Guy Boutin's Motorcycle Touring and Travel Pages

A
dventures in Sport Touring with the Honda ST 1100, 1300 and the BMW 1200RT

Exploring North America...One Road at a Time


Home Up

 

 

A Midnight Ride
August 2001

I was bored. I had watched the local news, dominated Playstation 2, and web surfed till my eyes were blurry. It was 11:30pm, and I was wide awake. It was a Sunday night, I was off the following morning, my work days the following week are Wednesday and Saturday. What to do? Go for a ride of course.

I walked from the study to my "dressing room", ok so its really the laundry room, but it houses my riding gear. The Roadcrafter, hung on the door, my Bieffe and gloves on their assigned table. My boots poised and ready.

I zipped up and the sound of my boots walking in the kitchen woke my slumbering wife.

"where are YOU going?"

"for a ride, not sleepy"

"NOW"?

"well I thought I would, be back in a hour or so"

"well ok, be careful"

"don't worry"

I fired up the ST, I pulled my gloves on as the motor warmed up.

The air hangs thick in Central Alabama in late August. These are "dog days". The dew point is well in the 70s. For a reference point, dews in California or Arizona, are in the 30s and 40s. At 11:45pm the temp is 73 with a dew point of 71. Always reference the dew point in relation to the temp to get a true measure of moisture in the air. The narrower the gap, the wetter it is. 

I need to get moving as I feel the sweat running down my back already.

I drop down to first, and ponder where to go. That's easy. A Krispy Kreme run to Montgomery, then back home by way of Elmore County. The donuts will be hot this time of night, and the familiar roads of my stomping grounds will be empty.

My hometown is quiet on this Sunday night. I spot a cruiser on routine patrol near the drug store. They recognize my bike and a hand pops out the window. 

I turn east on Main Street and make my way to I-65. The normally bustling east side is quiet and slow. The fast food joints are closed and dark. 

The East Side of Prattville is like the east side every city. Growing, prosperous, and new. People are fleeing the capital city of Montgomery in droves, moving here for our low crime, good schools, and low property taxes.

I pass the Wal Mart SuperCenter. Judging by the parking lot they are busy inside. What was life like before Wal Mart? I will tell you-it was Saturday mornings at court square where if you hung around on the bench long enough, everyone in town would come by. It was the local sandwich shop, where you got a cherry coke and burger. It was the hardware store at Court and Main, where you went for household items. The entire inventory of the local grocery store of back then, can be placed in the Supercenter's bread section. 

A white car pulls into a intersection tripping the light, causing me to stop rather quickly. I recall when this intersection was nothing more then a stop sign, for 2 quiet farm roads, and not that long ago.

I have two options when I reach I-65. I can take the interstate into the city, or go straight, and take a private toll road. The latter would be quicker and safer, but I take the interstate, saving my 75 cents for donuts.

I-65 is under contraction. They are transforming it into a 6 lane(3 each way) high speed time tunnel from Prattville into the city. The construction has been going on for years. In the mid 70s the final 15 miles from Prattville to Montgomery was completed in 2 years. That included clearing, bridging 3 water bodies, and placing the highway on a levee, to clear it from the flood plain of the nearby Alabama River. Trucks hauled dirt 24 hrs a day for many months to construct the levee. The current project has take 3 years already, and is nothing more then adding a lane each way. To make matters even more laughable, the new lanes only cover 6 of the 15 miles. 

Riding south the skyline of Montgomery lights up the sky. The green topped, RSA Tower dominates the city. My retirement dollars built the Tower, and the State leases it. It has proven to be a good investment.

I take the first Montgomery exit. The exit ramp is long and bends hard to the right. I resist the urge to lean hard. I know the ramp is oily, as big trucks take this exit to load or unload at a nearby Winn-Dixie warehouse.

I ride past the old industrial section of Montgomery. This area was home to a once thriving blue collar haven, but now the buildings are falling in. I see a glass bottle factory-shut down,  a old clothing apparel building-shut down,  a old food processing plant-shut down, and the list goes on.

The row houses near the plants, have become crack houses, and the once proud blue collar neighborhoods are crime infested. I wonder what it must have been like to live within sight of the place you worked. How it must felt to see the lights of your livelihood every night, and weekend from your porch? Those were different times,  growing up in these neighborhoods, you pretty much knew your fate. It was assumed a guy would follow his father. The specter of the factory hung over him. He could see it when he walked to school, played touched football in the vacant lots, and when he kissed his girl on her front porch.

