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Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/127772
EVENTS
.E by S
dited
cottRousseau'
Wild West 250
Dual Sport Ride
Sy Ann e Van Severen
Pho to by Tom Van Severen
LAUGHLIN, NY, FEB. 10-11
nseaso nably h igh temper atu res
and a lack of rai n had d ual
spo rte rs singi ng the summertime
blu es at Laughlin, Nevad a.
For two days and 245 miles, the riders sweated in the canyo ns an d foug ht
the ir way thr ough cloud s of d us t, bu t
the battl e was worth it to find some of
the most spec tacular 'scenery alon g the
Nevada / Arizo na / California border.
Th e ride, whi ch was o rga nized by
Jim Pilon ' s Tour ' n' Trail Promo tio ns
a nd Ro n Lo om is of Tea m Loomis'
"Dirty Entertain ment," dre w mo re tha n
150 riders to the Avi Hotel / Casino, 12
miles below the town of Lau ghlin on the
wes t bank of the Colorado River.
Saturday's ride got off to a leisurely
start. With on ly 50 miles to the lunch
stop in Searchlight, Ne vada, there was
no point in hurrying and most of the
riders began arriving for tech inspection
in the Avi parking lot betw een 8 and
8:30a.m.
The riders hit dirt less than five miles
from the start of d ay one's course. Twotrack roads alterna ted with serpentine
sandy washes littered with rocks that
gave the novice riders fits, forcing many
of them to struggle along with their feet
stu ck out on either side of the bike like
outriggers.
"Rocks? What rocks?" was the helpful input from ve te ra n ' d ual spor ter
Larry Woodruff . "There are no rocks in
Neva da - just very l a r g e g rains of
sand."
Most of the r id er s o p te d for a sixmi le scenic de tour a bout h alf w a y
th rough the m orn in g ' s rid e. The side
trip took them up a switchback road to
the top of Spirit Mountain and provided
panoramic views of the Colorado River
and the surrou nding desert as the riders
stood ben eath cl us te rs of mic ro wave
equipment.
The roll chart started to go downhill
as the course approached the lunch stop.
On e in struction afte r another was
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Dual sport riders who atte nded the Wil d
West 250 Dual Sport ri de In laughlin,
Nevada, enjoyed a summer preview
during the two-day event.
impossible to execute, and mo st of the
riders aba ndoned the roll chart and simply followed course ribbon, which had
been tied on most of the comers.
There were lots of complaints as the
riders gathered in the parking lot of the
Searchlight Senio r Center.
"Did anybody find the sewage treatment plant? We were supposed to tum
when we got to it, but I never saw it,"
said one disgruntled rider.
" I was los t way befo re that," said
ano ther, "but it wasn't so bad . We could
see Searchlight off in the d ista nce and
we knew that's wh ere we needed to end
up so we just head ed for it."
Bob Tar tte r go t lost and ended up
ridi ng backwards on the course trying
to figure out where he went wrong.
"I met some riders coming the other
wa y and t he y asked m e why I was
going backwards," said Tartter. "I said 1
was really tired and 1 figured that if 1
rode backwards 1 would be able to get
back some of the energy I spent on that
section. "
. Follow ing the course would have
been even harder if it hadn't been for
the efforts of Joe Meyer.
" So m e bod y h ad mov ed a ribbon
about six m iles off the start," Meyer
explained. "There was a fork in the sand
wash and, when 1 followed the ribbon,
the wash dead ended in a wall . There
were ATV tracks going in to the wall
and back out again, and m ore tracks
right where the ribbon had been moved. 1 was one of the firs t ones out on the
course so 1 m oved th e ribbon back to
where it should've been."
Bu t any complaints about the course
markings were forgotten when the riders were gree ted by th e Searchlight
Seniors, who p u t on a lunch to be
remembe red a t no cos t to the riders
than ks to KTM America an d Sportsman
Cycle of Las Vegas.
Man y o f th e ride rs spen t the lunch
br eak stu dyi ng the cou rse map, trying
to decid e wh ich of the three afternoon
sections they wou ld tackle. The easiest
choice was Option C, which cu t out a
large northerly loop an d resul ted in a
total of 110 miles for the day.
The second-longest rou te was Option
B, which took the riders 12 miles north
of Searchligh t on the pavement and then
headed into a challenging easterly loop
that included a nine-mile uphill a nd
stretched the total ride to 160 miles. The
other ch o ice was Opti on A, which
incl u ded a trickv sand / ro ck secti on
instead of Option' B's 12 miles of pa vement, and stretched the milea ge to an
impressive 175 miles.
The first comp laint of the afternoon
came from Dave Tonkis.
" It wasn 't fair putting us out in a
reall y sloppy sand wash with a full
lunch in our stomachs and a full tank of
gas. That part wasn't fun," said Tonkis.
" Bu t 1 loved the res t of it. 1 had too
much fun for one day ."
