Grant @ Renu Auto: Nothing but a Ducati and a Toothbrush

RenuAuto

New member
And judging from the thread title, it's not a Fermani-toothbrush detail of a Ducati, but rather, something quite different.





It must have been at least four or five weeks since I had a real day off. It was probably even longer since I ever left the office before 10pm.



And so, without an idea of what I was doing, where I was going, or what I really wanted to accomplish... I left town, with nothing but a Ducati and a toothbrush.








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This is my story:










I came home well after 11pm stumbling like an athlete just completing a marathon. My body constantly ached from every joint, and my spirit was beginning to waver just as much. Owning a small auto detail operation doesn't look glamorous, but I can promise you it's even less-so than you'd imagine. The scene of me stumbling through the house making a straight line to the bed was basically the same route I'd taken every night I got home for the past few weeks. I was pretty sure I was wearing a hole in the carpet between my bedroom and the front door.



I lay face first on top of my my bed. No energy to actually get under the covers, still clothed, hoping my complete exhaustion would somehow melt away into my comforter, I couldn't help my mind from recognizing some growing "void" in my spirit lately. A feeling of a missing pillar of stability in my life of some sort. It wasn't a lack of attention from women, or social interaction with friends, or recreation or entertainment. Heaven knows that my circle of friends is good at one thing, and that's A LOT of fun in A SHORT amount of time. Perfect for the busy professional trying to build an empire, but it still didn't explain what this feeling of "emptiness" that seemed to be growing lately.



"This exhaustion isn't getting absorbed by this down comforter by any means," I thought to myself, so with few options left, I figured I'd give a hot shower a try. Heaven knows nothing feels better in this world than a hug from mom, closely followed by a hot shower. Mom isn't anywhere nearby, so we'll try option #2.



Option #2 didn't work. Doning my favorite pair of jeans, a t-shirt and strapping some Chucks on the feet, I started searching for the next route of satisfaction. I had actually bought an old school Ducati motorcycle the evening before. I had been so busy it almost slipped my mind that it was sitting outside still. Hell, with as much spare time as has been on my schedule lately, the entire transaction from meeting the owner, to kicking the tires, & handing over a rubber-band full of cash literally took somewhere in the area of six minutes. There are hood-rats in South Central doing drug deals daily that would have gawked at the efficiency of the whole deal. I stood in the kitchen, munching on some chips, staring blankly as I reminisced on the deal.



"Well ****, got the damn thing, might as well go for a cruise", I thought to myself with a casual shrug. The roomates were on the back porch enjoying some drinks and talking as I came out to ask what exciting escapades they had planned for the Friday evening. "Nothin on the gambit" was the general consensus. I told them I would be on a short ride to get some air, and I'd see them back at the house in a little bit.



Even I didn't realize I was lying at the time.



The cool air of the summer evening was AMAZING. The Ducati was proving to be such a unique experience to me in the motorcycle world. Having owned several Japanese sportbikes, I was quickly coming to the conclusion that the Ducati was a perfect mesh of a Ferrari and a Rat-Rod, made into a motorcycle. The beautiful handle bar clips, machined from one solid piece of a aluminum, and the exposed architecture of the frame, and exotic materials like titanium and exposed carbon fiber harked back to it's Italian engineering, just like a well-built Ferrari. Then the ridiculously unstable rumble through the frame of the V-Twin motor, couple of rusty fasteners and bolts from spending much of it's life outside, and the ear drum popping bark from the twin exhaust was unmistakably a Rat-Rod that was born with an extra chromosone where instead of four, it was only given two tires, and was thus born a ******* motorcycle. Every girl that had seen the bike thus far had hated it, "It looks... very... aesthetically unpleasing" on noted, and "Ummm, kinda looks like you built it in your garage?" another remarked twirling her gum stretched from her mouth to her pointer finger.



"PERFECT." I thought to myself. I would have it no other way :D





My ride stopped short. I pulled into Wal-Mart. Walking in I grabbed a tooth brush. I didn't need a tooth brush. Thinking back to my drawer in the bathroom at home, I vividly remembered a picture in my head of a package of like fourteen brand new ones. I could keep an entire school of children in Cambodia with sparkly-white Richard Hammond teeth with all the damn tooth brushes I had. And yet I grabbed a tooth brush. I paid for my purchase, all $3.46 of it. And walked back to the bike, still completely unaware conciously of what I was really up to. I think my own subconciuos was put on auto-pilot and the body was following. "Not" thinking, was a refreshing change.





