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The
Wave
By Tom Ruttan
CYCLE CANADA - APRIL 2002
The bike's passenger seat swept up just enough that I could see over my father's
shoulders. That seat was my throne. My dad and I traveled many back roads,
searching for the ones we had never found before. Traveling these roads just to
see where they went. Never in a rush. Just be home for supper.
I remember wandering down a back road with my father, sitting on my throne
watching the trees whiz by, feeling the rumble of our bike beneath us like a
contented giant cat. A motorcycle came over a hill toward us and as it went by,
my father threw up his gloved clutch hand and gave a little wave. The other
biker waved back with the same friendly swing of his left wrist.
I tapped my father on his shoulder, which was our signal that I wanted to say
something. He cocked his helmeted ear back slightly while keeping his eyes
ahead.
I yelled, "Do we know him?"
'What?" he shouted.
"You waved to him. Who was it?"
"I don't know. Just another guy on a bike. So I waved."
"How come?"
"You just do. It's important."
Later, when we had stopped for chocolate ice cream, I asked why it was important
to wave to other bikers. My father tried to explain how the wave demonstrated
comradeship and a mutual understanding of what it was to enjoy riding a
motorcycle. He looked for the words to describe how almost all bikers struggled
with the same things like cold, rain, heat, car drivers who did not see them,
but how riding remained an almost pure pleasure.
I was young then and I am not sure that I really understood what he was trying
to get across, but .
It was a beginning. Afterward, I always waved along with my father when we
passed other bikers.
I remember one cold October morning when the clouds were heavy and dark, giving
us another clue that winter was niding in from just over the horizon. My father
and I were warm inside our car as we headed to a friend's home. Rounding a
comer, we saw a motorcycle parked on the shoulder of the road. Past the bike, we
saw the rider walking through the ditch, scouring the long grasses crowned with
a touch of frost. We pulled over and backed up to where the bike stood.
I asked Dad, "Who's that?"
"Don't know," he replied. "But he see to have lost something.
Maybe we can give him a hand."
We left the car and wandered through the tall grass of the ditch to the biker.
He said that he had been pulling on his gloves as he rode and he had lost one.
The three of us spent some time combing the ditch, but all we found were two
empty cans and a plastic water bottle.
My father turned and headed back to our car and I followed him. He opened the
trunk and threw the cans and the water bottle into a small cardboard box that we
kept for garbage. He rummaged through various tools, oil containers and
windshield washer fluid until he found an old crumpled pair of brown leather
gloves. Dad straightened them out and handed them to me to hold. He continued
looking until he located an old catalogue. I understood why my dad had grabbed
the gloves. I had no idea what he was going to do with the catalogue. We headed
back to the biker who was still walking the ditch.
My dad said, "Here's some gloves for you. And I brought you a catalogue as
well."
"Thanks," he replied. I really appreciate it." He reached into
his hip pocket and withdrew a worn black wallet.
"Let me give you some money for the gloves," he said as he slid some
bills out.
"No thanks," my dad replied as I handed the rider the gloves.
"They're old and not worth anything anyway."
The biker smiled. "Thanks a lot." He pulled on the old gloves and then
he unzipped his jacket. I watched as my father handed him the catalogue and the
biker slipped it inside his coat. He jostled his jacket around to get the
catalogue sitting high and centered under his coat and zipped it up. I remember
nodding my head at the time, finally making sense of why my dad had given him
the catalogue. It would keep him bit warmer. After wishing the biker well, my
father and I left him warming up his bike.
Two weeks later, the biker came to our home and returned my father's gloves. He
had found our address on the catalogue. Neither my father nor the biker seemed
to think that my father stopping at the side of the road for a stranger and
giving him a pair of gloves, and that stranger making sure that the gloves were
returned, were events at all out of the ordinary for people who rode
motorcycles. For me, it was another subtle lesson.
It was spring the next year when I was sitting high on my throne, watching the
farm fields slip by when I saw two bikes coming towards us. As they rumbled
past, both my father and I waved, but the other bikers kept their sunglasses
locked straight ahead and did not acknowledge us. I remember thinking that they
must have seen us because our waves were too obvious to miss. Why hadn't they
waved back? I thought all bikers waved to one another.
