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How does your garden grow?

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Back in 2014 CMM was approached by the Suzuki Apprentice Centre in Doncaster. They asked us to follow their restoratio­n on a 1990 GSX-R1100L, which would eventually result in a full road-test in this very organ.

This would be a strip-down and restoratio­n of this legendary machine, the aim of which was to teach the young apprentice­s all about sorting out ‘old’ rather than ‘new’ bikes – after all, many would go to their Suzuki dealership­s and never see a bike this old and quite this tarnished! The finished machine would be road-tested in CMM and raise some money for charity – more of which later.

Tim Davies from Suzuki GB’s Vintage Parts Programme knows the bike as it belonged to his brother Howard Davies before being sold to his friend Stuart Baker, who rode it until 2003 when he left it in his garden, before sadly passing away in 2013 from Marfan Syndrome. The bike was salvaged from the garden after a decade (literally) in the wilderness and with flora and fauna growing through and in it. With the blessing of Stuart’s wife Tracie it was bought and restored, and has since raised a fair few quid in memory of

Stuart, while also highlighti­ng the brilliant job that the Vintage Parts Programme does with selling parts for our favourite old Suzuki classics.

Interestin­gly, for such a hefty lump of a bike, this GSX-R1100L had even been club raced back in the early 1990s, before going on the road and then being left in the garden.

Tim Davies explains: “When we went to collect the bike we couldn’t even find it. It was completely overgrown with foliage and so much of it had rotted away!”

The bike, rusted and covered in moss and mould, was given to Suzuki’s Apprentice Centre in Doncaster as a perfect restoratio­n project and has since been brought back to its former glory with a lot of help from the Vintage Parts team. It’s now a stunning example of a 1990 model.

Tim adds: “This bike has been a great tool for us to show how many parts are available for various Suzuki classic motorcycle­s and it was a great learning process for the many young apprentice­s who worked on the bike over the course of a year or so.

“We took the bike to the Motorcycle LIVE event, as well as classic shows and, of course, the recent Sywell Pistons and Props weekend.”

It is hoped the completed bike will be sold or raffled in aid of the Marfan Trust, so if you want to make a donation to the Marfan Foundation go to: www.marfantrus­t.org

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