Traverse 12 | Page 57

JUMPING JAC FLASH “ So, if it isn’t you who’s getting married Geoff, whose wedding is it?” After a few glasses of rum it didn’t matter that I’d met neither the bride nor the groom. I had mistakenly assumed that when he’d said, “Sissy wants a Cuban wedding. Why don’t you come?”, he meant his Cuban partner Sisella. Only after I’d booked the flight, did he explain that it was her daughter, Sissy, who I’d never met, who was having a beach ceremony near Havana. In 2006, when on my way up through Central America on my Enfield, I considered a detour to Cuba but had a different agenda then. Now, aware that Cuba might be changing and wanting to see it as the Fidel-run communist regime it had been since the 1959 ‘revolutionary awakening’, I asked friends who had been if it was possible to hire motor- bikes in Cuba. TRAVERSE 57 Geoff, a fellow Enfield rider who I’d met on Pakistan’s Karakoram High- way in 2000 and was a long-standing friend, had been a few times and lived with his Cuban partner, Sisella, in Bradford, England. Another travel-mate I’d met in Syria who also became a good friend, put me in touch with his friend who lives and works in Cuba. He had a motorcycle and generously offered to lend it. “Hector isn’t very reliable, but if you’re willing to take the risk ... ", Chris enthused. "By the way, I can’t get anything here, could you bring some spare parts?” It was the least I could do. Taking a couple of sprockets and a bearing or two was more than a fair ex- change for use of his motorcycle. But alarming numbers of things started arriving from places as far apart as China and Derby. A metal mountain blocked the view from my floor-level window. An overhead valve-spring