Next morning I waited for a text from Josias – I needed reassurance granny wasn’t off with my bike.
Susan and I discussed and made a plan. We decided if I didn’t hear by lunchtime I would text him. At 10am I broke and sent him a message – ‘Hola Josias, como esta mi moto’.
Yup, our plan was ‘oot the windae’. It failed on first contact with my nerves.
Uppermost in my mind was you lot – oh yes, I could already hear you laughing at me being robbed by Jesus and his granny.
I had pinned the location of granny on Google Maps. Yeah, yeah, I’m not so daft. Well, maybe I am but at least I knew where granny lived – I had a big red heart (favourite) on my Managua Google map labelled ‘Granny’.
Thankfully, Josias soon replied and I didn’t have to follow that red heart to granny. What a relief!!
Josias explained the clutch was finished and he sent a photo of the bike. Thank goodness granny doesn’t have carpet.

And here’s the burnt out clutch plates or ‘discos’ as we call them in this part of the world.

We needed a new set of ‘discos’. Big problem – nowhere in Central America has these ‘discos’. Nowhere. We were in a disco desert.
Two days later, we sourced discos in Connecticut, USA, and arranged for them to be shipped via Miami. It would take a week. That’s the best we could do.
The Nicaraguan shipping agent was a nice guy and very helpful. He had a warehouse and he shipped things. He bought the discos from USA and then sold them to me on arrival for cash. It was a reasonable deal.
Before I go any further, I should add some context because I know a few intelligent people read these stories and will be shouting ‘didyounotthinkabout….. etc etc.’ That’s how intelligent people think – they call it joined up thinking.
I tried BMW garages in Guatemala, El Salvador and Costa Rica. They all replied it would be a month to source the ‘discos’ and if they’re saying a month then that’s best case scenario.
Going back to Costa Rica would have meant our visa for Honduras would expire and that’s us finished if we can’t pass through Honduras. Transporting a broken bike across borders with no guarantee it would get fixed would be another problem altogether.
So now we waited.
We were in a nice hostel with nice friendly people. I mean very friendly people. It was a hostel and so like South American hostels there were a lot of young ‘backpackers’. We were all very cool.
Unfortunately, although our room was comfortable, it looks like a jail cell.

Fortunately, it had a nice area outside where hostel cool people can chill, talk about ‘discos’ and do their ‘yard time’.

Unfortunately, there’s not much to do in Managua. It’s safe enough if you take a pragmatic view as to what you should do and where and when you should go. Its not a pretty place. It’s not a place for tourists.
Fortunately, there is a shopping mall down the road from our hostel.
Unfortunately, it’s a twenty minute hot, humid walk.

We walked to the mall twice a day for exercise, coffee and food.
That was about it.
We lived a simple, extraordinarily boring life waiting for the discos.
One day we walked to the market.

Another rubbish market in another rubbish city. They’re all over the world and only Tic Toc people and Instagrammers find them fascinating. I’d like to put these markets into some context though – they’re still better than Benidorm!
On the way to the market we passed through a neighbourhood we shouldn’t be in. I saw a teaspoon of white powder being passed through a grill in a door. Yup, it could have been sugar for his tea. Just didn’t get the feeling it was.
So we got a taxi back.
Eventually, after being in Managua for 8 days the ‘discos’ arrived and we went with Josias to collect. Oh, I know – you want a photo and so here it is. Discos 👇

Josias took the discos and went back to granny. That was Friday lunchtime and I was hoping we might get the bike on Friday evening. Josias said we would. Excellent.
We celebrated in my favourite restaurant – beer and wings! Nice! It only has one downside – I have to sit and watch Susan’s face as she has disdainfully eats the food. She puts up with it because her life is all about putting up with me. Life can’t always be about hummus, pitta bread and veggies – sometimes life is beer and battered wings. As Oasis once said ‘you’ve gotta roll with it’.
Late in the day, I received a text from Josias – did I have the technical manual for my bike that showed the position of the ‘discos’ within the clutch?
Oh, my legs crumbled and I whimpered.
After a week waiting for the ‘discos’ he was now asking me for the technical installation details.
Be calm, Clif. Be calm! Granny has your bike hostage. Be calm!
Thirty minutes later I sent him 6 photos from the appropriate technical manual downloaded from the internet.
I crumble, I whimper, I rise. Honestly, somtimes I’m immense! I’m sorry I’ve got to say that but if I don’t say that it goes unspoken. And we wouldn’t want my immenseness to go unrecognised would we? Would we?
Now, Josias is a lovely guy but he just can’t deliver. Oh yes, I know we’ve all worked with these type. As a manager would say ‘he’s not task orientated’. Of course, the other side of that Myers Briggs coin is empathy. Well I can tell you Josias was not empathetic either because he was driving me fu**ing mad!
Friday went. Saturday came and went. Sunday came.
Promise me this. I promise you that. Guarantee this, guarantee that. On and on, text after text. I just think he never sat down and worked for any length of time on the issue.
All our conversation was in Spanish. Hundreds of texts. Believe me if you’re not delivering I’m on your case. Oh, I was persistent.
By Sunday afternoon I was a bit of an expert on my motorbike clutch. I studied the manual and I watched countless videos. I honestly think I could have done the job myself.
Josias had difficulty working in the evening because granny’s leccy had been cut off so he worked by torchlight. Not that I think a lot of work was getting done.
Things were getting tense on Sunday evening. I wanted the bike that day. I was promised the bike that day.
It was about the fifth broken deadline and I went to sleep that night at midnight after failing to get Josias to deliver.
We agreed I would get the bike in the morning and Susan and I would travel onwards that day.
Josias said I was definitely getting the bike in the morning and I could pick it up at 4am if I wanted. You’ve got to laugh!
Next morning at 6am I’m on his case.
By 8am I was in a taxi to granny’s whilst Susan tucked into her nice breakfast of pancakes, syrup and fresh fruit. I know you always like to know what Susan is doing and we don’t want the blog to be all about me, me, me.
So Susan is having pancakes and I’m in a taxi to I don’t know what.
When I get to granny’s, Josias is still finishing up working on the bike. Why couldn’t this have been done before I arrived? No reason – that’s just how he is.
I didn’t take the cash to Josias to pay him. I’m not travelling to backstreet Managua with cash. I tell him he has to come to our hostel and Susan will pay. Susan looks after our dosh.
Josias jumps on the back of the bike and I test ride it to the hostel. When we get there I’m sunk. I’m finished.
The clutch is slipping!
Nightmare in Nicaragua 4 is unfolding.
And it’s perhaps the scariest yet!
