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Red_bike
09-17-2009, 11:48 PM
I haven’t been on the form in a few weeks because of death in the family and just life going on. But I am back from a long ride and I feel better. I left Georgia and went north then came back south. I hooked up with the Iron and Steel run in NY and it came back to Georgia.

The states I rode in for my ride were:
New York
Pennsylvania
Vermont
New Hampshire
Maine
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
Connecticut
New Jersey
Delaware
Maryland
West Virginal
Virginia
North Carolina
South Carolina
Alabama
Georgia

Duck

Moedad
09-18-2009, 12:31 AM
Wow, good ride! VL or GZ? Pics?

Water Warrior 2
09-18-2009, 01:00 AM
Far out ride. Did you get a T-shirt in every state ?? Pics would be great if you have some. How many miles overall did you ride ??

alanmcorcoran
09-18-2009, 01:35 AM
Lot of states. No tickets I hope? Back in my day I considered a number of those states (NJ, Penn, Georgia and Conn) part of the original 13 speed traps. Back roads or turnpikes? I never made it as far north as Maine but I hear it is really pretty up there.

Water Warrior 2
09-18-2009, 04:07 PM
Maine is one of the prettiest places in Sept with all the secondary winding roads to wander about on. Would love to go back on 2 wheels.

BusyWeb
09-19-2009, 12:08 AM
Wow, those are 17 state....
In here california, I could not imagine that many states' of riding.. ha ha ha.
Any photos of memory?
The solo bike riding >> sometimes hepled my soul refreshing too...

dannylightning
09-19-2009, 01:35 AM
that's nothing i ride threw all 50 states every day. ok ok its one hell of a ride, after a few hours and i'm ready to call it quits.

Water Warrior 2
09-19-2009, 04:42 AM
that's nothing i ride threw all 50 states every day. ok ok its one hell of a ride, after a few hours and i'm ready to call it quits.


:lol:

Red_bike
09-30-2009, 11:08 AM
Sorry about not getting back sooner but I had to get back to the “normal life” for a while to catch up on things. But here are some of the ride details. I warn you, it's kinda long, but what great ride isn't. :rawk: I live in Georgia and had planned on going up to NY to do the Iron and Steel run that started on Sept 12. I was going to leave on Thursday, Sept 10 and take two days to get there in time for the start of that ride. But we had a death in the family on Sept 4th up in Pennsylvania so we decided to “truck” my VL 800 up there and I left from there. By doing that it gave me more days in the saddle to do the NE area. Once everything was over with up there, I left the family I was staying with at about 6:00 in the morning and the only plan I had at that time was to ride north for awhile then turn east. I left on a 2 lane road and pretty much stayed that way for the next 1450 miles. There were a few times that the road was a 4 lane but it was not an Interstate. By late afternoon on Sept 10, I had worked my way back to Chester NY to spend the night. This had been an amazing few days that were long but enjoyable. The leaves were beginning to change and falling. The mornings were cool but not cold and the days were dry but not hot. The roads were good with lots of curves. At one point I even come upon an eagle that was picking up something in the road as I came around a curve. I came within 30 feet of it before it got out of my sight. I pulled over and took several photos of the trees hoping to get a shot of it. Well that paid off, once I got home and zoomed around in those trees there he was, sitting on a branch watching me. WOW!. At lunch and dinner time I always pulled in for gas and waited on someone that looked like they were from that area and asked them where I could find a place to eat that most of the locals go to. Everyone was nice and the food was wonderful at every stop. I took hundreds of pictures on this section of my ride and some came out and some didn’t. But they are all in my mind.The next section of my trip started on Sept 11 from Chester NY and I needed to get to the Queens section of NY, only about 70 miles away. The last 20 miles or so were the hardest miles I have ever ridden and I have been a biker for about 40 years. Now remember I am from Georgia, and I am now going into NY City. All was fine until I got to the toll booth for the Georgia Washington Bridge. It started raining so hard that the cars had their wipers on high. The wind was so strong that it was blowing large truck over the white lines. I went across the GW at 15 mph and my map that was attached to the inside of my windshield was now soaked and the ink had run. I had studied the mapping and knew (well I was hoping I knew) which roads to take. I had planned my route not thinking of the rain but going so I could see certain things. As I approached the Brooklyn Bridge the weather had gotten worse. A trucker in an 18 wheeler was beside me as we waited in traffic and he gave me thumbs up. This gave me what I needed to keep going. The wind was so bad that as I sat still in that traffic about half way up the ramp on the bridge, my bike almost blew over. There was nowhere to pullover, I had no choice but to keep going. I have never had cross winds so strong. As I got on the bridge part that was over the water, I was only going about 10 – 15 mph at the most and at times only about 5 mph. I could feel my bike being pushed sideways with the tires sliding sideways also. I was in the far right hand lane and the wind was blowing me all over that lane. I could also see the cars being pushed all over the road also. At one time I looked behind me and I saw that big truck that had given me a thumps up right behind me and once again he was giving me the thumbs up. I knew if could just keep it up I would make it. I also knew that if I did drop my bike, he was there to make sure no one ran over me. I tell you, at one point I really was thinking that this was my last living minute and I took the time to thank God for the great life that I had been given to me. I made it off the bridge with only Gods hands holding on to me. Now I had to find the hotel in a town that I knew nothing about and without a map. Well to make the story shorter, I did find the hotel without too many problems and when I arrived I called my wife and told her I was safe in the hotel and had no plans on leaving. During my 40 years of riding I have did my share of riding in the wind and rain. All my biker friends call me Duck and I live up to that name. But that last bit was the worse and I never want to ride in that kind of wind and rain again.The next morning we started the 1063.5 miles back to Ft Benning Ga. That is another story all together.Duck

