Visiting a special place

Destinations can offer up plenty of activities and things to do, but sometimes, all you want is a place to sit.

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In downtown St. Joseph, Michigan, which sits at the mouth of the St. Joseph River on Lake Michigan, city leaders were wise enough to preserve the bluff overlooking the lake in a park like setting. Below the bluff, there is some development, but also the greatest asset of the city, Lake Michigan and its beaches.

On the bluff, there is an opening in the trees with a park swing facing the lake. It is the best, uninhibited view of the lake. You can sit and feel the breeze come in off the lake full of the aroma of a large body of water. Itโ€™s a sweetness like no other.

Sailboats and fishing boats make their way out the protection of the river into the lake past the St. Joe Lighthouse. It is very calming, relaxing, and near euphoric. Cost of parking: 10 minutes or more of driving around waiting for a spot. Cost of sitting in the park overlooking the lake: nothing. Value of the moment: priceless.

See you on the highway.

Brent

Give me that old time mountain music

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Folk music has its followers around the world, and even more so is the music that comes from our own Appalachian region here in the United States. So, the opportunity to listen and and see a little culture is an experience to grab hold of.

I like that mountain music. Itโ€™s the roots of blue grass. There is nothing like it, and itโ€™s common enough that you can have a group of musicians gather with a banjo, guitar, mandolin and fiddle, and youโ€™ve got a band. Thatโ€™s all it takes. Sure, you can throw in a bass, but you rarely see drums or any kind of percussion instrument.

Grab a bite to eat, something to drink, sit back and just listen. Let the music carry you away to the oldest mountains in the USAโ€”the Appalachians. Yes, they are much older than the Rockies according to geologists. Not as high because theyโ€™ve been worn down, but older.

John Denver can take you home on country roads, but Iโ€™d really like to just fly, fly away. Listening to that old time mountain music can do that for me.

I need to find more festivals to attend.

See you on the highway.

Brent

Women, Motorcycles and the Road to Empowerment

A Book Review

You would think that with a title like Women, Motorcycles and the Road to Empowerment, this book is only for women, but it is far from that. Author Liz Jansen has given us a good read that is part memoir and part anthology of women who have found motorcycling as a tool for confidence building.

Throughout the 10 chapters of the book, Jansen tells us a portion of her life story, and how motorcycling changed things for her, building her confidence, empowering her to move forward, and finding a career. She also provides the stories of 50 women who likewise are motorcyclistsโ€”some having ridden all their life and a few only taking up the sport recently.

One of my favorite stories was Audrey Alexandre, age 78, who began riding in 1947 and quit riding in 2003โ€”thatโ€™s 56 years of motorcycling! Women were supposed to ride on the back, not take command of the motorcycle in the 1940s. After describing how she would ride in her dadโ€™s sidecar, she wanted her own motorcycle in high schoolโ€”her dad excited about it and her mother quite angry. โ€œThe freedom got me hooked. The wind is in your face and away you go. My first bike was from the Canadian Army, a 1942 45 cubic inch Harley. โ€ฆ My last bike was a โ€˜93 turquoise Heritage and I had โ€˜the wind beneath my wingsโ€™ airbrushed on.โ€

Other stories like Juanita Losch-Finlan who rides a motorcycle with a sidecar so she can take the family, and Andrea Tillmann who is a flight instructor, give us great stories about motorcyclingโ€”how they came to it and what it means. Ordinary women whose stories are just as compelling as some of the better known women motorcyclists like Carla King, Tigra Tsujikawa, Stefy Bau and Genevieve Schmitt, and not to take away from any of the others.

There are stories of tours, riding in the dirt, motocross, breaking speed records at the Bonneville Salt Flats, accidents and crashes. Every story is compelling and comes with a lesson learned.

Here is what I found most intriguing. Even though this book focuses on motorcycling and empowerment, it is much more than that. It could be about cars, or airplanes, or bicycles, or horses, or backpacking or whatever. Itโ€™s about how individuals found a passion, and in that development of skills and experience, found truly meaningful life lessons that carried them forward past bad relationships, broken careers, and hard times. That passion solidified good relationships and found common ground for families to build upon.

Hereโ€™s another thing: This book is not just for the women. Men, you will learn quite a bit and be inspired too.

Liz Jansen is an entrepreneur, adventurer, writer, and rider extraordinaire.

She creates motorcycle experiences that instill a sense of adventure, freedom and community while traveling the transformative road to personal and professional leadership. Liz has worked with individuals, corporate clients, manufacturers, retailers and the public sector.

You can contact Liz through her web site
http://LizJansen.com

See you on the highway.

Brent