Here is a link to a bunch of pics:
http://s159.photobucket.com/albums/t138/nhmaf/BMWRA%20RALLY%202010%20-%20Vermont/Despite my best laid plans, I had some issues with work and with house projects, so I didn't end up leaving for the BMW RA rally in Pownal VT until late in the afternoon on Friday. Mapquest (I don't need no stinkin GPS !) indicated the straightest/quickest route would be 142 miles and a bit over 3 hours. I had hoped to take some new "scenic" routes there, but as I had also planned to stop by along the way to check out a 1980 R100T for sale in Walpole, NH, I'd need all the daylight hours I could manage. I didn't leave the house until after 4:30 PM - not good, but I still did take the detour to Walpole along the way and ended up spending 2 hours trying to find the place, checking out the bike, etc. The bike may be had for a semi-OK price with more haggling, but will require quite a bit of work to make right (overall quite dirty, leaks at oil pressure switch, neutral switch, final drive, oil contaminated rear brake shoes, clutch lever adjustment issues, valves and carb adjustments/rebuild desperately needed, and it has a bent front rim (not bad, but visually I noticed it. Original paint is in tough shape, but appears OK from 20+ feet away. 1 cracked Krauser bag, one good bag - no keys for Krausers. 80K miles, and MAX BMW had at least replaced the pushrod tube seals and done some minor adjustments. Once running (wouldn't idle well, oil pressure light flickering) and on the road, it wouldactually pull quite strong and the gearbox sounded good - so it has its good points. Still I think I may pass on this and keep eyes open for a diamond that is a bit less "rough". Anyway, Back to business and getting to the rally!
I ended up arriving at the rally at 9:30 PM - it was dark, chilly, and loud music was coming from the interior of the old Pownal horse racing track building/grandstand. No one was still running the check-in table, but as I showed that I had at least already pre-paid/registered they let me come in and camp anyway. I looked for Sue, called her on her cell phone and then promptly discovered that she was looking for me in the parking lot about 50 feet away!!
We had a beer or two in the building listening to the largely unintelligible noise - the band might actually have been semi-OK except for the fact that they were playing a large enclosed room the size of a big warehouse, with cement walls, cement floors, and cement ceilings, and lots of other hard, reflective surfaces and not enough people to provide any acoustic dampening. So, it was echo-city all around. Sue showed me her latest "war wound". Now, I may embellish slightly here, but this is my story and I'm sticking to it until/unless Sue says otherwise... Apparently she enjoys dancing and was dancing with several guys just before I got there, until one of the larger women at the bar decided that she didn't like Sue dancing with her man. A brief but intense scuffle occurred, resulting in Sue flattening the 220 pound opponent to the floor - but not without suffering a cut and bruised nose herself. You guys gotta watch out when Sue has a few beers in her ! ;-) Of course, Canadians are just too darned polite to stay mad at for long, and Sue is no exception. So, Sue’s opponent bought her a beer and apologized, and Sue didn’t have the willingness to press charges, so all was forgiven in the end after a few bottles of Long Trail Ale…
Sue is very happy with her Triumph Bonneville Black - she can easily reach the ground on both sides with sandals on!

I set up my tent near Sue's tent and "enjoyed" counting the number of trains that came through the valley, sounding their horns at the crossing beside the rally site, all night long. I used to love the sound of the freight trains going by in my old home town when I was 8 or 10 and my dad and uncle worked on the railroad. Now, they just wake me up at night when I'd rather sleep.
The rally in general was pretty good! We had perfect weather - cool and fairly clear at night for good sleeping (except for the trains), and in the lower 80s, sunny and dry during the daytime. As I had mentioned earlier, there were approximately 1516 registered attendees, which is OK for an RA rally, but puny compared to even a western MOA rally. The vendors (not a lot of them) seemed eager/hungry for business, and several mentioned that they were told/expecting the attendance to be considerably higher even for this RA rally than it turned out to be.