The bike started with a loud bark from the twin exhaust pipes. A quick jump on I-15 North, a mile or two to the next exit, and I'd be a quick jaunt down a couple city streets and I'd be back home safe, with a refreshed spirit and a clear mind.





... Right?







But I didn't jump on 1-15 North. The feeling of the summer evening, and not being around anyone, and not thinking about anything, was cocaine. It was more than cocaine. It was, like, Megan Fox, hand cuffed to a hotel bed, with the entire Dallas Cowboys cheerleaders line up there, topless, and a coffee table with a mountain of cocaine, and Bono from U2, and Charlie Sheen in the corner having drinks and the keys to your Ferrari resting against your chest as they lay in the breast pocket of your Armani suit...



...it was a good feeling. And so what would you do if you have a good feeling like that? You chase more. I jumped on I-15 South.





And I rode.



I rode for a glamorous four and a half minutes before the seeming clear, perfect summer evening turned into a torrential downpour that soaked not only my clothes, but my skin, and my muscles, right until my bones turned to frozen ice structures. "WHAT THE FVCKING FVCK?" I was screaming inside my helmet. The storm came appeared from thin air. I imagined God and Zues sitting above the clouds, playing cards and laughing over cocktails, as God looked down on the little speck of me and the motorbike and said, "Lol, look at this little fvcker." I imagined Zues laughing and casually putting his hand out like he was Harry Potter about to put a spell on Hermione, and out of no where made a rain storm out of clear skies. They probably leaned back in their damn cloud-chairs laughing at the stars as they cheered their damn cocktails, gave each other a high-five and went back to cards.



"Damnit".





I rode 40 miles until I got to the next town, Mesquite, NV. A small town renowned for nothing more than a where a few Utahn's can come gamble and a few more Utahn's can make some regrets. I pulled off the freeway and made it about ten feet into the first gas station before getting off the bike and realizing I had already made a new friend.





The black-and-white Crown Vic with the OJ-Simpson-ending-push-bumper on the front that was about six inches from my rear tires was unmistakable.





"Hello officer!" I cheerfully said as my mind raced with thoughts of "Where the fvcking, fvck did this dude come from!?!?!?" as I retraced my route in my head.



Twenty minutes went by as the officer carefully explained that I had run the stop light at the end of the off ramp, done a small wheelie after pulling onto the surface street, don't have registration on the bike, any proper proof of ownership, any insurance of any kind, am illegally running a previous owners' plate and have illegal rear license plate mounts.



"...oh, so you saw everything." I thought to myself. Another unit pulled into the gas station. "And the plot thickens" I thought to myself again.





"Where you headed, what are you doing?" asked the officer, his young, clean cut face and time spent thoroughly thinking to himself before each question hinting towards being a relative rookie on the force.



"...I, well... I don't really know how to answer that." I replied.



Because, well let's be honest. Even I didn't really know what I was doing.





The officer spent an awkwardly long amount of time pacing around the bike, scratching his cheek occasionally, and dropping occasional comments like, "You know I can impound this, right?".



The laundry list of offenses I needed to be written up for, combined with the surely daunting amount of paper work for him associated with writting up that list and arranging a tow truck seemed to be enough to convince him of his final verdict.



"Get this thing home." He stated as he handed my license back to me, a defeated tone in his voice.



I really couldn't blame him. I wouldn't want to deal with me either.





YouTube - ‪Grant Liban: With nothing but a Ducati and a toothbrush‬‏





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I left the station with a full tank, and a little more blood flowing through the veins after a close call with Mesquites finest and a good bit of what I like to call "Motorcycle-gas-station-yoga". And anyone who has ridden long distances on a bike knows exactly what that is. And anywho who hasn't can picture it in their heads, although I'll have you know, it looks a lot more silly in real life than whatever you can picture.
 
I-15 North. A nice 45 minute ride back through the canyon, and I'd be back home safe and sound, with a clearer mind, and another one of my nine lives used up. "This was good" I thought to myself as I sailed back down the freeway, "This was really what I needed". But I wasn't on I-15 North ...I was on I-15 South. Again.



