I've written a couple of pieces for the local VMCC newsletter. I thought some of you guys might enjoy them.
Part 1:
In late 1976 I got a job as a motorcycle courier for a printers in Diss Norfolk. The regular rider had been banned for 6 months so I was taken on for that period. The company provided the motorbike; a Honda 500 Four and riding leathers. The pay was good so I thought I was doing well, getting paid to ride a nice motorcycle.
The job required the courier to ride from the printers in Norfolk to various locations in and around London collecting 'Copy' that would then be brought back to be set and reproduced on a Web Offset press. Typical pickups were at The Orpington Advertiser, (one of several free-sheets) but also The Liberal Party News Letter, West Indian World and Gay News. The average weekly trip total would often be well over 1000 miles.
After the first week I realised that this job was not going to be as easy as I had first thought. The weather that winter, following one of the UK's hottest summers was not good. By the time I had ridden to my first pick-up I was so cold I could hardly get off the bike. To try and keep warm I would dress with many layers of clothing with the leather bike suit over the top and three pairs of gloves.
One morning I set off early; there was frost on the ground but the sun came out so the roads were getting cleared. An hour or so later later I was burning rubber on the Newmarket bypass which is pretty much a motorway. I had just overtaken a line of cars when I felt the back wheel kick sideways; black ice I think. I had time to think, "Oh ****, I hope this doesn't hurt too much". Next moment I was sliding along in the fast lane with the bike on its side ahead of me with sparks flying out from underneath. After what felt like minutes the bike and me stopped in the fast lane. It was very lucky that at that early hour there was very little other traffic, but I had just overtaken a couple of vehicles. One car stopped on the hard shoulder and a young man ran across to see if I was ok. It was very lucky that I had been wearing all that winter clothing because my slide along the tarmac had worn the hip of my clothing right through but only just reached the skin. Also the gloves had worn through to the under gloves. I was pretty much ok, just shaken up. The young man that stopped, happened to be an off-duty policeman; he helped me to push the bike over to the hard shoulder; he said that when I overtook him, shortly before I came off I must have been doing about 90 mph. The off-duty copper drove me to a cafe in Cambridge so I could phone my employers to tell them what had happened. No mobiles back then.