Australian Motorcyclist — January 2018

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Welcome to Australia’s best kept secret. Gilberton Outback
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peace and tranquillity.

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unaccountably kept it as a souvenir
for many years), but I never saw it.
It must be said that Les Rudd was a
very generous man.
Just before Easter in 1957 I endured
a head-on with a 1948 Oldsmobile
car, which had suddenly stopped on
my exit line from a favourite left-
hander while I was enthusiastically
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The sidecar wheel was about a meter
into the air, but the device was
entirely under control, and I would
have missed the car by a whisker
had he kept going as he should have,
instead of braking in panic.
I panel-beat his near-side front
mudguard with my right knee ( the
only part of me still on the bike, the
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thumbs on the handlebars, almost in
the sidecar itself) with the result that
the knee was busted and took some
time to recover. Every Friday night for
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which we were living, and handed over


a week’s wages each time. It was a
great, and much appreciated gesture,
for which I was profuse in my thanks
for, as far as I knew, he didn’t have
to do that.
Once, towards the end of our
association, he had to go away for a
few days, he said, for he had developed
a strange twitch and an even stranger
itch, no surprise as the trade was on
its way out in a Big Way as it neared
the beginning of the sixties, and we
weren’t doing too well. Neither was
anybody else in the motorcycle trade
anywhere on earth, be assured!
He was gone for a solid week, but
rang several times every day to see
if we were still there, that the place
had not burnt to the ground, that we
had not been burgled, and that the
occasional motorcycle had been sold:
they had, for I had sold four of them
during his absence. The workshop was
also going full-blast.
I suggested he settle himself down
a bit, but I simply couldn’t stop him
regularly contacting us during that

short period; neither could his wife, I
was later to learn.
Even though Honda had recently
arrived in Australia (that happened
in April, 1958) and went on to save
the industry world-wide, it had not
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which was shortly to follow as other
Japanese motorcycles arrived in
ever-increasing numbers, so it all
went quietly pear-shaped before it
slowly came good again.
There were just three of us in the
store at the time; Les Rudd, the great,
self-taught mechanic/engineer Ernie
dal Santo and myself, so we hung on
for another eighteen months or so, but
he was almost in tears as he suggested
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my services. He then surprised by
paying me a fairly handsome ‘bonus’
to help me on my way.
Every day was an unalloyed joy
at Ryde Motorcycles, it really was,
and it remains one of the highlights
of my long, long career in the
motorcycle trade. D
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