Really True Truths

By Ron Davis

August 2021 BMW Owners News magazine

Misinformation, disinformation, alternate facts, fake news... Isn't there anything we can regard as "true" anymore? And if so, where can you find some of this truthy-ness? Well, fortunately, I'm here, and you can trust me when it comes to truth-telling. Unfortunately, the only thing I know anything about is motorcycling. To borrow the immortal line from Spandau Ballet, I know this much is true...
  1. All motorcyclists will have at some time noticed that his or her turn signal has been on for the last five miles.
  2. All stock seats suck.
  3. That tickle you feel under your helmet? Yes, that's a spider.
  4. Attempting to explain "desmodromic" is never a good idea at a cocktail party.
  5. Coffee will always taste better around a campfire, a beer will always taste better after a 350 mile day.
  6. It will rain. It will be cold. It will be hot. It may even snow. However, you will often meet the nicest people while sheltering under an overpass, at a convenience store or at a wayside.
  7. It may take years to find a riding buddy who likes the same pace you do.
  8. No matter how many bikes or how many other brands are in the parking lot, BMWs will always get respect.
  9. No one has ever removed and then re-installed fairings and all the other plastic bits without discovering a bolt or screw left over.
  10. During four out of five stops for gas you will be approached by someone who will ask how you like your bike, where you are headed, etc., then tell you about their personal history with motorcycles. It will not be an unpleasant conversation.
  11. No, that driver doesn't see you.
  12. You will drop your bike.
  13. Somehow, taxes, title, prep, license, insurance and accessory costs never seem to come up when discussing the purchase of a new bike with your spouse.
  14. When you walk into work and it's ten degrees below outside, invariably someone will ask, "Ride the bike today?" (Thank you, Andy Goldfine)
  15. There are roughly 2,110 interpretations of the rules governing roundabouts.
  16. There is no such thing as a "universal motorcycle."
  17. Without fail, sometime, somewhere there will be a washout of sand, gravel or manure awaiting you just over the crest of the next hill.
  18. It's probably best to avoid using Jon Delvecchio's phrase "kissing the mirror" around those who haven't read his book.
  19. Two motorcycles are always better than one, three better than two, etc.
  20. You will only miss a shift, stall your bike or forget to put the sidestand up when other riders are watching.
  21. When adding an accessory to your bike, rarely will it install as easily or work as seamlessly as advertised.
  22. You will always have at least one close call whenever you decide it's too hot or too inconvenient for riding gear.
  23. You will forget motel rooms, you will remember campsites.
  24. When you stop for a sandwich, you'll always sit where you can see your bike.
  25. Drivers in turn-only lanes have a habit of choosing other options.
  26. You will only remember your ear plugs after your helmet is strapped on.
  27. Your gloves/boots/ear plugs/phone/keys will always be in the last place you look.
  28. Your panniers will never be quite big enough, nor will your garage.
  29. Tires will never last as long as you think they should.
  30. The number one motorcycle accessory is a cell phone.
  31. When Brian and Shira invite you on a ride, GO!!
  32. The only way to ensure you stay dry and warm when you ride is to have a really big garage.
  33. It is easier to replace a jacket than get a skin graft.
  34. Always wave at kids in the car next to you.
  35. Even if you have the Right of Way, don’t take it.
  36. Go around that puddle.
  37. That Edelweiss tour? If not now, when?
  38. Get off the Interstate.

Even More Thruth-y-ness!

By Ron Davis #111820

December 2021 BMW Owners News magazine


After I wrote a column called "Really True Truths" (BMW Owners News, August, 2021). It occurred to me that there is probably an unlimited number of additions that could be made to that list, including, "Sometimes the best 'Global Positioning System' is a five-dollar army surplus compass." Since the column was published, I received a number of suggestions for additions which seem just as "truth-y" as anything I wrote:

"You will forget chain motel rooms, you will remember mom-and-pop places. (Like Recapture Lodge in Bluff, Utah, and what is now the Stargazer Inn in Baker, Nevada.) - Randy Bishop #173517)

"Save everything! The week after you finally throw out that 20-year-old weird metal scrap, you'll realize it would serve perfectly as an improvised part or special tool." And "Abandon logic when looking for small parts you drop in the garage. Begin your search efforts in dark, impossibly distant crevices where you're absolutely certain they could never reach while in Earth's gravitational field." -Mark Barnes (#222400)

"No matter what you take, I suspect you'll be on either side of comfortable all day long." -Peter Egan (#224733), from a comment made by Allan Girdler while preparing for a multi-bike test trip.

"If not now, when?" recalled from an issue of Backroads Magazine ten years ago about a High Alps tour by Stephen Pittman IV (#201246). He wrote, "We went. Heck of a trip!"
He also added: Ken Hollis (#210019) had a few: "You will forget to zero the odometer at the last fuel stop and make a gloved attempt to dial it back while underway until you come to your senses as to the foolishness of the effort." - Stuart Stebbings (#197456)

"You will only get stuck in traffic when it's blistering hot or raining." And "You will always wonder what caliber the last bug strike was." - Steve Draher (#43819)

And of course, not to be outdone, Jack Reipe (#116117) graciously put down his negroni and shared some wisdoms from his most recent book: Thanks to all who sent kind comments and additions to my list!

Andy Goldfine, founder of Aerostich, called Ron Davis's book Shiny Side Up: Musings on the Improbable Inclination to Travel on Two Wheels "a delicious, perfect and honest book about a well-lived motorcycle life." It is now available in print, Kindle and Nook formats from most major booksellers.

Motorcycle Learnings


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