The Fault in Our Carbs

Do you remember your favorite book from childhood?

It was a late afternoon in October and by the time Pop and I got there, the western sky was indigo-violet. We had maybe 20 minutes of daylight left. The kid popped a pink bubble and looked at me.

“So,” he asked. “Whaddya think?” 

I ran my hand over the dented yellow plastic gas tank. It was obviously a cheap replacement and the kid had pasted a Kawasaki label on it even though it was a Yamaha. Brother.

“Well, I dunno,” I said. “A hundred bucks? Two flat tires, a cracked frame and it doesn’t run?” As much as I wanted a dirt bike, I didn’t think hours of chores was worth it on this junker. The kid shrugged.

Pop fiddled with the carburetor and twisted the throttle. He checked a few other things, then nodded almost imperceptibly at me. I think it’s as good as we’re gonna get.

“How bout ninety?” I said. The kid thought for a second. “OK,” he said. 

I handed him the money and the three of us loaded it into the back of Pop’s station wagon. Not exactly what I was hoping for, but I was on my way.

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Growing up in the boondocks had its advantages. Kids in our tiny neighborhood of seven houses had perks that kids in town only dreamed about. Horses. Rifles. And mini bikes.

We all started out with the lawnmower engine kind, which were fun when we were 11 or 12. Their top speed was about 25 mph on pavement. On turf, it dropped to 10-15 mph with a jarring, teeth-chattering ride. And in the sugar sand of the surrounding bean fields, they just sat there, not moving, belching blue smoke. We had to walk beside them until we reached dirt.

As we got older, our interest turned to 125cc dirt bikes. One by one, the other kids in the neighborhood were blasting around on Honda CR-125 Elsinores, or Kawasaki KX-125s. They were pulling wheelies just by cracking the throttle. You could hear them in the distant fields buzzing like angry wasps. 

I read Cycle World, drooling over the reviews of the latest bikes. I had a poster of the famous Belgian motocrosser Roger DeCoster six feet in the air on his 500cc Suzuki. I bummed rides from the other kids and racing along at breakneck speeds in the bean fields was unlike anything I had imagined.   

I had to have one. But of course, I had to get past Mom and Pop first.

I broached it one night at dinner. “Y’know,” I said casually. “Tim Coffman just got a Suzuki TR-125.” I reached for a roll.

Mom looked irritated. “Yes, I hear those kids every afternoon racing through the neighborhood and out in the fields. I think they’re dangerous.”

I tread carefully. “Well, the 125s are only around 15 horsepower. That’s barely more than my minibike.” I didn’t mention that some were up to 35 hp.

“I don’t know,” she said. “I read an article in Reader’s Digest saying how many kids are being paralyzed in motorcycle accidents.”

Doug finished his drumstick and selected a thigh. “I dunno, Mom. Almost every kid in the neighborhood has one.”

She glared at him and looked to Pop for help but he was buttering his corn. She switched to me. “Well, you’ve shown them to us in the store. They’re seven or eight hundred dollars. Where are you going to get that kind of money?”

“I’ve got over two hundred bucks saved from chores and birthday cards. I thought I’d get a used one.”

Mom’s brow furrowed. She could see how this was going.

She finally caught Pop’s eye. “What do you think?” Her expression said it all. You cross me and you’ll regret it.

Pop wiped his mouth with his napkin but before he could speak, I had a brainstorm.

“Yeah! What do you think, Pop?” I asked. “I was thinking I could get a used one and it could be like our project. We could fix it up together and you teach me about engines and stuff.” His eyes lit up. She gave me a look that could have curdled milk.

It was touch-and-go for the next 30 seconds as Pop weighed the prospect of a father-son project with having cabinet doors slammed and the silent treatment for the next week. He looked me, then Mom.

“Well, honey…it wouldn’t hurt to just go look at some.”

