Finish Line For The Jolly Rogers -- Development And Falling Membership Are Checkered Flags For A Seattle Motorcycle Club And The Dirt Trails It Blazed

An old sign calls out like a friendly wave along a country road: This way to the track. Carmen Tom turns down a dirt path and burrows south of the Seattle city line into the leafy mosh pits of undeveloped Kent.

Past a few forlorn houses.

Through a swinging iron gate.

And finally, to a lonely 10-acre clearing of dips and bogs, as wide and breathtaking as a mountain summit.

"Gosh, it's pretty back here," Tom says.

At 73, Carmen Tom is one of the last surviving members of the Jolly Rogers Motorcycle Club. His gait is stiff and penguinesque, the result of an arthritic knee. No longer committed to his two-wheeler, he climbs out of a shiny Volkswagen Beetle and admires the club's onetime playground - trails of dirt track rising and falling and curling like uncoiled rope across the terrain. It almost seems to move.

But it's deathly quiet, and the silence is all wrong - like a prizefighter laid up in a rest home, or a baby grand wheeled out with the trash. This crumbling Roman Colosseum of the natural-dirt track world is in the process of being sold, with plans for redevelopment.

In its heyday, it was a buzzing hornets' nest of leather and oil and youthful charioteers in rolled-up jeans and buckled boots. The Jolly Rogers once numbered a hundred, including a women's division and a stunt-and-drill team that rode white Harleys in the Seafair parade, just like the Seattle Cossacks.

On a good day, races would draw 500 riders and their families,

and the winners would be in the paper the next morning. Motorcycling was a big deal then; from Bellingham to Portland, clubs like the Barons and the Sidewinders and the Ducks held court in dusty palaces. The Jolly Rogers' real trophy, however, was their hellacious hill climb, a 420-foot-high slalom that the most daring riders attempted to scale with mighty jolts of juice. The rise was considered formidable enough that the Jollies hosted a national hill-climb competition in 1964.

But those days are gone. The old-style clubs have either died out or run out of gas fighting encroaching development and zoning restriction. If you really want to trail ride, they say, you have to go to Eastern Washington.

The Seattle Motorcycle Club, which has leased the Jolly Rogers' track for the last 40 years, is on life support, with nowhere to go if the site closes. (The track is also used by Tacoma's Ready to Ride program for inner-city youth.) And with only four remaining members - one died last year, another the year before - even the Jolly Rogers themselves are running on fumes.

It's a far cry from their days as one of the Northwest's premier motorcycle clubs. The looming demise of the track they once called home, the last of its breed within a 90-mile radius of Seattle, spells the end of a lifestyle for which metropolitan growth was a hill too high to conquer.

At one with the bike

Her sentences fall like timber. But her somber moods are offset by lively, lighter memories, and in those moments, Lila Bulen is smiling and chirpy. Her husband, Ken, died in October 1997 of chronic emphysema, but he lives on in the pictures and programs that pass through her quivering fingers.

They were married six weeks short of 68 years, many of them spent in this stately Mount Baker home overlooking Lake Washington. He did right by her, he did. She cocks her head wistfully, looking at the view.

They were Franklin High sweethearts - Lila a 16-year-old freshman, Ken a 20-year-old senior.

"When we were going together, he said to me, `My parents won't let me have a motorcycle.'

"I said: `I'll let you have a motorcycle.' "

So they rolled into marriage, and when he rode, he and the bike were one. She loved tagging along, hugging him from behind as they zipped from race to race. It's enough to make an 85-year-old great-grandmother forget she now needs a walker just to get from the living room to the kitchen.

Around 1941, she and Ken had gone camping when a fellow rider, a stick of dynamite named Woody Combs, rode up, headlights aimed at the skies. Woody and Ken sat by the campfire and talked about how the Queen City Motorcycle Club, with its track near the King/Snohomish county border, catered mainly to North End riders; it was time the South End had a club of its own.

"That's how Jolly Rogers was born," Lila Bulen says. The dagger-biting pirate they chose as the club's symbol was borrowed from nearby Highline High.

