STRONGER FOR LONGER - SPECIALIST STRENGTH TRAINING FOR DIRT BIKE RIPS WITH ERIKA HURST

Hitting the gym is all good, but if can’t stand the monotony of lifting or stretching I the gym, then thrashing your way along a dirt trail is a more attractive way of keeping fit. We caught up with the awesome Erika Hurst of The Gnarly babes moto workout recently to find out all about the right route to go down to get you training to be girl who can pick up her own dirt bike no matter where!

Read More

THE MUSEUM OF YOUTH CULTURE - A HISTORY OF MOTOS AND YOUTH CULTURE

8F598191-9D2E-433B-B8B5-368BEC814CAB.jpg

Youth and two wheeled culture are two things that seem to have always gone hand in hand…..

From the early days of The Wild One and the mods and rockers of the 60’s to the modern day 12 O’Clock Boys and the Bike Life movement, the links between youth, rebellion, freedom and motorcycles have always been married together throughout many different decades, styles and subcultures. The history that’s come before is something that heavily influences (and we mean real influence not “influencers” here) the future and where we’re all headed, even in motorcycles. That’s what the awesome Museum of Youth Culture, founded in 2015, strives to document and safeguard, to ensure that we all have access to this history for years to come.

We caught up with the archive’s manager, Lisa der Weduwe, to find out all about their work to archive and document Britain’s youth from the last 100 years and learn why it’s important to preserve youth culture for future generations.

3A0F9485-2FA6-4E1D-8795-FF34CB46FC5D.jpg
The 59 Club - London

The 59 Club - London

First of all can you tell everyone a bit about the Museum of Youth Culture and what you’re about? 

The Museum of Youth Culture is an emerging museum that celebrates the incredible, but often overlooked story of young people. The museum is formed from the collections of Youth Club Archive, and contains over 150,000 photographs, objects and ephemera that document youth culture. From the Mods and Rockers to more recent movements such as Grime and Emo, the museum covers the everyday experiences of being young, from your first job to your first love, that period of life where you’re really finding yourself. 

Last year we launched our Grown up in Britain community archiving project, with funding from the National Lottery Heritage Fund. It was us saying: the Museum of Youth Culture is going to happen, now we want you help us tell the story of being young, and whether you have one photograph, a whole family album or just an amazing story to tell, you can be part of the museum. It is a campaign that continues to amaze us really, with new stories coming in every week that are helping us tell the story of British youth culture. 

Earlier this year within the campaign we launched the Outreach Champions programme, which has been about looking at the stories we’ve collected so far and working with researchers to uncover stories and narratives that are underrepresented in the collection. So there’s been a real focus has been on LGBTQ+ and BAME stories, as well as more rural narratives. We weren’t sure how that was going to go in the midst of a lockdown, but it’s been really exciting to see the stories that we’ve received through that programme so far! 

Jo Wilson

Jo Wilson

02BFE5F0-3C1F-4C65-BE62-470FBA18A8CF.jpg

Why did you start Museum of Youth Culture? 

The archive, which was founded in 1997, really came out of a realisation that no one was trying to collate, collect and preserve youth culture histories, and that it was at risk of being lost. 

We started using the Museum of Youth Culture properly for the first time last year, and although the response has mainly been incredible, we also had people say that; ‘youth culture is a bit niche isn’t it?’, ‘you should join another museum’ and even that we are ‘the best advertisement for national service there has ever been’. I think those responses really reflect a wider dialogue that youth culture isn’t important social history and the often negative representation we have of young people in the media. I think it’s been these attitudes that have meant that often youth culture hasn’t been seen as a real part of our social heritage and that’s really why the Museum of Youth Culture came into being! 

E7944E6C-F7B6-486D-BF86-CE99678528F5.jpg

We originally found you guys on social media through some amazing images that were submitted to you from people who rode motorcycles in their youth. Do you find that you mostly get submissions from guys in motorcycling or do you get a lot of women too? 

We’ve had some amazing submissions through from people who rode, and mostly still ride motorcycles, from the 1920s onwards. Although we’ve had more photographs from guys on bikes, it’s been a pretty even - though we’re always game for more female stories.  We’ve also had loads of family-related motorcycling photographs through - fathers with daughters and sons, uncles and aunts, newlyweds - it’s been exciting to see the family affair that is motorcycles, the passion being passed through the generations.

