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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/125657
Rugged Gold Rush Enduro Runs Riders Ragged
Story and P hotos by Leonard Sipe
MOJAVE, CAL., Feb. 1, 1970 - Some or
California ' s top desert riders were on
hand today to compete in the P r ospectors
annual Gold Rus h Enduro;The event was
the first of seven AMA sanctioned enduros to be held in Dis trict 37 this year •
The 100- mile run began at a "town"
consisting of hundreds of motorcyclist's
campers parked in back of Tokiwa's
restaurant and s ervic e sta tion. It's a
beer-and-gas oasis 15 miles north of
the desert town of Mojave on Highway 14.
The cour se included rutted sandwashes , steep embankments, arroyos with
rocks strewn by the devil hims elf, twisting gullies, the infa mous Pr os pectos
Hill , slick fir er oads , and choppy razorbacks.
.
Add to that a posted average speed so
demandi ng that noted enduroist Dick
Smith had to push his new 8-speed Husky
on uP to 90 mph...well, let's just say it
was a lively day 's riding for all 800
plus entrants.
Utller seasoned · Upper and Baja Califor nia veterans included Eddie Dayand
'Buck Smith, who between the twooftllem
combine over 106 years of off- road
motorcycle experience. Buck suffered a
flat tire only six mile s fr om the cold and
windy start; an ignoble fa te. He then
concentrated on coaching his son, Gene
and two other young worthies in the fine
art of enduro timeliness at the various
check points ;
Eddie Day, Buck's Mexican 1000partner, did the unbelievable by fini shing
close to his calculated time on a 250
Triumph. When asked just how close his
averages were, Day answered, " Not too
well . I only zer oed .s even of the eight
check points. I was one minute off at one
of them." Although Day has an undeserved reputation for tall tales, he claims
this is gospel.
Key starting time was 8 0' clock Sunday morning, with the fifty mile first
loop snaking its way through the rugged
western hills of the Mojave Desert.
After skirting the edge of Sequoia National Forest, r iders swung back toward
Highway 14 again. They took a 52 minute
noon check at another wide spot called
'Ar mi s tead.
Prospectors president Jack Lund, by '
the way, wishes to apologize to everyone
who had to pay an unexpected fifty cents
a car for parking behind Ar mistead's ••
The hastily s cr awled sign for the parking
fee tended to bear out Lund's allegation
that this was a last minute, unauthorized
fund raising manuever by the busines s
owner and was not agreed upon by the
Prospecto r s,
After the noon' check, riders passed
under the highway at Freeman Gulch to
begin the s econd flfty mile loop . They
and gr avel depos ited by torrential fIashfloods.
Baja notabl es were on hand, evidenUy
already wor king towards the Mexican
(Texas ?) 1000 In November.
Steve Hurd, a Kawasaki dealer in
Montebello, didn't s eem too concerned
with times and ave rage speeds. He just
rode in his usual tremendously fast
'"
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