At the end of the north erly run, the
"A" riders turned east to join the "B"
riders for a loop dow n to the bank of the
Colorado River near Nelson Landing. a
small se ttlement that was washe d in to
the river in the 1960s whe n a flash flood
came roaring down Eagl e Wash . The
riders had plenty of time to think abou t
what a 25-foot wall of wa ter would look
like as thev doub led back to head eas t
up the wash, an d then began the long
climb up a rocky m ining road full of
swi tchbacks and drop offs to rejoin the
"C" loop riders.
The rest of the course was a mixture
of gravelly was hes and loose rocks, with
occasional resting spots on two-track
roads.
Bill Sherman, a District Ranger with
th e -Lake Mead National Recreation
Area, got a helping hand from his fellow
dual sporters.
"There were a lot of courteous people
out there. 1 needed a helping hand more
than once an d people lined u p to help
me along an d give me some pointers,"
said Sherman, a Gold Wing rider who
took his first tentative shot at dual sporting on a borrowed 250cc Honda.
There was plenty to talk abou t wh en
the riders gathered for an afte r-ride dinner, courtesy of Riding Tiger and K&N
Air Filters.
The joking barbs about the morning's
roll char t continued all through dinner.
"Tha t was (j im ) Pilon' s worst roll
chart . Heyjim, did you do it in a vehicle
or on a bicy cle?" asked Jim Nicholson
(XR600), who rode with h is XR200mounted wife, Jackie. "We rode the B
loop. It was very nice - really slip pery
and rocky. It was a great ride except for
the roll chart ."
Jim Pilon's after-dinner apology was
brief: "Hey, about the roll chart. .. things
happen!"
Sunday's course was easier to fo llow and only 85 m iles long to ensure
the ho meward-bound d ual sporters a
quick geta way. The co urse heade d
across the Colorado River into Arizona , made a loop to the northeast that
led to the lunch stop in the h istoric
mining town of Oatman, where Clark
Gable and Carol Lombard are rumored
to have honeymooned , and then headed back across the river to th e Avi
pa rking lot.
I~
Isaacs king at Kearney Indoor
By Mike Zbrozek
KEARl\'EY, NE,FEB. 3-1
A hearty group of Vintage Pro riders brav ed a
temperatu re of 20 below zer o to challenge the
day surface of the Bu ffalo County Fairgroun ds
indoor arena for Roun d 1 of the VDTRAfTo tal
Pe rformance Racers Vin tage Cla ssi cs IX Dir t
Track Series and the final rou nd of Motor Sports
of America Indoor Series.
All we ekend the vintage machines resern bled Popsicles, sta nding in their pit stalls with
oil as thick as [ ell-O, They took qui te a lot of
coaxing to come to life, bu t eventually all were
fired up and the racing began . Second- place
honors in Saturd ay's MSA vintage Pr o 600«
se ries were hotl y contested. The top spot wa s
finnly con troll ed thr oughout by Johnny Isaa cs
on his B50 BSA, clinchi ng the MSA vintage Pro
600 number-one p late for 1996.
Sunday's races brou ght milder temperatures
and mo re h eated com pe tition for th e VDTRA
Pro season-opener as the 600cc field expan ded
to 10 rid ers and Open Pro Twins to six.
Two 600 he a ts we re run (or st a rtin g-line
positi on s headed by Isaacs on his BSA and Bill
Snyder on a Bu ltaco. Isaacs' Triumph headed
th e Pr o Tw-in hea t as well with Eric Bland 's
Yama ha in tow in the four-tap even t.
As MSA's Ed Beckley wo rked the full-hou se
cro wd to a lath er, the 10 600cc m ach ines pos itioned on the start ing line for the VDTRA mainevent. At the sta rt, Bob Loucks' Bultaco headed
for th e fenc e, fr ont wh ee l high in air and
Lou cks' feet dragging th e gro u n d, coll ecting
a no the r rid er an d bri nging ou t the red flag .
Loucks visited the medi cs wh ile the other rid er
wa s able to restart his machine. On the restart,
John ny Isaacs jumped into the lead foll owed
closely by Bill Snyder, Rodger Ster ling and the
Yamahas of James Vaug ht and Bill Hu ff. As the
g to u p circuited the tigh t day su rface, Isaacs
extended his lead wh ile the remainder jockeyed
to impro ve their p o siti ons . Isaacs took th e
ch ec k e re d flag w it h Sny de r, Sterl in g and
Vaught behind him .
In the Pro Twin main, Steve McGee mu scled
his BSA twin into tum one first only to give way
to the Triumph of Johnny Isaacs . Eric Bland kept
his Yamaha on tw o wheel s to head off the efforts.
of John Fike and Tom Laird.
Isaacs' clean sweep on the weekend left him
with not only the MSA series cha m pionsh ip, but
the po ints lead in both 600 PrO and Open Pro
Twin of the VDTRAI Total Perfonnance Racers
Vintage Classics IX Dirt Track Series .
Results
600 PRO: 1. Johnn)' b . ..cs (8SA); 2. Bill Snydtn" (8 u l); J.
Rodg" Sterlmg (BSA ); 4. J.~ V