Are a lot of the motorcycle submissions from London or are you getting them from all across the UK?

I’d say it’s mostly been in and around London, but we’ve had motorcycle submissions from across the UK, including the far reaches of Scotland!  Because we’ve always been based in London, it is definitely where we have the biggest profile and the collections are still skewed towards the city, although that’s starting to change through our Grown up in Britain project. Our original plan for 2020 was to travel to cities and towns across the UK to run events and collect photographs and memories for the museum - we were talking to people in Newcastle, Carlisle, Coventry, Cardiff, Glasgow and Belfast to name a few - but that’s on hold. For now we are focusing on encouraging people to dig through their family albums and shoe box archives whilst there isn’t much else to do! Sharing awkward teen memories is a brilliant way to connect with people in these crazy times! Why not get your mum to get out her photographs from when she was young or give your granddad a call and talk about what it was like being a teenager in the 40s or 50s?

Stephen Andrew

Stephen Andrew

Stephen Andrew

Stephen Andrew

What’s your favourite motorcycle story or image that you’ve come across so far?

When we launched our Grown up in Britain campaign, we were really hoping to get our first pre-WW2 photographs through. I was chatting to a lovely guy called Kevin about the stories behind some of his photographs from the eighties, and he started telling me about his mother-in-law. She was a flapper in the 1920s, which was already a pretty out there thing, but in her free time she also rode around on a WW1 army surplus Royal Enfield bike, sometimes whilst dressed up in her flapper gear! He promised to send me through some photos, and the next day he did and they didn’t disappoint! It was our first photograph from the 1920s, meaning we now have 100 years of youth culture, and it is to this day one of my favourite submissions.

Florence Reeves - 1920s

Florence Reeves - 1920s

We’re guessing that you must have some amazing images from the ton up boys  and rockers of the 50s and 60s as it was such a huge movement in youth culture.  Which are your favourites? 

For a long time we didn’t have many photographs from the original 50s and 60s ton up boys and rockers, and instead it was mostly revivalists from the 80s onwards. Then last year we worked with the 59 Club to digitise their archive of hundreds of photographs. We met them at their club house in Plaistow to talk about celebrating their story in the museum, when they pulled out this big archival box filled with amazing prints of the club’s history. We spent the next couple of weeks bringing along our scanner and scanning the whole collection. The story of the 59 Club is just amazing, how a youth club started by a vicar ended up becoming one of the biggest motorcycle clubs in the world. 

The 59 Club - London

The 59 Club - London

From the 1950s film The Wild One and the ton up boys of the 60s right up to today’s popular bike life culture movement, motorcycles seem to have always had a place in youth culture. Why do you think that youth culture has such strong links to motorcycle culture? 

I think so much of youth culture, especially more subcultural movements, is borne out of the want to break free from your parents and your day-to-day life and responsibilities, and in many ways the motorcycle is the perfect way to get that sense of freedom; they're fast, they’re dangerous and they’re a form of transport that means you can go wherever you please! In post-war Britain motorcycles also became affordable for working class kids, so that combined with the rock n roll music and movies such The Wild One created the ultimate rebel image - and that has really stuck. 

Young people now might be less likely to be dressed like the leather boys of the 50s and 60s, but they’ll get that same sense of freedom from being able to jump on their bike and ride off somewhere with their mates, and you can’t beat that really!

Karen Perry

Karen Perry

Why is preserving youth culture so important?

That period from your mid-teens to your early twenties is such a formative period in your life, where you’re really finding yourself and developing that sense of self, so it shapes everything after that. Through that process, young people are always trying out new things and breaking new ground, being incredibly creative and innovative, whilst also responding to the times that they’re in. In many ways, youth culture is a brilliant lens through which to look at our recent social history, but it’s only recently that people have started paying attention to that story.

We always talk about young people being the future, yet at the same time so many of the stories we read about young people are negative. It goes back to an earlier question about why we started the museum - it’s been the negative attitudes around young people that I feel have meant that youth culture hasn’t been as well preserved as other areas of our social history, and now that story is at risk of being lost. Hopefully, by preserving and championing the story of young culture as the Museum of Youth Culture, we’ll help change attitudes around young people for the future generations.

Heidi Maund

Heidi Maund

Are you solely looking for photograph submissions?