And I was riding. And I kept riding. I kept riding through the middle of the night, through the middle of the desert. No one knew where I was, or where I was going. I'm the only human on Earth that new were I was, and even I didn't know where I was going. The feeling of that crisp summer night's wind rushing around me was like finishing a 100-mile stumble through the desert and into a cool waterfall in a lush oasis. My down comforter back home wasn't melting away the feeling of stress and exhaustion, the hot shower didn't melt away the feeling of stress and exhaustion, being alone with nothing but a Ducati and a toothbrush melted away the feeling of stress and exhaustion.



I rode. And I kept riding. I rode 120 more miles, until I came over the crest of this long freeway pass, and was atop a plateau. I could see for miles and miles, and I saw a sight I had seen a hundred times before, but this time it was different. The window of sight through my helmet's visor perfectly framed 1-million lights at I absorbed the visual of Las Vegas, on a Friday night, at 1:30 am. I felt as if I had come into a warm wind as the visual in front of me filled me with that same energy as each one of the thousands of people in the valley below me felt as they danced and drank the night away. I took a deep sigh and said "Vegas." to myself as I dropped down into the valley.



Another twenty minutes and I was at the home of my two-brothers who live in Vegas. They came out to investigate the sound of repeated grenades going off that erupted from the exhaust and the sound of pots and pans tumbling around inside a clothes drier that protrudes from the clanking of the Ducati's signature dry-clutch. Their eyebrows furrowed slightly as they looked at each other wondering what the hell this all-black-dressed "dude" was doing in their driveway.



Removing my helmet I erupted, "HELLOWWWW GYPSIES!"



Their youngest brother, who lived a hundred and something miles away, who they hadn't seen in weeks was sitting their in their driveway, late at night, on some bike they had never seen.



They quietly chucked, shaking their heads, replying "...what the hell?"



I spent twenty minutes with them catching up on their lives. My older brother recently receiving a huge promotion at his job, and my oldest playing foster parent for abandoned dogs from the animal shelter that he works at. After being reminded that my bloodline generally kicks major ***, I passed out comatose in the middle of conversation. I hadn't realized I had even fell asleep as I found myself, still fully clothed, laying sprawled out on the couch like someone had thrown me there after putting a cloth full of chloroform to my mouth, one leg dangling over the back rest, the other one propped on the coffee table. "Well aren't I a hot mess" I thought as I stumbled onto my feet to start the day. It was 6:13am.





Nothing is awake at 6:13am. For the past four years I didn't even know what anything before 7am even looked like. For all I knew the sky is neon green and everyone walks on their hands at 6:13am. But here I was, awake, at 6:13am. With nothing else to do, I gave a casual shrug, and donned the jacket at helmet. Subconscious was back in control at this point. What the heck I was up to I had no idea. "Maybe I'll just go get some breakfast?" I thought to myself as I walked past the living room mirror and realized that I really do, in fact, look like an all-black-power-ranger.



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(leaving the brothers' house)





My phone was on it's last ounce of battery power, and the sight, which usually strikes a sudden panic in me, and I stumble around finding a power source screaming "WHAT IF A CLIENT CALLS! WHAT... IF... A... CLIENT... CALLS...!!!?!?!?!?" was unusually relaxing. The thought of a dead phone would be a ball and chain cut from my ankle. But I figured I might go do some shopping and need directions to something, so I stole a phone charger from my brother, a backpack, bungee corded the whole mess together and jumped on the bike. Pouring gas into the tank was like watching a bucket full of potential adventure fill up before my eyes. Corny? Yes. But that's that acid-trip **** that your brain starts picturing when it's 6:13am.



I ignited the starter and could have sworn the station's roof panels were going to fall on me as they vibrated from the deafening sound of the exhaust. My head shrank into my shoulders like a turtle from the sudden attention from everyone. I rode into downtown Vegas. There really isn't any place like it. The sheer size, architecture and obscureness of casino's in Vegas is a wonder. I loved riding by them, looking at them from the freeway, but I didn't get off. I never wanted to get off, I just... kept riding. I kept riding until I got to the Nevada-California state line to fill up for gas. Pull into the station, turning off the bike, and sighing a breath for only a moment was enough for me to finally realize where I was, and what I was doing.



For the first time, I had a plan. I filled the tank, ran inside and bought two barrels of trail mix, a bottle of water, a roll of duct tape and a sharpie.







After ten minutes of Power-Ranger-Gas-Station-Yoga, I was more limber and loose than a two-dollar-hooker. I started ripping strips of duct tape and smashing them onto the top of my gas tank like I was trying to get that same two-dollar-hooker to stop yelling from the trunk. Ripping the top off the Sharpie with that signature "pop!" I started quickly scribbling gas stations check points between state-line, and Los Angeles, CA.