I escaped that fate, and now I glide by on a fancy, shiny motorcycle that has taken me places, kids of that era only dreamed about.

Soon I leave the industrial graveyard for the lights of Montgomery's East Side. I ride past the Harley, Honda, and Kawasaki shops, all within sight of each other.

The KK comes into sight and I pull in. The orange neon light flashing "Hot donuts now" YEAH. KK has been here as long as I can remember. The south is home to the company, and we have come to take them for granted.

The clerk says-

"kinda late to be out riding"

"yeah but all I gotta do tomorrow is get up and read the paper"

"must be nice"

I order 6 hot glazed. They are so warm I can't pick them up. I eat 2, and put the rest in the saddlebag for the next morning.

It is after 12am, when I leave the donut shop. I take the Western By Pass and head for Wetumpka and Elmore County. 

I follow US 231 into the sleepy city by the river of Wetumpka. It, like Prattville, is growing, and as a result in the middle of growing pains. None of which are apparent on this peaceful quiet night.

Wetumpka also has a Supercenter, and it is doing a brisk business as I ride by.

The shops on Main Street are closed and quiet.

I cross back over the Alabama River and quickly find myself on a rural SR 111. The road is dark, and quiet. The STs quartz headlight and PIAA 1700s blazing back the night. My eyes make the adjustment from city lights to rural darkness.

My lights pick up set of red eyes in the distance. They are in the weeds to my right. To low to the ground to be deer I say. I slow down but before I get to close he darts off into the trees. I guess it to be a armadillo or a raccoon.

I have the road to myself, but I keep it around 50 mph. 

The farm houses I ride by are sleeping. The occupants in bed long ago. They are farmers, and Monday morning will bring tractors, cows, and crops. They will be in the fields long before I am up.

I have ridden this road hundreds of times over 30 years, but can't recall ever doing it at night.

I turn off SR 111 onto Coosa River Road at Shoal Creek Baptist Church.

This road is county maintained. It is dark, and the tree line comes all the way down to the road. With my eyes fully adjusted  my lights appear even brighter. The houses here are close to the road, and I light up their interior as I ride by.

The road dips down into a tree canopied tunnel. My lights startled a owl and he takes off- right at me. The sudden illumination of his roosting area by such a intense light, blinds him. I am playing chicken with a owl? Doesn't he know he CAN'T win? Before the gap gets too close he pulls up and goes over me. 

The air is so thick, the leaves so green, I can smell the foliage. The smell of pine and green trees catches the back of my nose. A mist hangs close to the road in the low spots.

I emerge out of the tree canopy into surrounding hay fields. I see tractors poised, and ready for the next day's task. Their red reflectors, flash as I go by.

The road ends all too quickly and I mark a right turn on SR 143. I know exactly where I am. These roads are in my domain. I can place every turn, and every mail box.

The route takes me into the tiny village of Deatsville. Home to a tractor supply place, and few houses, and a modern post office.

The lights of the post office casting a glow all the way to the highway.

It is 1:00am now. I am 15 miles from home. my route will be county roads all the way back to US 31. As well as I know these roads, they take a different character this late at night. 

I turn on CR 85 and the road takes a downhill with a long left hand twist. As I ride downhill, lights from the other direction, light up the berm. A north bound car is approaching. I run the time and distance numbers. I am going to meet this guy in the worst possible place, and it doesn't look like he is going to dim his lights. I slow down and move to the right, I assume this late at night he is going to be drunk, and halfway in my lane. None of which materializes, we do meet in a bad place, but he is courteous and under control.

I make one last turn on a road known to locals as "County Line Road". The road has recently been repaved. It is smooth, but not painted yet.

I slow down as I approach the turn that took a brother rider but a week ago. A white cross marks the spot. I can still see the orange paint of the investigation on the road.

County Line Road empties me out on to busy SR 14, and out of the darkness. I-65 is nearby, and the exit is awash in motels, food joints, gas stations. My pupils constrict, as if to signal my return from the Forbidden Zone.

I turn back on Main Street. The red lights now on flash. 

I coast back in the garage, and turn the ST off at 1:20am. Awesome ride, and a damn fine way to kill 90 minutes. Y'all need to try it. Great therapy.