chal•lenge, part two

(chal’enj) n. anything that calls for special effort

Copyright © 2023 by Bill James at The Shovel Shop, Austin, Texas

As noted in my last post, I became interested in adapting motorcycles for use by riders with disabilities after helping design and construct a shovelhead-powered trike for a quadriplegic rider disabled in a motorcycle crash.  However, I never anticipated a need for such adaptations for myself, but….

….Fate or Life or The Universe (the bastard) had other ideas.

😱😮😳😢😡🤬

The structure I fell from, with new panels to replace the ones that gave way under my hook ladder.

In July of 2004 I fell 35’ from a billboard structure I was climbing.  I ended up with an open compound fracture of my right tibia and fibula – two breaks in each bone, with the jagged ends sticking up through the skin — and a left foot pulverized ‘to dust’ per the surgeon who attempted to repair it.  However, worst of all was the burst fracture of my L-4 vertebra.  Between the three injury sites – a perverse Trifecta of Pain, if you will – nothing south of my waist works the way it’s supposed to….

….and I mean nothing!  😡

I might be smiling, but there was nothing fun about that hospital stay!

I was hospitalized for twelve days that first time and underwent four surgeries, with numerous hospital stays and surgeries to come. I was still wheelchair-bound when they sent me home, and lived in a hospital bed set up in our living room for the rest of the summer.

Me and my new wheels, back at the crib!
My friend Bryan built the ramp for me, and a bunch of folks from the church where Jackie and I were married came by to sign it and scribble ‘get well’ wishes on it.
When you’ve been active and physical most of your adult life, lying around watching television all day is not near as much fun as it sounds, but I made the best I could of it.

I was in the wheelchair well into September, having physical therapy and additional surgeries, before I could graduate to crutches, and then a walker. I still remember what a rush it was (literally and figuratively) to finally stand unaided and kiss Jackie from above, for the first time since the fall. I had to sit right back down again, but that kiss was the start of me getting back on my feet.

And get back on my feet I did. One hundred and twenty days after my fall, I limped out to my driveway, kickstarted my old rigid-framed shovelhead and took it for a ride around the neighborhood.  Probably not my brightest move – I was still recovering from major surgeries including a spinal fusion at L-3-4-5 – but damn! did it feel good in the moment!  Look at the photos taken that day, and the shit-eating grin on my face.  After all I’d been through, it appeared I would still be able to ride my motorcycle.

The Bitch started first kick after three and a half months of down time. I was so proud of my baby that day!
Oh, yeah! I was a happy man in that moment!
And a-w-a-a-a-a-a-a-y we go!
S-o-o-o-o-o-o happy!

As my recovery progressed, I took a few more rides on the shovel, but quickly learned that the geometry of my body had been permanently altered by the accident.  I’d spent decades sitting down in the bike, on a frame-mounted butt bucket LaPera saddle, but now that position caused almost immediate low-back pain, and sent referred pain down both legs.  Symptoms included spasms, sharp stabbing pain, throbbing pain, all manner of pain….

It was clear that I had to be seated with my hips above my knees, rather than below them; that flexion (being bent beyond 90° at the waist) was not my friend.

The Bitch with her frame-mounted butt-bucket saddle. On it I was seated down in the motorcycle, rather than on it. Great feeling, better road sense, lower center of gravity, et cetera, but not user-friendly for the new me.

Thus began a series of experiments.  One of the benefits of working in a motorcycle shop like Bud’s was almost unlimited access to parts, so I could dabble on the cheap. 

First was a Softail solo saddle.  It was puffy enough that it almost raised me high enough off the frame.  However, it wasn’t enough, and my attempt at a rider backrest – a tiny sissybar backrest pad and a couple of stainless-steel struts from an old FL windshield – failed to do the job.

Nice try, but no cigar.

Next was a bit of R&D in the best East Austin tradition, to see if a traditional OEM pogo stick might do what I needed.  I borrowed a single bright red fatbob tank, a pogo stick and t-bar, and a funky old buddy seat I found in amongst the takeoffs and rejects in Bud’s shop.  Test rides proved that a pogo stick could work, but only if I ran the optional OEM heavy-duty spring set, Harley part no. 51771-29

This might have been ugly as sin, but it did let me know I was heading in the right direction.

