Tag Archives: Fantic

A Quick Chat with Hedley Ashford

(Not strictly an interview undertaken by Mike Naish, but certainly in that vein and from the same part of the world!)

Words: Trials Guru & Hedley Ashford

Photos: Ashford Family; Hugh Hunter Collection, Fort William; Linda Ashford; Mike Rapley and Iain Lawrie.

We chat with a resident of Street in Somerset, a large village which had two famous all-round off-road competitors to its credit. The first being the late P.H. ‘Jim’ Alves who owned the local garage in the 1950s and 60s. He was of course a Triumph factory rider who was ACU Trials Star holder in 1950, the equivalent of British Trials Champion at that time. Alves was the first to compete on a works Triumph ‘Terrier’ 150cc, the forerunner of the Tiger Cub. He was very successful on the factory’s twin cylinder machines, both in national trials and the ISDT.

Triumph works rider, P.H. ‘Jim’ Alves at the 1951 SSDT – Photo: Hugh Hunter Collection

Jim Alves was at his height of his trials career when our subject was just an infant, he was actually born in Ashcott, Somerset, an eleven-minute bus journey from Street, in 1948 the youngest of four boys. His name of course is Hedley Ashford.

Trials Guru: How did you get into motorcycle sport Hedley?

Hedley Ashford: “When I was thirteen, a neighbour and I would ‘borrow a BSA B34 from a man who lived in the village, who only found out about a year after we’d been riding it. Luckily, he was fine about it.”

“I was still at school, weekends would find me riding around in a field, which was good fun, that’s where I got the bug for bikes.”

TG: What was your main source of income?

HA: “I became an apprentice joiner with a builder in Street called Ernie Blake, then I moved to another builder, Bert Steven and finally to my last employment with Chris Edgar, before I retired in 2013.”

TG: What was your first event and what did you ride?

HA: “My first motorcycle event was a Time Trial at High Ham in 1966, not far from where I lived, on a borrowed Triumph Tiger Cub, I was going to buy this bike. Unfortunately, the man who was selling it changed his mind but still let me ride it in the event, I won the Novice award.”

TG: And after that Novice win, what made you carry on?

HA: “In 1967 I went to see Bryan ‘Badger’ Goss and was looking at a 250 Greeves Anglian with the prospect of buying it, having only just started working I didn’t really have the funds, so I asked my older brother, John if he would lend me the money, which he was happy to do but said why not go to Wyverns in Bridgwater and buy a brand new Bultaco Sherpa? I only kept this bike for a few months before trading it in for a motocross Husqvarna 250. I rode against Badger many times when I scrambled and got on well with him.”

Hedley Ashford with the 250 Bultaco M27, before he took up riding scrambles. (Photo: Ashford Family Collection)

TG: What was your first scrambles event?

HA: “My first event was at Witham Friary, Near Frome, in the first race I finished in third place. I then rode for three months in Somerset, Wiltshire, Devon and Cornwall where I had accumulated enough points to move up to Expert Status.”

TG: You are a married man, was there any motorcycling involved?

HA: “Yes there was actually, soon after, I met my wife, Linda at a scrambles meeting at Witham Friary in 1968, she was spectating with a motorcyclist family friend. We got married in November 1972 and have three children, two girls and a boy, Trevor who followed in my footsteps as a trials rider. Both our daughters have dabbled in trials as well, the eldest having a nasty accident at a trial resulting in a damaged knee, one still rides bikes, following me around at events. Linda lived at nearby Compton Dundon and had a Vespa scooter at the time; I bought a Triumph Tiger 110 to do my courting.”

Linda and Hedley Ashford (250 Husqvarna) at a scrambles event at Witham Friary in 1968 – Photo: Ashford Family Collection.

TG: Which was your favourite event when you rode in scrambles?