"Fvck it. I'm going to LA".



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And after firing the engine, giving a flirtation wave to the two cutie-patooties in the BMW coupe getting gas, I was on my way.



The longest ride of your life, is the ride you take on an old, Italian motorbike that you haven no idea of how well it's screwed together. No less than sixteen thousand time during the journey did I not notice a phantom vibration come through the frame while on the freeway that assured me my front wheel was about to come off. Only three million separate instances of a confidence-sinking rattle were recorded before it would, two minutes later, disappear as soon as it appeared.



No amount of Pandora made the trip less stressful. Anyone who knows bikes knows that, while the "Monster" model Ducati does have a better seating position than most, Ducati's are still renowned for two things: Making womens underwear magnetic to the floor, and being really... really uncomfortable to ride.



I hadn't ridden in years, and was constantly waiting for the back ache, and the leg cramps to start. But they never came. The physical pain of being buffeted around by 80mph winds, and semi-truck wind sheer, must have been much less than the weight of four weeks of straight 12-hour days being shed from me with each mile. Pandora through the iPhone was the perfect companion for the journey. And the iPhone would later prove the only tool really needed for the entire journey.



After pulling into Barstow for fuel for the bike, I stopped at Starbucks to get some fuel for myself.



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While downing a strawberry yogurt and large bottle of Naked: Wheat Grass juice (hey no one is out here to judge my super-feminine meal), I jumped on my phone and pulled up Shattner, my Price Negotiator, to find a place to stay when I got to LA. I literally didn't give a rat's *** where the hell I shacked up for the night. "Phone booth on Compton ave? GREAT!" So with my first priority being "no-stress" I simply clicked the first hotel that showed up for "Los Angeles" and after typing in my card information had a reservation literally no more than three minutes later. I was thoroughly impressed by the service, my compliments Shattner.





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Walking out of Starbucks, I stop in my own steps as I come to the sudden realization that I have many, many hours of dauntless riding ahead of me without any form of entertainment, so remembering the roll of duct-tape, I figure I'll make my own entertainment:



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After an hour of bad Pandora mixes (I swear Pandora is just mad at me some days), I see the San Bernadino valley ahead of me, as well as literally a wall of clouds. The idea of cooling cloud cover is a welcoming change of sight. Little did I know that I was riding into a vortex of dark fog that would prove to be what felt like at least a 20 degree drop in temperature. Being a native to the desert, and not coming with any plan, I am dressed for the occasion about as appropriately as Lindsey Lohan dresses for court-dates. The mood changes from Wizard of Oz dandy-lions to the Wicked-Witch of the West. The "wet" ocean air, coming from someone who has lived in a desert their whole life, is like going 80mph through the arctic ocean. My core is frozen, and it remained froze for the next hour and a half to Los Angeles.



Arriving into the LA valley, I looked down at my tank and followed my chicken scratch directions to the Pasedena Rose bowl. It was Saturday morning, and the once-a-year event known as "Bimmerfest" was in full swing. I've owned several M3's and other models, my roomate has a classic 76' 530i, brother's own BMW's, work next to a BMW repair shop, and have been the last few years in a row, so missing the event, especially in the current circumstances would be an unforgivable sin. I didn't stop for gas, hotel, or lunch, I just rode straight to the field, snuck my *** through a gap in the fence and parked on the green.



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I had arrived.





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Walking around, by myself, not having to listen to someone elses' opinion of every car I walked by, getting to spend as much time as "I" wanted at each vendor booth, not having to accomodate someone else who is hungry and wants to grab lunch, not having to manage anyone elses' fussiness was overwhelmingly peacful. I may be weird, but I feel like "alone" is the only way to do a car show, or at least part of it.



I found myself back at the bike a couple hours later. Reaching into my backpack I found a "Do It Yourself" personalized license plate I had forgot I purchased back at Wal-Mart in Utah. "Time to have some more fun" I thought to myself.





Being that I was a "Utahn", in "California", I figure I'd better fit the stereotype and have some fun with it. Peeling the DIY sticker letters one-by-one, I came up with the following:





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I took one final breath of the amazing "fresh cut grass" air from the Pasedena Rose Bowl before mounting the bike again. I realized that I was still in the same damn outfit from the day before, and that just simply wasn't gonna fly, so a couple quick scribbles of directions on a new layer of duct-tape later and I was on my way to down-town Pasedena.
 
