Thur Singapore to Madras
Boring day waiting around for the the flight from Singapore to Madras via Kuala Lumpur. Get to Madras sometime around 12pm. I always find it weird coming out the airport in any country as your senses get assaulted by the new sights and sounds but this is really weird. All the cars look 20 years old and there are loads of blokes looking like the ‘Your Country Needs You’ poster walking around in uniform and carrying a huge ‘beat stick’. The auto rickshaws are everywhere too, and beggars. Get into a circa 1950 coach for the ride across town. Madras is a huge city but it’s dead this time of night. The traffic is light but there seems nothing on the road that would pass any sort of MOT test. This place looks squalid. We arrive at our hotel which seems an oasis in the early morning, two of us in each room have to sleep on the floor but better that than be in the ‘thunderdome’ outside the gates.
Fri Madras.
We’re riding Royal Enfields across India and today we go to the factory to collect the bikes. We get a bus for the 30 minute journey and I really can’t describe the scenery outside as we travel. The place is absolutely heaving with people, animals, auto rickshaws, lorries, bikes and various other machinery. The city is a grade 1, 100% money back guaranteed dump of the first order. It’s just simply incredible. The whole place is a squalid, filthy, smelly mass of humanity where people are living, washing, eating, pissing and literally shitting in the streets amongst the throngs moving to and fro. The poverty is incredible with straw huts on the edge of the roads next to piles of stinking rotting rubbish being picked clean by goats, cows and dogs. The shops are holes in the walls and the entire city seems to have that ‘post apocalyptic’ feel with survival amongst the ruins the only thing on peoples minds. There are people just everywhere. I’ve just not ever seen anything remotely like this before. All the traffic seems to have at least 400,000 miles on the clock, no brakes, a smoke generator for an engine and a horn that would be more at home on a cross channel ferry. We get to the factory and it’s like a 1950’s propaganda video with people working away making bikes with no safety goggles or any sort of health and safety rules at all, anything goes. The blokes are testing the bikes on a rolling road within 2 yards of the production line. One slip and a line of people immediately get deleted, mad. We have a bit of a chat and stand in the heat. 41 degrees and 75% humidity, nice. We then choose our bikes and take them on the ‘test track’, a 30 yard oval with a loose surface and tree branches overhanging. These bikes are CRAP, awful, uncomfortable slow old dogs. They also have the controls back to front and upside down. Now children, on a ‘normal’ motorbike the gearchange is on the left. From neutral you press down for first then up for the other gears in sequence but on an Enfield the gearchange is on the right and you press up for first then down for the other gears. A ‘normal’ bike has the back brake on the right foot, but the Enfield has it on the left, is that clear? Now imagine getting into a car with the brake where the clutch is and the gearbox having the normal pattern reversed and you see that things might get a bit tricky. We go out into the city for a ‘play’ with the traffic. This is the ‘WWF, no holds bared’ sort of traffic like nowhere else in the world. The only rule of the road is ‘biggest has priority’. It’s completely insane. Traffic comes at you from every direction, looks at you then just pulls straight out in front of you even if your 2in from the front of it. Riding in that in the heat on weird bikes is a bit of a challenge to put it mildly. We get into a huge group and the chief of police escorts us across town to the hotel. Through every traffic signal and round streets the wrong way etc with all the riders going ‘first…… second SCREECH bugger , wrong foot, that’s the brake… right second……. SCREEEM 5 million revs….. bollocks, that’s first again… what a laugh that was. Still, we all arrived safely, compare horror stories and look forward to tomorrow with trepidation.

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