HA: “I was riding a Bass Charrington sponsored scramble at Sigwells, run by Somerton MCC, I came second to Ross Frazer, I would have loved to have got my name on the Trophy. I competed in scrambles at Wick, Glastonbury, I think there was a British GP of Great Britain at that venue, possibly around 1965.”

TG: Was there any special friends when you were racing?

HA: “I lived across the road from Stan, Barb and their son Roy Frampton who also rode in scrambles, and they would take me to events with them. I rode under number 86 and Roy was 85.”

Hedley Ashford gets the power down on his 250 Husqvarna (Photo Ashford Family Collection)

TG: Which clubs were you a member of?

HA: “I was a member of the Tor Motorcycle Club, it’s now disbanded, Somerton MCC, Mendip Vale, Yeo Vale, plus many more which quite a few are still around today.”

Hedley Ashford aboard his 247 Montesa Cota in 1971 – Photo: Ashford Family Collection)

TG: You moved away from scrambles, when was that?

HA: “I ended my scrambles career in 1970, due to financial reasons, selling my Husqvarna and buying a Montesa Cota, I was riding a local trial and got chatting to another rider on a Bultaco 250 with a Miller Frame, we changed bikes to have a play on, he preferred my Montesa, I liked his Bultaco, so we did a straight swap. Later, in 1973, I bought a BSA B50 from Terry Cox at Keinton Mandeville to give motocross another go, but trials was by now my thing. Terry was one of Somerset’s best motocross riders at the time.”

Number 86 Hedley Ashford on the Terry Cox supplied BSA in 1973 (Photo: Ashford Family Collection)

TG: Did you ever compete in the SSDT?

HA: “I have never ridden the Scottish Six Days in my trials riding career, I was sponsored by Fantic who wanted me to ride in the Fantic Team, but my place was then given to Jaume Subira the Spanish factory rider. In a way I was quite relieved as there would have been a lot of pressure on me to do well.”

Jaume Subira (Fantic) seen here on Muirshearlich in the 1981 SSDT, took Hedley Ashford’s place in the Fantic Team – Photo: Iain Lawrie, Kinlochleven

TG: Which was your favourite bike?

HA: “Out of all the bikes that I’ve ridden over the years, I think at the time the Husqvarna was my favourite machine.”

Hedley Ashford’s favourite machine was this 250 Husqvarna from 1967.

TG: Was there anyone you particularly respected when competing?

HA: “Nobody in particular, that I can think of, I suppose I just wanted to do the best I could against whoever I was riding against. I was particularly friendly with Geoff Parken, Martin Strang, Nibs Kellett Graham Baker and latterly his son, Joe Baker.”

Geoff Parken (325 Bultaco) watched by Alan Wright on the left and Norman Shepherd at the back on the right. – Photo copyright: Mike Rapley

TG: Any particular incident that you recall?

HA: “I used to ride at a place called ‘Combe Hollow’ with Martin, Geoff, Gary Marshman and a few others. One day in late 1984 this guy turned up in a pickup with a mono-shock framed Bultaco called the ‘MonoTaco’ in the back. I think his name was Pete Neale.”

Press Cutting [1]

“I think we all rode it, but I was the only one that jumped over the others for a photo that appeared in TMX News.”

Hedley Ashford aboard a 325 Bultaco in 1978 (Photo: Ashford Family Collection)

TG: Was there anything that helped you be successful as a trials rider?

HA: “As I said earlier, I was sponsored by Fantic, being ACU Wessex Centre Champion three years in succession, 1980 through to 1982. I was given a new bike every six months plus riding kit.”

Dick Comer on a Yamaha TY250 – Photo: Mike Rapley

“Dick Comer who was a motorcycle dealer at Lydford on the Fosse, he put my name forward to Roy Cary at South Essex Leisure who imported the Fantic, he then sponsored me, then Mike Hann took over from Dick Comer.”

With Mike Hann of Bishops Caundle: Geoff Parken; Hedley Ashford; Nibs Kellett and Mike Hann.

