It's all about love and American Romance with
the creative side. We're lucky bastards to be able to build
whatever we feel and drive it off a cliff, if we so desire. Just 50
years ago a blue collar guy would think about working in a steel
mill all his life. Now that same guy can build Choppers and chase
women every night.
Fifty years ago that would be a man's dream only.
Here's the story of one lucky bastard who was born with sand
under his feet and a sea breeze cutting through his dark hair. Even
as a youngster he was surrounded by women in graceful bikinis. In
addition, his parents didn't badger him with rules and goals but let
him find his own way. This is his story and the story of Caribbean Custom Cycles:
Tell me about where you grew up. What was it
like, from the geography to
the people to your folks?
I grew up here, in Puerto Rico, on a large
neighborhood with plenty of land
and lots of fun stuff to do. We had all kinds of
animals around the
house, since my grandpa was a scientist and
explorer. I always had "toys" to
have fun with: bikes, guns, horses and stuff.
My mom was, and is, cool about all the crazy
shit I do. I was no saint. My
grandma had the heavy hand though! God bless her
soul.
I was not a gearhead or even close. Sure we all
messed with bicycles and
customized them, but nothing like tearing apart
motors and such. I remember
spending several weeks trying to put a carb back in
my 100cc Kawasaki dirt
bike, until a real mechanic fixed it. If I knew
then what I know now...
Fast forward a decade or two, I have lived in
lots of places for short
stints, doing what I wanted to do at the time be
it surfing, sailing,
racing or even nothing. But I always came back to
my
home. I was having so
much fun doing all this stuff that I never sat down
and thought about what
I wanted to be when I grew up. But always managed
to
do what I loved.
I had the privilege to go to very good schools
and college, but noticed
that a good education is balanced by hands-on
experience. It was easier to
take a history class after spending a month all
over Europe, if you know
what I mean. And always, even not wanting to, my
parents were OK with the
"different" ways I did things. I guess that's how I
learned the meaning of
respect, and was able to manage my freedoms.
One lesson learned by all those trips was how to
make it work. We managed
and never tried to bite more than we could chew.
Like on my time in Hawaii, we were seven in an
apartment. I slept on the
balcony for two weeks before I could upgrade to the
living room. We all
shared the pizzas and we paid for one buffet at
Sizzler and all seven ate.
Sometimes one of the guys would call in sick and
I'd take his place, make
some money and live the rest of the week, but we
were having so much fun
and surfing all day, every day. I mention Hawaii
because it's very similar
to Puerto Rico, the lifestyle and the people.
As I said before, I always end up back home.
This
land is were I was born
and probably were I will die. It's a rare
combination of a Caribbean island
with the U.S. mainland. We are like any big city in
the world with all the
advantages, although it's a bit sad that we have
lost that island thing,
you know, that slow pace, kinda lazy, fun, let's
got to the beach,
tropical, thing. Like, I love New York City; it's
the greatest place in the
world. But when you think of the Caribbean, you
think of pristine beaches
and cool drinks under the palm trees. Sure, we have
that, but we also have a
bit of New York style in here. It's also a great
place to ride, with lots
of mountain or beach roads to travel, all in a day
or a year. I have been
around the island on bikes, sailing and surfing,
and
it's an amazing place any
way you look at it. The people are very friendly
and for the tourists, there's
convinience, most people here speak English also.
We have the
oldest city in the
Americas and rain forests. It's a very complete
package for a tropical
island.
One of the main reasons I stay here, or come back,
is because I love it
and have been able to make it here one way or
another. I believe only weak
people leave their homeland to look for fortune in
other places while not
making their home a better place by their presence
and work, but hey,
that's my opinion. I know it could be more
profitable to open shop some
place else, but this is home, my Puerto Rico!
Tell me about your first bike, how you got it,
what did you do to it and a
funny story?
My first bike was a minibike chopper, white with
purple accents and apes. I
remember it was a birthday gift from my mom.
I did nothing to it but ride the crap out of the poor
bike and get a pretty
strong right arm from yanking that damn yo-yo.
A few of my street buddies had bikes too, like z-50s
and trail 70s. Since
my grandparents had a couple acres of land, we built a
dirt track. The downside was that the last jump (maybe
a foot or two) was right over my
grandma's roses and into the driveway. Needless to
say, she was not too happy
about the huge gap in her rose rows, but the cement
driveway was a must. It
was the only place that we could pull back on the
bars, twist the throttle
and pop a wheelie before hitting the dirt again. One
time, I don't exactly remember
when, but I know it was a holiday and lots of people
showed up at the house,
we were riding around and when I came flying through
the roses there was a car
parked there, soo... The dent on the door was not a
pretty sight and the
driver was not a happy camper. The little chopper and
I were bruised
but survived, and no one, ever, parked there again. I
can't remember what
happened to that bike, although the next one was a
100cc and I remember
from then on, that was some twenty-something years
ago.