Not at all no - as we are moving closer to the physical Museum of Youth Culture, we’re also diversifying away from photography. The collections now also include physical ephemera, such as magazines and flyers, clothing and other objects, and oral histories. We’ve also had through our first home videos, which has been really exciting. Photography will always be a super important part of what we do, as we have come from a photographic archive, but it’s been amazing to see what else is out there! 

What dates and eras are you ideally looking for images from? 

It’s super open really - our submissions now range from 1910 to some that were shot during the lockdown, so we’ve gone beyond the 100 years that was our original goal!  An area of focus for us is memories pre-1970s, since they’re most at risk of being lost at the moment. There are also fewer photographs from this time because cameras were just more rare and expensive, so we’re keen to preserve those stories. On the other end of the scale, we’re looking out for early 00s subcultures such as Emo and Grime. They were the first subcultures where the internet played a big role, and they used early cameraphone technology, so the photographs we do have are generally really bad quality - just a couple of pixels wide! 

Gail Thibert

Gail Thibert

What's the deal with how you're taking submissions? Are they open to anyone, as long as they spent their youth in Britain?

The great thing about the Museum of Youth Culture and our call out is that everyone’s been young, so everyone can be part of the museum. Although Grown up in Britain talks of people’s experiences being young in Britain, we also have stories from people that moved to the UK later in life and those that have never lived here - so really anyone can get involved.

How can someone submit their photos to you?

The easiest way to submit is via our online form, which you can find at: museumofyouthculture.com/submit. But you can also drop us an e-mail (info@youthclubarchive.com) or send us a message on Instagram or Facebook! 

CHOP CHOP, OFF WITH YER HEAD! - JANA JUNGE'S SHOVELHEAD OF DREAMS

jana jung x vc.jpg

What’s bad ass, full of flames and pink all over?

If you’re into custom bikes and you’re on Instagram, chances are you’ve come across the awesome Belgium based Jana Junge and her Harley-Davidson Shovelhead chopper build. As an absolute bonafide ripper, Jana’s Instagram follows her and her chop while they go road trippin’ all over Europe making us dream of endless road and summer adventures with our mates …. Just a little piece of what everyone needs in the current world we’re living in.

We’ve been following Jana and her awesome build for a while now so we wanted to get the low down on how she designed and made her dreamy bike a reality!

Make sure you give Jana a follow to check out her adventures and get inspired by her awesome build below!


Where are you from and where are you based now: 

I’m originally from Germany but I moved to Belgium 1½ years ago.

How long have you been riding for? 

I’ve been riding for 6 years now.

What originally got you into motorcycles? 

My mom was riding a lot when she was younger, but then stopped when my brother and I were born. Later she got a bike for Christmas again and took us for a ride and I loved it from that first second. Later, when I met my husband, he was going to buy his first bike and that made me finally get my licence.

IMG-20200915-WA0005.jpg

What was your first ever bike? 

My first bike was a Yamaha XJ 550. It was basically the cheapest running bike I could find.

Have you ever built a bike before the shovelhead?

I did! The first bike I built was actually my second bike -  a Honda VT600 and it was going to be my first chopper.  Then I got a stock ‘71 Ironhead called Bob, which we also completely rebuilt. 

What made you go for a Harley Shovelhead engine for the build?

Cause I couldn’t afford a knucklehead, haha! I was looking for a big twin because my husband and I do lots of trips all over Europe so I needed something powerful. My previous bike, The Ironhead, was a super fun bike, but the Shovel now is running much smoother so it’s perfect for big trips.

Did you do drawings first / plan out the build or did you just go for it?

The plan for the build was already in my mind and I knew which parts I wanted to use. I also wanted to go for this colour already on the Ironhead, but there we had some problems to find a nice rigid frame so Bob ended up with a bolt on hardtail and I didn’t want to ‘waste’ the peach idea on it as it wasn’t what I wanted deep down. Now I’m super happy with how the Shovel turned out…. And I’m glad I saved the peach colour.

What parts still exist from the original stock bike?

When I bought the Shovel in Germany it was already a chopper, but from this I just kept the frame, engine, gearbox and oiltank.

Screenshot+2020-09-01+at+19.37.57.jpg

“I did the paint job by myself. I had always wanted to try painting and during the lockdown I had the time to, so we turned our garage into a spray booth covered with foil and after watching a few YouTube videos I just gave it a go”.

