The life of a Scotsman

Some deep contemplation went in to this…

Weekly Update 5 – 15/08 – 29/08

Hello.

Yet again I have been very busy this past week with work, meaning that for the first 3 days of the week I was not on my MT. Instead I was in a white van for 2, and on the train for 1, and whilst I was away from the MT I had a chance to think about this coming winter and what winter entails for YamYam and his bikes.

Now  the reason I got my MT was on the basis that 2 bikes means that one can go away for the winter and stay nice, and the other can be run in to the ground thus saving money in the long run. I believe differently now and the reasons are to follow. But I think that this decision is a good one because the main motivation is that we wont need to be replacing £600 worth of bike parts every January.

As of Thursday 26th August 2010, YamYam is minus a Suzuki GSR600S K7. I sold it. On eBay

When I was looking at getting a MT I had asked the question “what would I get as a part exchange price for my 30,000 mile Suzuki GSR600s K7?” The answer was “Nothing.” The bike dealers obviously have to have some scope to mark up the bikes once they have bought them from customers at ridiculously low prices…so what can you mark up from a purchase price of £0? £500? Whatever it was, the dealer didn’t see any benefit in taking in my faithful steed.

So I decided that instead of keeping it and running it in to the ground completely, where I would eventually have to either scrape it, or myself, off the tarmac….I would sell it, and whatever I got for it would therefore be a bonus!

So to cut a long story short, I sold it for £1200! I was pretty chuffed with that, and the guy that turned up to collect it was equally chuffed, mainly because he thought it was in a lot better nick than he expected, even though I had clearly detailed in the listing that it was pretty rusty.

I am quite relieved actually. Not for getting shot of my then winter hack, but for the money that we will save not having to service (or not) two bikes, replace 4 tyres a year, petrol, wear and tear etc etc. It equates to around £100 a month saved if you compensate for wear and tear, replacing corroded and worn down parts. So what then shall I do during the winter, when I would usually be shivering in to work or sliding about on ice?

The Scotrail Fife Circle Train is what.

During my 3 days of non-biking I drove a white van around which in itself was quite fun, if only to listen to the radio on the way. The third day I didn’t have my van, but I got the train. It was at this point that I thought actually, it’s not that bad? I usually, when it’s really bad weather, get the bus. Its a smelly, stuffy, cramped, disease ridden journey at the end of which you get off and are genuinely relieved to get the hell out of that place. Bus drivers think it’s good to turn the heating up full blast in winter, but when you have 40 folk all cramped in, probably wet from the Scottish winter rain, then it all turns to condensation which makes it like a greenhouse. Because it’s winter, we all have our winter jackets on. So you can already see how torturous it is. Couple that with the tiny, OAP geared seats (knees around ears stuff), the sneezing, coughing, paper reading, light flicking passengers and the picture becomes complete…oh that and the complete inability of the bus driver to drive smoothly resulting in some serious frustration as your head goes bashing forwards and backwards, even quicker when sitting in traffic jams.

OH DEAR, I am getting annoyed just thinking about it. Well the train is different in that firstly, you’re on rails. So there’s no bumpy bits. The seats are a bit more spacious. There’s no queues. Yeah the passengers may still have colds and read papers, but the journey is a flat 25 minutes regardless of what the weather is doing. So you’ve not got to sit in a 2 hour long traffic jam because of the complete inability of the rest of the driving population to pay attention when its dark and raining.

It’s a bit more expensive, around about £40 more a month, but when you see how much different the experience is with the train, it’s worth it and I’ll still be saving money than if I was on my bike.

So yes folks, YamYam is turning in to a Spring/Summer/Autumn rider, and is dumping Winter from his repertoire. It makes both logistical and financial sense. I just need to let go of the slightly immature “I’m better than you because I can hack Winter” attitude that’s unfortunately consumed me for the past 3 years.

In other news then, Blair is selling his GSR too! Hahaha. It’s a Fraser exodus.

Blair, as you know, had his first child in December 2009 and as always is with bringing small humans in to this world, there are sacrifices. He fought it for longer than we all expected but he’s given in to the inevitable, even if it’s for the greater picture. So his bike is on eBay right now too.

It will be sad not having Blair to go out riding with every so often…yes we’ve not been getting out so much lately due to me working and Blair daddy-ing. But then again, I’ve invested a lot of my GSR’s money in taking up a new hobby, one that will allow me, Blair and Dad to get out more often together. Golf.

It’s a traditional Scottish sport that I’ve watched Blair and Dad play for years, whilst I walked along beside taking photographs. But now it’s time to get myself behind a club and start getting out in the fresh air in my spare time. I am so excited about it that it’s borderline obsessive already, for I have spent the past 5 days relentlessly scouring the web for the best deals, going up the driving range to test clubs and generally being really sad about it. But it’s a Fraser trait so I can’t feel to sad about it.

I have a funny story regarding a man in a car that is so angry that he felt compelled to hang out his window and shout abuse at me. Next week for that.

Cheers all, and sorry for the 90% non-biking post.

Gordon

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3 Responses

  1. Ross

    Trains?! You should stick with the van Gordo- It’s a well proven fact (as shown by all white van men) that you’ll get to your destination quicker by tailgating, switching lanes without indicating and shouting abuse at your fellow road-user, while all the time operating a sat-nav… and a mobile phone. And you can take your golf bag with you in the back!

    Sunday, August 29, 2010 at 12:39

  2. Neal

    Every week day I get 4 trains to and from work. The first is a 15 minute ride into Glasgow. I get on halfway through the trip so I never get a seat and for whatever reason the heating is always on full blast. I get off at Glasgow dripping with sweat and close to fainting.

    Then I get a train to Greenock. I have to wait around 20 minutes for that one. When I finally get on it it slowly fills full of chavs on their way to Greenock college or whatever shoddy place of learning they attend. This journey lasts 45 minutes…joy.

    In the winter it is very rare for me to get in on time resulting in late nights at the office. When the snow was bad this year I was stranded in Central on an almost daily basis.

    For this pleasure I pay £140 a month, bargain eh? Still, I’ve watched a ton of good movies haha.

    I’ve never gotten the premise of golfing in Scotland to be honest. Take up kayaking or summat, you’ll get less wet… :)

    Sunday, August 29, 2010 at 22:14

  3. Sue

    I started a new job back in April. To get there I have to travel on a road infested with a large number of large and very stupid kangaroos that like to play chicken with the traffic, especially at dusk and after dark. The last thing I want to do (and it probably WOULD be the last thing I did!) is to meet a roo on my SV on the way home from a parent-teacher night, so – in what has coincidentally been the wettest winter I’ve known since I came to Canberra, I wimped out and bought a little car, promising myself that I wouldn’t come to rely on it. I haven’t quite forgiven myself yet… I liked the ‘just me and my bike against the world’ thing – but the little Hyundai certainly has come in handy now and then as a ‘back-up’ vehicle.

    Your description of germ-infested bus rides made me laugh – they’re just like that on this side of the world too! Erk. Happy train travelling!

    Friday, September 3, 2010 at 22:22

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