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I’d Rather Be Riding My Scooter

August 26th, 2008 Jersey 6 comments

Our relationship began in March.

I posted an ad on Craigslist looking for the perfect match.

And a couple weeks later, we finally met at a place in York.

It was love at first sight. And now- I can’t go a day without seeing her.
My scooter is the best acquisition I’ve made in the past ten years.

I appreciate it more than my iPod. More than my disc golf discs. More than my lapt..er, maybe not as much as my laptop…but nonetheless. Owning a scooter for transportation around the city has immeasurable benefits to being stuck in a car all the time.

I know I’ve wrote of this before- but I’ve never been one to shy away from redundancy so here are a few more reasons that riding a scooter is better than driving a car-

  • I get FAR fewer parking tickets on my scooter than I do in my car. Just today, in fact, I had to go down to city hall to see good ole John with his bowlcut to pay one of three parking tickets I have out there in order to stay off of the ‘boot list’. I had a few errands to handle which required pickups and dropoffs so I opted to drive my car. After paying my parking ticket, I stopped over at Roxbury’s on State, plugged every quarter I had in my pocket into the meter and went inside. I came out to smoke a bit later and sure enough- there was that ugly green envelope on my windshield. When I’m on the scooter, I just park that sucker on the sidewalk. And there ain’t no meters on the sidewalk.
  • I spend five dollars per week on gas to drive many, many miles more than I could on five dollars in a car. Seriously. Five bucks. Ride it every day and get probably sixty five or seventy miles out of every one and a half gallon tank.
  • Did I mention less parking tickets?
  • It’s a very social way to get around. Seriously- at least twice every time I’m out, someone stops me to ask about gas mileage, license requirements, comfortable amounts of distance to drive, etc.
  • You see more on a scooter. It’s amazing how much more I notice while on two wheels compared to being boxed into a car. Unfortunately, I notice the piss-poor driving habits of many drivers- specifically ones yapping on their cellphones. But it’s a great way to really see the city.

Harrisburg Parking Ticket

Flaming Cheese in Camp Hill (Alternate title: Greek Food Festival

May 17th, 2008 Jersey 3 comments

Took the scoot out to Camp Hill to check out the ultra-suburban but mega-authentic Greek Food Festival at Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Cathedral today. (I’m actually there right now- well, when I typed this anyway- because of the convenient suburban, Camp Hill setting, there are no less than six wireless networks for me to choose from)

ANYWAY- This is the real deal when it comes to traditional Greek Orthodox cuisine and culture.

The main draw, it seemed, was the gigundo line waiting for Gyro’s, Spanakopita, Baklava and Falafel – but the highlight for DIS GUY had to be the Saganaki.

Nothing says “What a great weekend” like watching some cheese go up in a giant fireball on a Spring Saturday Afternoon.

Oopah! (Although Western grammar laws would presume the expression be spelled “Oh-Pa!”, the correct spelling is “Oopah; according to the guy making the cheese today in this video I grabbed.

[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/3CC7QzppL74" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Categories: LiveBlog, News?, Scooter Tags:

Things I’ve Learned While Driving My Scooter

April 28th, 2008 Jersey 2 comments

So it’s been almost four weeks since I procured my new scooter and, while I’m still not quite comfortable taking many long trips on it, it has become my primary mode of transportation within the city and the close-lying outskirts.

I’ve been driving it every day (minus the rain days) and have traversed most of the main roads and thoroughfares in the area- except for the highways- this puppy’ll go sixty; but I don’t have big enough balls to compete with the tractor-trailers cooking by at seventy miles per hour.

Along with having an absolute blast doing pedestrian things like running to the store for a loaf of bread or pack of smokes, getting to and from a few gigs at The Forum and Whitaker and back and forth to the Brewery, I must admit that I’ve learned a few things about drivers in general, the human race and the pothole and frost-heave ridden roads of Downtown Harrisburg.

And here, in no particular order, they are:

1. People who drive while talking on cellphones are much more oblivious to the world around them. And I say this as a driving-while-talking guy, myself.

There have been no fewer than a dozen times which I’ve nearly become road-hamburger because of some self-absorbed idiot whose line of vision is reduced dramatically by having that electronic device up to their ear.Up until now, I always considered myself a good driving-multi-tasker.

But when I’m behind the wheel of a large automobile now, I’m sure that I’ll be a helluva lot more conscious of my surroundings. I can’t tell you how frustrating and unnerving it is to be cruising down Front Street, thoroughly enjoying the wind in my receding-hair with the sun beating down on my arms while some bimbo in an SUV with two TV’s on the back seat headrests and a car full of kids is yapping on her Motorola Razor decides to change lanes without signaling or even glancing to her left…when if she did, she would have seen me scooting along next to her.

