The Province

Vintage bikes revive early dreams

SWAP MEET: North Van man started with cars, but restoring motorcycle­s is his passion

- Alyn Edwards

If you have a vintage Honda motorcycle for sale, take it to the Coastal Swap Meet that runs tomorrow and Saturday at Abbotsford’s Tradex Centre. There is a good chance Gary Hawthorn will snap it up.

He’s been on the hunt ever since buying a 50-year-old Honda motorcycle­s at the 2016 swap meet. The fact that it needed a complete restoratio­n didn’t bother him. He already had half a dozen vintage Honda motorcycle­s. Hawthorn is the co-ordinator for the 150 volunteers from the four local car clubs that put the swap meet on.

The retired mining engineer had walked by the unrestored 1967 Honda CD125 without seeing it. When he sat down later to chat with swap meet chairman Gary Catherwood he pointed at the motorcycle that was behind him. “Did you see that?” he inquired. Hawthorn bought it for $400 to commit it to a total restoratio­n. He had experience restoring the 1937 Packard convertibl­e coupe he has owned for more than 40 years. It is one of only two Canadian-built Packard convertibl­es of that year believed to have survived, and Hawthorn paid $2,000 for the worn-out classic he found in Kamloops in 1975. He also has a 1970s Mercedes Benz convertibl­e and an Opel GT sports car from the early 1970s.

With no more garage space, he thought he would follow his teenage dream of getting a motorcycle. One turned into two and then there were more.

It seems everything people love about motor vehicles stems from their early years. By the age of 16, Hawthorn had saved $25 from his 45 cent-an-hour usher job at the local theatre in St. Catharines, Ontario to buy a cheap James motorcycle. But his mother said no. That ended that. But the dream of owning and riding a motorcycle never left him over nearly 60 years — through marriage, the birth of his three children and mining jobs that took him to many parts of the world.

Finally settling in North Vancouver and becoming a member of the Vancouver Chapter of the Vintage Car Club of Canada, he sought to support the annual swap meet by becoming a member of the committee. The swap meet is prime territory for finding parts for his car and his growing number of motorcycle­s.

Now after 18 months’ work and an outlay of $2,500, the 1967 Honda is a showpiece. He used that bike to pass his “skills test” at the ProRide Motorcycle School at Capilano University and can now ride unescorted with a few limitation­s. The 77-year-old is hoping to pass the road test necessary to get his unlimited motorcycle driver’s license this spring. He can then ride the pair of restored 1972 Honda CB350F motorcycle­s he has finished and eventually some of his remaining projects including 1956 NSU motor scooter.

The swap meet is the best place to find classic vehicles for sale or the most elusive part. Last year, 436 vendors occupied 762 stalls. Approximat­ely 4,500 people will attend the event that runs tomorrow from 2 p.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday hours are from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. For more informatio­n, go to coastalswa­pmeet.com

 ?? ALYN EDWARDS ?? Gary Hawthorn proudly displays the vintage Honda motorcycle­s he has acquired and and restored in the past three years.
ALYN EDWARDS Gary Hawthorn proudly displays the vintage Honda motorcycle­s he has acquired and and restored in the past three years.
 ??  ?? This 1967 Honda CD125 motorcycle was purchased at a past swap meet by Gary Hawthorn.
This 1967 Honda CD125 motorcycle was purchased at a past swap meet by Gary Hawthorn.
 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS: ALYN EDWARDS/DRIVING.CA ?? The pair of 1972 CB350 Four motorcycle­s restored by Gary Hawthorn.
PHOTOS: ALYN EDWARDS/DRIVING.CA The pair of 1972 CB350 Four motorcycle­s restored by Gary Hawthorn.
 ??  ?? The driver’s seat view of the 1972 Honda CB350.
The driver’s seat view of the 1972 Honda CB350.

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