In another current thread we were discussing the brotherhood of the 1960s. Most times we glamorize the era. But like any other period in history, real buffs want to know about the day-to-day life of the culture they study. I'd like to do that now. Sort of wipe away the tinsel of that 'long lonesome highway.'
My wife is going to go see her mom, and today is a rest day from the gym (maybe). I have knives to sharpen, and I figured while the house was quite I'd get caught up on chores, one being laundry. I took one whiff of my jeans and realized "it was time." Then I thought about this 'brotherhood' debate.
Whether you like it or not, I'm a real biker from the 1960s. I do as my mentors taught. I was socialized in that period, I have many of the same habits and beliefs. I have most of my "biker crap." And strange as it might sound, my pants are artifacts, you might say the telling fossils of time past.
While we did not us the west coast term "originals" then, this is a good example. Modern Harley jeans are cut more for sitting, and like their jackets appear be cut from better patterns. In the 1960s most jeans came dark blue, and stiff as a board. It took months of washing, rainstorms and outright abuse to make them comfortable. And just about the time they 'felt right,' they ripped. The worst thing about a bar fight was having some drunken townie damage your jeans.
In that manner, check out my current knock around jeans. I know I wore them in 1979, so that makes them date from 1976 or '77. The pockets are ripped and torn, and as you can see, the entire crotch has been replaced.
As I emptied my pockets, I recognized another old mentor admonishment. That is, "
If you don't carry it, you won't have it on the road far from home." Look at the arm of the couch.
Now, that's just my "daily winter crap." It's how a era biker gets through the day--when he's not riding. Half of the stuff I use once per month, in fact, I cannot remember the last time I used the SureFire flashlight. Two knives? Well, yeah, a big one and a little one. I just used the little one yesterday to make a toothpick. I carry
more stuff just taking the Sportster to the bike shop for coffee.
So here, my friends, is the real aspect of the 1960s. No flashy Peter Fonda bikes. No Bronson beautiful girls at every off-ramp. Just a pair of worn out jeans and pocket full of bric-a-brac. Worn out warnings from voices long since dead and buried. Most of this stuff is the same as I carried in 1969 when I became a "brother."
If you're going to fake the past, do it right.
https://i209.photobucket.com/albums/bb23 ... 01-131.jpg