Tell me about your first H-D
My first H-D is the one that started it all, we--me
and my friends--did not
have much money then. We were surfing all the time and
all the money we had
was spent on surfing trips. We were in between
skipping school and working
a bit, you know, being rebels.
This is during the mid '80s. We were spending some
time in Miami and a
friend from Puerto Rico had a Harley shop. We thought
that was the coolest
fuckin' thing to do and when we got back we started
looking for bikes. Only
cops and old-timers rode Harleys here. A couple months
later my friend
found two bikes on the east side, a 65 and 67 FL. I
did not have the money
so someone else got the 65. I waited and saved a bit.
Later on I found a
77 FXE for $1,500 and ended up paying less since the
battery and some
other stuff did not work. I had no idea whatsoever of
how things worked; a
spark plug change was my mechanical skill. I remember
riding for months with
a bungee strapped battery and dripping a quart of oil
every place we
parked. Even had the bike parked for a month 'cause I
would not dare taking
a front flat tire off the bike. But man, when we rode
those suckers we were
the baddest dudes in the world, and we went everywere.
People saw us
and started buying bikes too. Soon we were six then
ten, then fifteen, and
it has not stopped since then. I remember reading
those Easyriders end to
end, over and over, while drooling at the choppers. My
first try at
customizing was a cheap drag bar and risers from
Superior. I thought
that FX was hot shit!
Like always, money would go into a surfboard rather
than the bike, so it
stayed as it was for a long time. I ended up in
California--another long
story--and saw the bikes there. This was before the
helmet law. I got to
ride a Sporty around. By then I was starting my new
career--racing cars--
and was making some money, so when I got back I
started searching for
another bike so I could customize the FX. That was 13
or so years ago and
I still have not completed the bike. I have a funny
feeling that when I do
the world will be over. I found a '64 Pan and that was
my everyday ride
till 1995, besides the '63, '65 and '70, when I got my
first Evo.
I beat the crap outta that Pan and every day I would
ride to Old San Juan
to my friend's shop. The bike would always stall in
the same place; we
thought that it was possesed. Many sweaty kicks later,
it would come back to
life. A couple weeks later I noticed, at the same
corner, that the choke was
on. I guess the vibration would loosen it until it
stalled the bike, yep, at
the same spot. I still have that old choke lever
around. Man how it made me
sweat!
How did you get into building bikes, who taught
you, and when did you start?
It's like everything I've done in my life. If I like
it, I work hard at it.
First we did a few things to bikes until a friend
decided to do his whole
bike. We had the race car shop, so we had a bunch of
tools, and my dad,
who's very handy with mechanical stuff, helped us out.
Other than that, was instinct and stupidity. I was
very limited in my
skills, but we managed. The bike ended up being really
cool and we ended up
doing some more friends' bikes, mostly stuff with a
good set of instructions
or we'd hang out at old mechanic shops and watch how
it was done. From
then on I was busy with the racing schedule, so the
fun part was restoring
the bikes we had, like a hobby, and buying more old
bikes when we had some
extra money. Even my dad got into it, which was great.
Though I don't like
his style, he can build a pretty mean bike. I can say
that my '64 Pan taught
me how to work on bikes. I learned to listen and take
care of her, to keep
her riding no matter what and wrenching roadside if I
had to. Sometimes I
wish everyone had one of those old bikes before
getting one of those TC
craps. Mostly it was hands-on. One day I dared to do
this, later something
else--always on my bikes first though. All the old
mechanics helped out
too; Charlie, Papitin and Batalla were always willing
to answer questions
and happy to see me hang out at their shops. Manuals
helped a lot, as well
as my dad. What I consider my first build is a bike
I called Mala Fe. It
has a Bourget's rigid frame, and an STD/S&S Panhead
motor. I had been
working for a couple of years and had met a few
people. The guys from
American Iron Magazine decided they were going to
feature my bike. The
catch was that it had to be done for Bike Week. It was
December and I was
trying to beat the deadline. We had to ship everything
and money was not
rockin'. Being a bit hard-headed, I had to build the
engine and
everything else. It was a mix of parts and even
Nitrous. Well I spent three
weeks of working from noon to six a.m. The day it was
done I rode to the
local strip bar and early in the morning to the dock.
when I got the bike
to Daytona, it left me stranded on the road--and it
was fucking freezing
too. I was so tired and so pissed that I took it to a
friend's shop and they
fixed it for me. It had a loose pushrod and had blown
the head gasket. I
made it to the shoot and ended up on the mag--the bike
was all black and
polished, with a pan. It was quite different, so I
pushed that bike all
over Daytona since the battery was crap. Never, ever
bought another from
that company. I ended up riding that bike all over the
States, Still have
it.
