Monday, April 13, 2015

The Last Run to Castle Rock

It started out as a simple three day campout for the guys, the destination being the Flat Track Races at Castle Rock, Washington, on their half mile dirt track outside of town on the Toutle River.  We didn’t know it then, of course, but it was the last race ever to be held at that track.  Mt. St. Helens blew up the next spring and wiped out the track, the river, a bunch of trees and quite a few people.
It was a mostly Harley crowd on this run, Dude on his ’69 Sportster, me on my purple ’71 FLH, Jerry on his knucklehead chopper, Bill on his 45 trike and Butch on his Toms’ Cycle Yamaha 650 chopper.  In those days, we always had a chase truck along, in this case Bill’s old ‘52 Dodge pickup, driven by Magoo, a good thing, as it turned out. You could become a biker pretty cheaply back then, but the price was the lack of dependability that comes from running used, worn-out parts because it was all we could afford.
We jumped off from Jerry’s place on the plateau above Graham, which is a short skip to the Orting-Kapowsin Highway that leads south past Lake Ohop to Eatonville.  From there, you have a choice of the Eatonville cutoff or the long way through LaGrande, both of which lead to Highway 7, the Mountain Highway.  From there, all roads lead to Morton, as it should be.
You can leave Morton in 4 directions.  Take a right on Main Street and you will find yourself on State Highway 508, a lovely winding country road (after you get past the pig farm) that rolls into Chehalis on the south side by way of Onalaska.  Or you can go back the way you came on Highway 7, which stops at Morton, as if to say, “I’ve got you this far, you’re on your own now.”  But we try to never go back.
The other two ways out are east or west on Highway 12.  East takes you up the hill through Randle and Packwood to White Pass and the road to Yakama.  West, the way we went that day, heads toward the distant ocean via another fine country road.  Two lane blacktop is where it’s at.  We turned off and headed south on what is now called the Jackson Memorial Highway, named after a Senator who was not dead yet then, but now nobody remembers the original name of the road.  Still, that is where we turned, because it leads to Toutle, and thence to Castle Rock, our destination.
We had made reservations at the Weyerhaeuser primitive campground somewhere out by Silver Lake.  We had planned to be there by early afternoon, but the Harley Gods frowned down on us, specifically the Knucklehead, which popped, sputtered and died on the side of 12 outside Morton.  The curse of the Milwaukee Vibrator caused the points to loosen up inside the distributor until the gap widened all the way.  It took us a while to find the problem and fix it by resetting the points with a matchbook cover (.018” thick) and back on the road we went.  So we rolled into camp late, as usual, set up in the dark, and then rode back to the nearest country tavern for dinner and beer, lots of beer.
There’s a task, a quest, if you will, to which I set myself years ago, that continues to this day.  That is the search for the best biscuits and gravy in the country.  So far, I think it’s the Tastee Freeze in Laurel, Montana, and Marty says there’s a place in Missouri that fills the bill, but you can’t rightly say until you’ve ate at them all, now, can you?  So the next morning we took the quest into Castle Rock on our Harleys, with disappointing results.  For one thing, the town was packed to the gills for the event, an AMA sponsored national short track event that drew the likes of Jay Springsteen and all the good local boys who came out to take him on that day.  There were exactly two bars in downtown Castle Rock in those days.  In one of them, one of the 1%er clubs placed a large prospect at the door who informed all comers that patch holders got in free, but anyone else had to pay a joint at the door cover charge.  Needless to say, the 50 or so patch holders for the various clubs who were in town and not at war with each other at the time had a pleasant, relaxing day in uncrowded surroundings, while the landlord cried in his beer and the other place in town was jammed, standing room only and hope for a drink.  That got old fast and we headed for the track.
There’s something about the noise at a flat track race.  Most of the bikes in the top classes were Harley XR 750s, with the occasional Norton and the Honda copy of the XR that wasn’t ready for prime time yet, so the sound was a hornet’s nest of short stroke Sportsters at full song.  As the pack hits the turn, the volume goes up as they pitch the bikes sideways and spin the rear wheel while jamming the steel shoe into the ground to form the tripod, and drops as they straighten up and fling themselves onto the seat to get the tire to bite and throw them at the century mark again.  Oh, yeah, and the track sold beer by the large plastic cup.  By the time the Finals come around, the crowd was roaring.  The smell of testosterone competes with the smell of the Castrol in the fuel tanks.
Then, suddenly, it’s dark, the race is over, and the grassy field that surrounds the stands is full of motorcycles, thousands of them, the owners of which are streaming out the doors full of beer, with that noise echoing in their heads.
