Quarter Year

Drag & Claws, tire repair

December 28, 2009 at 8:05 am

Mr. Manager, Bali, Indonesia

Mr. Manager.

by Mike

Tires aren’t supposed to be flat, but if they must, it’s better that they be flat in the middle of a town.

We walked the bike to a repair shop only 20 yards away and I pulled it right into the small garage. The kid working didn’t really say anything to me, he just took the bike and started taking the wheel apart. I asked how much it would cost to repair – I thought his response was 5,000 rupiah (50 cents) but I must have misunderstood. It would probably be 50,000. Still, $5 is a good deal to repair a tire.

He couldn’t get the patch to work, so he said they’d need to use a new inner tube. He put the tube in, threw the tire back together and told us it was good as new. The price for a new tire? 30,000 rupiah. That’s $3. So I had been right – the simple patch would only have cost 50 cents. We paid $3.50 and he tried to give the extra money back to us, but we told him it was a tip, because he was so polite and a good worker. The kid handed all the money to the boss (pictured above) and the boss handed 30 cents back to the kid as his share of the tip.

So, about that manager: I could only understand that his nails were just one year old, believe it or not. In other words, it’s within our reach, but we’ll have to start today if we want those nails for next year’s holiday season. There are probably a lot of things he does with those things that would be entertaining to watch, but I think I saw the best thing – when someone paid with a large bill, he pulled out a wad of cash and leafed through the notes with his thumbnail. THAT would have been a rad picture.

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Motorcycle Safety

December 10, 2009 at 3:15 am

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Azure by the river.

by Mike

Since we intended to ride all over Southeast Asia & Europe on two wheels it was prudent to take Washington’s motorcycle safety course. So, the weekend before I left, I sat with four other guys in a classroom captained by a well-intending man who reminded me of Dr. Phil, though not quite as stern nor insightful.

In his introduction he explained that he loved helping people safely experience something that’s given him so much joy. But he especially loved getting to know his students. This was a safe zone. There would be no wrong answers, he emphasized.

That said, we jumped into it. “First off, can anyone tell me the greatest risk to motorcycles on the road?” The answers he wanted were pretty obvious – other cars, potholes, dangerous surfaces – but we were reluctant to raise our hands. I’ve met a lot of idiots, but maybe the biggest idiot I’ve met was in the class, and he finally spoke up: (read more)

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Thai drivers are crazier than you

December 1, 2009 at 10:04 am

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Dude looking at me as traffic pulls away. Bangkok, Thailand.

by Mike

Have you ever:
… driven on the shoulder against traffic?
… pulled a u-turn during rush hour on a 6-lane road in the middle of the block?
… been let off a bus two lanes away from the curb in busy traffic?
… taken a left by first crossing into oncoming traffic, then turning the corner into oncoming traffic, then crossing back over onto the correct side of the road?

I saw all these things today. This, along with the Thai’s brazen approach to food-handling, makes me wonder how any Thai people are still alive.

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