Arriving there, I quickly became mad and EVERYONE I know from California for never telling me about what great shopping downtown Passey has. Amazing cars parked along a skinny two-lane street, full of happy-people enjoying out door cafe's and bags full of stupid-expensive clothes. The women are beautiful and the shops are awesome.





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I quickly found an H&M and darted inside to find a new outfit. After three laps around the store I quickly found out that you know you're in SoCal when H&M is a 6000 sq. ft. building and 400 sq. ft. of it are devoted to mens clothes. Oh well. Making lemons from lemonade I grab a new Tee, some under-roos, hoodie, wanna-be Wayfayers (hey, it's SoCal afterall) and make my way outta there. One more layer of duct tape (I think I'm up to like four/five now) and I'm on my way to the hotel.



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I am leaving downtown Passey when I come up behind a gorgeous BMW M3, obviously from the show earlier that morning. I manage to snap a quick pic while at a light:





(one of my favorite snaps from the trip)

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We eventually lead onto a long, two lane "mini-highway" in the middle of the city. No cross streets and it just winds beautifully though tree's, tall buildings, and literally NO other traffic. The M3 and I are both enjoying the wonderful road, and each other's company at a very... "spirited" pace, when suddenly I notice out of my rear view mirror he drops behind VERY quickly. Confused, I look ahead to see two tunnles. "Ah, this smart chap wants to hear the Ducati's rumble through these tunnels!" I smuggly think to myself. Down shifting I RIP through the two tunnles at 12k RMP. The sound is eurphoric. Emerging from the tunnels I look back to notice not two, but "three" headlights emerge. The third belongs to another bike, although I can't quite tell the make/model from the rear view mirror. I lay on the throttle again thinking "Oh, the M3 just settled back a bit to let me and this other bike play, how polite of him". Even at my ever-increasing pace the other bike eats the distance separating us two in NO time. I'm impressed by his riding. What I see next I'm not so impressed by.





With him close enough to my rear view, I now notice he's not "another bike". He's a Pasedena motor cop. ....*poker face*



Completely admiting my obvious guilt, I make like a puppy with his tale between his legs, put my head down in shame, and wave to motion to him both my admitting that I've been caught red handed, and that I'm pulling over before he even has a chance to ignight his blues-and-twos.



Before I can even make it to the side of the road, he ROARS past me.



*poker face* x2



But rather than him continuing on at that pace as if he was hurriedly on his way to a call, he just shot ahead of me and then returned back to the speedlimit, and stayed there for the next half mile or so...



...almost as if he was saying, "You think you can ride fast? I can ride fast, buddy."



*poker face* x3



I ever so gradually slow down, more and more until finally the M3 and I have come side-to-side again. The look on the M3 driver's face was priceless. I'm sure he was thinking the same about my stunned eyes and casual shrug with palms pointed towards the sky.













Quickly making my way to the freeway, I become aware that Los Angeles traffic on fouteen-hundred-lane-wide freeways, on a rickety old Ducati, is a stressful experience. It's like having to karate chop a whole swarm of bee's one by one. Every car that you manage to not get killed by, there's another one right behind it trying to take you out.







An hour later, I've arrived at the hotel, in one piece, alive, and tired. There is no place I'd rather be after such a long, tiring expereince. After finangling with valet to let me leave the bike in a place I'm not supposed to, I go to check in.





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I quickly become aware that Shattner had taken care of me. Four star elegance combined with modern decore and service from the staff that was second to none. I also learned, and advice to anyone else, if they ever say "Would you like to upgrade to our Executive member benefits?" Say Yes.



Room upgraded to the top floor, executive top-floor lounge with complimentary drinks, ordourves, internet; free breakfast, ect. It really helped make the hotel experience exactly what it needed to be after such physically exhausting journey.



(Elevator-ride after finally arriving at the hotel)

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(not the most glamours view, but the planes taking off and landing at night was both an AWESOME sight to see, and the noise was actually quite comforting, Yeah, I'm weird)

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(I had to make an edit to the room-letter to make it more appropriate)

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After a MUCH needed shower, change of clothes and few drinks at the lounge, I make my way to the pool. I didn't bring a suit and it didn't matter. When I planted my *** on that pool lounge chair, I don't think I'd ever felt more relaxed in my life. That cheap lounge chair may have well been a stiff wooden plank for all I cared. If you were to come to me and say that there is a thousand dollars in cash sitting on the chair opposite the pool that was mine if I walked over and got it, I would have casually shrugged and said "Eff it."