Screenshot 2020-09-01 at 19.38.48.png

Talk us through the full build (what you started with and how long the build took etc.) 

In July on the way back from Bavaria where we bought the Shovel, we made a stop at a friend’s place to have a beer, so we took the bike outside the van and a few more friends came by to have a look at her. We talked things through that I wanted to change and so together we started to figure it out. My friend Markus had a 12” over springer front end laying around, so we drove to his place, picked up the springer and put it on the shovel straight away. It immediately looked 1000 times better than before. He also built a super nice frisco teardrop gastank for his Knucklehead, which he (luckily) stopped building due to other projects so I got this too. Until November I rode the bike like she was, except the springer, then I began ordering the first parts and then we started with the rebuild. The plan was to have her finished by April for the Assembly Chopper Show, so we had enough time to get all the parts together. The mouldings on the frame definitely took the longest. To do on the whole build. I always sew my own seats at a friend’s workshop, luckily I could show up again, pick a nice fake cobra leather and use his sewing machines. 

Screenshot 2020-09-01 at 19.38.14.png
IMG-20200915-WA0006.jpg

What is the list of things that have been done to the bike (frame change, forks change, new bars, wheels etc? ) 

V-Twin frame, got mouldings over the weldings to have a smooth and clean look

12” over Samwel springer

21” high shoulder spoked by Spokeman_OG with a Lowbrow spool hub

Stay Wild Handlebars with internal throttle made by stuff from hell

Teardrop Gastank without visible mountings welded by stuff from hell

Fake cobra leather Seat

Sissybar with Prism Supply weld-on tail light

Who did your awesome paint job?

I did the paint job by myself, haha. I had always wanted to try painting and during the lockdown I had the time to, so we turned our garage into a spray booth covered with foil and after watching a few YouTube videos I just gave it a go. For the pinstriped flames on the gastank I did some practise on old tanks and helmets.

What was the best part of building your own bike?

Figuring out how things could work, finding the nicest solution and then to see how everything’s coming together, while spending time and having beers with my husband and friends.

What was the hardest or worst part of building you own bike?

I guess doing the moulding and grinding and moulding and grinding; this was the cause of most of the swearwords flying around.

Have you been on any road trips on the bike yet?

Last year before the rebuild we did small trips around Belgium and a two weeks trip to Wales and England, which was absolutely beautiful.  Due to Coronavirus going on this year, I didn’t manage as many miles as planned on the Shovel so far. But I’m super happy we went to Sweden for two weeks to join the Fückersafari and used every free minute to take the bikes out. 

Do you have any road trips planned in the future? 

For this year we just planned small weekend trips in Belgium or to Luxembourg and Germany. Fingers crossed next year will be more trips possible and shows going on!

Any plans for another build any time soon? 

For sure. But I’m gonna wait a bit and save some money, I know my Knucklehead is already waiting somewhere for me to come find it!

jana jung x vc 3.jpg

ONE FAST MOTHER - MICHELLE CLABBY-LEWIS

A0C28BF4-E3C6-4A2D-94C1-EC56A6BB1E45.jpg

It’s no secret that we love a moto mama over at VC and they don’t come more awesome than Michelle Clabby-Lewis.

At 36 years old Michelle is mama to two young boys and is a full on dirt ripper who can be found riding epic trails in her home town of Portland, Oregon, competing in enduro comps and regularly beating the competition ! To say she’s got her hands full doesn’t even cover it!

We caught up with Michelle to ask her about her life with motorcycles, and for a few words of wisdom when it comes to balancing being a Mama and getting that dirt when you need to.

D51637F9-110E-4A4B-A929-48AC292696B0-48BF8FAB-C704-4715-8B96-71F24C8DCDA9.jpg

Where are you originally from and where do you live right now?

I grew up in Chula Vista, California, basically on the border of California and Tijuana, Mexico. I’ve lived the last 11 years in Portland, Oregon.

How and when did you start out riding motorcycles?

