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Here we are on the
last day of 2007 a time when we are tempted to remember the
old year and look forward to the new.
As I look back through the stories I have written
this year I know that 2007 has been great fun in very enjoyable
company but, as you all know, that is not the complete story.
Sadly it will always be remembered as the year that we lost
Trevor, we miss the boyish excitement that he radiated, his
huge personality and his ever ready smile. We always will.
But Trevor was much more than that because he
did a great deal of quiet 'behind the scenes' work. In the
months leading up to his death he could often be seen riding
alongside different people and talking to them about the proposed
changes to the CTC. He would explain how he saw things could
be, listen to our views and suggestions and from all this
he produced graphic aids to our understanding of the changes.
These were invaluable in enabling us to have an educated vote
for the changes at our AGM.
But as some of us know the death of a loved
one is something we can do nothing about. We can shout and
scream, kick the furniture or cry quietly but it makes no
difference - death is cruelly final and we have to try our
best to live with it and try even harder to move on.
So, lets talk about Des Radford, the bonfire
builder.
Without Des the CTC in this area would not exist,
or if it did it would only be a shadow of what it is. Des'
enthusiasm over the last 21 years has given us a wealth of
rides and routes that we continue to enjoy year after year.
Lets just think about that.
21 years of dedicated enthusiasm. Many of us
would have become tired and given up long before then but
in reply to a message that I sent to him after he announced
that he was effectively hanging up his cycling shoes he just
replied
'Thank you so much, I don’t deserve it
I’m sure; I’ve only been doing what I enjoy doing
most.'
So, what's all this about lighting bonfires
then? Quite a lot actually, its not a literal thing - its
an analogy, but nevertheless a very good way of illustrating
an achievement and appreciating its continuing effect.
My father has, in recent years, found it difficult
to carry on digging his garden, opening trenches for potatoes
and generally keeping his garden tidy. He has a good excuse
for this, he is, after all 97. Anyway gardening has meant
that he continues to keep looking forward to the next gardening
year and as you get older that sort of mental attitude is
beneficial. So I give him a hand with the heavy stuff.
There was a pile of hedge cuttings and branches
in the far corner that he was anxious to burn but we had to
have a dry, windless day. So we waited, then along came that
day. I started to drag the branches to a part of the garden
that had been cleared of vegetables, the potash that remained
afterwards could be spread about and that would be beneficial
in the next season. The first branches were dry enough but
as I got further down the pile they got wetter and wetter,
some thought would have to go into this. I started a second
pile next to the dry branches and when I had finished that
pile I lit the first. The fire gradually caught and soon had
itself a good heart. We then slowly placed more of the rubbish
from the second pile on to the fire, the intense heat quickly
dried this new material and soon that blazed too. The two
of us quietly enjoyed the experience of seeing the one pile
getting smaller and at the same time enjoyed the glow and
warmth of this fire, our great creation.
That is the secret of a good bonfire. If you
create a good heart you can keep it going for ever, it will
take all the green and wet wood, dry it and when dry that
becomes the new heart. It can go on and on.
Des achieved this great bonfire, he built its
heart. We younger upstarts are represented by the wet, mucky
constituents of the second pile. Wet, mucky, younger upstarts
we may be but we want to keep Des' fire going. We want to
keep it going so he can enjoy its warmth at close quarters
and not from a far bedroom window.
So lets look forward to 2008, lets hope for
increasing membership, fun and good rides.
But most of all - friendship!
Happy New Year and happy pedalling
Lew Spokes
PS. For the complete Wednesday and Sunday rides
programme click on the link at the top of this page, or if
that is too much trouble then click
here.
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