Motorcycle Diaries

Motorcycle Diaries Motorcycle Diaries is the Official Page of The GYPSY's Biker Lifestyle and a Chronicle Of The Motorcycles He Has Owned Since 1972.

This page chronicles the trips and happenings around his numerous motorcycles in his life.

Made a hard decision today... one of my hardest ever. Traded Silver Streak my 2003 100th Anniversary Edition Harley-Davi...
08/23/2022

Made a hard decision today... one of my hardest ever. Traded Silver Streak my 2003 100th Anniversary Edition Harley-Davidson FLHT Ultra Classic for a 2015 Subaru Forester. Saying goodbye to this great motorcycle was not easy but it was necessary. Trouble with my knees, lack of time and other personal considerations have made riding difficult. Though a hard decision it was the right one to make. Silver Streak is most likely the last Harley as well as the last motorcycle I will ever own. Not a bad run... 50 years on two wheels and it was amazing. Goodbye Silver Streak. Goodbye Two Wheels. Parting is such sweet sorrow.

Made a hard decision today... one of my hardest ever. Traded Silver Streak my 2003 100th Anniversary Edition Harley-Davi...
08/23/2022

Made a hard decision today... one of my hardest ever. Traded Silver Streak my 2003 100th Anniversary Edition Harley-Davidson FLHT Ultra Classic for a 2015 Subaru Forester (seen in background). Saying goodbye to this great motorcycle was not easy but it was necessary. Trouble with my knees, lack of time and other personal considerations have made riding difficult. Though a hard decision it was the right one to make. Silver Streak is most likely the last Harley as well as the last motorcycle I will ever own. Not a bad run... 50 years on two wheels and it was amazing. Goodbye Silver Streak. Goodbye Two Wheels. Parting is such sweet sorrow.

THE RUBBER BISKIT ROAD SHOW PRESENTS, "NEVER SAY NEVER: AN EPIC JOURNEY - VOLUME ONE, PART TWO: IT'S GOING TO BE A BUMPY...
10/12/2021

THE RUBBER BISKIT ROAD SHOW PRESENTS, "NEVER SAY NEVER: AN EPIC JOURNEY - VOLUME ONE, PART TWO: IT'S GOING TO BE A BUMPY NIGHT

In Part Two of Never Say Never: An Epic Journey - Volume One you will meet Romani Craftsman Walter Hummel, his wife Priscilla and their children as they head west towards a new life in a new land. You will also meet a giant of a woman, Harriet Hummel-Wickman. You will continue this Epic Journey through Oklahoma with The GYPSY as he travels to Kansas on his motorcycle to lay Shirley's remains to rest. You will explore the past while moving forward towards the final goal.
https://www.buzzsprout.com/1859946/episodes/9333755

The Rubber Biskit Road Show can be found on your favorite Podcast Host: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music, Stitcher, iHeartRadio, Tune-In, Podcast Addict, PodChaser, Pocket Casts, Deezer, Listen Notes, Player FM, Podcast Index, Castro, Overcast, CastBox, PodFriend and Reason.

New Episodes Drop Every Tuesday At 5:00am CT. Join Us Next Week For Part Three: Frankly My Dear I Don't Give A Damn.

Brought To You By:
Buzzsprout - Let's get your podcast launched!
Start for FREE https://www.buzzsprout.com/?referrer_id=1841262

Artist Alley Studio Store - Featuring The Handcrafted Artisan And AAS Branded Products Of The GYPSY & Mad Hatter. https://www.artistalleystudio.com/

The Rubber Biskit Road Show Presents, "Never Say Never: An Epic Journey - Volume One, Part One: Off To See The WizardJoi...
10/12/2021

The Rubber Biskit Road Show Presents, "Never Say Never: An Epic Journey - Volume One, Part One: Off To See The Wizard

Join The GYPSY as he takes you on an Epic Journey into his life, the life of his family and the life of his mother; Shirley Elizabeth Hummel, who suffered from mental illness her entire life.
Shirley's story is not an easy one to hear. At times you will be uncomfortable with her situation. Other times you may laugh or fill the warmth that all to often eluded her. You may even find yourself angry and horrified at the situations and tragedies that drove Shirley further and further into her illness. The one thing you will not leave with is ignorance.
The telling of Shirley's story will educate and inform you. You will come away with an understanding of the highs and lows that mental illness plays in the sufferer as well as the family, friends and acquaintances of the mentally ill.