When did you consider opening a shop and
why?
Like I said before, when I do something I give it my
best shot. Racing cars
is great but unless you are in the very big leagues,
or your parents have
very deep pockets, it's very hard to become rich. I
noticed that in Puerto
Rico there was a heavy-duty movement towards Harleys.
The two local shops
sold hard parts and chrome add-ons and the mechanics
dealt with older bikes
but no custom stuff. What started as a hobby ended up
as a real job. We
were doing more and more bikes, very simple stuff,
bars, forwards, pipes,
paint, nothing fancy. I was buying from a local shop,
but I ended up buying
so much that I decided to get my own lines, sold the
race car and converted
the garage into a bike shop. We had the tools and the
space so it was
pretty simple. Plus I managed my own time, went
sailing when I had to and
came back to more jobs. I made some money and took off
once more. I have
never believed in being the richest guy in the
cemetary. I travel, learn
and do as much as I can. One thing lead to another and
more bikes rolled
into our shop. We expanded the work, always doing the
stuff on our bikes
first before venturing onto a customer's. By 1996 we
were doing some cool
custom jobs and had the first real custom bike from
Bourget's in the
island. We have managed to stay a step or ten ahead of
everyone else;
homework and traveling do the trick. Tell you the
truth, all that has
happened in my life has been by chance and by paying
attention to what's
around--besides heavy doses of hard work and a will
that has no limits. I
don't quit unless I think that I am as good as I can
be
at that certain thing. I'm not tooting my own horn,
but I've had an amazing
36 years.
Why I do it? Well it's simple and complicated at the
same time. I love
choppers and my whole family rides. We have managed to
locate our tiny
island in the Caribbean in the V-twin industry. People
know who we are and
call us to congratulate every time we are featured on
a magazine, they
follow our reports here on Bikernet. I have friends
and family making the
shop run as it should, and we have hundreds of
customers that trust us and
would not buy from anyone else. It's a compromise; I
created this and have
to stick with it, like it or not. There's no rest for
the wicked. Anyway, I
enjoy every bike I design or build. I enjoy the time
we spend with our
friends in the industry. I enjoy riding with friends
and family. I love it
when Yoly rides her chopper and when a customer enjoys
his new bike; plus
we make money to make new bikes.
Tell me the trials and tribulations of having a
shop on an island in the
caribbean?
I might bitch about this sometimes, but this is my
home and it will always
be. We don't have a special construction law, so it's
almost impossible to
register a "homemade" bike. That hurts our shop a lot.
We have to go through
unbelievable red tape to be able to register the bikes
that we build here,
sometimes taking as long as a year. We distribute a
couple brands from the
U.S. which makes it very easy for us to register since
they are manufacturers.
But we have to ship everything in, and shipping a ten-
foot-long chopper is
not cheap! Plus, we pay taxes when we bring the goods
in, not when we sell
them, which is great for the customers but sucks for
us.
Also, the logistics of getting a bike from Phoenix to
Puerto Rico would give
anyone a headache. Population is another issue; we
only have 3.9 million
people and around 5,000 Harleys. Our bikes are not on
the inexpensive
side. We have worked really hard to let people know
what a custom is and
why it's not even close to their factory ride. In
other words, why should
they spend their money. I'm not big in promotion, or
advertising, or
talking shit. I let our customers show others how much
they enjoy their
stuff. And since it's such a small place, people know
each other. On the
other hand, when we get a Kamikaze customer who
trashes the bike, we also
get the bad rep. The worst part is having people
opening new shops and
riding on your coattails. We try to be exclusive
dealers for our stuff,
but we are limited on the amounts we can buy so
sometimes it's hard. You
bust your ass introducing something new to the market
and the "other" shops
just copy what you are doing. By the time the dust
settles, we are already
working with some new stuff, or we just quit selling
that brand. I sell to all
the Caribbean and sometimes wish their laws were
easier. It's like selling
stuff state to state and all are a different ball
game. Also, some have more
buying power than others. And let's not even talk
about all our trips to
the rides in the U.S. It's a complete full-time job
getting those sorted
out. I know I could open a shop in Miami and make my
life easier, but this
is my home and I'm sticking to it. A couple years ago,
customs
started showing up around the island and then comes
HOG. Everyone goes into
Harleys so they can become members; it's time to suck
it up and rethink
your plan. Also, the U.S. companies that can offer
cheaper prices make a big
hole, but we can give person-to-person service; they
can't.
