Watkins Glen Trip Report July
29-31, 2005
Most of us purchased the Miata to enhance our lives, to expand our
world, or to provide escape. What we sometimes overlook is the educational
value of the Miata experience.
Seventeen happy Miatas left Massachusetts on a sunny July morning. The
plan was for a quiet weekend of touring and tasting in mid-state New
York. But as often happens when Miata owners get together, the results
far surpassed the plan!
After a healthy lunch of burgers and chicken served in foil packets, we
were cruising along the New York State Thruway relishing in the delight
of our two-seater fun machines. The traffic was heavy both with folks
rushing home at the end of the long work week, and vacationers like us
who were en route to our tranquil destinations. When that combination
came together, it resulted in our first lessons of the weekend.
A large truck pulling a ditch digging machine on a trailer passed along
side us at a very high rate of speed. For whatever reason, the driver
decided to reenter the travel lane at the very spot that Brenda and Jim
Powers were occupying with their 1999 Miata. The front right tire of
the truck struck the Miata at the driver's door, causing the car to spin
toward the front of the truck. As the truck continued to push the
Miata at this strange angle down the Thruway, the truck driver swerved
left, causing the trailer to overturn and drag the truck into the median
with a cloud of dust and dirt. Jim and Brenda, now free from the huge
tires and bumper of the truck, also spun into the median and continued
to slide along the grass way, pointed toward the passing lane. Thanks
to Jim's driving skills and the superb balance and handling of the
Miata, they did not overturn and when all the dust and dirt subsided, Jim
and Brenda sat in the median strip coughing up dust, but uninjured.
Jim, Brenda and the Miata all performed beautifully, but the Miata was
done for this trip!
What were the lessons of the day? 1) Life can change in an instant,
you have to make the most of every minute because you have no idea what
will happen in the next. 2) The Miata is one hell of a car that can
take on those ten times its size and still hold its own while protecting
its passengers. 3) Traveling with a club increases your fun, enhances
your safety, and it comes in handy in an emergency!
Before you start thinking that this accident was because the Miata was
too small to see, forget it! There was a full line of vehicles of all
sizes that were plainly visible as the truck driver approached. The
Miata was just in the wrong place at the wrong time, but it wasn't about
size.
We all regrouped and continued on with the trip. The next day, the
singles doubled up with the orphaned Jim and Brenda and we met the members
of the Mid-State Miata Club in the parking lot of the hotel. By the
time we left, there were more than 45 Miatas of every year and color
caravanning over beautiful rolling hills and back country roads to the
Watkins Glen Raceway. After lunch and four very fast parade laps around
the track, we left with a better appreciation for the capability of our
cars. The Porsche Club may have rented the track for the day, but I
know they didn't have any more fun than we did! After a stop for some
wine tasting, photographs and conversation, there was a great dinner, a
beautiful sunset and a spirited ride to the hotel under a starry night
sky.
As we gathered for a group photo the next morning, I realized another
lesson of the Miata. The backdrop for our photo was the state prison
adjacent to the parking lot. There it was in stark contrast; the
ultimate loss of freedom in the background, and the obvious celebration of
freedom in the foreground. After the photo we left in different groups,
some taking the fast route home, others the leisurely scenic ride, but
all of us were better for the experience.
Thank you to Bob Lannin for planning and leading this trip and thanks
to Lee Maddy and all the members of the NY Mid-State Miata Club for a
fantastic scenic tour. A special thank you goes to Al and Sheila, Les
Barton, and all the members who came to the aid of Jim and Brenda,
demonstrating once again that the Miata brings out the best people and the
best in people.
If you are one of those members who read the trip reports but have
never participated in a trip or a day ride, you are missing an opportunity
to truly enhance the joy of Miata ownership while learning about the
joys of life. Check the schedule and come along!
I will end with my favorite quote that has heretofore been anonymous,
but I will from this point forward attribute it to Jim and Brenda Powers
as they were sitting in their battered Miata in the Thruway median:
"Life is not a journey to the grave with intentions of arriving safely
in a pretty well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside,
thoroughly used up, totally worn out and loudly proclaiming ... Wow! What a
ride!"
Brian Rust