In Part One of Never Say Never: An Epic Journey - Volume One you will meet Shirley Elizabeth Hummel. You will also meet her son The GYPSY as well as her father and mother. You will start this Epic Journey in Texas with The GYPSY as he travels to Kansas on his motorcycle to lay Shirley's remains to rest. You will explore the past while moving forward towards the final goal.

Each Tuesday On The Rubber Biskit Road Show The GYPSY will present a new chapter of his novel "Never Say Never: An Epic Journey - Volume One"

Next Weeks Episode: It Is Going To Be A Bumpy Night

Like a Rubber Biskit I have spent my life bouncing from here to there and back to here again. I have created, guided and been the inspiration for many people, projects and events. I cannot sit still and must be constantly doing something, going so...

Kansas has an unsung and unmarked national landmark. It can be found on 6th Street in Topeka, Kansas where K4 crosses 6t...
04/30/2021

Kansas has an unsung and unmarked national landmark. It can be found on 6th Street in Topeka, Kansas where K4 crosses 6th street. It is the midpoint of the National Road; US Highway 40.
Once, like Route 66, was known as America's Main Street. It once ran from Atlantic City, New Jersey to San Francisco, California. This historic highway was mostly replaced by Interstates 70 and 80 and now ends near Salt Lake City, Utah.
The fabled route was originally trails used by Native Americans. Thomas Jefferson used the trails to create a National road going west between Maryland and Ohio. This road would eventually become US 40.
Between Lawrence, Kansas and Topeka, Kansas US 40 follows the Oregan Trail. The highway meanders across the country upon tracks established by pioneers in wagon trains heading on west.
Yes the National Road, US Highway 40, finds it's continental halfway point on the eastern edge of Topeka, Kansas where K4 crosses and briefly joins with it.
With the way Kansas slaps up historical markers (worlds deepest well, largest cottonwood, largest prairie dog), I am surprised that there is not a marker at this historic National landmark. But who knows one of these days I may pass by the midpoint on Silver Streak and have to stop to take a photo next to the new historic marker the state has installed.

-The GYPSY-

LAST RESPECTS AND BURNING QUESTIONSI had rode my motorcycle into Rochester Cemetery only once before today. It was on Ju...
03/08/2021

LAST RESPECTS AND BURNING QUESTIONS

I had rode my motorcycle into Rochester Cemetery only once before today. It was on July 26, 2013 when I came to lay my mothers ashes to rest between the graves of her parents. Rochester Cemetery sits on a hill on Menninger Road on the northwest outskirts of Topeka, Kansas. The cemetery was chartered in 1850 and is the final resting place of Kansans, not Kansans and everyone else in between. It is also the final resting place of 14 members of my family. Someday my earthly remains will rest within the grounds of Rochester Cemetery.
As I maneuvered the big Harley Ultra Classic up the steep drive and into the cemetery I wondered if the thump, thump, thump of the big V-Twin was disturbing the dead. Silver Streak, the name I christened my motorcycle with, navigated the tight, thin roads of the cemetery. “C’mon Silver, I urged the bike, let’s find Stanley.
Stanley is a large memorial stone on a family grave plot. The white stone features a palm leaf and the word Stanley carved beneath the leaf. Stanley has been the marker I have used since a child to locate the graves of my grandparents and now my mother. Stanley is directly across the road from their resting places and without him I would have a harder time of finding them within the maze of cemetery roads. We located Stanley and I saluted the stone, “Thank You Stanley.”
As I shut off Silver Streak the tick, tick, tick of the cooling engine replaced the sound of the crickets that would normally be heard in the cemetery during the summer months. But on this early day in March the children of crickets past were sleeping below the ground within their tiny eggs. I dismounted the bike and headed across the road towards my mother and grandparents graves.
As I approached the graves I was pleased to see that the marker I had set for my mother had weathered the rough winter well. It made me feel good that even if I was never able to afford the marker she had dreamed of at least my humble effort would endure for years to come. I knelt down and placed my right hand on the marker and my left hand on the spot on the ground where my mothers ashes lay beneath. I knelt in silence trying to calm my heart which was in turmoil. I had come to the cemetery that day to seek advice from my ancestors. I had things in my life that were troubling me and I needed their wisdom.
There are those who will say, “The dead do not speak.” But they would be wrong. The dead speak loudly if you just take the time to listen. I spoke my concerns to my grandfather and grandmother and while waiting for their response I turned to my mother. I leaned on her cross and looked up to the sky. “Mom, I really do not know why I am asking your advice. You usually get sidetracked when faced with a hard subject and never give a straight answer. But I am going to assume that once you got to heaven they fixed that flaw and you can listen and give straight answers.” I told my mother what was on my mind.
I knelt with my head down in silence. The cemetery was still, not even the sound of an early Robin chirp broke that silence. After long moments I looked up and around. My eyes wandered down the hill towards the low area of the cemetery. In all the years I had visited here I had never been down the hill to the tree line beyond the graves. I stood up and I wandered in that direction.
Walking through the gaps between the numerous graves I crossed the lower road and winding my way through a small section of graves I found myself at the tree line. Through the trees I could see a small pond. Walking through the trees and down the embankment I stood on the edge of the pond. It was obvious that it had been constructed as a runoff for the cemetery. How long in the past the pond had been made only the spirits of the cemetery knew. Towards the south end of the pond was a drive. A large pile of gravel and raw dirt rested there. On the north end of the pond a large tree had fallen across the expanse somewhere in the past. Woodpeckers had pocked its surface and its branches that reached into the pond no doubt created a haven for small aquatic creatures; salamanders, frogs, insects and maybe even minnows.
I stood and looked at the still waters of the pond and the tree. This simple pond next to a cemetery was a symbolic example of the circle of life. Life sprung forth then death came. From death came life which thrived and eventually died giving life to a new generation; a never ending and vital circle. A bright red Cardinal landed on the dead tree and cocked its small pointed head at me as if to put a punctuation mark on my thoughts. The small bird took one hop towards me and then flew away to signal that it was time for me to move away from the pond.
I headed back up the embankment and wound my way through the graves. I paused a moment at my mother and grandparents graves. I touched my mothers cross marker and smiled. I liked the marker, Though just a couple of feet high it resembled the type of stone markers that you would find on ancient graves in Europe. My family had migrated from Germany to America so this cross marking the grave of a Hummel seemed appropriate and right. I said, “Bye Mom, Bye Grandpa, Bye Grandma. Wish I could have known you Grandpa. Miss you Grandma, Miss you Mom. Love you all.” I moved away and returned to the road. I still did not have the answer to my questions and I had other ancestors to visit.
As I walked up the road I passed the graves of Samuel and Amanda D***s. I stopped and said hello to Grandma and Grandpa D***s. Sam and Amanda are the parents of my Aunt Patricia, the wife of my Uncle Karl. Karl Hummel is my mothers brother and passed in April of 2020 after a long fight with cancer. Though the D***s were not blood they were still family and out of respect I was taught when a child to call them Grandma and Grandpa. The house they once owned sits just a couple of blocks from my home. I have found memories of stopping by that house to visit with them. But what I remember most was Sam's Harmonica playing.
Samuel D***s carried a briefcase with his various harmonica’s inside. A couple of times a month Sam was asked to come forward to the church podium and play a hymn on his harmonica. Angels could not have sang those hymns more beautifully than Samuel D***s played them on his harmonicas. Sam passed away suddenly in 1964 and left many people grieving his loss, myself included. I was just 8 years old at the time and the passing of Samuel D***s was the first time I had to deal with the loss of someone I cared about.
I noticed that Sam’s Birthday was on March 4th. Today was March 2nd and I would not be back in the cemetery to wish him a Happy Birthday on the 4th so I said, “Happy Birthday Grandpa D***s.” I bid him and Grandma D***s farewell and moved on up the road. As I walked away I smiled; I like to imagine that God calls Sam up to the podium every Sunday to play a hymn and show the Angels how their voices should sound.