At the time, motorcycle events like the Gypsy Tours at Long Beach, Pacific County, were grassroots family occasions with picnic lunches. At races, guys would slap numbered plates on cheap trail bikes and fortify their thin, fighter-pilot headgear with football masks. Any kid could imagine himself a future Red Farwell, one of the sport's kings, just by stepping outside.

"It seemed like any neighborhood, you could just go down to the corner and ride in a vacant lot," says Ted Abernethy, owner of Motorcycle Works of Renton, who first won a race at Jolly Rogers in 1972. "But most of the areas we rode in are closed now. It was killer back then."

With miles of scenic roadways, the Northwest was a popular place to ride. "Guys would come up from California and ride our track, our hills," says Larry Poitras, one of the Jolly Rogers' charter members. "This is better hill country, anyway. The dirt's better. Down there it's just like putting the desert at a slant."

And before the brush fires of development caught up with them, Seattle's wildlands were fair territory for two-wheeled explorers. That's how Woody Combs stumbled onto the property that would become the Jollies' site. He approached the aging potato farmer who owned the land; club members chipped in for the down payment. Final cost: $1,500.

With two horses and a plow, they carved out a small dust bowl for riding loops. Then came a larger track for racing. It was 1943. Larry Poitras, partial to Indian Scouts, remembers: "We would go out there every night in the summer on our Indians and Harleys and ride around in the bowl," he says.

They played a game called Caveman Soccer. Riders would mount their bikes, then another guy would get on with a balloon tied behind his neck and a rolled-up newspaper in hand. They'd all buzz around in circles, trying to knock opponents out of the game by breaking their balloons. Some were so competitive they'd pre-soak their newspapers in wax or hide sticks inside to make them harder.

"It got pretty hairy," says local motorcycle historian Tom Samuelson. "Guys would beat the hell out of each other."

The first concession stand was a counter set under a big maple tree offering hamburgers and pop until the county health department blew a gasket. One of the Jollies set up an old water heater and installed a basin so people could wash their hands.

Race cards were loaded with guys named "K.C." and "Red" - notably Red Farwell of Tacoma, a real sportsman who won the Jolly Rogers' first 5/8-mile race and insisted the prize money be distributed among all the racers. But in 1952, at age 40, Farwell became the first rider killed at the annual Daytona Beach run, a well-known 200-mile race in which he'd finished second the year before.

"That was a hell of a blow," Poitras says. "Guys were blowing their noses and everything."

The club's glue

Ken Bulen relished the club he'd co-founded. Lila Bulen, meanwhile, became the only woman to immerse herself in the life, taking on the role of publicity director. Throughout the years, it would be the Bulens who would hold the Jolly Rogers together, who hung in during the dry spells. "They were the stabilizers of the club," Poitras says.

Lila went out to the university and took a course on promotions and learned what you do. You hustle. You get your word out. You prove reliable.

Here's a 1952 program, with ads for Ivar's and the Two Bells Tavern, where the Jollies would meet for beers. Inside, on one cover, an ad for Poke's Motorcycle - Larry Poitras' Indian shop - on Capitol Hill; inside the other, an ad for (Carmen) Tom's Cycle in the South End.

Lila did that. And this, too: a newspaper ad for the hill climb, admission a dollar and a half, kids under 12 free, boasting, "Thrills! Spills! Chills!"

Says Poitras, now 76, with hydraulic eyebrows and a disheveled pompadour: "West of the Mississippi, that hill is it. There was no other real hills in Seattle before the Jolly Rogers. The others were just little ding-a-lings."

Looking at it now, the slant seems impossible, maybe a 50-degree angle. It's a plunging groove that strikes you first as the result of stormwater runoff until you see the propped-up board that served as starting point for riders hellbent on rocketing to its 420-foot summit.

Carved out of the tree-dotted hillside by a nervous guy on a bulldozer, it is reputedly the highest hill climb in the West outside of one owned by the Widowmakers Motorcycle Club in Utah. There had been other hill climbs, like Queen Anne's Counterbalance or others in Lake Forest Park, Granite Falls and Portland - but this was the one picked by the American Motorcycling Association for its national hill climb in 1964, the only time Washington state has hosted the event other than 1924's national at Paradise, Mount Rainier.

