Tuesday, November 27, 2018

Holiday Traffic


Connecticut Polar Bears in Hopewell, NJ, from left: Fonz, Grumpy, Captain, Mac and Pogy down front.
Motorcycle Polar Bear Blog, Polar Bear Grand Tour, ride to Hillbilly Hall, Hopewell, NJ, November 25, 2018

Report by: Pogy
Photos by: Grumpy and Fonzie


All agreed to an early departure anticipating heavy holiday traffic on the return flight – Ride started at 0800 in Stratford picking me up at about 0820.  There were 5 of us, Fonz in the lead, then the Captain, Mac, Grumpy and I fell In as sweep.  The ride down was little traffic and we decided to stop at a diner before signing in -  after chow we motored a short distance to the Hillbilly hall arriving just in time to sign in – 

We were back on the road but 1150 – fueled up and proceeded north.  Fonz took us thru some interesting countryside – it looked like if we came sooner we would have encountered some flooded roads – just an observation!

Made pretty good time until we got about 9 miles from the Tap bridge – Lots of Hand, eye, and toe coordination – finally made it over the bridge and we followed the leader on to the Hutch – we no sooner got on it when Fonz, the Captain and Mac decided to make another right – I was thinking that they decided to cut over to 95 and not really knowing what was going on , myself and Grumpy decided to stay on 15.  Traffic was heavy right thru Stamford and then opened up.

Later I talked to the Captain only to find out that when we got on the Hutch they pulled over for a pee break – Grumpy and I had no clue

In the end it was a nice day and a good ride 

See you all next week
Ride safe
Pog





Fonzie, the Polar Rican!







Wednesday, November 21, 2018

Mouse Surprise



By: CT Blogger

What you're seeing in the photo here is a mouse nest. I keep my motorcycle in an unheated garage. With the Harley restoration complete, the Honda ST was parked in the back. The last time I rode it was May. But with our first snow of the season here in Connecticut, the Harley is now benched until spring. Once they started spraying those white lines of magnesium-chloride on the road, I vowed the Harley would never again be exposed.

When I rolled the ST out into the driveway to swap its space in the garage with the Harley, a little grey field mouse dropped out of the Honda and ran away.

When I rolled the ST out it was dragging. Turns out the rear brake caliper was hung up. I took the bike out for a test ride and the back rotor got hot. After consulting with my mechanic Dave at Sound Motor Sports, he advised me to whack the caliper. "Sometimes when I pick up a bike that's been stored, people think I have issues because they see me kicking the wheels. Actually I'm just kicking the calipers to loosen them," Dave said.

To get the bike to Dave, I whacked the caliper with a block of wood and hammer. It worked.

Next I checked the tire pressures. The ST has a label with recommended tire pressures under the seat. So I pulled the seat and tucked neatly in the storage space above the rear fender I found the mouse nest. Unfortunately mice urinate in their own nests. It stunk! I think mouse pee dripped down the drain hole in the fender and onto the caliper.

I Windexed the heck out of everything and rode the bike down to Fairfield. Dave changed the oil, air filter, brake fluid and greased the caliper sliders. All is well and I'm looking forward to a few Polar Bear rides on my now road-ready Honda ST 1100.

Meanwhile, I'll pull the leather saddlebags off of the Harley this weekend and store them in the basement over the winter. I set a few mouse traps and will also use Pogy's suggestion of hanging a bag of mothballs off the bike when it's parked.

Easy Journey

Vineland, NJ, 5-Points, CT Polar Bears, from left: Captain, Grumpy and Pogy.
Motorcycle Polar Bear Blog, Polar Bear Grand Tour, ride to DeThomasi's East 5 Points Inn, Vineland, NJ, November 18, 2018.