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(self taken glamour shot)

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I actually ended up meeting one of the most generous gentleman also enjoying a cigar by the pool who volunteered a couple of his Cuban's in the name of good company. We spent a couple hours talking about business (he was a real estate developer) and life (a happily single guy). An unequaled pleasant experience.





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Those moment's, with that cigar, by the pool were the best few hours of the past few weeks. It was so relaxing it was surreal.







By the time I finally made it up to the room, I had a message from one of my best friends of many years suggesting a Sushi place in LA. To my luck "Tsunami Sushi" was just down the street and the food was KILLER. Such a cool vibe too. A perfect meal on a perfect day.



I thoroughly did enjoy the ride back to the hotel as well as two, very European looking gentlemen in an electric powered Telsa Roadster sports car went flying by as they cut through traffic, convinced the more daring their maneuvers, the more women they were going to impress. Pulling next to them on the obnoxiously loud, hairy-chested Ducati (a perfect juxtaposition to their silent electric two-seater) I mustered up my best possible European accent as I looked down at them and declared,



"Oi! Eezy on the throttle ther' luv'. I'd Hate oo see yer bah-eries run flat!"





They both went to reply, their mouths moving but no words coming out. Their brains searching aimlessly for an appropriate response.



"Yup, that bit of silliness was definitely worth it." I thought to myself.



When the light turned green, they tried to save face anyway a womanless-man would try... by out accelerating everyone next to them from a set of lights.



Unfortunately for them, and thanks to the huge V-Twin of the bike, that didn't end well for them either.
 
And so, returning back to the hotel, I walked through the gorgeous lobby, and the bar and lounge, and made my way to the elevator looking forward to my appointment with the goose feather bed waiting for me. It couldn't have been any later than 11:30pm, but no part of me had any desire to go to a bar, to a club, to go woman chasing. This trip wasn't about that. This trip was about getting away, that that's just what I was going to do.



Upon waking up the next morning, sleeping in past 9am, the rest felt amazing. I could have never left that bed and everything would have been just fine. I showered up at my leisure, enjoyed one of the most amazing breakfasts' by the pool, and enjoyed one more cup of coffee before my departure. I wanted SO badly to go ride the infamous Mulholland canyron run, but google maps suggested otherwise, with an hour long ride, in the opposite way of where I needed to go, I reserved myself to "another time" for that adventure.



(early morning self-taken glamour shot)

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Swallowed my pride and had valet take a photo of me and the bike before my departure:

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The ride back from LA was long, and a whole set of stories in of itself, but I'll save those for another time. The weather mercifully warmed back up once I made it to the Mojave desert and I stopped in Baker to get some gas:



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(Thought this was pretty cool)

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Arriving in St. George, seven hours later, I rode straight to the shop. I had a client that called and needed some paint work done on his car before it got shipped across country. Five hours later I left the office...



...well after 10pm



and stumbled into my house,



making that hole in the carpet between the front door and my room just a little bit deeper.
 
Awesome trip, very cool. Rider here also but just had my bike stolen :*(, no riding for me right now. You should wear boots on long trips like that! Are you on adventure riding or touring forums?
 
Awesome story of your trip Grant! I thoroughly enjoyed reading it...twice! :)





It also make me realize how much I miss riding. :(







Cheers,

Rasky
 
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Haha! Just kidding! Been waiting for the perfect time to use that gif. :lol



Very entertaining read. Thanks for sharing.
 
Hey! Thanks a lot for sharing!



Those moment's, with that cigar, by the pool were the best few hours of the past few weeks. It was so relaxing it was surreal.



Boy, do I know what you're talking about there. Nothing like a good cigar! Gotta love 'em! :bigups
 
What a story indeed, after reading the "Gold Rush" thread I had to see what escapades would be described .......especially love the duct tape "Bullitt points" list of Utah to Bimmerfest, the last two points are "Epicness".







.Do wheelies

.F**k bi**hes









W T F............................................. :rolleyes:
 
Great story, great read, great ride. The way it should be.



Curiously, last time I left on two wheels with no clue, no plan and no luggage I ended up in St. George as well. Except I left from Ohio. Sometimes you just don't want to stop or turn around... :nod:



TL
 
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