Tell me about the shop, everything, size,
equipment, services, bikes, stories
about customers, the wildest Bourgets owner?
In reality, we have three shops, nope, four: a 1,200-
square-foot showroom in
downtown San Juan, where we have the bikes, parts and
everything else. We
also have a huge parking lot, which is a must. We just
opened that a year
and a half ago and it has boosted our sales
incredibly. That's were I spend
my days, and Yoly too; that's the hub of everything.
We also have a small
shop, let's say 800 square feet, that I use for
building bikes, and it's
equipped with the stuff that I need to build the
bikes. I still do most of
the choppers we build personally; it's not easy but I
maintain a certain
control on what they receive. Once the bike is done,
anyone at the shop
can put it back together; we are all very capable.
Then the third shop, which
used to be the race car shop, is around 5,000 square
feet and it's on
the same property. That's where we do all the service,
parts installations,
and modifications. It's also full of tools and what's
needed to work on the
bikes. Between the two shops we have all the tools and
machines we might
need, but we still don't have good lifts. It's been a
pain trying to ship
them over. And a CNC machine would be really
productive. We have in-house
painting, a powdercoater close by, we do metal work,
etc. We take a
little longer on doing stuff, but we don't do hurry-up
work. When we put
our little sun logo on a bike we are putting our name
on it and it has to
be top-notch work. Though choppers are not perfect and
never will be, we
don't see customers stranded on the side of the road,
even the Kamikaze
ones.
Sometimes I see what other shops do and wonder how
they dare to send a bike
down the road with such a shit job. In a sense, we are
responsible for the
well-being of riders. If they do something stupid, so
be it, but not
because of us.
The fourth shop is a partnership in Orlando, Florida;
it's kind of a franchise. They sell
Bourget's for that area.
Now going back to the showroom, we are dealers for
anything that you might
imagine, all the big ones and the up and coming too. I
have a gut instinct
on what will be the next rage or top guy and most of
the time I hit the spot.
We also have a bunch of people that we have been
working since the start,
ours and theirs. I could not mention all the lines we
have, but for
motorcycles we are exclusive distributors for
Bourget's Bike Works and Big
Mike Choppers in the Caribbean, and a few other
manufacturers that we don't
buy from. But I'm sure they will tell you to call us
for a bike. We have
based our business relationship on friendship and
honesty, first and
foremost. Money comes and goes, but friends are
friends. We've been working
with some people for over ten years now and in this
industry the tide rolls
and you are hot, the next day not. But the good stuff
does not fade away. I
would mention some of the names of the manufacturers
we deal with but we
don't have that much space and our pseudo competitors
will read this and
copy us once more. We also believe in being fair. Why
overcharge
and try to screw the same people that are paying your
rent? That's why most
of our customers become our friends and bring other
friends. The same story
as the H-D buying friends applies to our bikes. We
have the craziest Bourget
owners. I bet they put more miles on their bikes in
this tiny island than
any in the States. I do every bike like it was for me.
If you see the
photos, our bikes might be a bit different than those
flashy dudes you
see on Main Street. This guy puts a good 250 miles
every Sunday on their
choppers, rain or shine, sometimes even more. I just
built a bike for a guy
in Boston and he put over 4,000 miles on his bike in
three months.
That's sick! Remember, we are an island, 100 by 35!
We've had guys pick up their brand-new bike at 5
o'clock and do
burnouts later that night. They have to change the
tire a couple days later. Most of these guys
enjoy their bikes and treat them well. We have test
pilots too, drag
racers, and bikes that have been to Sturgis at least 5
times......All in
all we have fun.
Why did you choose Bourget over others like
Titan, Big Dog, etc....?
Because the others suck!!! Kidding aside, I have this
gut feeling about stuff. I met Roger and Brigitte in
'96 when they were
starting. I saw a bike there and liked it. It was
different and he was
doing most of the stuff. We ended up bringing that
bike back to Puerto Rico
and became dealers. I believe we were the
first dealers, not counting Bourget's of New York. I
rode that bike for a
year before even attempting to sell one. I had to make
sure that it would
work for our island and our prospective owners.