Mom glared at me, then got up and started collecting the plates with unusual vigor; we could barely hear her voice above the clatter. “Fine,” she said. “But when he breaks his damn neck, YOU can take him to the ER.” She dropped the plates in the sink, continued to her bedroom and slammed the door.

Pop, Doug and I looked at each other; well, that didn’t go so bad.

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I checked the classifieds in the Boca News for the next few weeks, but dismayingly, there were very few 125cc used dirt bikes for sale. We did check out a few that were like new and way out of my budget; and others that were off the list before we even touched them.

One kid, “to make it lighter for racing,” had taken a metal-boring bit and drilled holes every possible place he could. The frame, under the seat, the handlebars, the fenders, even the kickstand; it looked like Swiss cheese.

We finally found the Yamaha and I thankfully plunked out my ninety bucks…with visions of two new inner tubes, maybe a new spark plug, and keeping it under 30 mph with the cracked frame. I’d be riding in a week, two at the most.

I was sadly mistaken.

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Pop, a mechanical engineer, approached our father-son project in his usual exasperating methodical fashion. 

Our first Saturday in the garage, he presented me with a package. I opened it and pulled out a book: Chilton’s Yamaha Repair and Tune Up Guide. I flipped through page after page of wiring diagrams, specifications, and exploded views of components.

My passport to racing excitement
Que?

He contentedly slurped his coffee and started out by leading me around and pointing out all the components and what they did. I knew some of this, but OK, wow, Pop I see.

Next we started taking it apart, starting with the big stuff; the seat; the chain guard; the wheels. So far, so good: easy off, easy on. A little duct tape, some minor stuff… should be zipping around the bean fields in well, OK, three weeks now.

But when I saw him take off the air filter housing, then the carburetor, then the cylinder head, my three-week time line went out the window. And with each additional component that came off, the completion date receded until it vanished over the horizon.

“Pop,” I said weakly. “Do we really need to tear it down this much? I mean—“

“Now, now, Schmedly,” he grinned. “Any job worth doing is worth doing right.” He patted me on the head to tease me, then sat down on his stool and reached for a socket wrench as the radio played big band music.

When I saw the piston and rings come out, I groaned. I wouldn’t be riding this stupid thing until next summer.

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To say we took it down to nuts and bolts wouldn’t be a stretch. Using the Chilton Guide, we removed, cleaned and inspected every piece on that bike. We got to know the people at the Yamaha parts department very well.

The low point. Entire engine disassembled, Chain, seat, muffler, wheels removed. What’s left is sitting on Pop’s mechanic’s creeper.

But as the weeks turned into months, something unexpected happened. My impatience turned slowly to interest, then fascination. With Pop as my tutor, I not only learned what things were; I learned how they worked, why they worked. I learned something about vapors, liquids, physics, electrical stuff. Things like venturis and capacitors and spring constants.

I became just as interested in learning about the bike than in riding it; it was fun hanging around with Pop and the bean fields weren’t going anywhere.

Finally, the turning point came when we took the cracked frame to a repair place and had it welded. As the guy with the mask used his welding gun and the sparks flew, Pop and I shook hands solemnly; a job well done. From then on, it was just a matter of reassembling all the cleaned, repaired and replaced parts.

My Yamaha raced, flew through the bean fields. It carried me through shallow canals, down dirt roads, through unfamiliar woods miles from home. I knew no more contented hours than the time I spent chasing my wanderlust on that bike.

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I ran across the Chilton Guide a few weeks ago as I was decluttering some boxes of books that have sat up in the attic for thirty years. As I flipped through the grease-stained pages, those weekends came back to me with startling clarity. 

I thought about that. All those weekends of frustration and hard work when Pop could have been hanging out with his buddies at the dinky Boca airport and flying. Or floating around the pool with a cold one. Instead, spending hours kneeling on the garage floor, the smell of gas, pinching his fingers on greasy springs and putting up with the impatience coming off me in waves.

Weekends when he no doubt caught flak from Mom with nonstop predictions of trips to the ER. His favorite dishes suddenly off the menu with frosty looks.