I stopped at the graves of my Great Aunt Harriet and my Great Uncle Karl Hummel, my Uncle Karl’s namesake. Next to them is the grave of Lucien Vick. He is a relative but how I do not know. My Great Aunt Harriet was the first woman ever stationed at the Kodiak Base Naval Station on Kodiak Island in Alaska. My Great Uncle Karl was a singer with the Metropolitan Opera in New York. I paid my respects and moved off to visit the gravesites of their parents, my Great Grandparents, Walter and Priscilla Hummel.
I stood at the graves of my Great Grandparents and my head bowed. Walter had been the first Livery and Tack maker in Topeka making mule harnesses for the 7th Calvary. Priscilla had been a devoted wife and mother giving birth to Harriet, Lucius, Karl, Ralph and Oscar, my Grandfather. I spoke my questions to them then remained silent, listening. In a few moments my head turned and I looked towards the gravesite of my Great Uncle Ralph Hummel and his wife Buena Vista, the namesake of Buena Vista, Arkansas.
Between the graves of my Great Grandparents and the Graves of my Great Uncle are two empty spots. Someday those spots will not be empty, they will be where me and my wife Raychel will be laid to rest. As I looked at the empty spots the answers to the questions that had been troubling me suddenly flooded into my head. I now knew that my ancestors had spoken to me and had answered my questions. Now with those answers my turbulent mind and heart knew peace. I sighed and said, “Thank you, I knew you would help.”
I believe strongly in the power of prayer and I believe God answers prayer. I also believe that he sends his Angels to help us in our time of turmoil. The Angels he sent this day were the ones that were responsible for giving me my life. Life sprung forth then death came. From death came life which thrived and eventually died giving life to a new generation; a never ending and vital circle. I had one more stop to make before leaving Rochester Cemetery.
I stood in front of the grave graves of my Uncle Karl Lennox Hummel and my cousin Deanna Hummel. My cousin Deanna had been a police officer in Shawnee Mission, Kansas and had been murdered by a drunk driver while on duty. My Uncle Karl having succumbed to the cancer on April 28, 2020 had been laid to rest next to his daughter with no memorial service.
The Coronavirus Pandemic robbed many families of their chance to say goodbye to loved ones. I shook my head feeling a mixed emotion of sadness and anger at those that deny the Pandemic. They claim the virus is not real, they refuse to practice social distancing and refuse to wear masks. Many are refusing to take the vaccine. They wallow in their ignorance and inconsideration of others shouting, “We are exercising our rights”, while violating the rights of others. Here before me was a victim of the Pandemic. It is true that my Uncle died from cancer but he was denied his right to have his family come together and say goodbye because of the Pandemic. How many more must suffer this indignity because people refuse to do the right thing?
I knelt down and placed my hand on the long flat stone that bore the names of Karl, Deanna and Patricia Hummel. My Aunt Pat is not here yet and hopefully it will be a long time before she is. But her spot is waiting for her next to her husband. Karl, Deanna and my cousin Lenny who passed away during a bicycle race years ago when a car ran him off the road and over a cliff will be waiting for her at Heaven's gate. My Aunt Pat shares a birthday with my sister thus being my sister Patricia's namesake.
I was happy that I was finally able to pay my respects to my Uncle Karl. He loomed large in my life when I was a child. Partial owner of a bicycle shop, he gave me my first bicycle, a Huffy. He also made an 8’ by 4’ board into the home of a Lionel Train set for me on my 7th Christmas. Family gatherings featured my Uncle Karl and Aunt Pat along with their seven children, my cousins. My cousins and I spent many a summer afternoon in a field near their home on Massachusetts street collecting grasshoppers and fireflies in jars. Uncle Karl and Aunt Pat had offered to raise me because of my mothers mental condition but she refused. I have often wondered who I would have become if I had been raised in that family. Yet I realize that I am exactly who I am meant to be.
I last saw my Uncle Karl on July 26, 2013 when I laid my mother to rest. He stood by me at the graveside as we sang Amazing Grace which my Mom had requested. We spoke and caught up with each other before he left me to say my final goodbyes to my mother, his sister. When I left Texas and moved back to Topeka in November 2013 I thought several times about contacting him and my Aunt Pat. But somehow I felt like I would be an intrusion because of the years that had passed between us. I never contacted them instead keeping track of their lives through my cousin Scott and my Aunt pat’s page. In 2015 I led the team that restored Animal Land in Gage park. My Aunt Pat sent me a short message that simply stated, “Your Uncle Karl is proud of you.” That meant a lot to me.
I rose from the grave and said, “Well Uncle Karl, looks like I have to buy more flowers from now on.” I had made a vow years ago that as long as I was alive my relatives, buried in Rochester Cemetery would have flowers on their graves. I place flowers on my grandparents and mothers graves. Flowers are laid on the graves of Grandma and Grandpa D***s. I place flowers on the graves of Lucinda Vicks, Great Aunt Harriet and Great Uncle Karl. My great Grandparents get flowers as does Ralph, Buena Vista and Lucius Hummel. I have always left flowers at Deanna’s grave and now I will leave them at Uncle Karl’s grave. I wonder if anyone will ever lay flowers at my grave.
I returned to Silver Streak filled with a mixture of melancholia and joy. I had finally had the answers to my burning questions and I had finally had a chance to pay my respects to my Uncle Karl. As I put back on my riding gear I surveyed the cemetery. Rochester is an odd mixture of an old peaceful cemetery and a dark gothic burial ground. There are portions of the cemetery whose serenity gives way to a place where the living dead would be at home. I like the feel, I like the contrast. It feels like life not death.
As I mounted the big Harley and prepared to start it a Robin alighted on top of Stanley's Stone and sang to me. “Ah, there you are.” I said. I started the bike and the Robin watched me ride away and out of this hallowed ground. I left with the knowledge that love is truly eternal.

-The GYPSY- March 8, 2021
www.RubberBiskit.com

Silver Streak and I took a little ride today being that the weather was so nice out. I have to admit that the temperatur...
02/24/2021

Silver Streak and I took a little ride today being that the weather was so nice out. I have to admit that the temperature was right, air was right and the road was smooth.
We rode Highway 24 East to Lawrence. At the junction of us 40 and US 24 are the infamous teepees. Once the site of the Teepee Motel. The large teepee appears to be someone's home now while the former gift shop and restaurant are empty and for lease. I honestly do not understand why these teepees have not been made an historic landmark. Hopefully they are historically protected buildings.
Silver Streak and I turned around at the teepees and headed back West on Highway 24 towards Topeka. Halfway between Lawrence and Topeka there is a small turn off where there is an historic marker. When I was a child this was a rest area. My mother used to carry an empty gallon jug in the trunk of her car. Every time we passed by the rest area we would stop so that Mom could fill her jug from the well water spicket in the rest area. She would take a long drink from the spicket and say, "There is nothing better in the world then ice cold well water." She would fill her empty gallon jug stick it in the trunk of the car and down the road we would travel until the next time that we would pull into the rest area so that my mother could quench her well water addiction.
There was something else about that rest area that was shared by all the other rest areas in the state of Kansas. There was a sign that had a kangaroo cartoon character on it. In the pouch of the kangaroo was miscellaneous scraps of trash. The kangaroo held a pointed stick upon which there was a piece of paper on the end. Above the kangaroos head were the words, "$500 fine for littering." My mom would click her tongue, shake her head and say, "That is so stupid there are no kangaroos in Kansas. Why didn't they use an opossum it's a marsupial too." Thus my mother's disgust with that sign taught me what a marsupial was.
The only thing that really remains of the former rest area is the historical marker. Now I am sure that at some point in my childhood my mother read but marker to me. It's what she did, she always read historical markers to us children. It was from her that my love of History grew. So today I decided to have a look at that marker.
The story that the marker tells is of the Kansa Indians who the state of Kansas is named after. The story tells of the theft of their lands and their genocide. It also relates that Charles Curtis, the first Native American Vice President of the United States, spent the remainder of his days with his mother on what was left of their reservation two and a half miles Southeast of that marker.
The story made me sad. I'm not going to get political here, I'm not going to point fingers and I'm not going to stand up and have righteous indignation just because my wife, my daughter, two of my sons and my grandchildren are Native American. All I'm going to say is that sometimes it pays to stop for a minute read a historical marker learn the lesson that it has to tell and hopefully we become better people from knowing the story. We have the power to make our world a better place and to see that things like what happened to the Native Americans never happen to any group of people again.
After making this stop Silver Streak and I headed on back into Topeka and back to home. I put Silver Street to bed in his garage and I came downstairs to see my beautiful Native Wife fixing us a very nice dinner of beef and noodles. It's a wonder I don't weigh 500 lb married to such a wonderful cook. But I can tell you this; if you could gain weight from Love I should weigh a ton right now.
So until God grants us another wonderful day like today so Silver Streak and I can go out and find what we can find, see what we can see and share it with you I wish you many blessings and a good evening.
-The GYPSY-
www.RubberBiskit.com

ABOUT HISTORIC TOPEKA HARLEY-DAVIDSONLocated at 2047 SW Topeka Boulevard in Topeka, Kansas.Henry Patterson purchased Top...
10/14/2020

