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- Newsgroups: rec.motorcycles
- Path: sparky!uunet!microsoft!wingnut!patlo
- From: patlo@microsoft.com (Pat Loughery)
- Subject: Tacoma Police officer's trip across Soviet Union
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.024627.29060@microsoft.com>
- Date: 22 Jan 93 02:46:27 GMT
- Organization: Microsoft Corp.
- Lines: 65
-
- I found this on a "weird news" alias here at work. Enjoy.
-
- ---- Begin included message ----
-
- Tacoma, Washington:
-
- Police Lt. Darrell Hughes calls his 5,700-mile
- motorcycle tour across the former Soviet Union a mix of
- the memorable and the miserable.
-
- Accommodations ranged from a village where Mikhail
- Gorbachev once stayed to a cramped Siberian boxcar.
-
- Hughes' experience included kicking his feet up on
- Josef Stalin's desk and riding into a pothole so large
- that both his thumbs were sprained.
-
- But Hughes said the fondest memory will be the warmth
- of the people, most of whom treated him like a
- celebrity. "It was the closest thing to being Elvis
- that I'll ever experience."
-
- Hughes laid the groundwork for his visit in February,
- when he was assigned to coordinate a sister-city visit
- to Tacoma by four police officials from Vladivostok,
- the Siberian port. Hughes suggested to the visitors
- that he make the motorcycle trip as a demonstration of
- goodwill.
-
- Hughes had to wait an extra month after a delay in
- shipping his 1,000cc BMW R100 GS Paris-Dakar, but he
- was set to go August 20.
-
- Two Russian National Police majors Victor Strigin and
- Alexander Golubshansky, escorted Hughes in a police car
- with hand-painted Tacoma Police emblems.
-
- Hughes was grateful for the escort when he found both
- paving and road signs "optional" on hundreds of
- kilometers of Siberian roads. At one point even the
- roads became optional, and he and his hosts spent four
- days crammed into a boxcar with the car and motorcycle.
-
- Hughes remembers it as "the longest four days of my
- life."
-
- People along the way loved the idea of a visiting U.S.
- police officer, particularly one who didn't wear a
- uniform. But mostly they appreciated Hughes'
- explanation of his journey.
-
- He told them such a trip probably should be considered
- impossible because of language and cultural barriers,
- costs and hardships. "But if we put our minds together
- nothing is impossible," he said. "We can do anything."
-
- ---- End included message ----
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
- Pat Loughery [patlo@microsoft.com] Seattle, WA
- '91 Nighthawk CB750 - DoD #393, AMA, VME
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- "I had no shoes and I pitied myself. Then I met a man who had no feet,
- so I took his shoes." -- Dave Barry
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-