What made him do all that for me?

I could never have understood if I didn’t have kids of my own.

Thanks, Pop. 😎

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62 comments

    1. He probably would have liked them! Fewer moving parts, probably more torque for sugar sand, quiet. But then no angry wasp buzzing sound letting me know my buddies were out racing 😂

      Thanks, Rojie! Appreciate you reading and commenting! 😎

      Liked by 1 person

  1. You’ve brought back so many memories of enjoying bike riding with my son. He continues the sport, and even though I no longer ride, that feeling you get picking up the Chilton Guide never goes away. From a $20 moped to custom Harley, from dirt biking to drag racing, it gets into your DNA. I enjoyed riding, but those dirt and road trips with my son top it all. Thanks for stirring that feeling again!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Grant, I’m glad I brought up good memories for you. Biking really does get into your blood. I move to NC in the late 90s with my company and bought a ‘79 650 Kawasaki off a guy. SOO much fun cruising around through farm country… pastures, barns, ponds.

      Thanks for reading and leaving suck a wonderful comment 😎

      Like

    1. Haha, thanks CJ! My BIL has a 250 and when I’m up at his place, I take it for a spin. Can’t believe we were so wild and stupid as kids, think my mom was onto something with the ER business 😂 Thanks for reading and commenting 😎

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Drew! I wish I had one of the “after” bike… many of our fam photos are MIA… I just happened to find this one, thought it’d make a good story. Thanks for reading and commenting 😎

      Liked by 1 person

  2. As always, a pleasure to read. This reminded me of two brothers I went to school with, their dad owned a couple of car dealership franchises in town, and they raced dirt bikes on the circuit.
    What a wonderful bonding exercise for the two of you- and I am betting a boatload of memories to boot.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Violet, oh yeah. My mom was actually closer than she realized to the truth with the ER biz. Of course, she never heard but some of the spills I took, I’m surprised I walked away from them. But when I wasn’t racing, it was such a joy to just putter down dirt roads, wondering what I might find.

      Thanks for reading and leaving such a nice comment 😎

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Thank you! It was really a fun project and I learned so much. Made riding it so much more fun 😎

        Thanks for reading and leaving such a nice comment 🙂

        Like

  3. “Any job worth doing is worth doing right.”

    Such a dad thing to say. I heard this growing up, too.

    Seems like he gave you more than just a repaired dirt bike. Time, love, fond memories. He also received the same in return. Great post.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. IKR? Back then, argh, I just wanted to ride. But sure didn’t want the flipping thing falling apart under me. I slowly began to understand and appreciate. Thanks so much for reading and the awesome comment 😎

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Maria! I grew up in a really great place… only about 5 miles from town, maybe 10 from the beach… but it was another world 😎 Thanks much for reading and leaving duch a kind comment!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. What a wonderful story about your dreams of getting a dirt bike, and then your dreams coming true thanks to your dad. I love how you describe falling in love with learning about everything that makes a dirt bike work, and your memory of your dad’s love for you. When my husband was 13, he wanted a dirt bike. So bad. This would have been 1974. His parents felt about it the same way your parents did. They finally let him buy a bike in a box. I don’t have any idea what model it was or how many cc’s it had, but that little boy that was. My husband went to work on that bike. And his father helped him also. So your story just brought some tears to my eyes, thinking about the time that my husband got to spend doing the same thing. Thank you, Darryl!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Awww, Lisa, thanks and I’m sorry if I made you sad thinking about your husband 😢 Seems like all boys have the same dreams… not sure how much of that is still around these days, but I couldn’t wait to get home from school and hop on my bike. I found some really cool “secret” places that I’d just go and sit and think about stuff.