TG: Any plans for the future?

HA: “At the moment, I don’t ride so much as I’m waiting for a hip replacement, I’m hoping once it’s done then I’ll get back to riding at a slightly higher level than I am at the moment.”

In the winnings – Hedley Ashford; Steve Bryant and Ian Baker – Photo: Linda Ashford.

A Quick Chat with Hedley Ashford is the copyright of Trials Guru.

Credits:

Trials & Motocross News – Press Cutting: 14 December 1984 [1]

Apart from ‘Fair Dealing’ for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988, no part of this article may be copied, reproduced, stored in any form of retrieval system, electronic or otherwise or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical, mechanical, optical, chemical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the author as stated above. This article is not being published for any monetary reward or monetisation, be that online or in print.

Mike Hann chats with Mike Naish

Words: Mike Hann & Mike Naish.

Photos: Mike Naish; Linda Ashford; Glenn Carney; Mike Rapley.

This is a profile, which dates back to 2007, of one of the most pleasant riders you would ever wish to meet. Enthusiastic, courteous, friendly, always willing to lend a hand. Somebody who encouraged young riders to take up the sport; an organiser, co-ordinator and course plotter. A rider who at sixty-six was the oldest rider in the South West Centre, and performing well at that. Who could have a bad word to say about a real genuine gentleman? Mike Hann.

Mike Hann (325 Bultaco) – Photo: Mike Rapley

Mike Naish: Have you always lived in Dorset, and how did you become interested in motorcycles?

Mike Hann: “I was born in the small Dorset village of Leigh near Sherbourne in 1941. My grandparents and parents were very keen motorcycling families and my father was an excellent engineer. He had been in the Royal Signals during the war and was captured by the Japanese in Singapore. During his captivity he was made to work on the Burma railway. I did not see him until he came home after the war when I was seven years old. He was an enthusiastic motorcyclist but all his bikes were road going models.

Every evening all the local bikers would gather at our house, drink tea and coffee, maintain their bikes and of course all the talk was about bikes, so I suppose it was inevitable that I would become interested. I saw in them a great sense of comradeship and I was learning lots from an early age.”

“When I was about thirteen, along with Badger Goss and Tony Chant, we joined the legendary grass tracker, Lew Coffin as trainee assistants at his parent’s place at Pond Farm, Hillfield. We worked five days a week for no money because Lew said it was ‘training’. Lew had a spare stock bike which we used to share at grass track meetings. Badger was useless as a mechanic but as you know he became a world class competitor joining first Cotton and then Greeves. My father and I looked after Badger’s machinery in his early days.”

“Tony was excellent at both grass and scrambles but he used to annoy Lew by going out at ten o’clock at night to see his girlfriend. Lew reckoned that if you were going to be dedicated to bikes there was no time for anything else. I enjoyed my time with Lew, he taught me a lot.”

MN: Apart from the odd grass track, what was your first competition bike?

MH: “At fourteen, I joined Yeo Vale and Somerton Clubs and very soon became involved in the running of events which I still am today. In 1957 I purchased my first scrambles bike, a 250 Greeves that was followed through my scrambling period by a succession of Husqvarna and Maicos. In 1958 I started work as an apprentice motor mechanic. This enabled me to afford to start scrambling which I did until the mid 70s when it was motocross.”

Mike Hann struggles to control his wayward 250 Greeves at a South West scramble.

MN: Any highlights you want to share?

MH: “Reaching good ‘Expert’ status.  Scoring two British Championship points at a South Molton British Championship round and winning a support race at a Farleigh Castle World Grand Prix in the 1960s. After a short engagement of ten Years, I married my wife Evelyn. It cost me seven shillings and six pence, thats thirty-seven and a half new pence.  She was a farmer’s daughter, excellent value for money, because we also gained three family farm venues for trials which we still use today. Not bad hey?”