Well, my first time ever on motorcycle was a dirt bike when I was 16. After, a quick lesson from a friend, I saddled up and immediately whiskey throttled, flew off the bike and somehow ripped my pants. I didn’t touch another motorcycle until I was 26. Then a friend brought a dirt bike camping and gave my friends and me a lesson and let us tool around camp. At the time I wasn’t super interested in off road riding, but more interested in getting my motorcycle endorsement and getting a street bike. My now husband and all his buddies had all been riding Harleys for a while, and I was tired of riding on the back. So, that’s what I did. Took a riding class and got my endorsement and bought myself a Harley Sportster.

I rode the shit out of that thing. First, just around the city, then as I got more comfortable, I adventured as much as possible. I remember my first “long ride” (4 hours long, lol)... 30 minutes into the ride I had to pull over to collect myself. It was windy af (Google windy day at Vista House to see just how windy it can get in the Columbia Gorge)... Anyway, the point is, I feel like that ride was when I fell in love with the feeling of being on the road... the elements, the smells, the scenery, all of it. I did several epic rides with groups of friends, but the best are a toss up between my honeymoon around the Southwest with just my husband and my return trip from Babes Ride Out 2 (Joshua Tree to Portland via mostly the 395) with 3 other women.

Sadly, my Harley is collecting dust in the garage. I pretty much stopped riding street bikes after having kids, mostly because you can’t put a car seat on a bike lol. I’d go on a ride here and there and rent a bike when I went to events like Babes Ride Out, mostly because I didn’t have the time to do a full on multi-day road trip. Mom life is demanding... between breastfeeding/pumping and all that stuff it makes more sense to just have your kid around all the time, at least in those early years.

“Like most things, greatness takes time. Literally, the only way you get better at riding is by riding.”


What do you currently ride?

2020 KTM 150-XCW TPI

What first got you into riding dirt?

My friends and I had been doing an annual trip to Moab, Utah since 2008. I mostly was into wheelin’ (Jeeps) and side x sides. But, then my husband and his buds all started riding dirt bikes when we would go. So, in 2013, (29 years old), I decided to rent a dirt bike while we were in Moab. I figured, hey I’d been riding street bikes for a while now, I’d totally be able to hold my own on a dirt bike. Ha, I ate shit A LOT and cried A LOT, but after that I was like okay this off road riding is fun.

When we got back to Oregon I eventually ended up buying a used Honda CRF230 that I never got to ride, because it got stolen literally right after I bought it. It took a while to lock down another bike. I had a friend that broke up with his girlfriend and had a lowered Yamaha WR 250R for sale. I’d say that was my first dirt bike. Still, I wasn’t super into dirt bikes, it was just something I did when we would go camping. I mean, I’d just scoot around in jeans and a vintage jersey.

0530A3A0-9C5A-4C68-8760-36B85A186FEE.jpg

Then my husband started racing offroad. I don’t know what it was, but that’s ultimately what got me super into riding dirt. I grew up playing soccer and field hockey, so maybe it was the competitive nature in me. I had gone to several of his races and was like “I want to do that”. I entered my first race in 2015 (age 30), a Hare Scramble in southern Oregon. I was so scared, it was a mass start, I was lined up next to Justin (my husband) and 200 other riders. I came in 4th in my class, which is pretty impressive if there was more than 4 people in my class LOL. Anyway, the experience was humbling but also lit a fire in me that I hadn’t felt in a while. I was determined to improve and become a better rider. A week or two after that race I found out I was pregnant with Thomas (my first kiddo). I like to say that I started having babies and really riding dirt at the same time.

So now you’re a mama to two amazing little boys. How do you make riding work for you now as it can’t always be as simple and easy as it was before having a family?!

We invested in a travel trailer (30ft Airstream). 99% of the time we take our boys wherever we are riding. We go with friends and take turns going out for rides. Recently I convinced my mom to move the Oregon from California, so she’s been coming with us and helping with the boys so Justin and I can ride together. I make its sound so easy, but it’s not. Kids are tough and have needs and opinions. We just “embrace the suck” and do things anyway. Over time things that seemed so hard aren’t as hard. The boys love camping, bikes and dirt bikes. They both absolutely love riding on our bikes with us. Yes there are still meltdowns, but nothing beats being outdoors. Also, we go to a lot of places without internet, so that guarantees no “screentime” for all of us.

IMG_8559.jpg

Do your family come along with you when you and your other half compete in enduro?

