead, I was broken down in what my Quaker relatives would surely call Hades. Those Quakers would probably think downtown Mexico City or Cairo would be better, but they had not been sleeping in jungles the last two weeks, attached by rabid monkeys, nearly run over by a tiger, hunted by two-legged dears or run off the road by numerous truck/bus/car drivers. As I tried to get over my depression of being stranded with a broken bike by strolling down Walking Street I concluded the Pattaya-Hades was similarly hot and humid, almost torrid, but far better than Cairo or Mexico City. After looking into several oasis’s on the Walking Street I decided the Cult Bike had stopped me in Pattaya for a reason: I needed to research this town, make a long, arduous and deep comparative analysis between it and Salt Lake City, Utah; Omaha, Nebraska; Delhi, India; Newark, New Jersey; and my home town of Yellowtail, Montana. Barry BBQ, like a good wingman, stayed to help me suffer through my funk. He found a quiet place near our hotel where I could seek solace for 50 baht ($1.30USD) an order. At 50 baht a cup he knew that I, as one of the three founding member of the North Thai Tea Drinking Society, one of the Drink Kings, could be consoled in this kind of setting. The above logo is that of the North Thai Tea Drinking Society, a secret motorcycle society. The members do not drink much tea, if any. Barry BBQ also knew that I needed to get my mind off the damaged melted rings, so started me thinking about a ring job. As I sat that first night, watching a live lesbian and body painting show, I could not get the horrors out of my mind. I knew I was in serious need of a ring job. I finally caved in into my needs and started asking around the bar if anyone knew where I could find someone one to do a ring job for me. Thankfully Barry BBQ spoke some Thai and the boss lady spoke some English. For what I would have to pay 100’s of dollars for back in the United States I was able to get my ring job done for far less in Pattaya. I got things up and running most efficiently and professionally at Wat Service, 20/123 Soi 17, a service I can highly recommend. On the down side, to get the full service I needed it was going to take more than a couple of days. Barry BBQ had to leave me getting my ring job and head for Chiang Mai. He had received notice that water was running out from under the locked door of his condo. As we stood in the hotel parking lot while he packed his BMW, I asked him how he was fixed for grays (1,000 baht notes), sensing the possibility that my ring job and the time needed for the associated work and research might leave me well spent before I could get out of town. Barry BBQ told me he had a few grays left, then said, “Dr. G, you’re a good GT Rider buddy, but remember what I wrote about money and people who borrow money on my blog (www.barrybbq.blogspot.com/2007/02/money.html) or did you forget already?” Shamed lower than truck flattened dog dung, I bent my head and looked down at my motorcycle boots. As I stared at them I remembered I had a couple hundred dollars hidden in the lining, my emergency stash. Life began looking up. While Barry BBQ was leaving me broken on the beach, Wrong Way Rob and his brother Cigar Man Mark were coming into town, and Joe was already there. All three are entertaining guys of tastes for delights that run from carnal to cigars with motorcycles being the glue holding us together. The No Stranger To Danger Ride had been a successful research project. As I monkishly shuffled back to the oasis Barry BBQ had found for me, the Oasis Go-Go, I reflected on the last weeks of being bar fined, nearly knocked off the Cult Bike by a tiger, in a fight with a gang of small gorillas, attacked by several flocks of doves, and here I was finishing up with a first for me, an extended ring job in Pattaya. The Cult Bike and I would soon be united and back on the road again. We would be doing more research for my new book, MOTORCYCLE SEXPEDITIONS – ABSOLUTE RIDING. Maybe the Cult Bike and I might even find a couple of adventuresome volunteer researchers along the way that do not prefer to look at elephants, paint their motorcycle, go to weddings or sail boats. (Photo by Barry Prom) [END] |
July 27, 2000, Going Out Again - 'Round The World October 4, 2000, Why Another Long Ride, The Plan, and Mr. Fish October 10, 2000, the beginning, in America on an Indian November 6, 2000, AMAZONAS-Tamed By Beasts in Brazil November 22, 2000, Monster Cow, Wolpertinger and Autobahn Crawling Across Europe December 22, 2000, Enfield 500 Bullet, India Motorcycle Dementia, Ozoned Harley-Davidsons and Gold Wings December 25, 2000, Yeti on a Harley-Davidson, Nepal By Enfield, No Carnet Sexpedition January 1, 2001, Haunting Yeti January 25, 2001, Monkey Soccer, Asian Feet, Air 'em Up: Bhutan and Sikkim February 12, 2001, Midgets, Carnetless, Steve McQueen on Enfield, Bangladesh February 20, 2001, Higgledypiggledy, Salacity, and Zymurgy - India March 20, 2001, Road warriors, sand, oil leaks - meditating out of India April 8, 2001, Bike Cops, Elephants, and Same-Same - Thailand May 1, 2001, Little Bikes, Millions of Bikes, Island Riding - Taiwan May 15, 2001, Harley-Davidson, Mother Road and Super Slabs - America June 8 , 2001, Crossing The Crazy Woman With A Harley-Davidson, Indian, BMW, Amazonas, Enfield, Hartford, SYM, Honda January 1, 2002, Donged, Bonged, and Gonged - Burma January 20, 2002, Secrets of The Golden Triangle - Thailand March 31, 2002, Bear Wakes, Aims Green Machine Around The World April 10, 2002, Moto Cuba - Crashes, Customs and El Jefe (Fidel) May 20, 2002, Europe and The Roads South to Africa June 10, 2002, Morocco Motorcycling, Thieves and Good Roads July 30, 2002, Russia – Hard and Soft, By Motorcycle August 30, 2002, USA – American Roadkill, Shipping Bikes and BIG DOGS September 30, 2002, Good Times Roll Home, Riding With Clothes On, Team Green - USA November, 2002, Mexico By Motorcycle - Gringos, Little Norman Bad Cock, and Bandits March 2003, Laos by motorcycle - Guerrillas, Mekong Beering, and Plain of Coffins July, 2003, Alaska by motorcycle – Deadhorse, Fish Story and Alaskan Bush January 2004, Angkor, Bombed Out Roads and Dog Eaters - Cambodia April, 2004, Minsking, Uncle Ho and Snake Wine August 2004, Around The World Again, 1st Tag Deadhorse February 2005, Colombia To The End Of The Earth - South America January 2006, My Marriage, Long Strange Ride, Montana Nights May 2006, Cherry Girls, Rebels, Crash and Volcano - Philippines September 2006, Break Bike Mountain Ride – United States March 2007, Kawasaki Cult Bike “No Stranger To Danger Expedition” - Thailand and Cambodia November 2007, Lone Wolf Wanders: Bears, Moose, Buffalo, Fish April 2009, Global Adventure Roaming: Burma through the USA to headhunters on Borneo February 2010, Adventure Motorcycle Travel: Expedition to Alaska, then Java May 2013, The World Motorcycle Adventure Continues | ||
Copyright © Dr. Gregory W. Frazier 1999- All Rights Reserved.
Thoughts and opinions expressed here are those of the author, and not necessarily Horizons Unlimited
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