Report by: Pogy
Photos by: Grumpy

Morning started off at 37 Degrees – Departure was at 0800 from Stratford so I left for the pickup point at the same time – When I got picked up at 0820, there was Grumpy and the Captain – So it was a  party of 3 to Vineland, New Jersey. Chris called the night before and said that he had a slight fall and he would not be able to join up and we didn’t hear from Mac or the Fonz

Grumpy took lead with the Captain as tail gunner – I made up the sandwich !  The ride down was without incident and very little traffic to speak of –we got off of the NJT at exit 7 - we arrived just a little after 1100 – the buffet was already set up so we enjoyed the spread and back on the road by 1145 – we had to stop briefly because grumpy had a red light on his instrument cluster -  MOM (Motorcycle Owners Manual) said it was a head light issue – so we moved out

Didn’t have the opportunity to ask Grumpy on the way back but we had a GPS glitch or a human error glitch – took the wrong path of travel and ended up about 25 miles out in the wrong direction – ended up getting on the NJTNPK at exit 3 – But no worries – it was a nice road and a clear day and again – not to much traffic to speak of 

As always – thanks for the ride and the comradery 

See you next week – destination – The Hillbilly Hall












Thursday, November 15, 2018

Hammer Time?

CT Polar Bears in Bridgewater, NJ, from left Captain, Anonymous Ed (look hard, it's like where's Waldo) and Grumpy.
Down front, this week's reporter, Pogy.
Motorcycle Polar Bear Blog, Polar Bear Grand Tour, ride to the Eagles, Somerset Aerie #2137, Bridgewater, NJ, November 11, 2018

Report by: Pogy
Photos by: Grumpy


This was our third ride of the season – it was a late departure (0930) so it gave everyone the opportunity to eat breakfast at home and get some honey doos done before the ride.  

I got picked up at the rest stop just at 0950 – The Captain was in the lead, anonymous Ed was in second place and I fell in third position with Grumpy as sweep.  Needless to say it was an interesting ride down – it was obvious to all that the Captain really ate his Wheaties cause he was very heavy on the throttle and very anxious to get to our destination – at times he went past the 75MPH mark but in the end he got us to our destination just in time to eat a nice spread put on by the Eagles – and decompress!

Our ride back was not as exciting as going down with only a few bursts of throttle here and there – One observation during the roundtrip – I saw 11 road kills – there may have been more but it is obvious that its that time of year for the deer – 

So Captain, we still love ya and look forward to seeing the crew again next week – destination 5 points

Ride safe 
Pog














Tuesday, November 13, 2018

A Loooong Ride Strains Discipline

Connecticut Polar Bear Riders in Lewes, from left: CT Blogger, Captain, Jorge, Mac, Grumpy and Pogy down front.

Polar Bear Motorcycle Blog, Polar Bear Grand Tour, ride to Irish Eyes Pub, Lewes, Del., November 4, 2018

By: Chris Loynd, a.k.a. CT Blogger
Photos by: John Bowlan, a.k.a. Grumpy (and a couple by Chris)

Ten hours in a saddle can try anyone's nerves. It's especially hard to retain your composure when the ride back is longer than the ride down. It's even worse when these 10 hours are not spent on scenic backroads or cruising across the great plains of South Dakota. No, not us. We were pounding up and down the New Jersey Turnpike and Garden State Parkway around New York City. Winter riding is a bit more demanding too. Instead of tooling along in a light jacket and jeans, you're layered up in enough full riding gear to stay warm.

Me, I cheated. I didn't have it as bad as my compatriots, freely admitted. I spent Saturday night with my folks, north of Wilmington, Del. That meant my Sunday morning ride was just two-and-a-half hours, compared to the Connecticut departees' four-and-a-half ride down to Lewes. To top things off, they got off late.

I rode to Lewes Sunday morning, then waited an hour to meet up with Grumpy, Captain, Mac, Pogy and a new Polar Bear Jorge. Jorge is a friend of the Fonz. As he did last week, Fonz left early with Trike Mike and Anonymous Ed. We met up with them, briefly when they signed-in and headed home. The rest of us ate a nice lunch at Irish Eyes Pub before heading back. There was some speculation Irish Eyes had raised prices over the summer. I paid $15 for a grilled cheese and cup of tomato soup.

Fortunately, the weather was good. Like last week there was a stormy Saturday and beautiful Sunday. It was cool enough for the winter gear but not so cold that you're fighting to stay warm. My electric clothes were turned off most of the day. As the day got later and darker, I did dial them up a bit. In fact, toward the end of our ride I bolloxed our symmetry by forgetting to connect my riding suit to the bike. As we departed from the stop at the top (Montvale Services on the Garden State) I dove out of formation at the last possible minute. Our sweep blew right by, clueless, but in his defense I did make a quick move when the other riders were focused on speeding up for the merge into traffic. Thanks to a long traffic jam of stop-and-go traffic leading up to the Tappan Zee, now Cuomo Bridge, I easily caught back up with the group. But we were frazzled by then anyway.

Delaware was good to us. There was not much traffic, even some scenery as we motored through the downstate flat expanses of drying brown soybeans and bright green winter wheat. It didn't last, though. All too soon we were over the Delaware Memorial Bridge and working through traffic on the New Jersey Turnpike.

Still, we can do better; we have done better. Maybe it's early in the season and we're rusty at group riding. Maybe it was too many miles and our nerves were fraying. Grumpy was lead with Captain as his wingman. I was third in line. Behind me, sometimes right next to me, Jorge was on his first Polar Bear ride. Mac was behind Jorge and Pogy was sweep. Six bikes are a manageable number in most any traffic, if we ride it right.

Jorge was rubber banding a bit, and we'll work with him if he stays with us. Mac rubber bands quite a bit, always has, and seems unwilling or unable to keep tight. That's tough on the sweep who can be too far back to easily clear for lane changes. If the bikes are spaced too far apart, there's always a cager who will try to butt in. It can make communication between the lead and sweep difficult.

Grumpy got impatient. I know it's hard. I've led my share of rides. You signal the lane change then wait for the sweep. It can help if you anticipate when the sweep can cross over and secure the lane. But to keep cars out of the formation, you have to wait. Grumpy would signal, get too tight on the car or truck in front of him, and move over, whether or not Pogy had cleared the lane. Pogy would make a space in traffic, but then we had a car jammed up in our formation because Grumpy already moved.

We've seen this before. But over six hours it gets more and more frustrating. Then it go worse.

On the Garden State Parkway, in the infamous Oranges, there was an accident. Arrrg!

Captain got really impatient in the resulting stop and go. He kept running ahead of Grumpy, taking over the lead, as if there was someplace to go. At one point I thought maybe he was getting bored and playing a game to see how close he could get to the white van in front of him without actually touching it.

I just paddled along, feet up, feet down, clutch in, clutch out, walking more than riding, trying to keep my place in formation, sometimes behind Captain, sometimes behind Grumpy, sometimes Jorge way behind me, sometimes Jorge beside me, sometimes Jorge ahead of me.

Things settled after we cleared the accident. But with the hour growing ever later, we stopped for gas and a quick pit stop at the top of the Garden State. Nobody wanted to take time for a coffee. We were all just anxious to get home. Unfortunately, the big flashing sign over the Parkway predicted 56 minutes to the Cuomo Bridge.

Bad behavior continued in the pre-bridge traffic jam. Then two ambulances began working their way through traffic in the far left lane where we were riding. Pogy and Mac moved over right away. The rest of us got over quickly too, leaving cars between us. Getting our lane back behind the ambulances was impossible. Aggressive car drivers were diving over, trying to follow the ambulances to get ahead of everyone else. The upshot was we never saw Pogy and Mac again. I trust they made it home okay.

We probably could have waited for them to catch up by taking the second lane on the bridge or later on I-287. But patience was in very short supply. As soon as traffic opened, throttles did the same.

Grumpy and Jorge split off to take the Merritt home. Captain and I headed to I-95. We were lucky in that. Uncharacteristically, I-95 traffic was better than usual. Captain had the smell of the barn in his nostrils and ran for home. I did my best to keep up.

We can ride better. We have ridden better. It's up to each individual to decide. But maybe we should have a group discussion about group riding at our next group Polar Bear lunch.

Our CT Crew arrives in Lewes.


Pogy, can you hear me now?

Mac and the CT crew arrive.

Irish Eyes on street parking required; their lot is stone only and not so good for motorcycles.
Picture of Grumpy taking a picture of CT Blogger.

CT Blogger taking picture of Grumpy taking picture.



Mac signs in. Big 6-pointer for the CT crew on this long ride.

CT Blogger is also Polar Bear Newsletter Editor and here conversing with Polar Bear Grand Poohbah Bob.

Chris signs in, Flight B.

Mac contemplating lunch.

Chris and Pogy trying to decide what to order.

Trike Mike stopped by.

Captain and Anonymous Ed.