Bud tracked down a customer who had a brand-new set of the heavy-duty springs he would part with. Bud also gifted me a set of late-model flat-side fatbobs, which was a nice hit.  Unlike the original fatbobs found on knucks, pans and shovelheads, the flat-side bobs aren’t prone to cracking and leaking.  Nothing like a lapful of petrol at 60 MPH to put a damper on an otherwise pleasant ride! 😮

Late model flatside fatbobs in a factory blue, with my old bobber fenders painted to match. Since they were Bud’s final gift to me, I am reluctant to mess with the paint scheme.

However, the way the flat-side bobs mount to the frame prevented us from using the traditional t-bar.  Instead, Harley Bob, one of Bud’s ace mechanics and welders, had to relocate the front mounting point for the t-bar, and then heat and bend my t-bar to make it fit.  I topped that off with a traditional OEM leather tractor seat saddle; the one Harley-Davidson had been using since 1923.  I actually bought it from the local Harley dealership, no less!

The result was one-of-a-kind, but it worked to get my hips above my knees, thus eliminating one problem, but now I had another. I generally dislike seeing a windshield on an unfaired bike, but my weakened back muscles could not withstand the buffeting of winds at highway speeds, so I crafted another rider backrest. This time, I took the back off an old industrial office chair and connecting it to the underside of the tractor seat, as seen below.  I cut some stiff-celled foam to fit, found an upholsterer to cover the thing in black leather to match the saddle, and pronounced it good.

There’s my homemade backrest before I sicced the upholsterer on it.
….and here it is completed. It didn’t work quite as well as I’d hoped….
....but it wasn’t terrible-looking, was it?
Better than this, at least…. 
 
….right? 
 Right?
🤷🏻‍♀️

And it was a good idea, if I say so myself. The backrest worked like a champ once I was up and rolling with my weight on the saddle, and I could have ridden all day with it like that. 

Unfortunately, the moment I stopped for any reason and shifted my weight to one foot or the other, those heavy-duty pogo stick springs forced the backrest into my already pained back.  It felt like a torture device the Spanish Inquisition might have appreciated. 

The sucky part is that it worked great while I was moving!
Backrest had to go!

I finally admitted defeat, set the backrest aside and bolted on an FL windshield.  It worked, even if it did ruin the lines of my gorgeous, oh-so-simple shovelhead.

The Bitch with the pogo stick and vintage FLH windshield….

I later exchanged it for one that came off a Dyna Wide Glide, I think.  A slightly sleeker look, and that’s the way it looks today: pogo stick, tractor seat and Dyna windshield.

….and here, with the later-model Dyna windshield.

My BMW needed no such alterations.  It already put me in a riding position suitable to my limitations, and I’d already installed a windshield for touring purposes. 

2000 BMW R1100R with a windshield and OEM bags, on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington State.

However, I still wanted a Harley I could pack my wife on, so one Saturday I toddled off down to Bud’s to explore the possibility of a new frame for my shovelhead.  It would have hurt my heart to lose the rigid frame and, thankfully, I didn’t need to.

Instead, I came home with a 1987 FXRS.

The 1987 FXRS I named The Banshee (because she knew how to wail) was ugly as sin when I got her, but had a powerplant rebuilt from a burn by Harley Bob, the same ace who figured out how to make The Bitch’s pogo stick saddle work. It also handled like a dream, had all the get-up-and-go an ol’ boy like me could need, and was the first Harley my wife could passenger on!

The first thing I did was install an FXRP Police saddle, which accomplished on the FXRS the same thing the pogo stick did on the shovelhead:  got my hips above my knees.  The FXRS already had a windshield, so I was spared that expense. 

The FXRP (Police) saddle mounted on my 1987 FXRS Low Rider the day I brought it home….
….and the first ride on the new saddle.

Instead, I just started stripping the FXRS of all the chrome and gold-accented doodads the previous owner had insisted on, and altering the bike to better fit my body.  Finally, I decided on a paint scheme I wanted, and spent months getting that accomplished. 

The Banshee on October 24th, 2008, the day I finished a two-year makeover, which included the FXRP saddle seen here, the removal of a metric fuck-tonne of chrome shyte, and the installation of as many black parts as I could lay hands on. In fact, a black belt-guard and that all-black pillion pad were the final pieces of my puzzle.