Mike Hann aboard his 400 Maico in 1974.

“It was in about 1973 that I had an unfortunate crash in a support race at a winter TV Grandstand meeting. It left me with a nasty broken leg and thigh damage. I missed half of a season being repaired and as much as I tried I could never quite get back into it. It was no longer enjoyable. This coincided with a new daughter and I had started the garage business at Bishops Caundle. Before that I had worked for ten years at Yeovil Technical College teaching motor vehicle maintenance. Common sense and family advice prevailed, motocross ceased and the magical world of trials began.”

Mike Hann guns his 250 Husqvarna.

                                                                                                 

MN: So how did you start your trials career?

MH: “I met up with my long standing friend Keith ‘Ringo’ Ring and then started the long uphill climb up the trials ladder. Although good riders made it look easy we both found trials a lot harder than we first anticipated. Our local heroes at that time were Martin Strang, Geoff Parken and Hedley Ashford. They seemed to win an event on about ten marks lost and we took simply ages to get under one hundred marks. Remember, no dual routes in those days!”

Mike trialling an early model 10 250cc Bultaco Sherpa.

MN: How did you find trials compared with scrambling?

MH: “Right from the very beginning of my trials it was the sense of help from others and the general friendliness of everyone which was very apparent and different from motocross-which is still very true today. As I have already said we found trials at the start very difficult, but after quite a long time we eventually worked our way to ‘Non Expert’ and then ‘Expert’ status. Because I am living in Sherborne Dorset, I am officially resident in the Southern Centre ACU but right from the very beginning I have always considered myself a South West Centre person. I always loved my scrambling days as much as anyone but the magic of the trials world is absolutely the tops with me which of course includes all the people within it.”

Mike Hann on a Bultaco riding ‘Ruby Rocks’ – Photo: Mike Rapley

MN: You have competed the SSDT a number of times?

MH: “Yes, our Yeo Vale chairman in the early days was the well known Percy Butler. We all admired his dedication to the club and the South West Centre; he was admired by all who knew him. This was with the exception at some of the South West Centre board meetings because when Percy was there you knew it was going to be a long evening!

I always remember Percy saying to me “Son, thee can’t call thee sell a trials rider till thee have ridden and finished the Scottish Six Days Trial”.

Mike Hann tackles ‘Fersit’ on his 240 Fantic in the 1984 Scottish Six Days Trial.

“Yes Percy” I replied, “OK, if that’s what it takes Percy, then that’s what it will be”. Well I tried to make entries in 1976, through to 1979, but all were refused as the event was full up. Then in 1980 that special Edinburgh letter said ‘YES’ riding number 180. What the hell have I done now I thought, as the realisation dawned? There was no backing out and I really did not know what I was letting myself into.  That was the start of ten superb Scottish Six Days that I rode in with enough good memories to keep me going for ever. It included two retirements and I can never thank Percy enough for urging me to enter in the first place.”

The Fantic 301 of Thierry Michaud at the 1986 SSDT – Photo: Glenn Carney

MN: What about your bike dealership?

MH: “From 1980 to 1990 I was a Fantic trials main dealer. I loved every second of it but it took up lots of my time and in reality it was difficult to keep going with the main garage. Sadly when my parents passed away a tough decision had to be made, the garage earned my bread and butter and the bikes didn’t, so regrettably the Fantic Agency had to go.  I have to say that during those ten years the Fantic importer Roy Cary and his wife Helen were absolutely fantastic. For example in 1981 a spectator stole my riding jacket at the top of Pipeline, having put it at the ‘ends cards’ prior to riding the section. Mrs Cary was there and insisted I use her own coat to continue the event. That was beyond the call of duty. Following this I have been privileged to take part in six Pre65 Scottish events in total, with a variety of machinery, and once again my good friend Jack Coles allowed me to use his beautiful 500 Ariel, a machine which I rated as perhaps the best bike I have ever ridden.” 

