Nashville TN Older Bikers

Nashville TN Older Bikers Nashville TN Older Bikers Enjoying the Sunset of our Lives while Riding to Restaurants and Rallies

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03/06/2026

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Thirty grown bikers shutting off their engines and lying flat in the middle of a sunny city park looked less like compassion and more like the beginning of something the evening news would call “disturbing.”
That’s what people thought.
I could see it in their faces.
It was a Saturday afternoon in late May. Clear sky. Kids running near the fountain. A birthday banner tied to a tree. The kind of afternoon that feels harmless.
Until thirty of us rolled in.
Leather vests. Boots. Engines rumbling low before cutting out all at once.
Heads turned. Conversations stopped. Parents pulled their children closer before we even dismounted.
And then we did the thing that made everyone freeze.
We laid down.
One by one.
Flat on the grass.
No shouting. No chanting. No signs.
Just bodies in a line near the old iron bench under the oak tree.
From the outside, it looked like a coordinated stunt. Or a threat. Or the first move in some kind of extremist protest.
A woman near the playground whispered, “Call the police.”
A man in golf shorts said, “They’re blocking the path.”
We didn’t argue.
We didn’t explain.
We just stayed there.
I could feel the tension ripple across the park like a storm cloud. Officers were already on their way. I heard someone mutter, “They’re trying to intimidate us.”
And maybe that’s what it looked like.
Thirty men who could fill a doorway, lying motionless in broad daylight.
Dangerous.
Defiant.
Disruptive.
But nobody asked why.
Nobody noticed the skinny kid standing near that bench.
Fourteen, maybe fifteen. Oversized hoodie even though it was warm. Backpack small enough to tell you everything you needed to know.
I saw him earlier that morning.
Saw two officers es**rt him away because he’d been “sleeping in a public space.”
He didn’t yell.
Didn’t resist.
Just picked up his bag and walked.
I recognized that walk.
I’d done it once.
Years ago.
Six months on that same bench after my mother died and the house disappeared under bills I couldn’t pay.
Six months of being invisible.
And today, that kid had nowhere else to go.
So when we rolled in and laid down on that grass, it wasn’t to scare anyone.
But the crowd didn’t know that.
All they saw were bikers creating a scene.
All they saw was a potential threat.
An officer approached me while I was still flat on my back.
“You need to get up. Now.”
I didn’t move.
“Are we breaking a law?” I asked.
“You’re obstructing the area.”
I glanced toward the bench.
The kid was watching us.
Watching like he didn’t understand why anyone would do this for him.
That’s when the officer stepped closer.
That’s when the crowd got louder.
That’s when the tension hit its sharpest edge.
And that’s when I heard a small voice behind me say—
“Why are they doing this?”
It was a little girl, no older than seven, tugging on her mother’s floral sleeve. The mother tried to shush her, pulling her back, but the question hung in the warm spring air.
I sat up. Slowly. The heavy leather of my cut creaked, the sound loud in the sudden quiet. Twenty-nine other heads turned toward me, but nobody broke rank. Nobody else stood.
I looked at the officer. His hand was resting nervously near his belt. He was young. Probably hadn't been on the force long enough to know the difference between a real threat and a stubborn point being made.
"We're tired," I said, my voice steady, carrying over the murmurs of the anxious crowd.
"You can't sleep here," the officer snapped, trying to project authority. "City ordinance."
"Funny," I said, brushing a blade of grass off my knee. "You didn't seem to care about the ordinance yesterday when those kids from the high school were tanning on this exact same patch of grass."
The officer’s jaw tightened. "That’s different."
"Is it?" I pointed a heavy, scarred finger toward the bench. Toward the kid in the oversized hoodie who was clutching his fraying backpack like it was a life preserver. "Or is it only a crime when you don't have a home to go back to?"
Silence dropped over the park. Heavy. Immediate.
The people who had been whispering about calling the SWAT team suddenly stopped. The man in the golf shorts slowly lowered his phone.
I stood up then. Just me. I walked past the officer and over to the boy. He flinched slightly, but held his ground. I didn't reach out to touch him—I knew better than that. I just looked him in the eye.
"This bench," I said, turning so my voice reached the officer and the onlookers, "was my bed for six months in nineteen ninety-eight. Nobody looked at me either. Nobody helped. They just called the cops when I became an eyesore."
I turned back to the young cop. "You kicked him out this morning for sleeping. For existing. So we figured we'd come do some sleeping of our own. If you're going to arrest him for being tired in a public park, you're going to have to arrest all thirty of us."
The officer looked at the line of massive, bearded, leather-clad men spread out like a barricade across the lawn. He looked at his radio. Then, his expression softening just a fraction, he looked at the kid.
He sighed, taking his hand fully off his belt. "I can't let him stay here indefinitely. It's not safe."
"He won't," a deep voice boomed. It was Bear, my right-hand man, sitting up from the grass. "He's coming with us. We've got a spare cot at the clubhouse and a hot meal waiting."
I looked back down at the boy. "If you want it," I told him softly. "No strings. Just a safe place to close your eyes where nobody is going to tell you to move."
The kid swallowed hard. His eyes darted from the officer, to the silenced crowd, and finally to the line of bikers who were now slowly getting up, brushing dirt and leaves off their denim.
A single, silent tear tracked through the dirt on his cheek. He gave a small, jerky nod.
The crowd parted as we walked back to our bikes. They didn't look at us with fear anymore. Some of them looked ashamed. A few of them even smiled. The woman who had wanted to call the police was staring at the ground.
We fired up the engines. The rumble shook the park again, rattling the old oak tree and vibrating in our chests, but this time, it didn't sound like a threat.
It sounded like a rescue.
I tossed the kid a spare helmet. He put it on, the visor way too big for his face, and climbed onto the back of my bike. He wrapped his skinny arms tight around my waist.
"Hold on tight," I said over my shoulder.
We pulled out of the park, thirty-one of us strong. And for the first time in a long time, as we roared down the avenue, that kid wasn't invisible anymore.
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It is with the deepest regret that I have to announce the passing of OBRC Georgia Member Betty Bates, yesterday August 2...
08/30/2024

