Going Out In Style
Love your motorcycle? Wanna make a splash at your funeral? You may want to consider contacting the Tombstone Hearse Company to see if you can book one of their motorcycle hearses for your departing day.
They really have funeral director conventions in Vegas? I thought that was just on Six Feet Under episodes...
Seriously though, check out some of these photos (my favorite is the one with the Grim Reaper in the background):



Pretty classy if you ask me. Personally, I like it when people have unique additions to their funereal ceremonies. Why not let the ceremony reflect the individual? We have a tendency to get too stuffy with stuff like that. Let it be a celebration as well as a good bye.
Not only is it less boring but its probably better for one's mental health as well.
Tombstonehearse.com - Motorcycle enthusiasts and bikers looking to provide a motorcycle funeral procession for their dearly departed, find that Tombstone Hearse Co. provides the alternative to the traditional Cadillac or Lincoln hearse to fulfill the biker "Farewell Ride" and burial tribute.
Those who are non-riders and people liking to break traditions, find the 19th century styling of the hearses offer to them a unique means of transportation for their loved one to the final resting place. For them, Tombstone Hearse Co. makes the statement and personalizes the service to provide that special remembrance for their family and friends to cherish for years to come.
Wild West buffs find the glass sided hearses from Tombstone, nostalgic and reminiscent of many years gone by. Possibly thoughts of the OK Corral, Wyatt Erp, Doc Holliday, and the Clanton's may come to a family's mind as the burial coach makes its way to their Boot Hill.
Tombstone Hearse Co. has been featured in Easyriders and V-Twin magazines and seen on The Travel Channel during Bike Week at Daytona Beach. We also had the honor of providing service for the late Karl Smith, aka "Big Daddy Rat" of the famous Rats Hole Bike Show, as he took his farewell ride through the streets of Daytona Beach during Bike Week 2002. One of Tombstone's hearses was on exhibition this year at the National Funeral Directors Association convention (NFDA) in Las Vegas.
They really have funeral director conventions in Vegas? I thought that was just on Six Feet Under episodes...
Seriously though, check out some of these photos (my favorite is the one with the Grim Reaper in the background):
Pretty classy if you ask me. Personally, I like it when people have unique additions to their funereal ceremonies. Why not let the ceremony reflect the individual? We have a tendency to get too stuffy with stuff like that. Let it be a celebration as well as a good bye.
Not only is it less boring but its probably better for one's mental health as well.