Water Warrior 2
09-30-2009, 04:55 PM
Wow, sounds like the last 20 miles were more than a workout. Glad to hear you had no mishaps. Looking forward to some pics and the rest of the story.

Red_bike
09-30-2009, 11:17 PM
The second part of the story.

Also long.

The next morning started at 2:00 AM as we started the 1063.5 miles back to Ft Benning GA with a piece of the WTC. By 4 O’ Clock we were meeting up with some guys to go eat breakfast and then on to the start of the ride. What we were doing was escorting a piece of the WTC and a 1951 Fire truck called the 343 from Floyd Bennet Field, Brooklyn, NY to Ft Benning GA where the I-beam will be placed. The Fire truck 343, is named because there were 343 fireman killed when the WTC fell. Everyone was there because they love their Country and was touched when part of it feel. The thrill I had as we all gathered together while someone sang the National Anthem and then the prayer for the run is something I will never be able to explain to anyone. As we rode out of NYC the “fire riders” which are fireman on motorcycles from that area were up front. But on the lead bike was Susan Rescorla. There is a statue of her husband, Retired Army Colonel Rick Rescorla at the National Infantry Museum at Ft. Benning. The Iron Beam will be near his statue when it is finished. Colonel Rescorla had worked in the WTC and was killed on 9/11. Before he was killed he was credited with saving over 2700 lives before he returned to save more lives and then the towers feel. Over the next several days I had the honor of meeting Suzie and every day we spent some time together talking. After the fire riders everyone else just fell into place somewhere and the Iron and 343 moved in different places of the convoy during the next 4 days. As we left NYC there was fireman everywhere. They even had the fireboat in the river doing its thing as we got ready to cross the Veranzo Bridge and head out of NYC. But that was not the end of the Fireman that had showed up to send us off. For the next 50 miles, almost every bridge we passed there were Fireman and their truck parked on top saluting us as we went by. Where there were no overpasses; they were parked beside the road standing at attention while the convoy went by. Since we had police escort the entire way there were no stopping for red lights or toll booths and I quickly learned that the speed limit was not an issue either. When we stopped for lunch some of the riders left but we picked up some new ones. You would be going down the road and you would see someone up front give a wave and take the next exit. Or you would pass by an exit and at the end of it would be a bike or several bikes waiting for us and would just join in at the end. This was the way it was the entire trip. The weather held until we were well outside of NYC before it rained again. Over the next four days when it would rain we would slow down to a safe speed but nothing was stopping this mission. There were guys appointed to stay with the Iron or with 343 if they had to pull over for any reason but they never did. We would ride about 250 miles each day and stop for lunch about halfway thru. Before we left Brooklyn NY I signed the I-Beam with the name Duck and at every stop they let everyone that wanted to sign it. At one point they had to turn the Iron over because it was full of names. There were 4 guys from Georgia that started the ride from Brooklyn and did the whole run. There was one other that we picked up about 100 miles out that lives in Warmer Robins. I was the only one from the Columbus\Ft Benning area that did the whole run. We stated picking up the Georgia riders near the SC border and several from Columbus joined us in Newnan GA. The weather was great from Newnan to Columbus but when we got almost to the Macon Rd exit it started raining. Now I don’t mean a small rain, we were going about 60 mph and had to slow down to about 30 just to see the white line on the road. When we got to the Infantry Museum it was still raining and the only person there to meet us was my mother-in-law, Kathryn. I am not sure who dropped the ball but if you were not involved with motorcycling, most likely you didn’t know anything about it. All along the way, at every town we stopped at, people were out to great us, but somehow the folks of Columbus never were told about it. They did turn out two days later when we had the dedication of the Iron to Ft. Benning and it was well attended.