And there I was, a happy biker with three motorcycles suited for my disabilities:  my original OG shovelhead for hopping around town or solo road trips, the BMW for canyon carving, and the FXRS (now named The Banshee) for squiring my wife around in style.

I wish I could say we lived happily ever after, but….

….Fate or Life or The Universe (the bastard) had other ideas.

😱😮😳😢😡🤬

One of the many cruel tricks Fate or Life or The Universe (the bastard) played on me (and there have been many) is that the nerve damage at my spine causes all sorts of misfires in the lower half of my body.  I feel things I shouldn’t feel — sudden sharp pains, weird sensations like wetness on my leg, muscle spasms — and don’t feel things I should, like knowing when my bladder is full. 🤢 Ain’t that a gas?

And just so you know, I’m not sharing this because I want to. I just know there are other riders out there who have experienced (or, heavens forfend, will experience) some of what I’m going through. I wish someone had talked turkey to me post-accident, so I’m talking to y’all.

And you can ask questions, if you have any, about the bikes, the adaptations, or the medical shyte I’ve experienced in the nineteen years since my fall. All that experience should be good for something besides making me miserable…. 
 
….right? 
 Right?
 
🤷🏻‍♀️

Anyhoo….

Think of that channel through the center of each vertebra as a conduit, and the nerves as wires.  My surgeon said that when he got to my L-4 vertebra it was 80% occluded. With ‘spring-back’ — which means just what it sounds like — he reckons the L-4 channel (through which the cauda equina passes) was 100% occluded at the moment of impact. That explains why I felt the sharp pain in my back when I hit the ground, and also explains the problems I had post-surgery.

If the vertebra acts as a conduit, then a burst fracture is like a kink in that conduit, which crushes the wires inside.  At 100% occlusion, the insulation on those wires will be damaged, and as a result, electrical signals will go places they weren’t supposed to go.  Misfires.  Some are frustrating, some are humiliating, some are aggravating as hell, and most are just fucking painful. 

However, one of the first misfires I noticed began while I was still in the wheelchair after my initial surgeries.  Because I’d damaged both lower extremities so severely, I couldn’t weight-bear on my own, but the medicos wanted me up and moving about. 

The solution?  Working out in the physical therapy pool at the hospital.  The water would bear most of my weight, but I’d still be able to ‘walk’ and move around. 

As an aside, I was working out one day with a man about my age who had his hip replaced, and we got to talking about our injuries.  When I mentioned that I had fallen 35’ from a billboard, his eyes got big as saucers, and he said, ‘My father fell off a six-foot stepladder in his garage and died!’ 

Have I mentioned that Fate or Life or The Universe (whatever) is a bastard?  😡

Anyhoo, I was still working out in the pool when I learned that one of the many ‘gifts’ I’d been given in my accident was a trick knee, that would give way without warning and drop me where I stood.  In the pool, of course, this meant a sudden dunking and a faceful of highly chlorinated water.  Once I was out of the wheelchair, the results could be considerably worse.  I’d be strolling along, minding my own business, and suddenly I’m sprawled on the floor, or sidewalk, with skinned knees and palms.  What fun!

At first, it was mostly annoying and occasionally embarrassing, but over time the misfires to my knee became more and more frequent, to the point that I worried about my leg giving way as I sat at a red light on my bike, and me ending up with the bike on top of me, dependent on strangers to help me get back up again.

I do not like feeling that dependent on anyone.  It’s a whole thing with me.

I finally realized that I needed to do something to protect myself, and I thought ‘Hey, what about a trike?  After all, we’d built that one for Paul ‘way back when, and with Bud to help me I knew I could take my shovel and build a sharp-looking trike around it.

See my previous post for details about this trike.

I started banking money with Bud, saving up for one of the rigid trike frames Paughco was manufacturing, but then Bud died and my money disappeared.  I was so heartsick over his death that I couldn’t even pursue it.  In fact, it took me a number of years to step back into what was left of Bud’s shop again, and by then it was in a different location and of a completely different world.  I recognized some of the fixtures – the classic old showcases Bud had scored when the original Harley shop on Guadalupe closed – and noticed the tribute to Bandido Craig, who I’d worked with when Bud was still alive, but everything else, including the people, was utterly alien to me.

