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1966 Motorcycle Hare & Hound Ron Nelson - 3-Page Vintage Article

$ 7.6

Availability: 30 in stock
  • Condition: Original, vintage magazine article. Condition: Good

    Description

    1966 Motorcycle Hare & Hound Ron Nelson - 3-Page Vintage Article
    Original, Vintage Magazine article.
    Page Size: Approx. 8" x 11" (21 cm x 28 cm) each page
    Condition: Good
    NATIONAL
    CHAMPIONSHIP
    HARE
    AND
    HOUND
    Ron Nelson recovers
    from spill to win
    The defending champion sat this one out.
    Mike Patrick,, who had wrestled the crown
    away from two-time winner Eddie Mulder
    at the 1964 National Championship Hare
    & Hounds run at Cherry Creek. Utah in
    May of that year, eyed the long starting
    line. It seemed only natural that Mike
    should be aboard his husky 750 Norton,
    foot poised, ready for the fall of the banner
    and the frantic charge over the desert which
    followed. But not this time. Not that he
    wasn’t more than ready, but a technical
    point in the rule book kept Patrick from
    any chance of repeating his win: He was a
    member of the sponsoring San Gabriel Val-
    ley Motorcycle Club, with access to knowl-
    edge of the course, checkpoints, etc.
    None of the 348 entries figured that
    winning would be a snap just because the
    current champ was automatically retired.
    There was still plenty of top talent in at-
    tendance to guarantee that the win would
    be hard-fought, demanding a well-prepared
    machine, experience, stamina, determined
    drive and whatever luck could be wrestled
    from the hands of fate. There was one fac-
    tor in everyone’s favor: damp ground and
    no dust. Heavy rainfall, setting an all-time
    record in California, had wet the desert for
    a week prior to the running and the present
    weather was CAVU (Ceiling and Visibility
    Unlimited).
    SGVMC’s lightweight ace, Bob Belt, had
    conducted the riders’ meeting, outlining the
    start and check procedures. The run was
    111 miles long divided into three separate
    loops—clover leaf fashion—of 38, 38 and
    35 miles, returning each time to the cen-
    trally located pits northeast of California
    City to allow small-tanked bikes to refuel.
    Most of the big machines could make it two
    loops before pitting. The 51 trail bikes of
    lOOcc and under and the 10 sidecar outfits
    (half of which were lightweights) would
    finish at the end of the first 38-mile loop.
    An innovation by the San Gabbers was
    TOP—Some 90 miles out, a string of riders slow imperceptibly for a danger-marked road crossing (see six
    limed lines on trail under second rider's wheels). LEFT—Most of run laid out by sponsoring San Gabriel
    Valley M.C. was over rapidly executed sand wastes. Fast trails permitted winners' averages of 60mphl
    RIGHT—Crashing through the thick shrubbery of the start area, the mob heads for the smoke, several miles
    away. Fortunately, rains the preceding week had wet down the arid California City region of the high desert
    70
    country and dust was light, permitting a fast break to the lime pick-up point.
    to have the hounds place their check cards
    on the backs of their helmets rather than
    atop gas tanks. The idea had a two-fold
    purpose: it required the rider to (nearly)
    stop at the checkpoints in order to assure
    being marked, and it obviated the problem
    of gas splashing on the cards and obscuring
    the checkers’ marks.
    Checkers were positioned, mobile radio
    units were put at strategic locations includ-
    ing an air-watch control in a light plane
    wafting overhead, marshals were posi-
    tioned at i;oad crossings with red flags and
    the banner was held high over a jeep on a
    low ridge a half-mile in front of the poised
    riders and their silent mounts. In the dis-
    tance, smoke coasted gently skyward, signi-
    fying the spot where the lime and ribbon
    markers began. And then the flag fell.
    Instantly, the quiet morning was shat-
    tered with sound and fury, and the line
    broke with cycles dodging and crashing
    through the thick brush of the start area,
    which had been selected in order to slow
    down a banzai charge at the outset. Except
    for the few neophytes who had decided to
    play at the championship tilt and an unfor-
    tunate or two with starting problems, the
    pack had disappeared in seconds, their roar
    slowly diminishing to a faint drone in the
    distance.
    At the smoke, a dozen riders converged,
    grasping for every advantage offered by a
    spot in the front. In some cases the low
    numbers told that a champion was at the
    throttle. (A number is based on the rider’s
    performance over the preceding year with-
    in his local district.) Up in the front ranks
    were no. 2, Dick Vick, on a 500cc ’66 Tri-
    umph; no. lx, Neil Fergus and 2x, Bill
    Thorwaldson, on new Bultaco Metisse
    250’s; no. 7, Gary Preston, on a 650 Tri-
    umph battling against no. 7x, Gary Conrad,
    on a 250 Greeves Challenger. Big Ken
    Knudsen, no. 4, had his immaculate Tri-
    umph in the thick of the front-runners. Not
    all the vying hounds in the first wave car-
    ried low numbers, due to their commit-
    ments in other forms of racing which keeps
    them from battling for low desert-racing
    plates. Among these were Eddie Mulder,
    hot to regain his title and fresh from a
    regional championship win a fortnight be-
    fore, and Ron Nelson, who had fought to
    win a good many state championships in
    the sand and hills. Not many miles out, it
    ',zas Nelson in the lead.
    Young Rich Thorwaldson, on another of
    the light-yellow terrors from Spain, passed
    his dad and fought his way forward. The
    Continued on Page 79
    place no.
    name & machine
    class
    1. 141
    Ron Nelson
    Triumph 500 Expert
    2. 43
    Cliff Coleman
    Triumph Open Expert
    3. 7x
    Gary Conrad
    Greeves
    250 Expert
    4.
    2
    Dick Vick
    Triumph 500 Expert
    5.
    7
    Gary Preston
    Triumph Open Expert
    6. 115
    Rick James
    Triumph Open Expert
    7. 69
    Bob Ferro
    Triumph Open Expert
    8. 618x
    Gary Griffin
    Bultaco
    250 Expert
    9. 15
    Gene Dempsey
    Triumph Open Expert
    10. 63
    Dick Romas
    Triumph Open Amateur
    277 entries (solo) over lOOcc
    189 finishers
    51 trait bike entries (1 OOcc and under)
    33 finishers (first loop only)
    winner: Earl Roeseler/90cc Honda
    10 sidecar entries (2 men each)
    7 finishers (first loop only)
    winner: John Palfreyman/
    Steve Foss
    650cc Triumph
    LEfT-A study in techniques. A pair of 250cc machines come out of the some wash crossed by the yellow
    ribbon-marked trail, but in divergent attitudes. The Dirt Diggers M.C. member at *he '®f‘
    '
    Greeves' front wheel airborne, while the Jawa-riding Buzzard clubber nearside lands flat on two pomts.
    RIGHT—With a hastily applied Band-Aid over a cut received when he fell in rocks, Ron Nelson gives a weary
    'X, .X KnudX Too. bear -es.taon, of grueling boble ,o hold mil.—inu..
    untried course. Ron's 500cc Triumph also bore the scars of battle to gain the goal of Nat.onal Champ.on...
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