Mike Hann on ‘Pipeline’ in the Pre65 Scottish Trial on the 500 Ariel HT5.

“In fact I did actually own it for a short time but a long standing back injury incurred a few years prior made riding the Ariel continuously a very painful exercise, so Jack had it back.”

Mike Hann, seen here on a 240 model, will always be associated with the Italian Fantic marque, having ridden and sold them for many years at Bishops Caundle.

MN: Do you run any road bikes?

MH: “I love the older bikes and am a very keen member of the Dorset Vintage Club and sometimes take part in their club runs on my 1929 BSA 350.  My brother Rodney, a retired policeman is chairman of the Vintage Club and in my capacity of car and bike MOT testing I get my oily hands on some very exotic machinery which I really enjoy. I consider myself lucky to be able to compete in the South West for fifty two years continuously and above all still very much like to get up early on a Sunday morning to meet the Yeo Vale gang and centre friends and enjoy another good days sport.  I am often asked ‘What are the highlights of your trials life?’ and my immediate reply is ‘Every Sunday’.  I am not afraid to admit that no one enjoys their sport more than I do.”

Mike Hann on a 1921 Sunbeam 1000cc vee-twin taking part in the Banbury Road Run.

MN: What do you think of the Pre65 scene?

MH: “My father was often Clerk of the Course for the Yeo Vale trials and I was helping him one day when he said to his helpers ‘Let’s get the Experts to ride over this part of the fallen tree and the rest of the entry over this lower part’.  That was the very beginning of the dual sections and now of course many times a triple route. In the sixties and seventies when single route sections were the norm you very rarely saw competitors over forty years old, but look at us now with multi route sections, we are all catered for which perhaps is the best and most sensible thing to happen to our sport.”

TALMAG Trial action from Mike Hann on a Matchless.

“One side of our sport which really saddens me is the mad mad world of Pre65 British bike trials, you could write a whole book on the subject. But when you have a section of people spending £12,000 building up an exotic engineered super bike and then entering it in a Pre65 event when the original cost was £300 it is a complete sad joke. The premier event is obviously the Scottish Pre-65 Two day and you could correct the situation overnight if you gave the awards to the competitors whose machine is in the correct spirit of the pre-65 movement.”

MN: And what of the future?

MH: “At sixty six and feeling sixteen you certainly appreciate much more all the things we take for granted. We appreciated our fortunate health, also the massive amount of club work, the observers, the help and support from my wife and family. Every Sunday I am riding Evelyn is running the garage forecourt. A customer recently asked me what I am going to do when I retire from the Garage. I said I would like to be a professional Trials rider and to be sponsored by my wife. She said that she had been doing that for years. In all a happy appreciative South West Centre rider whose favourite day of the week is Sunday. All the best to everyone.” – Mike Hann

Mike Hann entertains during an ‘Up Memory Lane’ gathering organised by the SWCTA – Photo: Mike Naish

This interview took place in November 2007, so the dates and ages will have change considerably. – Mike Naish

Trials Guru Post Script: When Mike Hann rode the 1980 Scottish Six Days with riding number 180, an enthusiastic parc ferme marshal when calling out the numbers in the morning, when he came to Mike’s number he called out in a loud voice “One Hundred and Eightyyyyy” in the way they do at darts competitions. This happened every morning with people laughing. Mike had to ask what the joke was!

Mike Hann (Fantic) at the Somerton Classic Trial – Photo: Linda Ashford

‘Mike Hann chats to Mike Naish’ is the copyright of Trials Guru and Mike Naish.

More interviews with Mike Naish HERE

Apart from ‘Fair Dealing’ for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review as permitted under the Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988, no part of this article may be copied, reproduced, stored in any form of retrieval system, electronic or otherwise or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical, mechanical, optical, chemical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the prior written permission of the author as stated above. This article is not being published for any monetary reward or monetisation, be that online or in print.