However, that was later.  Once I’d recovered enough from Bud’s passing to begin thinking of triking the shovel again, I began selling a massive assortment of stuff I had accumulated over the years.  Most of it was through eBay, and for a while I was shipping motorcycle parts, manuals and moto-themed gewgaws all over the world.  I also sold books and pop culture collectibles, antiques, whatever….

….until I’d finally saved enough to order the Paughco frame I’d been dreaming of.

The frame of my dreams, minus the chrome plating. Homie don’ like chromie!

I rang Paughco, all confident and ready to talk turkey, only to be informed that Paughco no longer makes the frame I wanted.  This was after the pandemic, when the supply chain was in disarray, and Ian, the fellow I spoke with, told me they couldn’t get the tubing they needed, but it didn’t matter because they couldn’t hire enough qualified welders, either!  😮

And that raises a quick question:  Where is this ‘collapsed economy’ I hear so many people raving about?  Because I see a fuck-ton of ‘Help Wanted’ signs and adverts all around.  Paughco is obviously not the only concern experiencing staffing shortages, and low unemployment is one of the hallmarks of a healthy economy, right?

Just sayin’….

Anyhoo, with Paughco unable to provide the frame I wanted, I began searching all over for other options.  I was burning up the Googleplex looking for ‘trike frame’, ‘rigid trike frame’, ‘Harley trike frame’, et cetera. I found plenty of bolt-on swingarm trike kits to fit swingarm and Softail frames, and stretched and raked low-saddle rigid frames intended for radical ‘chopper’ builds, but no one was making the traditional rigid frame I wanted – the one like the photo from the Paughco catalog.

I finally found one outfit in The Netherlands that made the frame I wanted, a place called VG Classic Frames. He even used repop factory-styled castings for the headstock, et cetera, and had what looked like a seat post for the pogo stick, which would have made it ideal for my needs.  Sadly, despite numerous attempts, I could not get the shop owner to give me a price (or even a ballpark estimate) of what shipping to the U.S. might cost.

Oh, what could have been! 😢

By now I was getting desperate to get back in the wind, so I gave up and I gave in, and I went shopping for a Harley-Davidson Freewheeler.  Of the late-model trikes on offer from the MoCo, the Freewheeler was closest to my idea of a motorcycle.  It was a little stripped down, a little meaner looking than the Tri-Glide, and quite a bit lighter.  It still weighs twice what my shovel does 😮 but that fiberglass taco box is heavy!

The 2016 Harley-Davidson Freewheeler with the 103″ Twin Cam engine; last year for the line, I’m told. I know squat about late-model Harleys, so every day on this thing is a new experience! And just think, I went from a 74″ shovel to an 80″ Evo, and now a 103″ Twinkie.

I found the bike I wanted at a stealership in Houston.  It was a 2016 FLRT Freewheeler in Black Quartz, with 4” unbaffled Cobra cones and a factory rider backrest and luggage rack.  I could have done without the backrest – thankfully, it’s removable with the push of a couple of tabs – and the luggage rack is actually kinda handy, but those straight pipes were fucking awful! 

The 2016 Harley-Davidson FLRT Freewheeler I have christened The Box-Turtle. First there’s alliteration — Bitch, Banshee, Bagger and Box-Turtle — and then there’s that great honkin’ taco box on the back, like a turtle shell.
I even found a metallic sticker of Heinrick Kley’s musical turtles, which I’d discovered several years before they appeared on the cover of The Grateful Dead’s Terrapin Station album.  
 
 
 In fact, while I lived in Seattle in late ’75, after getting out of the service, I got the banjo-playing turtle tattooed on my left bicep. Unfortunately, the ‘artist’ — a celebrated tattooist who called herself ‘Madame Lazonga’ — did such a crappy job that I had the thing covered at the first opportunity.  
 
 
 Still, I never got over my affection for the critters!
I even found an embroidered patch to add to my winter riding vest, and a suitable quote from a Grateful Dead song. It really has been a long, strange trip, hasn’t it?