The Moto world is definitely one of the most family oriented industries there is. A lot of the events are organized where the whole family can race. Kids in the morning, Amateurs next, followed by Experts. There are however times where Justin and I are racing at the same time, and thats when we get help with our kiddos from family or friends. We like having them at events with us so they get used to the experience themselves and also there’s nothing like seeing their faces after a tough race.

What has been the biggest challenge that you’ve met about being a Mama that loves to ride motorcycles?

The guilt is real. I feel guilty for choosing myself over anyone or anything else. But the BEST thing you can do as a mother, is find something that creates happiness that is not dependent on anyone or anything but yourself. I found that in riding. So the challenge has become making the time or creating the opportunity to ride as much as possible.

Do you have any advice for other women who are mothers that would like to get into riding and dirt bikes?

Invest in good riding gear. And wear knee braces. We moms can’t afford to get hurt. We’ve got tiny humans to take care and sometimes our partners when they think they are young and invincible lol. Also, go to a womxn’s event. Like Camp VC, Babes in the Dirt, Over and Out Moto, or a Dirtastic Event. Take a class or clinic.

“Make moto friends... One of the people that helps with my boys the most is someone I met riding!”

Screenshot+2020-08-15+at+21.03.10.png

How do you think your riding/ or how you view your riding has changed since becoming a mother?

I actually did an instagram post about this a while back. Time has always been precious, but when you’re a mother it becomes even more so. The minutes fucking count. If I’m riding, it took a ton a “work” to get there (finding help to watch the kiddos, cleaning/maintaining my bike and gear, stay- ing fit and healthy) so if I’m out, I’m going to make the most out of it. Riding as a mother is different, I’m super intentional, present, focused, and in the back of mind I know that I need to show up for my kids after this ride, so let’s not fuck ourselves up.

How soon were you back on your bike after having your little ones?

I had to look back at photos to remember. I was back on a dirt bike 6 months postpartum with Thomas (my first). I had a gnarly childbirth, so it took a while to heal and feel comfortable again. Totally different with James (my 2nd). I was back on a bike literally the day after my 6 weeks postpartum check-up and then I raced a ISDE 8 weeks postpartum. That was not easy. I literally pumped (breast milk), got my bike out of the impound and lined up to race. I could literally feel the pressure of my milk building up the entire race. That’s one of my favourite Moto Mom memories.

“Riding as a mother is different, I’m super intentional, present, focused, and in the back of mind I know that I need to show up for my kids after this ride, so let’s not fuck ourselves up.”

How did you find the right bike for you? Did you ask anyone for advice?

The “right” bike is always changing... The “right” bike also depends on the type of terrain you’ll be riding a majority of the time. My KTM is perfect for the technical woods riding I am riding the majority of the time. It does fine in the desert, but lacks the power/speed for those long open stretches. I’m lucky to have a partner that knows me and knows bikes pretty well. We are a bit biased towards KTM’s because we owned a KTM shop.

What are your favourite trails that you’ve ever ridden and why?

I’m fortunate to live in the Pacific Northwest which has miles and miles of single track through the most incredible scenery imaginable. The Gifford Pinchot National Forest is probably my favourite area. It’s challenging, high consequence with unbeatable views.

What is your ideal day out on a motorcycle? (who with, where would you ride and what would you be riding).

I can’t wait for the day my kids are both out there riding with their Mom and Dad on their OWN bikes. But until then, if I could teleport all my lady friends from all over the world to come ride in my neck of the woods that would be epic.

Why do you ride?

It’s so fun.
It’s a constant challenge.
It’s taken me through the most beautiful terrain with the most epic views.
Also, have you ever calculated the calories you burn while riding?! Hello fitness.

What’s the biggest fear you’ve conquered on a motorcycle?

I haven’t conquered my biggest fear yet... I’m completely terrified of catching mad air at a track. Water crossings care still scary even though I’ve done a bunch of them.

What is your greatest achievement from motorcycle riding?

My greatest achievement "with recognition” was a first place finish in the Devil’s Head ISDE, arguably the hardest race in Oregon. Just finishing is a feat in itself, so the fact that I came out on top was my single greatest “recognised” achievement.

Whats the biggest lesson you’ve learned from riding motorcycles?

Like most things, greatness takes time. Literally the only way you get better at riding is riding.

Anything else to add?

You’re never too old to start something new. Don’t use being a mother an excuse for not doing something, but rather a reason to do something. I promise you, nothing is harder than having a child. Anytime, I’m struggling or feeling overwhelmed or defeated, I literally tell myself “nothing is harder than childbirth, I got this”.

