Some of you might know the story of how I got the bike...if not....
It was an old friend of mine named ED who let me borrow his XS11 a few times about 37 years ago that really got me into it. I never forgot that bike, the exhilarating ride that made my eyes water the very first time I ran it up through all the gears as fast as I could. I lost track of Ed over the years as we moved to different cities. But I have always wanted a bigger bike, and had been casually searching kijiji and ebay every now and then to see what an XS went for.
So when I found out the guy at my new place of work had one of those XS11's, we got to talking, and a year & half later the bike is in my garage.
I then tried to find my old friend to share the news, but it was difficult, until I tried his brother who still runs a seafood store in nearby Kitchener. After a couple of calls he finally let me know some bad news - my friend Ed had a stroke and really doesn't feel good about himself and has become kind of a recluse, not seeing friends anymore.
So I went to the house Ed shared with another guy that I suspected still lived there by the nature of the "collections" in the yard. We had a good talk, looked at my bike he recognized, and reminisced about Ed, sadly. He also is into bikes, has an old racing Triump, and works on old Model T's, lots of railroad stuff - interesting guy
He mentioned he had some sort of tool hanging around somewhere that was from Ed's bike that might be useful to me, rummaged around but couldn't find it. Said it was a wire thing. That was last year.
I just stopped in tonight again to say Hi, and he says "I have something for you. Lo and behold - the WIRE TOOL!
He would not take any money for it. Said the one to thank was our old friend Ed who left it behind.
So now I have one, and it is extra special to me because the history behind it. Who would have thought!
I will try writing my old friend a letter, maybe his brother can deliver it and who knows....
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwZ...ew?usp=sharing
Brian
It was an old friend of mine named ED who let me borrow his XS11 a few times about 37 years ago that really got me into it. I never forgot that bike, the exhilarating ride that made my eyes water the very first time I ran it up through all the gears as fast as I could. I lost track of Ed over the years as we moved to different cities. But I have always wanted a bigger bike, and had been casually searching kijiji and ebay every now and then to see what an XS went for.
So when I found out the guy at my new place of work had one of those XS11's, we got to talking, and a year & half later the bike is in my garage.
I then tried to find my old friend to share the news, but it was difficult, until I tried his brother who still runs a seafood store in nearby Kitchener. After a couple of calls he finally let me know some bad news - my friend Ed had a stroke and really doesn't feel good about himself and has become kind of a recluse, not seeing friends anymore.
So I went to the house Ed shared with another guy that I suspected still lived there by the nature of the "collections" in the yard. We had a good talk, looked at my bike he recognized, and reminisced about Ed, sadly. He also is into bikes, has an old racing Triump, and works on old Model T's, lots of railroad stuff - interesting guy
He mentioned he had some sort of tool hanging around somewhere that was from Ed's bike that might be useful to me, rummaged around but couldn't find it. Said it was a wire thing. That was last year.
I just stopped in tonight again to say Hi, and he says "I have something for you. Lo and behold - the WIRE TOOL!
He would not take any money for it. Said the one to thank was our old friend Ed who left it behind.
So now I have one, and it is extra special to me because the history behind it. Who would have thought!
I will try writing my old friend a letter, maybe his brother can deliver it and who knows....
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0BwZ...ew?usp=sharing
Brian
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