Sunday was DESMO Ducati Owners Club's annual barbecue, a massive Duc extravaganza held every year at Thomas Bull Memorial Park, northwest of Middletown, New York

The DOCNYC (The DOC's local chapter, based in New York City) met up at 8am on 61st Street and Central Park, by Columbus Circle.

Ducati 4 Valve SuperBike Section

Above from right to left, a 749, two 899s, an 848Evo, a 998S Troy Bayliss Replica, a Panigale 1199 Tricolore, another 899, a 999S Parts Unlimited Replica and a 749R.

This 749 won both best in show and best of the Superbike category.

Hamza's Bayliss

Ducati 2 Valve

The nicest 900SS was this pretty yellow "Superlight" edition:

A much later 900ss

Ducati Naked Bikes

Vintage Ducatis

There were also a whole bunch of bikes that didn't compete in the show, that parked out in the parking lot.

I'm pretty sure this wasn't a Desmosedici though, as the bike was a bit beat up, with track stickers all over it.

This Diesel Monster was pretty cool, and the helmet gave the whole bike a kind of Call of Duty impression, what designer Renzo Rossi called "urban military chic."

Post BBQ Run back to Bear Mountain







We lost half the crew, but ended up meeting up with another 10 club members who had left separately and had the same destination in mind.



After the Barbecue, several DOCNYC members wanted to get back the the city, while others still wanted to ride.A veteran DOC rider Lew (with something like 70K miles on his yellow ST4) offered to take about 25 of us around a bit, and after losing most of the group, we wound up back at Bear Mountain.The sky was so clear you could easily make out the NYC skyline an hour away.As the sun set over a such a beautiful day, we took one last look at each others' amazing rides, the stunning scenery, and finally made our way home back home to our most likely more ordinary lives.

Gathering the urban crew for a little pre-BBQ pep talk. Riding with 30+ motorcycles in NYC is fairly dangerous, so the club coordinators laid out some ground rules as it began to rain.After a bit of debate, we took off up the Palisades Parkway, and the skies cleared up.We stopped for gas about an hour into the trip, where I got a chance to admire the new Ducati Monster 1200S (below), which is a hell of a Monster, but a totally different design from the classic Monster I know.We took some twisties, but got up to the Park a little after 11am. Perhaps it was the rain, but there were far fewer bikes than last year , and less bikes entered in the bike show (below) as this year we were required register before parking.The 749 was immaculate, and had been rebuilt from the ground up.The bodywork was filled with touches of carbon fiber, and custom painted as well, from both the pearl yellow to custom, hand-painted lettering to match the Ducati red highlights of sprockets, steering dampers, bolts, etc.This Ducati 1198S showed up a bit later, but was sporting a ton of mods, including a complete Akrapovic exhaust, Carbon Fiber EVR air intake, a kevlar tank, super-light cams, flywheel and sprockets, dyno-tuned at ECS There were at least five or six 900SS Ducatis that showed up; some fully, some half-faired.Included in this section were two GT1000's.The red GT1000 was a beautifully modded machine, with tons of Rizoma parts including clear belt covers.The silver GT was a Paul Smart GT1000 with a full race fairing, sporting a eggshell teal colored frame.This hypermotard had also had extraordinary care given to detail, with blue accents everywhere, from tire stem caps, to a complete titanium bolt set, to sprocket and wheel nuts and much, much more (though the picture doesn't do it justice).This Ducati M1100EVO had also been heavily modified, and won best naked bike. Dyno-tuned, with a a complete exhaust and race map, I bet this motorcycle has some serious power.Unfortunately, there were only a couple vintage Ducs this year, including the '75 850GT aboveI'm pretty sure this was actually an 848 and not a $70K motorcycle someone was throwing around at the track, but you can see "Desmosedici" fairings on the side.© 2014 Tigh Loughhead