FCD4E242-E1C2-49AF-92B1-E530847AFDDB.jpg

CAMP VC COMMUNITY - CASSIE BENNITT

DREW IRVINE

DREW IRVINE

Thinking about learning to ride and coming along to Camp VC this year? Well we’ve got just the person to inspire you to get on two wheels and get involved! In the first of our Camp VC community stories where you’ll meet awesome women who have been part of what we do at Camp VC and VC from the start, meet the awesome Cassie Bennitt!

After first learning to ride 5 years ago with our VC beginner sessions in East London, Cassie can now be found razzing round London on one of the raddest custom Harley Davidson sportsters we’ve seen and road tripping all over the world (including her annual pilgrimage to Camp VC) with her own band of buds. We chatted to Cassie about her life with motorcycles, her journey into riding and her experiences over the years coming along to Camp VC. Check it out :)

Don’t forget tickets for Camp VC 2020 go on sale 2nd May @ 10am over at www.campvc.co.uk!!!

See you there!


DSC00858.jpg
Charlie McKay

Charlie McKay

@miss_lola_mae

Where are you from? 

East London via the Shires of Cornwall.

How long have you been riding and what made you first start? 

I started riding in 2015 and there’s two reasons I started …

1) When I first moved to London I brought my 1960s classic car with me. I realised quite quickly that I couldn’t keep a car up here without a garage so I sold her. I missed having an old classic and realised motorbikes were the solution!

2) I wanted to ride with my Dad before he hung up his leathers for good. 

What is your first memory of motorcycling?

My family are big petrol heads and my Dad has ridden bikes since he was 16. I grew up around motorcycles and have always loved being around them. Also I loved ‘Easy Rider’.

How did you first find out about VC London?  

It feels like yesterday but it was actually 2015! A friend was badgering me about doing my CBT but I kept procrastinating. Then he messaged me a link to a group of badass women (VC) that were putting on their first all-female CBT. I booked in straight away and the rest is history … 

DREW IRVINE

DREW IRVINE

How did you feel the first time you rode a motorcycle? 

Absolutely petrified – I’d had a horrible near miss on a dodgy scooter in Cyprus when I was 17 … but I was determined to overcome the fear so I kept going. 

What was your first motorcycle? 

My 1982 CB100N … a little custom tracker that used to break down all the time. And still does….

What do you ride now? 

I’ve still got the 100 because I couldn’t bear to part with the little sod …. And I’ve got a 1991 Harley Davidson Sportster (which is one of two built by Warrs as a replica XR750 track bike)

9d033604-b1a1-4d34-8199-9d37eaa9c06c.JPG

What’s the best moto trip you’ve ever been on? 

Every Camp VC I’ve been to (of course) … and also Southwest Chopperfest last year – a vintage chopper show in stunning countryside.  I rode down from London with my friends Kristen and Charlotte. We went with no idea what it would be like and it was brilliant – no frills, no egos, just booze, bikes, beer and good times. 

What does Camp VC mean to you? 

It probably sounds cheesy but what the hell, Camp VC is everything I love about motorbikes - meeting friends old and new, comparing bikes, stories, anecdotes …. Supporting each other. And hoping daily that I don’t break down….

What has been your best memory of Camp VC so far? 

I have so many great memories from each year, it’s hard to pick just one. I think it has to be a general one - waking up in the morning to a beautiful view, riding all day with a bunch of kick ass, fabulous women and coming back and partying and comparing stories from the day’s adventures. Oh and Namin climbing in the giant fridge after we had drunk a LOT of rum in the first year. That was ace. 

What are you looking forward to most about Camp VC 2020? 

Hanging out with everyone!!!

Cassie VC LONDON
20190209-DMD-097-FabioAffuso.jpg

VC LONDON X THE SAN MIGUEL RICH LIST 2017

A massive thanks to San Miguel  for asking us to be a part of their 2017 San Miguel Rich List this year alongside some incredible people who value experience over possessions & pursue a different kind of wealth in life 🙌 .

Also a massive thanks to Jody Daunton for the amazing London memory. Pure magic to ride over London Bridge at sunrise with no one else around 🙌

Screen Shot 2017-10-13 at 13.41.24.png