• Hi everyone,

    As you all know, Coffee (Dean) passed away a couple of years ago. I am Dean's ex-wife's husband and happen to have spent my career in tech. Over the years, I occasionally helped Dean with various tech issues.

    When he passed, I worked with his kids to gather the necessary credentials to keep this site running. Since then (and for however long they worked with Coffee), Woodschick and Dirtdame have been maintaining the site and covering the costs. Without their hard work and financial support, CafeHusky would have been lost.

    Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been working to migrate the site to a free cloud compute instance so that Woodschick and Dirtdame no longer have to fund it. At the same time, I’ve updated the site to a current version of XenForo (the discussion software it runs on). The previous version was outdated and no longer supported.

    Unfortunately, the new software version doesn’t support importing the old site’s styles, so for now, you’ll see the XenForo default style. This may change over time.

    Coffee didn’t document the work he did on the site, so I’ve been digging through the old setup to understand how everything was running. There may still be things I’ve missed. One known issue is that email functionality is not yet working on the new site, but I hope to resolve this over time.

    Thanks for your patience and support!

Learning from Jarvis....

We did have that privilege, it was a great day, right in the El Cajon Zone area of San Diego, Ca. . Very hard to get anywhere near the ease and calm at which Graham does his amazing moves. BTW he was on a 100% OEM stock TC250 (Murrieta Husky USA HQ demo bike), with his muffler, GT216AA front and 300 side panels
This log was one of the easier obstacles for us students follow over. I had more than a few fails on the other stuff. I had no trouble with the log but you can read my body language compared to Graham's he is just so relaxed and loose, I'm all tight in my shoulders!
Graham log.jpgrob log.jpg
 
Lucky for Graham, Earl and I were there to help him pull his bike over the top of this canyon cliff climb. (haha)
He constantly pushed/tested his own boundaries even at the expense of us seeing him fail. I like that , for sure he is great at bowing out gracefully when he does fail, no drama, no bike tossing, no looping out, just calmly step off and hold and think what's next. That is a valuable lesson unto itself. Relax don't panic don't rush-- just stop and think. And never give up, he went back in and blasted up and out after resurveying the climb out.
helping G force.jpg
 
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