RealClassic

Ace OF CUBS

Rewind to January 2011 and you’d see my hands thrust deeply into my jacket pockets as I waited for the show to begin. My fellow bikers crammed the hotel bar for the much-anticipated Scottish Classic MC’s winter auction – an annual event which boosts club funds by flogging unwanted motorcycle paraphernalia.

To the great amusement of the room, the appointed auctioneer is traditionally hard on fidgets, coughers, blinkers and nose-scratchers. Any involuntary movement is sadistically rewarded with the lesser contested auction items – how else would the usual collection of round-robin books, DVDs and dog-eared magazines find new homes? So my hands remained firmly entrenched in my pockets and my body rigid as petrified stone. I was wise to the auctioneer’s tactics and not an itch would be scratched, nor a twitch indulged.

Two ragged-looking Honda Cubs had attracted my interest. Both were propped up ungainly against the bar. Either would be a prize to any Cub enthusiast; they were discovered festering in a shed in the seaside town of Broughty Ferry. An SCMC official was offered both brine-encrusted machines for club disposal to clear them out of the shed.

Lesser items were rapidly disposed of by the auctioneer’s gavel before the main event, and it wasn’t long before an excited murmur rippled through the crowd like a Mexican wave. I fancied bidding for the C90 and in expectation I released my hands from their confinement. The C50 came up first and the ‘rat-a-tat-tat’ of the auctioneer’s gavel soon soared beyond the starting bid, to reach a very reasonable £60. ‘Well affordable,’ I can remember thinking at the time.

I prepared myself for the C90 – a machine which I hoped to secure to kickstart my sixteen year-old daughter Zoe’s biking career. Once again bidding was fierce and

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from RealClassic

RealClassic2 min read
Travellers' Tales
Some friends recently let me know that my Moto Guzzi appeared in RC234, when my wife Cheryl and I were mentioned in a letter that recalled a trip in 1974. We bought our 850 GT Guzzi in Melbourne, Australia, but took delivery of it in Switzerland. We
RealClassic3 min read
From The Front
Down the years I have acquired defunct projects many times. Projects is the operative word here, in case you were wondering. I’m drawing an imaginary (but compulsory) line between a project involving rebuilding a bike and a special, which is somethin
RealClassic2 min read
Clubman’s Corner
There aren’t many motorcycling organisations which survive and thrive to celebrate their hundredth anniversary. We mentioned the Sunbeam MCC recently and then - like London buses - here comes another one. Based in the Guildford area, this organisatio

Related Books & Audiobooks