It is with the deepest regret that I have to announce the passing of OBRC Georgia Member Betty Bates, yesterday August 29, 2024.

Betty was the wife of our National V.P. and an officer of the Cairo, GA chapter.

She rode her own bike for many years and eventually got a trike.

She was a loving wife, mother and grandmother.

We will dearly miss her and offer our prayers to her family and the Georgia OBRC family.

Notice to ALL Older Bikers from SW Indiana. NW Kentucky and the Nashville, TN area.Several of our OBRC National Officers...
07/31/2024

Notice to ALL Older Bikers from SW Indiana. NW Kentucky and the Nashville, TN area.

Several of our OBRC National Officers have recently purchased property in Kentucky. I am NOT going to reveal the exact location yet, because the home is not totally built yet. But as soon as they are ready to move in, we will be making that announcement.

The reason this is exciting to us, is because it will place additional National Officers within ONE hour of our National Headquarters in Indiana. Plus they will also be ONE hour away from our Nashville TN, Chapter.

As a result of their relocation, they are planning on creating a NEW Kentucky Chapter of OBRC.

This will help unite 5 chapters that are located in Three states. It will be the center or hub of a nice WHEEL of chapters.

This idea of creating a HUB is something we have been working on for some time.

I would also like to let everyone know that National is working on a Major Project that will become a great drawing card and recruiting tool for OBRC.

I will explain more about this new project within the next couple of months, but in the meantime, I have a question for ALL of our members.

If OBRC had access to a reasonable amount of cash they wanted to DONATE to the others that were in need of HELP, what type of HELP and what type of PEOPLE do you think we should try to help?

Share your thoughts.

FTW

Welcome to the Nashville, Tennessee Page for Older Bikers. We are dedicated to helping Mature Bikers over the age of 40,...
01/14/2023

Welcome to the Nashville, Tennessee Page for Older Bikers.

We are dedicated to helping Mature Bikers over the age of 40, find Riding Friends they can meet with on a regular basis to talk about Bikes, Roads, Restaurants, Rallies, Health Issues, or any other topics they may have in common.

We NEVER charge any membership dues and have no Rituals you have to endure in order to join our club.

The only thing we ask is that you do not ride with us in a group formation if you are under the influence of alcohol or illegal drugs.

However that does not mean that some of our members don't ever drink, because when we are camping out at rally together, many of our members love to relax with a few good drinks.

We also invite non-members to ride with us anytime they want to. That gives them a chance to get to get familiar with our members and find out if they want to socialize with us.

Our primary goals are to RIDE to RESTAURANTS and RALLIES.

We love the back roads, small family owned restaurants with home style cooking and rallies where we can sit around a campfire and listen to good music while we get to know each other and share stories about life, motorcycles, and the good old days of our youth.

So, if you want to know more about us, come talk to us at a local bike night, or send us a message on Facebook and we will be happy to meet you at a local restaurant and talk or ride with you.

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Nashville, TN

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