Now for some of the highlights of the trip. Well there are too many to mention in an E-mail so you will just have to get with me in person and let me tell you about them. One thing I will tell you about was how proud I was to see my family up on the overpass as we came into town and see my wife smile so big because I had made it. And then to see Kathryn out in the rain waving as we came in, WOW. Once again I think of how hard it is for me to even get out of bed some days and to do a ride of almost 3000 miles, it has to be God’s will that gave me the strength.

When you do see me, be sure and ask about the little boy looking at my bike.

I did meet some great guys and we now have a bond that will not be broken. I did take more pictures on this section of my trip and some of them can be found here:

http://picasaweb.google.com/theduckfami ... directlink (http://picasaweb.google.com/theduckfamilyphotos/SecondPartOfMyRideNYCToFtBenning?feat=directlink)

Once again I thank God for giving me the strength to do this ride and yes I am planning on doing the NY to DC ride next Sept. if I am able.

Duck

Water Warrior 2
10-01-2009, 01:43 AM
OMG ! I sure didn't see that coming. You must feel very honored and humbled to be part of the escort. Thank you for sharing a part of history with us.

Red_bike
10-01-2009, 10:26 AM
Well while I am tooting my horn...one more thing. This is a copy of an E-mail that was sent to the City Manager's office from one of the other bikers and they sent it to my wife. I still have not responed to them. Not sure if I will.
Duck

My name is J Lucas (Tank is my biker name) and I just finished the Iron & Steel Run from NY to Ft. Benning Ga. I live in NY and I think you need to know about one of your residents of Columbus Ga that did the motorcycle ride also. His name is “Duck” Frye and he was the ONLY one that did the entire ride from your area. This was not just a small bike ride. It consisted of 4 days of hard riding in sun and in rain. What sit The Duck apart from everyone else (besides being the only one from the Ft Benning area) were many things. There were many days that you could tell he was in pain from a handicap he has but that never stopped him from having a smile on his face. Once we even had to pick him up and sit him on his bike because he could not get his leg over the seat. Once he was on his bike and got moving, you could tell he was one of the most skilled riders out there. He gave advice to less experience riders and was seen often praying for others that had
asked him to pray for them. We even saw him holding the door of the hotels open for woman and helped an old man fix a flat tire. He talked of his love for his wife and son and other family members,and everyone knew he was a Georgia Bull Dog fan. By the time we arrived in Columbus, some of us knew our way around because of The Duck telling us about “how great it is to live in Columbus and what to do there” and from the many maps that he did for us.
I know when I get home my town will recognize me for being on this run and I feel that Duck should have something for what he has done. He will not look for recognition, so it is up to Columbus Ga to take the step. I never knew his first name but his biker name is Duck and that is what everyone called him. His last name is Frye and I do now that he worked at AFLC at one time and his wife Theresa Frye still work there. I hope this will be enough information for you to find him.
Please do something to show Duck how proud the Columbus\Ft Benning area is of what he did.

J Lucas

mrlmd1
10-01-2009, 04:31 PM
Incredible! Nice ride, great idea, and you participated. Good for you!
I used to live in NY/NJ. The winds whipping up the East River can get pretty fierce, also across the narrows on the Verazano bridge. Glad you made it OK, and through all the rest of the rain.

Water Warrior 2
10-01-2009, 07:17 PM
Red Bike, you are a credit to your country. From the comments in the E-mail I would think you have many new friends who will forever remember you and the escort ride.