It took the better part of a day of dicking around, but I got the price down to what I was willing to pay, and the deal was made.  The next Saturday I pulled my motorcycle trailer down to Houston and carted her home. 

The FLRT Freewheeler loaded on my too-short trailer….
….and thank goodness I had the heavy-duty tie-down straps Bud gave me, so I could rig that tailgate/ramp securely enough to make it home. I’ll be having braces made for it ASAP. 
 
 
 And yes, that is a flat tire, unnoticed in all the excitement until I was a block away, no longer under the nice shade tree. 😡🤬 Triple-A earned their premium that day!
Once home, I didn’t ride the beast for a week. See those four-inch cones? I like my neighbors, and I have no interest in inflicting that on them, so I waited to ride until I could replace the damned things.  
 
 
 This project, BTW, prompted my return to Bud’s Motorcycle Shop, Version 2.0, for the first time since his death, and my realization that change, that constant motherfucker, had done its damage in my old home-away-from-home. Took two trips out there — one before I brought the trike home and another after, to exchange the first set of take-off mufflers for a set that fit — but I got it done!
Then it was time to begin the learning curve.

For those not familiar, riding a trike (or a sidecar rig like the one I piloted in the ’80s) is completely different than riding a solo machine. For starters, countersteering will get a rider killed, because the trike reacts in a completely opposite manner to a solo when countersteered. Push out on the right handgrip while approaching a left-hand curve, and instead of gently leaning into and tracking through your curve, you will find yourself going hard to port before you can even grasp what’s happening! 

The sidecar we dubbed ‘Moon Unit’, attached to my 1954 wishbone frame with a combination of OEM Harley-Davidson parts and some bastard mounts designed and constructed with the invaluable assistance of Bill Mading at BG&T Welding in Austin. Bill was a former motocross racer who understood (far better than I) the stresses and strains a motorcycle frame undergoes. It was Bill who restored my ’54 frame when I first got it, replacing the stress tube and fat bob mounts some chopper builder had removed, and inspecting the joints for cracks. When I decided to get a sidecar for the shovel, so my stepdaughter could join her mother and I on rides, I knew I could trust him to help keep my little girl safe.

The test-ride I took in Houston was terrifying, so when I got the beast home, I knew I had to unlearn almost five decades of training and experience in order to ride her safely. Just resisting the instinct to countersteer when going into curves took all my concentration, at first.  
  
Then, since I’m not countersteering and leaning into curves the way I’m accustomed to do, the trike constantly felt as if it might tip over in turns, victim to centrifugal force. I had to gradually build up my confidence in curves, carefully going faster and faster as I gained a feeling for how the machine would handle and what it could handle.  
  
It was effectively like reliving my earliest days on a motorcycle. My first rides were just toodles around the neighborhood, but I slowly progressed to longer and longer excursions.

My first ‘big’ trip out of the neighborhood was to drop some eBay packages off at the post office. Whoo-hoo, huh?  🤷🏻‍♀️
  
 Still, it was me on a motorcycle and back in the wind, so no complaints here…. 
 
 
 ….and I’ve managed longer trips since then, including a day-long walkabout through Williamson, Cameron and Bell Counties, down the backroads I so enjoyed exploring on my shovelhead. I’m slowly rebuilding my ‘mileage muscles’, which have atrophied after years of disuse, and look forward to longer and longer rides on my Box-Turtle.

So, I am back in the wind, with my knees in the breeze, but wouldn’t you know? After months spent scouring the internet for the rigid shovel frame I originally sought, and asking everyone I could find for leads, et cetera, and finally committing to the 2016 Freewheeler, it was (and I swear I am not making this up) just two weeks later that a friend helped me reconnect with an old riding partner – a fellow I haven’t seen in over twenty years – who just happens to own a custom frame shop in Dallas. 😳

Steve back in 1992, on a ride from Central Texas to Western Colorado. I just love that grin on his face!

