Never mind rust on the motorcycle: how fast does a rider get "rusty"?
We'd been out of town, away from my Royal Enfield, for a month. The weather was perfect for a ride, so I suited up, planning to take the motorcycle to fill the tank.
After a month away, getting some fresh gas seemed like a good idea.
But I was rusty.
No sooner did I kick start the Royal Enfield than I realized I didn't have my gloves. I was all ready to go. The motorcycle was running. I considered riding without gloves, just this once.
But thoughts of what a fall could do to my hands prevailed. Regretfully I switched off the motorcycle and headed inside the house to get the gloves.
They weren't where I normally keep them! I figured I must have left them in the pockets of my other jacket.
No, the gloves weren't there either. Never mind. I'd just use my spare pair.
But those weren't where I thought they'd be either. What the... ?
I realized that I would have taken the original pair into the garage when I went to get the motorcycle. And there they were, "hiding" under the edge of an upside down canoe, where they had fallen.
OK. Gloves on hands, I headed back to the motorcycle.
Mounting up I realized that the rearview mirrors were out of adjustment. They must have moved when I put a dust sheet over the bike before leaving town.
Damn, you know how I hate adjusting those mirrors!
Moving them loosens them and, with the vibrations of the motor the mirrors are soon swinging merrily backwards and forwards as the motorcycle picks up or loses speed.
Still, it had to be done. I took a chance and just barely touched them to make the adjustment.
OK. Finally! Ready to go at last.
Only as I let out the clutch did I remember that I hadn't first checked the tire pressures. I decided to chance riding anyway; it had only been a month since the last check; surely they'd be OK?
The throttle seemed to feel a bit unfamiliar, since I had only just struggled to remove and replace it before leaving town. OK. I guess this is the way it feels now. Get used to it.
At the first intersection my boot heel failed to find the neutral finder lever. You have to rely on muscle memory to locate it, and my muscles had forgotten.
This ride was getting a bit frustrating.
Traffic was heavy, and my dance with the neutral finder, so important in traffic, continued to go badly.
How could I have forgotten how to do this, in only a month!
OK, at last, here is the gas station.
I undid the gas cap and reached for the pump handle. I've added gas a million times, it seems, and never, ever, spilled gas onto the tank.
But, sure enough, this time, a teaspoon of petrol spilled across the tank as I brought the pump handle over the tank.
Damn! That's not good for the paint.
Gassed up and restarted, I headed towards home. No sense prolonging this experience.
Except, thinking about it, practice is actually what I needed.





