The Real Adventures of Jack- Chapter 3
Jack |
Then eventually I decided to start my business. Everyone has a tale, mine is the story of Bill Bonanno.
Every week as I was mowing his lawn in East Meadow, LI. Sometimes a black limo would stop, two big guys would escort Bill Bannano to the house. I was just a young yipper snapper and new very little about the local news, I was busy on a career path!
Then I did see the story Joe Bannano, now Joe was just regular guy, wanted by the FBI and IRS, he was the head of the biggest crime syndicate in New York State, he had disappeared to Canada they claimed?
Joseph Charles Bonanno Sr. was an Italian-born American mafioso who became the boss of the Bonanno crime family |
Everybody has a story about being in the right place at the right time. That day while mowing the FBI showed up, I did what everyone would have done I waved hello! Well after they asked me for my birth certificate, proof of a business license we waved goodbye, as poor bill was hauled away in handcuffs.
I made up the waving part.
I always had wondered what those bulges were in their jackets. Sadly I lost a good customer, they would tip me about $20. I felt bad for Bill, I am sure he was just the innocent son.
Page 2
In a place called Uniondale, Long Island, was Sagan Motors. Paul Sagan was a man bred to perfection. His shop sold Fiat, Porche, BMW, Honda, and Triumph Motorcycles. Proud I was to become the owner of a Honda CB 160, in1965. Paul sponsored flat track racing, he introduced me to dirt riding. Many afternoons Paul and I his student rode up Uniondale Ave to Mitchell Airforce Base, then closed after WW11. He taught me how to slide a motorcycle in the dirt. OMG, I was hooked!
Soon I fitted it was with semi-knobby tires, and took off the mufflers, it had twin cylinders, yea! I was cool!
Little did I know a lifetime of Motorcycle, mountain-biking, running, event promoting and triathlon racing was beginning?
Please excuse some of the accuracies here, that was 1965 + now 2018, there were no notes, no photos, just a crazed group and one gal.
Some days I would ride up to Mitchell Air Force Base; between the base and The Meadow Brook Pkway was a closed golf course, we would sneak in ( top secret) through a hole in the fence, many times being chased by security; after all, we were bing time criminals?
Then came my introduction to scrambles
Barry Higgins, Fishkill, N.Y. 1965 |
Back in the day before motocross came to the United States, the sport was called Scrambles. Tracks in upstate N.Y. , like Fishkill, Walden, Maybrook, and Monticello Holiday Mountain Ski Resort.
( Monticello, was the beginning of true motocross before we even knew what it was) Also West Hampton and Bridgehampton truly were tough sand tracks on L.I.
Motocross the sport was born in and around Europen countries. I believe America's first introduction was by a race promoter, Edson Dye.
Edson Dye decided in 1968 to bring Thorsten Hallman, 4 times 250cc World Motocross Champion to tour different tracks in the United States. The best East Coast scramblers would challenge the champ that day, in 1968 at Pepperell Motocross track, Pepperall Massachusets.
Pepperall 1968 |
Surely, in my opinion, Barry Higgins was the best the East Coast had to offer. With many young upstarts, Jimmy Weinert, and Sonny DeFeo ( son of Sal, owner of the famous Ghost Motorcycles, in Port Washington, N. Y. Ghost Motorcycles was also the sponsor of Barry Higgins.
Also, here we will find the first, woman Kerry Kleid to ever have an AMA Professional Motocross license. She was mentored by the great Barry Higgins, also his girlfriend. In future chapters, I will tell the story of Kerry Kleid's AMA Pro license.
The Long Island Gang
Along route 110 in a Huntington, L. I. Was a power line, that led to huge sand pits. ; For most of us our scrambles/motocross careers began at Rt 110.
One day at 110 on the small scrambles track we rode I met Bob Islamolf ( The Mongoose ), then our group grew, Andy Hanlon, Dan McCann, the Vargner bros., Joe Anunizza, Marty Ripp, James VanArman, Jimmy Yeager and more, I apologize it has been too long.
These were times when the two-stroke motorcycle was almost unheard of. Until the ( the Mongoose ) appeared with a Sacks 80 cc, with leading-link front suspension.
Wow, I almost forgot, Marty Rip and I would load his Honda 360 and my Honda 160 in his 1962 Volkswagen Van, ( try that )and go to Mitchell Air Force base to practice at sun up, before going to work, how is that for dedication?
I will never forget that day in 1969 when The Wide World of Sports came to Pepperall, this may become the first time most Americans viewed or even heard of the sport of Motocross.; The Wide World of Sports on ABC was seen every Sat. Afternoon for many years, it was the day we met maybe the most famous all-time sports announcer,
Jim McKay |
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