Anyway, Roger had a car tire
bike and my bike was a 190 tire. That was 1996; I
guess I saw the future.
Without knowing it, I saw hard-working people willing
to make their efforts
pay off. I was right.
I don't want to throw dirt at any other company,
but the other
manufacturers were doing stuff that we could do at our
shop and buy the
same parts that they did without having to pay for a
name. Time proved me
right. I have an opinion on every manufacturer. I
watch them and get the
inside information, but I have never doubted Roger or
his product. He has
an edge. He fabricates 95% of his bikes and he builds
what you want,
ugly or cool. He dares to break
the mold and it works.
He sees the future trend and they bust their ass to
keep everything going,
plus they are not spending shitloads of money on
Playboy bunnies and
monster shops.
We also got BMC last year. I saw the
same thing: young,
hard-working guys with a plan, no nonsense and no
bullshit. They've sold a
lot of bikes, so I guess I was right once more. I have
not been able to
sell that many, but it's a slow process for us. It
took four years to start
moving Bourget's, and I'm not saying how many we sell,
just in case the tax
man is reading, but we get by. And as soon as we get
the fear out of riding
rigids, we will do the same for BMC.
It's really simple, if you do your homework. We are
very good friends with
Pure Steel, but the price is out of range for our
consumer,
same as American Iron Horse. We think it's a solid
company, but our market
is limited. Why be a dealer when we can't put in the
effort. I don't want to
sell a bike a year. Big Dog is solid, owned by
Coleman, so it will never run out of money. But we can
build a Bourget's
as you wish for the same amount...no brainer.
Just to make it short, what other company can build a
good quality product,
the bike you design, for under 40,000? No one.
Then again, Roger and Brigitte are family to us and
they build a good
product. I have the riders to prove it.
What do you like doing the most at the
shop?
Calling all the 900 sex lines... Designing and
building the bikes, putting
the puzzles together. I get bored when I do the same
thing. I like a
challenge now and then. That's why I build a bike over
a weekend; it's a
challenge. I like redoing stock bikes. I love it when
the guys tell me to do
what I want. And when they see the final build, their
grin says it all. I
also like having people come back after buying stuff
that we recommend and
loving it. This might sound stupid but I like making
people save money,
getting the right parts and avoiding the crappy ones.
I hate working on a
schedule. I hate impatient people and liars. I'm stuck
at the showroom so
after we close I go and work on bikes. The ones I'm
building, I can't wait
to get a new shop with both things on the same place.
Lots can be done in
idle time. I also hate solving other peoples'
problems. If a shop sold you
crap, call 'em up, not me ! I love old bikes, any
Panhead over any other
bike, hands down. I like having an idea and seeing it
become something. I
also like having stuff that no one has and that looks
really cool.
Tell us about your relationship with WCC, about
building the bikes and your customers?
Again, gut feeling and a bit of information goes a
long way. I knew who
Jesse was quite a while ago. We never talked and
barely met each other at
some places in Indy. I saw his green CFL and thought
it was very cool. I
talked to him, but nothing concrete. I found out he
was chosen for a TV program on Discovery. I ordered a
frame and shirts before the program aired, so by the time everyone was doing
the West Coast mania, we had the stuff available. We are his dealers in
Puerto Rico and bought seven frames in three months, plus a shitload of
shirts and stuff. Put it this way, we had the market covered before the others knew
what hit them. Jesse does not mind us doing his bikes at all. I send photos
of the done stuff and he likes it. He can't do all the bikes he would
want to. We are even doing bikes for people in the U.S. And even though
they are his frames, they are still our bikes. It works pretty well. I spent a good
chunk of cash and people get what they want, even though they are still afraid
of rigids.
It's all related though. We are on the same bandwagon,
maybe not on the
same scale, but it's all young people trying to make a
name for themselves
and being good at it, having fun and making a buck.
Sometimes it pisses me
off when people bad-mouth Jesse. He was lucky enough
to get his shit on
TV, and jump from trying to make it to rolling in it.
But it has helped
everyone in this industry. People know what a chopper
is, or how it's made,
more so what it takes.... Sure there's some drama, but
mostly it's true.
I see people that are pushed month after month by
magazines and they don't
make it. At least Jesse is good and making it.
Anyway, it's pretty simple. Anyone can call us up and
I'll build a CFL in
three months. You tell me what you want. Actually, the
orange bike is for
sale and we have a softail and rigid
frame available, that's it.
