Traverse 12 | Page 38

“It should have a robust and noble name, but I call it ‘bike’,” Jacqui grins. It doesn’t need a name to witness her love, it’s there as anyone in Jacqui’s presence bears witness. Criticise Jacqui’s bike and she jumps to its de- fence like a loving parent. Jacqui knows her Enfield is rough, old in design … still running drum brakes amongst many other 1950s fea- tures. Astonishingly, Jacqui has made no real modifica- tions to her Enfield however, someone once did attach a plastic dinosaur to the bike while in Ireland … perhaps a statement to the look and technology of the bike. “It’s scruffy and battered and looks older than its 19 years but it has had a hard life,” Jacqui laughs again. “We love going off road. It’s been dropped dozens of times and has been in several accidents, plunged into pot-holes covered by bulldust, almost shaken to death on rocky roads in Cambodia and Pakistan, corrugations in the Northern Territory and Queensland, through rivers in India and narrowly escaped being used as a boat an- chor in Colombia.” It matters little as Jacqui points out that the Enfield has taken to special locations, experiences and adven- tures. “Reassembling and riding it away from the boat and skipper who threatened to kill me,” is an experience that Jacqui gets excited about. It’s when a special bond was TRAVERSE 38