| Motorcycle Investor mag Subscribe to our free email news 
 
 The Beattie files:  You meet the nicest people on a Harley 
 
 Young
                  Beattie
                  continues on life’s great adventure, meeting a bro in
                  a brothel, and learning about
                  use-by dates on bullets… 
 
 (by Chris Beattie, March 2024) 
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
              
               “Mate,
                    if it hadn’t
                    been for old ammunition, the bitch would have killed
                    me for sure!” This
                  was one of
                  several memorable encounters we had during a
                  two-wheeled odyssey a few years
                  back. We
                  were on a west
                  coast swing that began in LA and took in Las Vegas,
                  before heading north
                  through Death Valley, west into Yosemite National Park
                  and then south back to
                  LA via San Francisco and the legendary Pacific Coast
                  Highway. Harley-Davidson
                  had
                  kindly offered me and my partner Patricia and I a new
                  Tour Glide, which was the
                  ideal companion for the trip we had planned. It was
                  the start of summer, so
                  temperatures were already starting to climb as we
                  headed east for the five-hour
                  run across the desert to Vegas. I’ve
                  found that
                  riding a motorcycle in unfamiliar country generally
                  results in meeting people
                  and finding yourself in situations out of the
                  ordinary. And this trip would
                  prove no exception.   Cottontails
                  brothel
                  in southern Nevada hadn’t been on our itinerary when
                  Patricia and I planned the
                  journey. But one thing it did have going for it was
                  cold beer in the middle of
                  a scorching 45-degree day. As heat haze blurred the
                  surrounding desert, we were
                  due for a midday lunch stop and a quick call back to
                  the family in Australia.
                  Trouble was, we were in the middle of a parched – and
                  deserted – desert. To our
                  west lay daunting Death Valley; to our east the giant
                  Nellis Air Force Base
                  Gunnery and Bombing Range. Not the most hospitable of
                  environments.   So
what
                  looked to be a small roadhouse up ahead raised our
                  spirits. As we slowed
                  our big black tourer and pulled into the parking lot,
                  empty other than for
                  another luggage-laden Harley already baking in the
                  sun, the Budweiser neon sign
                  in the window sealed the deal. But
                  as I went to
                  walk through the door, Patricia gave me a nudge. “Oi,
                  I’m not going
                  in there,” she said. “It’s a brothel!
                  I’m not going to phone the kids from a brothel!” In
                  my haste to
                  escape the midday heat and seek comfort in a cold
                  Budweiser I’d completely
                  missed the five-metre-tall sign in the driveway. “Cottontails
Brothel
                  – All Welcome!” it beamed seductively. I
                  looked at the
                  sign and turned to Patricia. “You
                  want a cold
                  drink now, or would you rather go thirsty for the next
                  50 miles?” She
                  shrugged, and a
                  moment later we were both sitting at the bar, dark
                  subdued ’80s disco-style
                  mood lighting replacing the harsh desert sun. “Howdy
                  brother,”
                  said the ageing tattooed biker on the barstool,
                  reaching out to offer a firm
                  handshake. It turned out Ziggy, who was the only other
                  customer in the bar, was
                  from Texas. He’d just come back from visiting his
                  brother, who was currently
                  the guest of the Federal Government in San Quentin
                  prison, near San Francisco.
                  As we came to discover, Ziggy and his brother were
                  both highly placed members
                  in a particularly notorious one percenter US bike
                  club. “I
                  only get one
                  week a year to catch up with him,” he explained. Today
                  was a “rest and
                  recreation day”, he said, and Cottontails seemed like
                  as good a place as any to
                  ‘unwind’. Ziggy
                  had been
                  engrossed in a conversation with Shelley, the barmaid,
                  when we entered. As
                  Ziggy later confided, he was hoping to get the “daily
                  special” rate down to a
                  more affordable $40. I wished him luck. Meantime,
                  realising
                  she had female company, Shelley tried to make Patricia