2. I’m going to save a heck of a lot of dough this summer. So far, I’ve driven about two hundred fifty miles and have spent twenty dollars on gas. It’s a two gallon tank and I must be getting about fifty-five or so miles per gallon. Even just puttering around town in my old Saab required no less than thirty dollars per week in the tank. What with all of the idling and stop-and-go traffic, gasoline burns mighty fast. But a fill up hurts a lot less on a two gallon tank of a 150CC scooter.
3. Scooters get parking tickets, too. Seemingly more frequently than automobiles.

Remember in my first post when I predicted that I’d get a lot less parking tickets? Yeah, well…I was wrong. I wonder if they can boot a scooter? Oh well, the money I saved on gas for the past three weeks shall go back to the City Coffers.

4. There’s no such thing as “road rage” on a scooter. It just doesn’t work.

Remember the lady in the SUV who swerved into my lane on the phone? Had I been in a car when that happened, I likely would have engaged my human-alert-device (horn) while raising my voice in her direction (yelling) and dispelling a barrage of unpleasantly offensive words from the English lexicon (swearing). But on a scooter, all I can do is shake my head and offer a more-annoying-than-alerting “meep, meep”. (I wonder if they sell air-horns that are mountable on a scooter?)

5. Scooter drivers are apparently required to be social and conversational. Stoplights are the new barstool at the local tavern for me, these days. And the conversation is mostly inquisitive about the economical benefits I referenced in “Things I’ve Learned Number Two”-

6. Harrisburg roads have many, many, MANY potholes. Clunkuhduh, clunkuhduh, clunkuhduh…I must be on Reily street heading towards Third now..Clunk-clunk…clunk-clunk…oh, this feels like Sixth Street.Sure, sure…it’s the end of the winter and potholes abound nearly everywhere we go…but damn are there a lot of potholes on our streets. One would only notice the really big ones in a car, but nearly every bump and crevice on the street is felt on two tiny wheels and a Matchbox-Car-Like-Chassis. Oh well, dems the brakes, I guess.

7. And finally, Central PA has a scooter club that I’ll soon be joining. The Three Mile Island Scooter Club meets every Wednesday in the spring, summer and fall months at a coffee shop in Camp Hill. And I can’t wait for the meltdown!

    [kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/O5L6JaoKi38" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]

Categories: Scooter Tags:

Hillary Didn’t Wait This Long For A Waffle

April 6th, 2008 Jersey 1 comment

File this under “note to self”-

I consider myself something of a Diner Aficionado. Having grown up in the Diner Capitol of The World, most of my nostalgic memories include a reference to a Diner somewhere within the reminisce.

It was (and still is) commonplace to “go to ‘da diner” after nearly every family, social or business event- after church, winning a Little League baseball game, after the Junior Formal and Senior Prom, before a wedding, after a funeral, just got a new job, just got fired from an old job, got promoted, got dumped and, most often, sometime around two thirty AM, after leaving the bar.

We’re somewhat fortunate in the Harrisburg Region to be blessed with no less than a dozen or so authentic, Greek-run diners.

There’s the Summerdale Diner on 11/15 (in my experience, the most consistent and dependable diner in the area).

Coming in at a close overall second is the Colonial Park Diner- home of the server my friends and I have nicknamed “Lightning” based on the fact that nearly every time we’re there and have him as our server, he seems to have some odd diner-server-sixth-sense of knowing what we want before we’ve even arrived and seemingly immediately after delivering the coffee and water, our food magically arrives less than sixty seconds after placing our order.

And then there’s the Riverview Diner -that’s the new one right off of the Harvey Taylor Bridge in Wormleysburg- this particular diner I only visit as a last-resort. When it doesn’t matter what the aesthetic of the place is or whether or not I’m picky about the homefries which are served with the omelette’s, The Riverview Diner, in my opinion, is the diner equivalent of frozen Ellios pizza- yeah, it’s not that good- but it’s never really that bad, either.

Oh, we’ve got plenty of retro-train car diners as well- The American Dream on Herr Street (home of “The Rope”- featuring two eggs, homefries, toast and a three foot long piece of sausage for around four bucks) is the first to come to mind.

And the one across Market Street on Cameron- the name escapes me right now- is a bona-fide, real-deal diner as well.

And amongst all of these is the Capitol Diner- which drug itself right to the bottom of my “favorite diners in the area list” after an incident there earlier this morning.

You see, 31 Flavors and I had a long day yesterday. Ran a ton of errands in the morning, logged about six hours on the scooters, came home and took a well-needed powernap and when we woke up, it was time to clean up and head out to make the rounds.

After a stop at Suba to check out Knuckle’s rock band The Good Things followed by a brief visit to the killer-party at Josh and JoAnna’s, we made our way to ABC to catch Pistola Amore’s set.

And, right around two AM, I got that urge- that feeling that a Diner Addict cannot ignore: It was late in the evening- I had a belly full of liquor and all I wanted was a waffle, some decaf and a chocolate milk.

Now, normally when deciding which diner to patronize after a day like this, there isn’t much thought involved. Because ultimately, all diners are pretty much the same.