Have I mentioned that Fate or Life or The Universe (the bastard) has a perverted sense of humor and really shitty timing?  😡

Anyhoo, I did get to visit my old friend on a road trip that I’ll tell you about in an upcoming post, but in the meanwhile, my gimped-up ass is finally back in the wind where it belongs, and my old friend is scheming on a possible frame for my shovelhead!

chal•lenge accepted! 😁

I might look grumpy, but inside I’m smiling like a fool! I am in the wind! It’s not my beloved Bitch, but the wind tastes the same! ….and I still have The Bitch, so I still have hope. So long as I’m upright and breathing free air, there’s always the possibility that The Bitch and I will be together in the wind again, someday soon. 😎

In case you missed the link at the beginning of this post, you can find the first part of my article at:

chal•lenge

(chal’enj) n. anything that calls for special effort

Copyright © 2023 by Bill James at The Shovel Shop, Austin, Texas. Photograph of Jane Strand (above) © 1988, 2023 by Bill James at The Shovel Shop, Austin, Texas.

What would you do if life – an accident or illness or hereditary condition – stopped you from doing the thing you most enjoy?

Paul aboard his custom shovelhead trike, as it appeared in Easyriders in January, 1985.

I initially got interested in adapting motorcycles for use by riders with physical disabilities in the early ’80s, when I helped design and construct a shovelhead-powered trike for a military veteran who’d been paralyzed in a motorcycle wreck.  Paul (seen in photo above) was classified as quadriplegic, which, FYI, does not necessarily mean a person is paralyzed from the neck down, as I’d always assumed.  Rather, it simply means the normal functions of all four limbs are affected by the injury or condition.  In Paul’s case, that meant he had no use of his legs, and while his right arm was almost fully functional, his left had only limited strength and range of motion.  He could make a partial fist – enough to operate a hand clutch and help steer a motorcycle – but couldn’t operate a jockey shift or brake lever.

Now, bear in mind that in the 1980s none of the well-known motorcycle manufacturers were producing three-wheeled motorcycles.  Harley-Davidson still offered sidecars, but the Motor Company’s venerable Servi-Car (popular with police and fire departments, delivery services and automotive repair shops) ended its forty-one-year run in 1973, and no one was rushing to fill that slot.

As an aside: circa 1982, Honda reportedly produced a prototype three-wheeler based on their CX500 – an estimated 250 units overall – for U.S. Police Departments.  I have a distinct (and very pleasant memory) of seeing a female Austin Police Department officer in full moto-cop regalia, including knee boots and leather jacket, blasting through downtown traffic on one such prototype with her long blonde hair streaming behind her.  😍  Unfortunately, the bikes didn’t make the cut and never went into full production, and I never saw my jackbooted goddess again. 🥺😢😭

Anyhoo, as I was saying….

No one was cranking out three-wheeled motorcycles back then, and aside from some knucklehead-powered prototypes constructed at the onset of World War II, the Motor Company had never produced a Big Twin trike.  That meant virtually everything we needed to make Paul’s bike function as required had to be designed and created in-house.

The chassis consisted of an OEM early shovelhead swingarm frame grafted to a rigid Servi-Car rear section.  It had originally been built for a local biker who was shot in the leg by an off-duty APD officer during a traffic confrontation on Guadalupe Street, near the entrance to the Austin State Hospital.  The cop claimed he was in fear for his life, naturally, and walked away without consequence.  Meanwhile, the unarmed and now disabled biker was left to fend for himself, and put together the three-wheeler. 

After a while, Rod assumed he was healed up enough to get back on two wheels, so my boss at the motorcycle shop got the trike frame.  Unfortunately, Rod wasn’t as healed as he thought he was, because shortly after getting back on his panhead he tipped his bike over while trying to park it in a grassy area pocked with hillocks and treacherous low spots.  When he tried to catch himself his right (injured) leg gave way, putting him right back on the disabled list.  

However, by then we were already well into the construction of Paul’s trike.

The Easyriders spread from January, 1985, seen below, shows the details of Paul’s unique trike:  crossover shifter mechanism, linked front and rear brakes, custom floorboards, et cetera.  What the magazine doesn’t show is that, while we got the trike running and dialed in, and fine-tuned the hand-controls and other adaptations, Paul was bartering with the shop’s owner, trading custom paint and bodywork to cover the costs of the build.  Paul was a gifted body man, and I was very proud to run the tins he’d shaped and painted for me during that time.