I patted my father on his shoulder and yelled, "How come they didn't wave
to us?"
"Don't know. Sometimes they don't."
I remember feeling very puzzled. Why wouldn't someone wave back?
Later that summer, I turned 12 and learned how to ride a bike with a clutch.
I spent many afternoons on a country laneway beside our home, kicking and
kicking to start my father's '55 BSA. When it would finally sputter to a start,
my concentration would grow to a sharp focus as I tried to let out the clutch
slowly while marrying it with just enough throttle to bring me to a smooth
takeoff. More often, I lurched and stumbled forward while trying to keep the
front wheel straight and remember to pick my feet up. A few feet farther down
the lane, I would sigh and begin kicking again.
A couple of years later, my older brother began road racing, and I became a
racetrack rat. We spent many weekends wandering to several tracks in Ontario-Harewood,
Mosport and eventually Shannonville. These were the early years of two-stroke
domination, of Kawasaki green and 750 two-stroke triples, of Yvon Duhamel's
cat-and-mouse games and the artistry of Steve Baker.
Eventually, I started to pursue interests other than the race track. I got my
motorcycle license and began wandering the back roads on my own. I found myself
stopping along side roads if I saw a rider sitting alone, just checking to see if
I could be of help. And I continued to wave to each biker I saw.
But I remained confused as to why some riders never waved back. It left me with
almost a feeling of rejection, as if I were reaching to shake someone's hand but
they kept their arm hanging by their side.
I began to canvass my friends about waving. I talked with people I met at bike
events, asking what they thought. Most of the riders told me they waved to other
motorcyclists and often initiated the friendly air handshake as they passed one
another.
I did meet some riders, though, who told me that they did not wave to other
riders because they felt that they were different from other bikers. They felt
that they were "a breed apart." One guy told me in colorful language
that he did not "wave to no wusses.'' He went on to say that his kind of
bikers were tough, independent, and they did not require or want the help of
anyone, whether they rode a bike or not.
I suspected that there were some people who bought a bike because they wanted to
purchase an image of being tougher, more independent, a
not-putting-up-with-anyone's-crap kind of person, but I did not think that this
was typical of most riders.
People buy bikes for different reasons. Some will be quick to tell you what make
it is, how much they paid for it, or how fast it will go. Brand loyalty is going
to be strong for some people whether they have a Harley, Ford, Sony, Nike or
whatever. Some people want to buy an image and try to purchase another person's
perception of them. But it can't be done. They hope that it can, but it can't.
Still, there is a group of people who ride bikes who truly are a "breed
apart." They appreciate both the engineering and the artistry in the
machines they ride. Their bikes become part of who they are and how they define
themselves to themselves alone.
They don't care what other people think. They don't care if anyone knows how
much they paid for their bike or how fast it will go. The bike means something
to them that nothing else does. They ride for themselves and not for anyone
else. They don't care whether anyone knows they have a bike. They may not be
able to find words to describe what it means to ride, but they still know.
They might not be able to explain what it means to feel the smooth acceleration
and the strength beneath them. But they understand.
These are the riders who park their bikes, begin to walk away and then stop.
They turn and took back. They see something when they look at their bikes that
you might not. Something more complex, something that is almost secret, sensed
rather than known. They see their passion. They see a part of themselves.
These are the riders who understand why they wave to other motorcyclists. They
savor the wave.
It symbolizes the connection between riders, and if they saw you and your bike
on the side of the road, they would stop to help and might not ask your name.
They understand what you are up against every time you take your bike on the
road-the drivers that do not see you, the ones that cut you off or tailgate you,
the potholes that hide in wait. The rain. The cold.
I have been shivering and sweating on a bike for more than 40 years. Most of the
riders that pass give me a supportive wave. I love it when I see a younger rider
on a "crotch rocket" scream past me and wave. New riders carrying on
traditions.
And I will continue in my attempts to get every biker just a little closer to
one another with a simple wave of my gloved clutch hand. And if they do not wave
back when I extend my hand into the breeze as I pass them, I will smile a little
more. They may be a little mistaken about just who is a "breed apart."