Bonneville Salt Flats

Vincent Rally

Cannon Falls is just far enough out of the city to provide a nice low-stress, small town location for an eclectic and (in some cases) eccentric group of motorcycles riders. While most of us assume these bikes are too valuable to actually ride, many of the bikes at the rally did indeed get there without the benefit of a trailer.



Real bikers drink Leinenkugel beer – this is the parking lot at the Friday night barbecue.


The Black Shadow owned by Carl Hungness made it all the way from Madison, Indiana to Cannon Falls, a distance that Google calculates as just shy of 700 miles. Another Shadow carried its rider from Colorado. I stopped at the headquarters hotel on Thursday afternoon, and it was nice to see these very valuable motorcycles parked helter skelter under the canopy, covered in road grime and equipped with home-made saddle bags and tour pacs.



Carl Hungness, the man who rode his Vincent from the southeastern corner of Indiana, to Cannon Falls Minnesota, a distance or roughly 700 miles.


When it comes to riding Vincents, one member stands out head and shoulders above the rest. Marty Dickerson from California didn’t ride a Vincent to the rally. What Marty Dickerson did do is ride Steve Hamel’s Vincent to a one-way speed of 157.3 miles per hour at the Bonneville Salt Flats this year during the Bub event. Did I mention the fact that Marty is 83 years old, and has ridden at Bonneville almost every year since 1950.

Kind of gives the rest of us something to shoot for as the sand slips through the hour-glass.



Owned by Steve Hamel, this is the bike that Marty used to turn a one-way speed of 157.3.




Marty Dickerson, the man who first rode a bike at Bonneville in 1950, and has ridden almost every year since, including 2009.

















NEW PRODUCTS

New Hardcover BookNew Hardcover Book
The last blog talked briefly about our limited ability to get everything done on time, and there are in fact two books stuck in the production process: Biker Math and Motorcycle Wiring. For anyone waiting on one of these titles, we hope to have them finished and ready to ship later this summer.

For fall, we have an ambitious group of books planned, and some are actually partly finished. Bonnneville, World’s Fastest Motorcycle is in the midst of layout. Jacki, resident graphic artist, is busy placing images on the pages before the book goes back to the author so he can install the copy and captions. The author in this case is talented photographer Hörst Rosler and the book is a hardcover, 10X10 inch edition. With the wonders of computers and email, we are able to send Hörst the layout in PDF format, have him write in the copy and then email it back to us. We are trying to get this to the printer in time to have a few advance copies ready during Sturgis week.