1980: My 1974 shovelhead, recently transplanted into this OEM 1954 wishbone frame, sports tanks and fenders shaped (where needed) and painted by Paul.  This was the first frame-off rebuild I’d ever done, and I remain very proud of the finished project!  A lot of people who looked askance at my choice of colors when the painted tins were hanging on the wall in my shop area admitted I’d chosen well, and created a striking custom build.

Once we got the trike dialed in, while it was still all bare metal and grey primer, we turned it over to Paul, who soon returned to his home in Massachusetts.  There, he took the bike apart and detailed the thing, putting his expertise and artistry as a body man to work, and doing much of the physical labor himself.  Paul built an extended platform behind the pogo-stick saddle to hold his wheelchair, and the custom-built ultralight wheelchair itself.  He also cleaned up the rough metal we’d used to fashion some of his controls, added a lot of gold and chrome plating, and painted the machine a rich ebony black with striped accents on the frame.  Aside from the unique aspects of its construction, the machine was a beautiful custom motorcycle, deserving of its place in the pages of the world’s most widely-read biker magazine.

By the time we completed Paul’s trike, I had become fascinated with the process of modifying motorcycles for use by handicapped riders, and enamored of the spirit and ingenuity that went into each adaptation.  I began clipping articles from newspapers and magazines – anything referencing handicapped riders or drivers – and adverts and announcements about new parts that looked as if they might prove useful in adaptations.  I photographed adapted bikes wherever I found them, and spoke to the riders if possible.  

Over time, I accumulated a hefty file of information in those pre-internet days, and acted as a clearinghouse for that info.  Primarily through Letters to the Editors columns of motorcycle magazines I made that information available free of charge to any and all takers.

Early 1988: Jane Strand on the shovelhead trike she and her husband, Rick Strand, designed and constructed. Jane was paralyzed when a teenaged red-light-runner struck the couple as they rode Rick’s flathead through downtown Austin. I featured their bike in the article I wrote for Road Rider. Rick and Jane went on to found a custom motorcycle shop in South Dakota, specializing in adaptations for handicapped riders. However, just now, when I went looking for the shop’s contact info, I learned that Rick passed away several years ago. Sorry to say, I don’t know what happened to Jane.

I’d written for newspapers and magazines for several years, so it was a natural progression to take what I’d learned and create a feature-length magazine article.  I shopped the idea around, and Road Rider (later reconfigured as Motorcycle Consumer News) gave me the commission.  I did the research, conducted my interviews, took the photographs, and my piece appeared in Road Rider‘s November 1988 issue.  I didn’t even know it had come out until someone at a motorcycle rights organization meeting asked for my autograph! 🙄

October, 1988:  My friend Tina and I, as I sign my first (and last, so far) autograph on my just-released article about adapting motorcycles for use by handicapped riders.  We were at Frank’s Lakeview Inn on Lake Belton, Texas, to attend a Texas Motorcycle Roadriders Association meeting.

Times have changed drastically since that article appeared.  By the late ‘90s aftermarket manufacturers had begun releasing bolt-on trike kits, and now offer assemblies for almost every motorcycle marque on the road.  In 2009, Harley-Davidson began marketing its own line of Big Twin trikes with a wide range of options.  Aftermarket trike frames are also available, as are helpful add-ons like electronic shifter mechanisms, and reverse drive units for those who can’t back their bikes out of parking spaces.  Meanwhile, the Can-Am Spyder and Polaris Slingshot offer something other than the traditional trike configuration, if you’re into that sort of thing.

Just in time, too, as the perennially playful Baby Boom ages into the need for three-wheelers!  😆

Okay, so, on to the article:

Here is the Easyriders article about Paul and his trike:

And another piece, from Easyriders’ March 1979 issue:

So, what’s this got to do with me? More at the link below. ‘Til then, sláinte! 😎

HAPPY ANNIVERSARY, SWEETHEART!

When I was maybe seven or eight the boy next door came home from college on a toaster-tank BMW, and was giving the neighbor kids rides around the block. I begged and pleaded with my Mom – ‘PleaseI’llbecarefulI’llhangontightPleasecanIgoCanIgoPleaseI’llbecarefulPlease….’ – until she finally gave in. Yay! 😁👍

Gene and I were halfway around the block when I got this thought, like a crystal-clear voice in my head, that said ‘I’m going to HAVE one of these someday!’ The moment was so profound that, forty years later, I was able to take my wife to that exact spot and say ‘There! That’s where it all began!’ 🤷‍♀️

Right about there is where that lightning bolt inspiration struck me!