ABOUT HISTORIC TOPEKA HARLEY-DAVIDSON
Located at 2047 SW Topeka Boulevard in Topeka, Kansas.
Henry Patterson purchased Topeka Harley-Davidson® in March of 1949 from Dutch Myers. Henry (Pat) moved his wife, Leola, and their two young boys, Larry and Dennis, along with all of their possessions, in one car and motorcycle trailer from Grand Junction, Colorado to Topeka in order to take over the dealership. Pat endured many hardships in his first few years of business. Within a year of taking over at 305 Kansas Avenue, the Throop Hotel, next to his store, caught fire and collapsed on top of his building and ruined the structure. He was forced to move across the street temporarily before finding a new location at 2410 W 6th on the edge of town.
Just after the move, he found himself and his store in 3 feet of water when Topeka's largest flood in history swept through in 1951. He persevered and continued with his business and his dream through many difficult decades. After working for many years in the store by himself or with one employee, Pat was happy and surprised when his son, Dennis, joined him in the business in the mid '70s. It was perfect timing for Pat, as the Japanese motorcycles were taking a stranglehold on the market. Denny's new energy helped save the business from a sure demise. In the late 1980s, Pat's grandson (Denny's nephew), Mike, entered into the business to make it three generations of Patterson's managing the store.
With the resurgence of Harley-Davidson®, the Topeka store jumped on for the ride and began to grow at a rapid pace. In 1990, the 6th Street store had served its purpose and more room was needed. The Pattersons and their five member team moved to 600 NW Hwy 24, north of town, to a building that was so much bigger they didn't know what to do with all of the space. As Harley-Davidson® bikes continued to become more popular, two expansions, tripling the size of this store in six years, were needed to keep up with the growth. 1999 was an epic year for T H-D®. The store celebrated 50 years in business with a gala event held at the Kansas Expocentre and included over 700 friends of the store and Harley-Davidson® Chief Executive Officer, Rich Teerlink. Rich gave a tribute to Pat's 72 years of Harley-Davidson® dedication. Less than a week after the event, Pat succumbed to a fight with cancer, but he had persevered one last time by reaching his goal of 50 years in the business.
In the year 2000, Topeka H-D® made a major relocation to the current facility at 21st and Topeka Blvd. The building was constructed in 1935 and had housed the Shawnee County Maintenance Department and then Willie C's Restaurant. The renovation allowed THD® to incorporate a restaurant (Henry's Grill) and a museum (Yesterdays) into the dealership at the new location. This unique combination has created a destination and enjoyable stopping point for motorcyclists and visitors alike.
At Historic Harley-Davidson® we're not just proud Harley-Davidson® dealers, we're also riders. So we know the freedom and adventure you'll find with the right motorcycle. We serve the Topeka, Kansas area, offering the best in new and pre-owned bikes. Our friendly and knowledgeable sales, financing, service and parts departments are prepared to make sure your experience is outstanding, from assisting while you're making your choice to ongoing maintenance and customization. At Historic Harley-Davidson®, we value the opportunity to create a long-term relationship with our customers, and we do that by making sure to exceed your expectations.
https://historicharley.com/

The Silver Streak and I went for an early morning ride. We got to know each other pretty well. I believe we are going to...
10/12/2020

The Silver Streak and I went for an early morning ride. We got to know each other pretty well. I believe we are going to be great friends.

This motorcycle club was started by the late Larry "Prez" Patterson and Tom Mayfield. Located in Northeast Kansas and la...
10/11/2020

This motorcycle club was started by the late Larry "Prez" Patterson and Tom Mayfield. Located in Northeast Kansas and later expanded to a Missouri chapter, the Missouri Reapers, with President Robert Hyatt and VP Gary McBride.
The GYPSY was the Missouri Reapers Business Manager.
We lost Larry in 2009. We continue to ride and party together as friends, and have had a renewed interest in the club and it's history. We were a great group of friends, spending time with each other and getting away from the stress of work and mainstream America.
The club's motto, "It's The Brother, Not The Bike" still stands true today. Though the majority of us ride Harley's, there was a day there were only a small group that did. We based our membership on the rider. Not what he had the money to buy or not to buy. We rode hard. Traveled all over together. Spent a lot of time together. We were a true brotherhood and remain so today.
We know if we need something, we are only a phone call away from each other. Little by little we keep finding members who have slipped out of touch with each other and our group is growing.

Address

Topeka, KS
66601-66612, 66614-66622, 66624-66626, 66628-66629, 66636-66637, 66642, 66647, 6

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Motorcycle Diaries posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Establishment

Send a message to Motorcycle Diaries:

Share