I’m standing by my bike, looking around at chaos.  Over there, a man is using a Bowie Knife blade tip to scoop large doses of either cocaine or methamphetamine out of a plastic bag and hold them under the noses of all in their party, spilling visible amounts on the ground in the process.  Over there a woman is screaming, a man is trapped under a fallen bike while around them swerve a steady stream of sportbikes all jammed together as twelve lanes form two on the only road to the freeway, visible in the distance.  All you see in any direction is headlights on chrome, all you hear is engines and all you smell is exhaust.
The promoters of the event, knowing full well what they have unleashed on the highways, and experienced in the crowd control needed for it, have arranged a little scenario on the side of the onramp in a well lit location that every single rider must pass on the way out.  A motorcycle, a four cylinder Japanese sportbike, lays on its side on the shoulder.  Parallel to it, but a few feet further on, is a figure in racing leathers and helmet lying flat on his back, apparently dead.  A few people are standing around, their faces betraying their helplessness to do anything for the poor guy, but they approach anyone who attempts to stop and render aid and urgently send them on their way.  The figure on the ground is a mannequin, and the intent is to penetrate the testosterone with a splash of cold water before the racing fans hit the freeway.  It certainly worked on me.
Our group had run into several of the Zudmen, and were yacking and telling stories while we waited for the zoomie bikes to get out of the lot first.  It’s always better to have the wheelie boys in front of you far enough so you have time to avoid the chaff.  It was only after they fired up and left, while we waited for stragglers, that Dude noticed that Dragon Lady had dropped her purse on the ground on the way out.  That put us in the position, of course, that we had to catch up with them, and all we knew was they were going to form up at the next rest area to the south.  So off we flew, into the dark night with our dim headlights and no real idea where this was gonna end and how, with a belly full of beer for courage.  Magoo and Bill took the truck and the trike back to camp, knowing better than to try to keep up with us, which turned out to be bad, because the Knucklehead finally died on the side of the road somewhere near Woodland, and refused to be revived this time.
JB and I wound up sitting in a raised brick flower bed outside a closed restaurant off some nameless off ramp for hours while we waited for the rest of them to go back to camp, wake Bill, and send him along in the truck to pick up the Knuck.
The morning cook came along in the wee hours and took pity on us and gave us some coffee.    We ran out of cigarettes about half way through.  Then we watched Bill drive by on the freeway twice before he figured out we had to be this way.  By the time we got back to camp, they had drunk all the beer, so we hit the hay.  We never did find that rest area.
The next morning we headed back the way we came, with the knucklehead, which had a long wide glide front end with a 21” wheel and no front brake, sandwiched into the back of the 1952 Dodge stepside pickup with the frame resting on the tailgate and the front tire down by the bumper, tied in with rope.
About 15 miles outside Toutle the frame on the Yamaha broke at the front motor mount.  It turns out the boys at Toms Cycle just butted the frame tubes together at the bracket with no slugs or fillets to give it the strength needed in that critical area, so it broke.  Mr. Murphy said it broke on the side of the road.  So into the back of the Dodge went the Yamaha, stuffed in next to the Harley with more rope.  Good thing we had lots of rope.
A few miles further up the road, the 45 trike burned a hole in a piston.  That poor little thing, which I later took over and restored back to stock, had been struggling all day to keep up with the big boys.  A flathead 45 trike puts out about 9.44 SAE net horsepower at the rear wheel in stock form, and this one had big meats on the back because they looked cool.  When I took that rear end apart, the extra weight and inertia of the big tires had been wearing away at the end of the axle inside the differential and when those little C-rings fail the axle, wheel and brake drum squirt out the side as you go around a corner and drop you on your ass.  Good thing it only holed a piston.
Fortunately, the trike also had a long front end, which we simply lifted over the tailgate and stuffed it in between the two prior residents, held in with even more rope.  It turned out the trike did fine like that, just a little squirrely in the corners and don’t stop too fast.
So there we were, three bikes in the back of a ’52 Dodge, and four guys to fit into the cab of a truck made for two.  We rested in the long grass on the side of the highway and debated how to choose who got to ride passenger with me and who got to ride in the back with the bikes.  Then, wonder of wonders, who should show up but the girls!  Three of them, in fact, mine, JBs and Magoos, in Barbs car.  They had decided to trace our route and see if they could catch up with us on the return trip, and it worked.  Not only that, but they brought us a picnic lunch, and more beer!

And so it was that another memorable adventure ended up on the side of the road, this time with sweethearts, sandwiches and beer to wash down another good one.  Somewhere, I’ve got pictures.  :-{)}

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