What's in your bagger? Is it full of useless stuff like clothes, food, maps, and toiletries? Most of the fancy baggers that grace this magazine are so damn nice the thought of filling them with brews and ice would send a cold chill up the owners' spines. Let's be real clear here: I don't condone drinking and riding, but I drink at my final destination, better believe a cold brew is first order. Enter B.A. Moto. No, these aren't $60k custom baggers, hell they're not even Harleys, these are modern Triumphs with 40mm military ammo cans bolted onto the frame, perfect for beer, ice, and the perfect riders to answer the nagging question-how many beers fit in a bagger? Based in Orange County, California, The British American Moto MC has a devout core of riders with one goal in mind, to ride. Ride far, ride fast...then party. Most ride modern Triumphs, Thruxtons, and some vintage Triumphs. So how many beers fit into a bagger and how long will they stay cold on ice? Let's find out.
First, some scientific research; one ammo can holds 24 cans of beer but I removed four allowing for more ice, which equals 20 cans. Let stand outside in the sun, watch for leaks, and wait. The ice actually lasted almost two hours and the beer stayed cold even longer because the ammo can is watertight and sealed really well. Full ammo cans of beer and ice weighs 36.4 pounds each.
Ammo cans may be purchased at any Army Surplus store for about 20 bucks. Since this is B.A. Moto's preferred bagger of choice they have designed a really cool bracket that fits on Bonnevilles, Thruxtons, and Scramblers; installation can be done in about an hour. Scramblers can only be fitted with one ammo can since both exhaust pipes are on one side.
Armed with all this scientific data it's now time for the practical application. Twelve bikes times14 ammo cans equals about 300 beers, yeah baby! With more than 800 pounds of camping gear, beer, and food all packed on a dozen Triumphs, B.A Moto heads to the Salton Sea for the Slab City Riot. Salton Sea is the result of an irrigation plan diverting water from the Colorado River gone terribly wrong. A levy breach in the early 1900s created this manmade lake only 45 miles from Palm Springs. It's the largest body of water in California and it's now saltier than the Pacific Ocean. Because of its extreme salinity, every couple of years millions of Tilapia die off and an awful stink hovers for weeks. A once promising recreational paradise now resembles a post-apocalyptic Mad Max movie set. The 36-mile ride skirting Salton Sea on hwy 111 to Niland is a surreal mirage against a dry desert backdrop and there are so many interesting abandoned structures from North Shore to Bombay Beach to explore.
Unfortunately, scientific research and real world applications don't always coexist. First, the heat from the pipes wasn't factored into the experiment, secondly the holes where the brackets fit to the ammo cans leaked and finally all that shaking meant a complete ice refill at least every hour.
Slab City is easy to spot because colorful Salvation Mountain looms at its entrance. Twelve years ago Leonard Knight decided to make a "small statement" with half of a bag of cement. He fashioned a small monument near the entrance and one thing turned into another and weeks turned into years. Each day, Leonard would put a little more cement and a little more paint on the side of a forgotten riverbank. Salvation Mountain has become an American Mecca with visitors sometimes traveling thousands of miles. Leonard's message is simple; God is love, make good bigger. That reflects his passion on the mountain. Build it and they will come.