Visit the Cellar!

The Cellar Image of the Day is just a section of a larger web community: bright folks talking about everything. The Cellar is the original coffeeshop with no coffee and no shop. Founded in 1990, The Cellar is one of the oldest communities on the net. Join us at the table if you like!

 
What's IotD?

The interesting, amazing, or mind-boggling images of our days.

IotD Stuff

ARCHIVES - over 13 years of IotD!
About IotD
RSS2
XML

Permalink Latest Image

October 22, 2020: A knot of knots is up at our new address

Recent Images

September 28th, 2020: Flyboarding
August 31st, 2020: Arriving Home / Happy Monkey Bait
August 27th, 2020: Dragon Eye Pond
August 25th, 2020: Sharkbait
July 29th, 2020: Gateway to The Underworld
July 27th, 2020: Perseverance
July 23rd, 2020: Closer to the Sun

The CELLAR Tip Mug
Some folks who have noticed IotD

Neatorama
Worth1000
Mental Floss
Boing Boing
Switched
W3streams
GruntDoc's Blog
No Quarters
Making Light
darrenbarefoot.com
GromBlog
b3ta
Church of the Whale Penis
UniqueDaily.com
Sailor Coruscant
Projectionist

Link to us and we will try to find you after many months!

Common image haunts

Astro Pic of the Day
Earth Sci Pic of the Day
We Make Money Not Art
Spluch
ochevidec.net
Strange New Products
Geisha Asobi Blog
Cute animals blog (in Russian)
20minutos.es
Yahoo Most Emailed

Please avoid copyrighted images (or get permission) when posting!

Advertising

The best real estate agents in Montgomery County

   xoxoxoBruce  Thursday Dec 28 11:40 PM

Dec 29th, 2017, Aussie Biker

Quote:
Solo back-to back transcontinental rides put Winifred Wells on the map but her full circuit of Australia confirmed her eminence among Australia’s moto pioneers. Winifred was 21, when on 26 December 1950 she embarked on her solo and epic journey from Perth to Sydney return across the unsealed and lonely roads of the Nullarbor.
Keep in mind, “unsealed and lonely roads” in putting it mildly. The route she took weren’t even roads yet.
They were bush tracks with nothing but sand for miles, no water, no food, no help.
She, and her life, were entirely in her own hands and the reliability of her bike.



Quote:
She received a hero’s welcome when she arrived back in Perth after 5,500 miles in 21 days. She went on to achieve the “big-lap” of Australia alongside her father in 1952.
Back in England Royal Enfield heard about this and knew it was a great promotion chance.
They seized the chance by the horns and made Winifred Wells a poster girl for Enfield around the world.



link

link


sexobon  Friday Dec 29 03:06 AM

Quote:
Originally Posted by xoxoxoBruce View Post
... The route she took weren’t even roads yet. They were bush tracks with nothing but sand for miles, ...
I bet she made time to stop and get a nice tan all over.


Carruthers  Friday Dec 29 05:13 AM

Royal Enfield. Now there's a name from the past.

I was never into motorcycles, but names like Royal Enfield, Triumph, Norton and BSA were, at one time, part of the landscape.
Most seem to have disappeared through ill-advised mergers, bankruptcy or desperate, but ultimately doomed, restructuring.
Survivors include Royal Enfield, which is now an Indian company with a factory in Chennai and Triumph which, as far as I can see, is the only household name which both survives and manufactures in the UK.

If you have £10,000 to £12,000* in loose change hiding down the back of the sofa, a brand new Triumph motorcycle can be yours.

www.triumphmotorcycles.co.uk

Wiki

*$13,500 to $16,200



xoxoxoBruce  Friday Dec 29 05:57 AM

Might have to check the sofa and the recliner...
But the modern Royal Enfield Bullet is more reasonable, although not much more technically advanced from what she rode.



Diaphone Jim  Friday Dec 29 01:09 PM

I rode and raced a BSA Gold Star in the 1960's. It was a 500cc single and would vibrate your arms to numbness at speed. Helmetless and in short sleeves on LA freeways, ah youth.
Hers was a 350, but certainly a handful, heavy and with crappy brakes, not to mention with the lack of real roads and no logistical support.
Neat post.



Griff  Friday Dec 29 02:42 PM

That there was a cool girl. Adventure today is more like crappy cell coverage.



Carruthers  Friday May 25 06:43 AM

Quote:
New motorbike is a tribute to war heroes’ ‘Flying Flea’

A MOTORCYCLE ridden by British paratroopers behind enemy lines in the Second World War has been commemorated with a new limited edition bike.
Attachment 63829

Quote:
Royal Enfield made the lightweight RE/WD 125 “Flying Fleas” which were parachuted down in protective cages.

Now the company has produced a motorcycle in tribute, the Classic 500 Pegasus, which was unveiled yesterday with an aerial display from the Red Devils parachute team.

The 10 paratroopers leapt from a C-47 Dakota above Imperial War Museum Duxford, near Cambridge.

The launch was attended by veterans including Fred Glover, 92, who was 17 when he joined the 9th Parachute Battalion.

He was wounded in a glider landing in Normandy and taken prisoner. But he escaped from a hospital.

He returned to the battalion and saw action during the Battle of the Bulge and the Rhine crossing.

Looking at the Dakota, Mr Glover said: “I wish I was in there.”
LINK

LINK


xoxoxoBruce  Friday May 25 07:22 AM

So Royal Enfield is trying to make a few bucks on nostalgia by reminding us what they did during WW II, with a fat military contract, by taking a modern bike in no way related to the WW II Flea and slapping on some decals and canvas bags.

Oh, and making them exclusive by limiting the production to two colors and 1000 units. Unless of course some zombie virus causes a clamor of demand at which point they will announce a 2nd edition.

No reflection on Carruthers, and thanks to him for the information. I'm just wary of nostalgia driven campaigns because I remember the good old days and they weren't that great.

I'm sure Mr Glover has fond memories of the war 75 years ago as a kid, and probably nothing in the rest of his 93 years has pumped that kind of adrenaline again.



Your reply here?

The Cellar Image of the Day is just a section of a larger web community: a bunch of interesting folks talking about everything. Add your two cents to IotD by joining the Cellar.