How do you compare your customers with H-D
dealer ones ?
We share customers; I have a great relationship with
the local dealer. I
think that Harley as we knew it ceased to exist in the
'80s.
I have customers that want something that the factory
won't produce, or
that are sick of having to wait for a bike, spend a
shitload of cash and
having the same bike as his friend's. We sell stuff
that is different, new
and exciting. I realized a long time ago that if you
want a Harley, go
ahead and buy it, but if you want something unique,
that's where we enter
the picture. Right now we have some bikes that are
competitive with H-D's
prices and people are buying them, and their friends
are getting into them
too.
It's like there's a lot of people that buy a bike and
become instant
experts, or see a bike on the side of the road and
assume that it broke and
it's crap. H-D is God to them and everything else is a
lame clone, but those
few that are smart and want their stuff have realized
otherwise. When
we finally introduced the "custom" bikes to Puerto
Rico after a few years of
work, HOG appeared and people started buying H-Ds
'cause HOG was cool. That
set us back a bit, but instead of ranting and raving
we kept doing what we
did and more people noticed that custom bikes are not
taboo. It all ends up
working quite well. I believe the aftermarket industry
is what has made H-D
the powerful company that it is now. And H-D bikes
have made the aftermarket
industry what it is today. Then again this "hobby" is
like anything else.
We have a more complete availability of parts and
accessories than the
factory, and the more modern they go, the more basic
we go. Plus, we have
the advantage of creating what we want quicker than
the corporate gears can
and adapt or even create the new trend. There will
always be pro factory
consumers, which we don't look for, and consumers that
will vary their needs
and look for the "other" things which is what we have.
I work on an honesty
basis, so I don't run to the local dealer to make a
profit on a part. I'd
rather call the dealer up and refer the customer; it
might make less money but
I have customers that trust us, which is more
important.
On another thought, we tend to do our own thing, not
follow someone else.
We try not to laugh at the people that wear all the
latest "company"
fashions or die if they don't have the new TC 88. We
beleive in function and
simplicity, not looking like a fucking peacock on a
parade. If it was up to
me, Puerto Rico would be full of rigid panhead
choppers, but that's another story. We
have people riding choppers. The next step would be
getting them to buy
rigids... It's all a matter of growing up in a
lifestyle. The RUBs and
wannabees will pass on to the next fad, and the ones
that hang on will
mold into newer stuff. Since we are not money hungry,
we can choose
who we want as customers and are able to respect other
people's customers.
What about the future? Does anything concern
you?
What do you look forward to?
That's a tough one, but I will try to stay within the
industry. I see Billy
Lane and Choppers Inc. making it big time. I see a
decline in H-D stuff and a
move toward custom stuff without all the EFIs and
V-Rod crap. I would love
to see a Puerto Rico Bike Week, get rid of the helmet
law, get a special
construction law, ride Sturgis without fearing the
cops. I wish not to see Sam Orwell really happen.
I see more bikes like the old choppers and bobbers,
less techno-lime shit.
We will do our own style of bikes pretty soon, have
a new shop with
everything in one place. I'd be happy selling 50 bikes
a year. I see Bandit owning Easyriders and making it like it was. I
see the Horse being the #1 magazine. I see Mike Maldonado getting the
place that he deserves in this industry. I see a lot of
things in this world of ours, and good things happen
to those who deserve it.
I think a lot of what would happen, that's how I stay
on the edge of things. That's why I move around and do stuff. That's
why I write, why I ride. We all think of the stuff that we would do
tomorrow. I also think
that I will have time to rest, that the shop will run
itself. I guess
that's why most builders are insomniacs--they are
always thinking what they
would do next.
Lots of things concern me, from very tiny, to very
big..... This world,
the status of our island, what tomorrow might bring,
the health of my
family and friends, love, kids, freedoms lost, lots of
things.....many,
many, things.
I look forward to being the first Puerto Rican
Hamster, the cover of Easyriders, being respected by
my peers, financial stability, being able to
enjoy the fruits of our hard work, the next issue of
The Horse, getting my
next bike done, not fighting with Yoly....you know
stuff like that...... I
also look forward for the success of all my friends
and the demise of all
my enemies....
We are working hard in our clothing lines, Chopper
Freak (tm) and for girls
Chopper Freak Chick. We are starting with shirts and
caps, but the sky is
the limit. We are planning on doing a few of the main
events as vendors and
see how it goes. Also, I'm thinking about a parts
line.....but that's
another story.