As has been the case for the last few years, the Log Road crew had a great track waiting for the few souls that managed to make it to Coldwater.
During the three days that I was there, the sun was shining through big puffy white clouds and there was little wind. Temps stayed in the mid 70s, low 80s and very little humidity.
When I arrived early Friday afternoon. The soil was already wet from a previous rain but that moisture served well because the workers expertly groomed it into that sandy/loamy mix that we all prefer.
Only a little rain fell during the weekend, and that began a couple of hours after the VMX races on Saturday and continued through till before daybreak on Sunday. It was only a periodic drizzle, really, and was the perfect amount to make for another mud/dust free day on Sunday.
Turnout was exceeding light. Sad. In spite of that, I think most all present were glad they came once they got to ride on the track. Every gate had a disparate mix of classes, but the Log Road folks ensured that all would be compatible together.
Personally, I didn't fair too well.
On Saturday, my CZ clutch had issues, so I never even practiced on it. Instead, I took it to Henri Gref's pits and left it all day in his capable hands.
I ended up racing Keith Boyd's CZ in the 50+ and Sportsman 500 classes. I had the usual brief flashes of brilliance but they were overcome by a heavy measure of bone-headedness. Falling over in snail's pace sections, stalling the motor in turns, and daydreaming kept me from beating the one or two other guys I was dealing with.
At least Henri fixed my own bike so I'll get to ride it at Lake Sugar Tree in a few days.
Sunday, much of the same bone-headedness on my Suzukis. This time it included running out of fuel while running 2nd (yeah, it was also last) in the Ultima 250 class, just as I passed the white flag. Similar to the previous day, tip-overs and miscalculations kept me from getting a trophy in the +50 class as well.
I had entered the 500 Ultima class too, but I ended up loaning that bike to a 60+ Novice who blew a crank seal on his Honda 480 in practice.
I doubt if an National at Log Road will be on the AHRMA schedule come next year. It's undoubtedly not due to the facility or it's people. And it's not because guys don't want to go. I know that I am in a minority, because I'm retired, the "kids" are grown, my wife approves, and I'm able to take the time and afford the expense, barely.
But, even though I've been doubling up with others this last trip to Michigan was really costly, and it has me rethinking a few priorities. I think I can see on the horizon that the end of my four year vintage racing era is coming to a close. Just not yet. Hopefully I'll see a few of you guys in Virginia this coming weekend.