We were not allowed to have motorcycles when we were kids; not even minibikes, which were all the rage at the time. The closest I got to the chopper of my dreams was some plastic modelling kits and a Sting-Ray bicycle.

Not my Sting-Ray – this one is listed on eBay for $1200 😳 – but this is the color and year I had.

Of course, on the sly I rode anything with a motor – minibike, moped, dirtbike, whatever – whenever anyone was dumb enough to let me, but that wasn’t often. We lived in a ‘nice’ suburban town, and actual bikers were hard to find. The boy next door and Steve down the street, who had a BSA, were the only people I knew with real motorcycles, and they were never dumb enough to let me near the controls! 😆

As noted in previous posts, I spent my teen years drinking and drugging – a lot and very badly – and it wasn’t until I put all that aside, at the age of 21, that I could get serious about putting together the money for my first motorcycle. It took a year of sobriety to clean up my rather messy financial history, and working two jobs while going to school full-time on the GI Bill, but I finally got together the down-payment. With that in hand I got the nod from the credit union to begin shopping. Yay again! 😁👍

I toddled off to the Harley-Davidson dealership – I already knew I wanted a Harley – but the guy there was such a jackass that I turned around and walked out. Smart move, because half a block up the street I saw a Harley for sale in a used car lot. It was black, low, lean and mean, one of the prettiest things I’d ever seen, and looked like it might be everything I ever wanted.

I could not have been more right.

I called this biker I’d met in sobriety – a lawyer, of all things, who built choppers! – and asked him to come look at the bike with me. He came down and we went over the bike together. It was a 1974 Harley-Davidson Superglide FX with a 74 cubic inch shovelhead motor, a kickstarter (no electric start then or now) and disc brakes fore and aft. After he took it for a test ride (I did not yet have my motorcycle license) Wayne gave it the thumbs-up, and the deal was done. I completed the paperwork at the credit union, conveniently located just around the corner from the used-car lot, and spent a near-sleepless night as keyed up as a kid at Christmas.

The next day – April 11th, 1979 – I threw my leg over my very first Harley for the very first time. That’s right: Forty-four years ago today I answered the call I heard that long-ago afternoon, on the back of Gene Graf’s BMW. After years of wishing and wanting and dreaming about it, I finally had me one of those things! 😎

April 11, 1979, at Northwest Hills Texaco, where I worked at the time.

And forty-four years later, I still have that same motorcycle. I’ve had a few others along the way, but that one is my ride-or-die keeper. She (for she is a girl, make no mistake) is no longer black, and not as low or quite as lean as she was (neither am I, for that matter 😏 ) but she is still the prettiest thing I have ever seen. She’s still gorgeous, and righteous, and I still love her dearly.

Sad to say, a series of unfortunate events (primarily a disabling on-the-job accident) have kept me off my one true love (machine division) for several years, but I still harbor a hope that we may still find a way to be together again.

However, in the meanwhile, and with the support of my one true love (human division) I have secured a different bike, better suited to my disabilities. She’s big and fat and shiny and loud, and so new-fangled and complicated I dare not touch most of her more intimate components, but I’ve already had my hands on her, a little bit, doing little fix-its and adjustments, and once that happens love is sure to follow. She’ll never displace my shovelhead – seriously, what could? – but I have a good feeling about her. 🥰

My new-to-me 2016 Harley-Davidson Freewheeler. Now all I have to do is unlearn forty-four years of training, practice and instinct I’ve accumulated riding a two-wheeler, and learn the proper handling of a three-wheeler. For those who don’t know: it’s a very different style of riding!

So, Happy Anniversary to my 1974 Harley-Davidson FX – my beloved shovelhead – and thank you, thank you, thank you for all the years of joy and adventure you brought me. Let’s go for forty-four more, eh? 😁

Yes, sir, that’s my baby. No, sir, I don’t mean ‘maybe.’ Yes, sir, that’s my baby now!

And don’t you go getting jealous of the new kid. She’s just here to help. 😏