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Cycle News 2026 Issue 27 July 7

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

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lull the riders into thinking the Jackass would be just another ride. That notion vanished when they approached a steep ledge, so much so that they set aside their competitive instincts and be - gan helping each other physically lower each other's bikes to safety. Except for our man Schneiders. "I didn't have time for such foolishness, so I just skirted the crowd and pushed my Sachs over the edge. Anything on it that will break at less than 20 mph, broke a long time ago." Up next was the treacherous, rock-strewn downhill, which Schneiders believed signaled the "start of the real enduro. From there on, it was rock, rock and more rock into the noon check." Rocky uphills, rocky downhills and where there weren't any rocks, there were "deep, deep sand washes." By noon, more than half of the entrants had quit "or were beaten into submis - sion." After a lunch break, ev- eryone had about 10 miles over a trail, but that came to an end, and then, of course, more rocks. Enduro riders on 300-pound machines were now riding trials, climbing over boulders. The Jackass then took a decidedly unusual, X-Files sort of turn. Schneiders writes, "I came upon one of the strangest things I've ever seen in an enduro. I rode into a small valley, not more than a mile long, and there were bikes and riders all over it. A few guys were riding toward me (back - ward on the course), some were trying to scale the hills that made up either side of the valley… and some were messing about down in a rock-filled gulch along the bottom. I figured there must be some fearsome obstacle along the trail somewhere, but I couldn't see what it was. What - ever the obstacle, I never found out. Quite strange." In the end, fewer than 200 of the 750 starters completed the 1971 Jackass Enduro. Schnei - ders and a few others took pride in being part of that elite group, but as is quite often the case, some smart aleck comes along, griping that the event was too easy. "It's the kind of run that can be won by a Class B rider riding without a watch or speedom- eter…riding as fast as he can [he will] win and timekeeping won't even enter into it." The sourpuss' assessment is a bit easier to swallow when one learns that the source is none other than off-road legend Dave Ekins. Still, nobody likes a wise guy. Schneiders wraps up his story with a tribute to one of the hardy souls who completed the Jackass, a fellow by the name of George Verkamp. "George fin- ished the first loop with a flat tire, but he determinedly [started] the second loop anyway. He finished, and within his hour, too. His rims were square; he had several spokes missing from his flat- tened wheel; his handlebars had come loose… and his gas cap was missing. But he finished." Verkamp's reward for his effort? A bronze pin. Worth having? Questionable. Worth working for? "I doubt," wrote Schneiders, "if many people have got enough money to buy it from him." CN (Left) Desert races in the early 1970s were gnarly. (Below) Of the 750 racers that started the Jackass Enduro in 1971, just 200 saw the finish line. VOLUME ISSUE JULY , P133 Subscribe to more than 60 years of Cycle News Archives issues: www.CycleNews.com/Archives

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