Tuesday, 7 July 2026

The Temptation of the Cruising Plodder

I was idly scrolling through Facebook Marketplace when I came across a 1991 Yamaha Virago 535. Cream. Chrome. Twin-cylinder. Shaft drive. £1,300. It sat there on the screen looking quiet, faintly pleased with itself and not remotely interested in proving anything.



This, of course, is precisely the sort of motorcycle I now find dangerous. Not dangerous in the usual way, with savage acceleration, poor brakes and a rear tyre made from ambition. Dangerous because it looks reasonable.

I've been vaguely thinking about another bike for a while, mainly to take with us when away in the motorhome to give us more reach than a couple of bicycles. A Honda Gold Wing appeals, because obviously what every man needs is a two-wheeled sofa with reverse gear, stereo speakers and enough mass to affect the tides. Sadly, they're too heavy. A Triumph Rocket 3 also appeals, because I still have some idiocy left in me, but that's also too heavy and still too expensive. A Triumph America or Thunderbird would do nicely, but they remain stubbornly outside the sensible end of the market. Even a Bonneville now seems to require either a larger pension or a more forgiving bank manager than I currently possess.

Then there's a Dnepr, which appeals for all the wrong reasons. A Soviet-sidecar-shaped act of mechanical self-harm. Agricultural, eccentric, heroic and almost certainly a gateway to standing in the rain beside a leaking final drive muttering about parts availability.

My limit, in the unlikely event that common sense briefly leaves the building, is about £2,000. Preferably £1,000. Which is not so much a motorcycle budget as a polite enquiry at the gates of disappointment.

There's also the small matter of my 71-year-old's built-in aversion to Japanese bikes. I was brought up to believe that only Triumphs, BSAs and Ariels were real motorcycles, and everything from Japan was a suspicious appliance with indicators. This was, of course, nonsense, but it was very strongly held nonsense, which is much the same thing in British motorcycling circles.

Mind you, the rot may already have set in. 3 years ago I bought a 50cc Mobylette moped for about £400. I told myself it wasn't really a motorcycle. More of a historical curiosity. A French bicycle that had somehow acquired an engine. The sort of thing a sensible retired man could own without alarming anybody.


In practice, I rode it about 3 times. For most of the 3 years it was either awaiting parts, leaking petrol from its carburettor or giving every indication that French engineering had been conceived as an elaborate practical joke. A few weeks ago I sold it for £700, thereby accidentally making a profit from mechanical incompetence. Unfortunately, this has done nothing to discourage me. If anything, it has reinforced the dangerous belief that motorcycles can somehow be justified as investments.

And yet there it was, this little Yamaha, quietly undermining decades of inherited prejudice by looking affordable, tidy and unlikely to strand me in a lay-by.

20 years ago I had a Honda Shadow 600, and I liked it. Low, comfortable, friendly, not especially fast, and not constantly whispering, go on then, you coward. That sort of bike suits me. A cruising plodder. The motorcycle equivalent of an armchair with a modest exhaust note.

Back when I first met Hayley, I used to ride it from Caversham Marina, where I kept my boat, to Old Sodbury to see her. It was one of those journeys that suited the bike perfectly. Just settle into the inside lane at a steady 60 mph, listen to the engine doing its thing and watch the miles drift by. No drama, no heroics, no attempt to arrive first. Just the simple pleasure of being on a motorcycle heading somewhere you wanted to be.

That, I suspect, is why the Virago caught my eye. At my age, I am no longer shopping for excitement. Excitement has an unfortunate habit of involving hospitals. What appeals now is comfort, character and the ability to arrive with all the original body parts still attached.

I also used to have a Triumph Daytona 955i, which was a rather different proposition. Beautiful, fast, muscular, and perfectly capable of encouraging a man to overestimate both his ability and the coefficient of friction available on a roundabout. I came off it on one. Roundabouts are where motorcyclists go to meet diesel, gravel, white paint and physics, usually in that order and without a formal introduction.


I nearly ripped my thumb off in the process and, luckily, there was nothing coming in the opposite direction, as I ended up on the other side of the road. This did not improve the domestic case for continued motorcycling. My wife, applying the sort of calm risk assessment normally missing from male hobbies, banned me from motorcycles. Strictly speaking, this was less a law carved in stone and more a suggestion written in oil.

So perhaps the universe is trying to tell me something. Not loudly, because the universe has seen my garage and knows shouting is pointless, but quietly, in the shape of a cream Yamaha Virago.

The Virago doesn't pretend to be a sports bike. It doesn't pretend to cross continents. It doesn't come with 6 riding modes, a heated dashboard and a computer asking how assertive you feel today. It just sits there saying: I can take you to a cafe, make a pleasant noise, and probably not involve paramedics.

It knows what it is. A simple Japanese cruiser from the era before every object had to come with a lifestyle attached. Shaft drive. Low seat. V-twin burble. Enough chrome to cheer a man up, but not so much that he starts wearing tassels, talking about freedom and reading Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, which I have actually read.

The problem, as ever, is Facebook Marketplace. The bike may be sane, but the environment in which it is being sold is not. Marketplace is less a buying and selling site than a long-term study into the collapse of language.

Is this available?

Yes.

Silence.

Best price?

No greeting. No words wasted. Just 2 words dragged from the cave wall and hurled into the void.

I was tempted to message the seller and ask whether it was left or right hand drive. Not because I needed to know. I just wanted to establish whether there was still a functioning human being at the other end of the transaction.

And once that bond had been formed, I could move on to the serious questions.

"Can you deliver to Ulan Bator?"

"Will it fit in the lift of a 3rd-floor flat?"

"Has it ever been submerged?"

"Do all the wheels come with it?"

At that point the seller would either block me immediately or become a lifelong friend. There is very little middle ground.

In the end I resisted. For now.

The GT6 is still in pieces, the garage is already full, and there is a limit to how many charming mechanical nuisances one retired man can justify. Though admittedly, nobody has yet established what that limit is, and £1,300 for a tidy old Virago is a dangerous little number to leave unattended.


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