There’s a freedom in motorcycling that’s impossible to imitate. Cars isolate you from the road, but a motorcycle demands your full presence. Every ride draws you into a relationship with the wind, the asphalt, and the machine beneath you. It sharpens your senses. You notice the shift in the air before a storm. You feel the slightest change in road texture. Even your thoughts become clearer, stripped of the noise that fills ordinary life. The ride becomes a kind of meditation at speed.
Over time, motorcycles have also been tied to the milestones of my life. Each bike I’ve owned carried a chapter of my story. Some were bought in excitement, others sold reluctantly. The act of buying a motorcycle often came with the rush of possibility—a reminder that adventure is always within reach. Selling one, on the other hand, carried its own emotional weight. Letting go of a bike sometimes felt like letting go of who I was when I bought it. Yet each farewell made space for something new, another machine with its own personality and potential.
Working on motorcycles has shaped me just as much as riding them. Hours spent in a garage or workshop—tools scattered, grease on my hands—taught me patience and problem-solving. Fixing a stubborn bolt or tuning an engine has a way of humbling you, but it also rewards persistence. There’s something deeply satisfying about understanding a machine so well that you can hear what it needs before it breaks.
More than anything, motorcycles have connected me to people. Fellow riders, mechanics, strangers at petrol stations who share a nod of appreciation—the motorcycle community has always felt like a loose-knit family built on shared passion. Even quiet solo rides become part of a larger story, one that other riders instinctively understand.
In the end, “me and motorcycles” is a relationship built on movement, memory, and meaning. It’s not simply about riding; it’s about living with a sense of direction, curiosity, and heart. Every journey, whether short or long, reminds me why I keep coming back to two wheels: because they make life feel bigger, brighter, and undeniably real.










































































































































Thanks for your efforts Grant, a fabulous edition once again while I sit and heal a torn rotator cuff.. all the best for an enjoyable Christmas. Kind regards Pete Thomasen
ReplyDeleteGlad you made it home safely, have a great Christmas and a fabulous 2026
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