                  feel as comfortable as
                  it’s possible for an Australian woman tourist to feel
                  in a Nevada brothel. “What
                  can I get ya,
                  honey?” she offered cheerfully. A
                  chilled
                  chardonnay helped melt the ice and before too long
                  Shelley was entertaining an
                  enthralled Patricia with bawdy and bizarre tales of
                  daily life in a Nevada
                  bordello. After
                  a refreshing
                  drink and some enlightening conversation, we left
                  Ziggy and Shelley to their
                  negotiations, mounting up for some more miles under
                  the unrelenting Nevada sun. We
                  dismissed our
                  Cottontail interlude as just another weird encounter
                  on a roadtrip that had
                  more than its fair share of the unexpected and
                  unusual.   Like
                  a day earlier
                  in Las Vegas, when Patricia was propositioned by a
                  Harley-riding Elvis, who
                  looked like he’d seen better days. “Hey
                  baby, wanna
                  come cruisin’ with the King?” drawled the elusive
                  superstar as he sat sprawled
                  on his bike in the front of the 7-11. A great opening
                  line, but while the oil-
                  and food-stained white sequined outfit and impressive
                  paunch seemed authentic enough,
                  the unconvincing hairpiece gave the game away. Then
                  there was the
                  World Famous Peggy Sue’s Diner near Baker on the way
                  to Vegas, a delightful
                  oasis in the middle of nowhere that had us wondering
                  if we’d just ridden
                  through a time-warp and been transported back to the
                  1950s. Waitresses
                  dressed
                  in bobby socks and knee-length dresses danced between
                  the tables, while the
                  whole place hummed to tunes from the likes of Buddy
                  Holly and the Big Bopper. Even
                  Batman put in
                  an appearance later in our trip as we toured down the
                  California coast from San
                  Francisco. Coming into the historic hamlet of
                  Monterey, I did a double-take as
                  I noticed the Batmobile – or a very authentic looking
                  replica – pull up in the
                  lane next to us. “Nice
                  bike dude!”
                  commented the costumed crusader, who gave us a gloved
                  thumbs-up as he
                  presumably went off in search of local evildoers. It
                  turned out our arrival
                  coincided with a local car show. The
                  day before we’d
                  met bullet-proof expat Kiwi Mike. We pulled in to his
                  small, rustic general
                  store on our way into San Francisco from Yosemite
                  National Park, drawn by the
                  NZ flag flying on a pole out the front. Mike had been
                  living in the country
                  outpost for about 15 years and was a long-time Harley
                  rider. The
                  jovial and
                  rotund 55-year-old took an instant fancy to Patricia,
                  who he said reminded him
                  a little of his former wife. “I
                  just hope, for
                  your sake Chris that she’s not as mean and ornery,” he
                  said, going on to
                  explain that a minor dispute between the pair had
                  ended with Mike in intensive
                  care fighting for his life. “The
                  bitch pulled
                  out a gun from behind the bar and shot me!” he said.
                  “Here, look, this is where
                  it went in,” he continued, lifting a sweat-stained
                  singlet to reveal an ugly
                  crimson scar the size of an orange just above his
                  navel and another to its side. As
                  Patricia tried
                  to look away, he explained that out-of-date ammunition
                  was the only thing that
                  saved him. “It
                  didn’t have
                  enough power to go right through me. At least I ended
                  up with the bar and
                  store,” he said. “Bitch went away for five years. She
                  can rot in hell as far as
                  I’m concerned.” As
                  we left, I made
                  a mental note to check the date on the ammunition box
                  if I ever married a
                  female American gun nut … 
 
 
 The excerpt is from Beattie's wild and woolly book. So far as we know it's had one brief print run and he's threatening to do another. Watch this space. In the meantime he can be
                contacted by email. 
 More at The
                  Beattie Files home page 
 Travels with Guido columns here ------------------------------------------------- Produced by AllMoto abn 61 400 694 722 | 
 
 ArchivesContact 
 |