So, we pointed the car due-east and arrived at the Capitol Diner sometime around two thirty in the morning. The parking lot was packed- which was no surprise considering the bar-crossroads it occupies at the intersections of I-83, I-283, The Pennsylvania Turnpike and Eisenhower Blvd. I had been there before at this hour and hadn’t ever had a problem like we did last night.

We were seated immediately upon arriving- smoking table at the window- but that’s where the speediness ended. For fifteen minutes, we sat without my much-needed Chocolate Milk and cup of decaf. Not even a glass of ice-tap water. Until finally, the guy who sat us came by to take our order.

Probably ten minutes after that (which is twenty five minutes after we arrived) was the first time we saw a server walk the aisle with a tray of food- but none of it was ours.

Somewhere amongst the Cheeseburger Deluxe for the firefighters at the large table in the back and the open-faced turkey sandwich for the guy sitting by himself at the table three rows down and the ham and cheese omelet for the woman-half of the couple sitting across from us was a server- but she paid us no mind.

Our order had been taken by the host- an obvious sign that the place was understaffed for the post-bar rush of a Saturday night in Harrisburg.

To pass the time, I pulled all of the loose change out of my pocket- six quarters, two dimes, a penny and a nickel- and we proceeded to make artistic coin arrangements on the table.

Spinning a quarter and calling “heads-or-tails” was certainly less enjoyable than scarfing my oasis of an order- a waffle with two scrambled eggs and sausage.

We waited- and waited- and waited- until I finally decided that, if our order didn’t arrive by the time I finished my decaf, we were outta there. I would have rather left completely, driven to the Colonial Park diner up the road and repeated the process- hoping to whoever’s-up-there that Lightning was on the clock that night.

But finally, right near that last sip of coffee-without-the-kick, it arrived. Smokey old waitress came to the table- waffle, eggs and sausage on three different plates (I ordered them all together, by the way- on the same plate- stacked on the waffle) and grumpily announced “here’s your waffle”, dropping it on the table and scurrying off without uttering the standard “can I get you guys anything else?”.

So sometime around three-twenty AM- a full fifty minutes after arriving- I got my waffle.

Was it good?

Absolutely.

Was I happy about waiting nearly an hour for a freakin’ waffle at two-thirty on a Sunday Morning?

Obviously not, considering I’m spending a portion of my Sunday morning lamenting about it.

You see, the way I view it is this: certain businesses come with certain expectations. If you go to a bar, you expect a beer within the first few minutes you arrive. If you go to a gas station, you expect to be able to pull in, pay and pump your gas without a hassle. If you stroll into a furniture store scoping out the best deal on a new futon, you expect a sales person to greet you with that predator-like cunningness a furniture-salesperson embodies.

And when you go to a diner at two thirty in the morning after a night at the bar, I expect my waffle in something under fifteen minutes.

Is that too much to ask?

One More Reason I Love Craigslist

April 2nd, 2008 Jersey 3 comments

I’ve been on Craigslist for about three years now. (I’m pretty sure I first heard about it on Sara’s blog)
In the beginning, it was mostly browsing and checking things out- and then I decided to start to sell some old crap that I had.

Old cell phone here, couple of speakers there…and before I knew it, I had racked up a fair amount of great deals on everything from houseplants to an older iMac to an iPod and three Saab’s so far.

To date, my favorite Craigslist deal was bartering with 717 Tattoo an older television for the beginnings of my sleeve tattoo on my right arm.

But today, my friends, the “Holy-Shit-How-Great-Is-Craigslist” factor just jumped up about forty notches.

After driving my Saab’s for upwards of three years now, I grew sort of tired of the huge maintenance bills virtually every time I brought it into the shop.  Few hundred here, couple hundred there….it really started to add up.

So, after a bit of internal debate, I decided I could either a.) put another thousand bucks into my newest Saab and keep it for another year or three, b.) sell my Saab for around a thousand bucks or c.) throw an ad up on Craigslist offering to barter my car for a scooter.

A few weeks went by and I had all but forgotten about the ad I posted when I got an email from a guy in Biglersville who just so happened to have a brand new MotoFino 150CC four stroke scooter which he bought for his wife (he actually bought two- and his wife wound up not wanting the scooter). So it sat in his yard- with twelve miles on it for just about a year.

Which brings this story to the present-tense. His son just turned the ripe age of sixteen and was ready to enter the workforce- but needed a vehicle to get him to and fro. And presumably, Jr. didn’t have the dough to lay out for a car, so when Sr. found my ad in the barter section- it was a match made in heaven.

So after a few back-and-forth emails working out the details and a ride down Route 15 in my friend Chile’s van to pick my new ride up, I’m now a proud owner of a 2006 Moto Fino 150CC four stroke scooter.

It goes about sixty miles an hour, has a two gallon gas tank and gets just over forty miles to the gallon. 

It should go without saying that I’m a VERY happy Craigslist user- and it also should be noted that I’ll likely get FAR less parking tickets this summer.

Four bucks a gallon? Bring it on…