Trail Rider Magazine

March 2013 _Rev_1

Issue link: http://trailridermagazine.uberflip.com/i/117782

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 6 of 43

moved to skirt the edge of a long, deep puddle. It was payback time, bitches! Costing Shitsowshawny precious seconds in his quest to be one of the top 200 finishers in this winner-take-nothing National Turkey Run was not going unpunished. His timing was perfect. With the dualsporters hugging the edge of the puddle, Shitshowshawny fanned the clutch, grabbed some throttle and spilt the puddle on his back wheel, dousing the dualsporting ���squids��� with several gallons of South Jersey water, sand, and mud. To say they looked stunned beyond belief is an understatement. Fortunately, their eyes and goggles were blurred in a watery, sand mixture allowing me to slip by, undetected and completely horrified. Several miles later he noticed the long train of briar patch had wound around his rear wheel and he pulled over to stare at it (he doesn���t carry tools.) I encouraged him to get the heck out of there before people began lining up to punch him in the mouth, but he had had no memory of what had transpired just a just few miles back. Truth is, I may believe him, as A) his eyes roll in the back of his head when he puts his helmet on and B) his Helmet Madness affects his short term memory. Believe me when I tell you that there���s an embarrassing amount of evidence to support this. When it was over, we quietly loaded up and got the heck out of there. Shithsowshawny is hardly alone in suffering from helmet madness. There seem to be varying degrees of helmet madness and while Shitshowshawny may seem like a severe case, he pales in comparison to another friend; we���ll call him ���Defective.��� We���ll chronicle Defective���s exploits next month. Until then, keep the Helmet Madness under hat. March 2013 5

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

view archives of Trail Rider Magazine - March 2013 _Rev_1