Over the years, folks would come from as far as Canada to see the gutsy racers lurch and swagger up the incline, carloads of fans parked below and honking like maniacs when bikes would clear the rise.

Riders who didn't make it to the top would have a hell of a time getting back down, but their bikes would fare worse if the squads posted at the climb's margins couldn't snag them with tautly pulled ropes to keep them from skidding down the hill.

The crowds loved it - and so did the Jolly Rogers, for whom those 10 acres weren't just a place to hold events but to camp and get away from it all. For them, motorcycling was a way of life, so much so that they vowed the site would never be used for anything but the sport.

"It was a wonderful time of my life," Lila Bulen says now. "I dearly loved it."

Now all those programs with ads she sold, all those articles that were written thanks to her publicity efforts, all the pictures she collected, are stuffed in boxes. It must have been interesting, you think, to have been meeting all those people, but no, she says, that's not what kept her going at all.

"I was keeping Ken happy," she says, stifling a cry. "I did it for love."

A different sport now

After the sport peaked in the 1970s, the club began to fade. Young riders, the hope of the future, came to meetings but didn't pay their dues. The Jolly Rogers even discontinued their Seafair floats; they'd run out of girls to be queen.

Says Carmen Tom: "We all got to be so old that we couldn't put on meets anymore."

Meanwhile, dirt biking has enjoyed a renaissance that has left old-style, low-tech bikers in its dust. Walk into motorcycle gear shops and you'll see stylishly disorienting, slow-motion footage of high-flying, faceless riders as colorfully garbed as tropical frogs, their high jinks accompanied by ear-ripping alternative rock music. It's a skateboarders' sport now.

"I haven't seen it this popular since the mid- to late 1970s," says Abernethy, the Renton shop owner. "Which is amazing, considering there's no place to ride."

Tracks once aswarm with mud-spattered bikes in places such as Tacoma, Woodinville and Puyallup are gone, some turned into shopping centers, as land became too valuable to hold on to, neighbors too wary of noise.

Now you can't poke your treads anywhere off-road without running into signs threatening fines and jail time for trespassing. The sport has been displaced, from once-accessible public lands to privately owned ones.

"That's getting to be the only way to do it," Abernethy says. "Just hoping there's an open-practice day."

Carmen Tom, who has built himself a comfortable life as founder of Downtown Harley-Davidson, says the sale would never have happened had Kenny Bulen still been alive. The old man would get so worked up at meetings over the very idea of selling that Tom thought Bulen would have a heart attack right there at the table. But with his death, everything began to unravel.

With surrounding properties falling prey to developers, Tom says the club's aging members saw little point in fighting. The zest and vows of their youth had wilted under old age, the lure of money and painful David-and-Goliath realities.

"Probably the hardest thing in the world was for me to agree to let the property be sold," Lila Bulen says. "This was my husband's dream. I never could have signed to let it go had he survived."

No one is discussing price tags, but it's a sure bet Polygon, the Eastside developer buying the property, is offering more than the $1,500 it took to buy it 60 years ago. Still, the riders say it couldn't pay for the memories left by old-timers who once raced here.

"Those guys'd be rolling in their damn graves if they knew what was going on," Larry Poitras says.

Carmen Tom shuffles along the dirt in the looping pantomime of the fading track where he taught his four boys to race. The site is strewn with litter, the dips mud-bogged, the wooden bleachers cracked and faded. The snack bar and control tower are laced with graffiti leveled at Polygon with what might delicately be called criticism.

"I don't blame them," Tom says. "We had a nice track. A nice hill."

He and members of the Seattle Motorcycle Club have been scouring the county for possible relocation sites, to no avail.

"It's a shame to see it go," says SMC president Rick Harpster. "We've all got a big tear in our eye."

Says Carmen Tom: "It's a dirty crime to shut it down. I just hate to see it die."

Marc Ramirez's phone message number is 206-464-8102. His e-mail address is: mramirez@seattletimes.com