Men's Vogue > Tech

bultaco: raging bulls

Bultaco_1 In 1971, the Academy Award-nominated documentary On Any Sunday captured the then-uncharted world of off-road motorcycle racing. Watching it today, it's impossible not to crave those classic-looking dirt bikes scrambling across the Baja desert or careering up tree-lined Spanish trails; even the deep thrum of their engines sounds better than the whine of today's insect-like machines. Between revs, you might even recognize the film's eternally stoked director and narrator, Bruce Brown, who also made the surfing classic, The Endless Summer.

(Watch a clip from On Any Sunday right here.)

Bultaco_2_3Bultaco bikes tended to be at the head of On Any Sunday's pack. Founded by the late Francisco Bulto in Barcelona in 1958 (and folded by him in 1983), Bultaco revolutionized the off-road industry, producing fast, lightweight bikes with incredible handling. A former racer himself, Bulto guided the company with the philosophy, "Sales follow the checkered flag," and it was at competitions like the International Six Day Trials in El Escorial, Spain--the setting for this clip from Brown's film--that Bultaco earned its winning reputation.

Although the segment of the film mentioned above focuses on the legendary American racer Malcolm Smith and his trusty Husqvarna, most of the Spanish riders (in the canary-yellow helmets) are astride Bultacos. It was on El Escorial's trails that Oriol Puig Bulto, a company engineer and Francisco's nephew, honed his riding skills. He would become Team Bultaco's winningest motocross rider.

"The spirit that was in Bultaco has never been duplicated," Oriol recently said.

Whether you're watching an 'Old Bull' on the charge or admiring the bike's fluid beauty as it rests, quiet and riderless, between races, you would be hard-pressed to disagree.

--MICHAEL MRAZ

December 22, 2006

Comments

Post a Comment
RSS
RSS
photo by eric staudenmaier
Jaguar