“3,700 miles … 11 days … on scooters.”
That’s the introduction to “Slow Ride Home,” a documentary featuring eight members of the Seattle-based Soldiers of Destiny Scooter Club as they ride across the country, from Florida to Washington, on scooters that top out around 61 miles per hour.
Released in 2019, the movie would become an official selection at the 2019 Ellensburg Film Festival and win “Best Feature Documentary” at the 2019 Rendezvous Film Festival before nabbing the “People’s Choice” award at the 2020 Portland Motorcycle Film Festival.
Camas native Joe Hammill, one of the eight scooter riders featured in “Slow Ride Home,” says he and his friends thought the Portland people’s choice award was the pinnacle of their adventure.
Then, another opportunity presented itself.
“Winning people’s choice? We thought that was the top,” says Hammill, a 1994 Camas High School graduate who went on to work in radio for more than a decade before moving into his current role as a senior event booking representative for the Seattle Center. “Then Amazon Prime happened, and we thought, ‘Here we go again.’”
Amazon Prime viewers can stream the documentary and see for themselves what happens when eight guys — all wearing latex animal helmets to show their “spirit animals” — Hammill’s spirit animal is the deer, a creature he saw often and said he respected during his childhood years in Fern Prairie — take to (mostly) Yamaha Zuma 125 scooters and begin what turns out to be an often hilarious trek across the country.