      I think it was that Christmas that I got the “Visible V-8” model. I had a clear engine block that showed the pistons going up and down, these little lights (“spark plugs”) that went off… how the crankshaft and camshafts worked…etc. That was really a cool present and I learned a lot about cars. But now you’d have to hook it up to a computer for an accurate demonstration 😂

      Thanks much for reading and leaving the lovely comment. Enjoy the rest of your week 😎

      Liked by 1 person

  5. Darryl, it sounds like your dad enjoyed working on it as much as you eventually did. Great poignant story about bonding with family. Hopefully you never did end up in the ER! 🙏

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Awww! Thank you, surfer sister! I really appreciate you reading my stuff and always giving such kind feedback 😎

      I read your latest post… Comments are closed, but when I read those words, it reminded me so much of Heart’s song Dreamboat Annie

      Heading out this morning
      Into the sun
      Riding on the diamond waves
      Little darling one

      Such a touching post… very well done, loved it! 😎❤️🏄🏻‍♂️

      Like

  6. Love your writing. And my dad had (okay, has) the same relationship with my mum – wanting to do fun things with his kids, but not wanting her mad at him. And usually the fun wins out. He once built me and my younger brother a whole zip line in our garden. It was terrible. Barely lifted us off the ground. You were guaranteed to get muddy. But we had hours of fun on that zip line! Thanks for reminding me of the memory!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Aww! That sounds like so much fun! I’m glad my post brought to mind happy memories with you, your brother and your dad 🙂

      Yes, my dad for sure was the fun one, but my mom’s instincts were usually pretty good. If she knew about some of the spills and spectacular crashes me and my idiot friends had…we had to have had a guardian angel watching over us…she would have dug her feet in. But “what she didn’t know couldn’t hurt us.” 😂😉

      Thanks much for reading and the lovely comment 😎

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Wow, that is such a nice comment! Thank you so much. I’m glad you liked it. I really did learn a lot and found I liked tinkering with stuff.

      Thanks again for reading and the kind words… much appreciated 😎❤️

      Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Tanja! It’s funny how stuff like that…and especially smells… trigger memories. I remember it all like it was yesterday.

      Thanks for reading and leaving such a kind comment 😎

      Liked by 2 people

  7. Pingback: Site Title
    1. Thanks, Scott! Yeah he was a great guy and it was an interesting project. I also built “the visible V-8” which had a clear engine block and showed how everything worked. We had a lot of fun times together, I miss him 🫤

      Thanks so much for reading and the comment 😎

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Hey! That’s one I can relate to! When I was young, my dad insisted on the visible V-8 project with me. He was far more excited about it than I was until I could see some progress and wrap my brain around it.

        Have a great weekend!

        –Scott

        Liked by 1 person

  8. Great story, Darryl. I bought a new 80cc Yamaha when I was 15. One of my friends was killed on his 150cc Honda. He ran into the back of a stopped car, flew over the car into a semi stopped in front of the car, scattered his brains over the back of the semi. They passed a helmet law less than a week after that.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. Tim, that’s awful!! I’m so sorry… we usually wore helmets, but they were the “minimum coverage” kind not the full-head type they have now. I think I had a guardian angel watching over me, I had so many close calls. My mom was almost right about the ER several times! 😨😎🙏

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Beautiful story of bonding ! Actually the dreams keep us alive! And you have good memories. Well shared 💐 . In my childhood I loved to read king queen’s story 😁

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Thanks, Priti! I’m glad you enjoyed it. I had other books I enjoyed as a kid, every rainy day had my head stuck in one, but that guide had a better story.

      Thanks much for reading and the nice comment 😎

      Liked by 1 person

    1. I’m sorry about your friend 😢 Atvthat age, we did tend to think we were invincible… I had several instances where my Mom’s dire prediction of an ER trip almost came true.

      Thanks much for reading and the comment 😎

      Like

    1. Joyce, haahaaa, yeah, dinnertime was always interesting…if we could get one of them on our side, we had a chance. But usually they stuck together 😂 Oh well. Once I became a parent myself, I remembered and used that myself. Thanks for reading and commenting! 😎

      Like

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