Columns

A vicious cycle

I never intended to enter the Cape Argus Cycle Tour, but by Friday I was so sick and tired of these people taking over our restaurants and filling our brothels that I decided to teach them a lesson.

I approached Ted with the plan and he was up for it from the start. Right away he wanted to know what drugs we would be taking.

“Not so fast,” I said. “First we have to get to the finish line.”

Studying the route was key to winning the race. After much poring over maps and pouring of beers, we found what we were looking for – a convenient cul-de-sac leading off Queens Road in Sea Point. All we had to do was find a couple of bicycles.

With so many in town it wasn’t that difficult. In fact, it took us less than an hour of driving around Bantry Bay with a bobbejaan spanner to acquire a couple of fine-looking bright red racing bikes.

This morning found me and Ted lying low in the cul-de-sac arguing about what drugs to take. Narco-loading is vital for racers such as ourselves. Essentially, we are sprinters. But jumping into the race two hours after the official start is not as easy as it sounds. The pack leaders swooping into Sea Point are usually in an ugly mood and timing is everything.

Even though our race would only be 3.5km long, we had to be fully prepared.

Ted had brought along two plastic bottles – one filled with white wine, the other with red. He said this was in case we changed our minds at the last minute and decided to jump into the race on the other side of the mountain, where people drink red wine. He was saving the cheap white for Green Point.

I had one of those cunning backpacks designed to hold a litre of pre-mixed Jose Cuervo and orange juice. A plastic tube ran from the bottle to my mouth.

Ted wanted to take two Dexedrines to get his heart rate up and a Seconal to bring it down. He said that with a fluctuating pulse and arrhythmic heartbeat he would be unstoppable. His symptoms sounded like a cardiac arrest and his strategy made no sense at all, but I had more important things to worry about.

I had a dope muffin the size of a soccer ball in my backpack but I knew if I wolfed that thing down, there was a good chance the frontrunners would suspect something as I raced past them laughing at nothing and talking to nobody.

The alternative was a bankie full of stale magic mushrooms that I bought years ago from a dishevelled shaman hanging around the entrance to Stonehenge trying to get a lift back to Putney.

In the end I opted for a mouthful of each and told Ted to get ready. He swallowed his Dexies and within a minute was pacing up and down the parking lot, babbling incessantly and gnawing the insides of his mouth to a bloody pulp. It wasn’t a pretty sight.

There is no doubt that drugs make any race a lot more exciting. For one, they help dissolve all those awkward social barriers that prevent you from openly taunting your opponents.

Steroids, needless to say, are the worst kind of drugs you can take. They do absolutely nothing for your mind and I, for one, applaud sports administrators for banning this scourge.

Unfortunately we had left it too late to buy Day-Glo orange lycra shirts so, the night before, Ted and I had produced a couple of hand-painted outfits that looked virtually identical to the real thing. All we needed to complete the ensemble were a couple of sponsors.

I chose Armscor and the Arthur Murray School of Dancing while Ted opted for the Gay and Lesbian Alliance and the SA Police.

I dredged up a pair of stretchy floral shorts from the back of Brenda’s underwear drawer (dear god, I hope they were shorts) while Ted had to make do with a baggy pair of semen-stained khaki Bermudas. I threatened to pull out unless he changed his broeks.

“What about you,” he said, snorting loudly. I asked him about the snorting but he quickly denied having been at the Colombian marching powder.

Before I left the house I caught a glimpse of myself in the mirror. Something was missing. At first I couldn’t work out what it was. I had everything the modern cyclist could possibly need – bright shirt, stupid shoes, funny helmet, drugs, alcohol, tight pants.

Tight pants! That’s what was missing. I rolled up a pair of socks and rammed them down the front. There. Much better. Now I looked like a real sportsman.

So it was with heads full of amphetamines, depressants, psilocybin, tedrahydrocannibanol and tequila that we found ourselves lurching out of the cul-de-sac as the first of the bunch came swarming past just after 8.15am.

We were half way to Green Point when Ted gave the signal to make our move. Much later he told me that this was, in fact, not the signal.

Narco-loading is great for short sprints but one of the side effects is that you see and hear things that might not necessarily exist. Like the blonde who lifted her top, causing Ted to crash into the straw bales.

The upshot is that I held back until we were opposite the Green Point tennis courts and then made my spurt. In retrospect, I spurted way too soon. It’s a recurring problem.

After holding the lead between the second and third set of traffic lights on Beach Road, the pack charged past me. I was even overtaken by a woman.

Later, while drinking beer to counter the effects of the post-race high, I told Ted how a muscle-bound lesbian had beaten me to the finish. He looked at me with a dazed expression and said, “It’s not about the dyke.”

Well, that’s all history now. The caravan has moved on, leaving behind more chafed crotches and sore bottoms than you might find in Sydney on the last night of Mardis Gras.

Unknown

23 thoughts on “A vicious cycle

  1. venez tous voir articleseuro2016wordpress pour connaitre les informations, résultats et les statistiques de l’Euro 2016 en France. Très bon blog

  2. That’s Very Good For Me, Thanks

  3. sanzisan says:

    Sambilngopiblog.wordpress.com

  4. kiellaann says:

    That’s cool hope to be like you soon 👍

  5. i like your article, very inspiring and thank you for your post 🙂

  6. asksamson says:

    I was editing a funeral insurance commercial around 10h00, drinking a secret vodka I had snuck in at work when snot came flying out of my nose reading this. Thanks, I have never had a snodka before.

  7. 1gelin1damat.com.tr eh idare eder

  8. nitesh303 says:

    excellent article. I would be waiting to get from. Please have a time to visit my site sportscenter366.wordpress.com

  9. shaun says:

    Great article. Would have loved to join you on this mad adventure 😉 Keep it up

  10. Ricky says:

    if you think lycra is tight – wait til you try squeeze in to a neoprene catsuit to surf.

  11. i like your article, very inspiring and thak you for your post

  12. rayeann16 says:

    Of course I laughed my ass off! Then I started thinking, you are my kind of guy! 😂😂 I’d have done the same thing. Well only the edible. How did you get seconal? I’m moving to Sidney this summer. Hint, hint. So many questions! You have to be the funniest and funnest guy on the planet! So, I’d give you my number but there are other commenters, like your wife? 😉 lucky lady! You aren’t married? Well…. Whatever the case, you’re a hell of a writer! I need to read your blog every week or I have a rotten week. Missed last week and, the horror! Sounds like you overdid it here…. That was a lot of drugs,I mean really guys! Which means I’m probably to old for you anyway. I did my experiment with lots of drugs, in the 80’s! So I just enjoy my legal marijuana. 😛 that I’ll miss when I get to Aussie land… Like I’ll stop. 😂😂 just gonna have a garden. You know,you have embarrassed yourself here, but loyal readers understand the need to win, just once in our misable lives… Sadly you fucked it up, but had a hell of an adventure! Love ya! Rayeann Kemp p.s. that’s my name on Facebook… Hint hint… 😉😊

  13. Michele Totton says:

    As always, this man can raise serious laughter!

  14. Sue says:

    Had me in hysterics on the couch; had to haul out the tissues 😀

  15. Jane says:

    A ‘Tour de Force’ in inimitable style – you make my day! (just found out Tour de Force also the name of a 2016 ‘9/11 Memorial’ Bike Ride)

  16. Excellent!And the article wasn’t that bad either!Nice to see someone glorifying drugs!

  17. Sharon says:

    Flipping hilarious!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *