MOTORCYCLE TOURING, Are you doing it all wrong? The lies and myths that spoiled it for Everyone!

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Publicado 2024-05-23

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  • Best bike for touring is the one you own. Use what you have, enjoy it for what it can do rather than feel bad for what the hype and lies from bike sales media tell you about what they want to sell you.
  • @batwillow
    I was touring a few years back..speeding ticket on an A road, the ticket had my registration on it and stated that it was a 500cc motorcycle (the police did'nt put the make of the bike) It stated I was doing 95mph in a 60mph zone. I was fully loaded with box and panniers with a tent and sleeping bag on the seat behind me. I elected to go to court to "show" my evidence. Court date set and of I went with a smile on my face. One of the police officers was in the court. After they heard the polices version of events stating that I was driving eratically and at dangerous speeds, the court was looking at me as some sort of biker hoodlum (I am over 60 years old), I told the court that I have the evidence to prove I was not speeding at the time of the alledged offence. I showed photos of my bike fully loaded and that I had body cam footage if the court wished to view it on a dongle. After they saw the photos and realised that the bike a Royal Enfield 500cc Bullet was not capable fully loaded and even able to achieve that speed, my ticket was crushed, even better was the fall out as the court ordered the two police officers to be investigated and I got fully compensated and also I filed for an action against the police which paid for me to enjoy a few more tours. SO the bike hating police officers got a smack on the wrists and charged with falsifying evidence to a court which led to a whole lot of worms being opened up. Sometimes they just earn the hate ! I love touring on my old RE and now planning to pop up to Scotland.
  • @49googie
    When you tour by car you're watching a movie, When you travel by motorcycle you're IN the movie. No matter what you ride !!.
  • Its not the destination its the journey. Going on a slower bike down the backroads and soaking it is where the fun and romance is.
  • @kramnireehs
    I've toured and camped with a 125 and It carried my tent and sleeping bag ... Freedom of the road. Go anywhere even where bikes can't normally go. With a small bike you can get off turn off the engine and push it along a footpath to avoid detours. Try that on a gs1250 with full panniers fully loaded
  • After 50 years of motorcycling and still doing it at nearly 67 my big advice is keep it simple in all aspects, just that keep it simple 😊😊😊
  • hitting the ‘avoid motorways’ option on my phone maps has changed my view literarily and figuratively of our countryside. biking on B roads on my Triumph Bobber is a dream.
  • @wotseeschops
    I took my Classic 350 to France last year and thoroughly enjoyed it. I found that 110-130 miles a day was optimum for me. I have booked another trip to Northern Spain next month. I don't have a rigid itinerary, just a rough idea of where I'm going. I just book my accomodation on a day to day basis. I'm on my own. I tend not to ride in groups as I find egos start to take over the ride. Cheers to smaller capacity bikes... !
  • @markc7469
    Chopped my GS in for an interceptor. I’ve done more with the interceptor in two months than I did with the GS in the past four years.
  • Back in the 1970's l toured all over the state of Florida on my Honda CM-185 Twin Star. On my learners permit I rode all over the state.l put 36,000+ miles on the bike in a 1 1/2 years l had the bike. After the Air Force l toured from coast to coast on my CX 500. I toured all over Europe ona1955 RE 350 G . Then l rode her all through the Middle East and Sub Saharan Africa. Never tour on a bike too big to pick up by yourself.
  • As a young engineering apprentice my daily transport was a 50cc Zundapp moped travelling from Grappenhall in Cheshire to Broadheath south Manchester. I also went camping on it riding from Grappenhall to Torquay on my own with a large ex army rucksack on my back supported by the bikes small rear rack. Now at 86 years young I ride a V7 Guzzi.
  • @JLOSTAFF1
    We sometimes conduct our lives in a way to impress others, even if that conduct doesn’t impress us! Crazy. Your video is a reminder of that. 👍
  • In 2014 my mate and I were touring on our motorcycles in Tasmania (Australia). We met a young Frenchman on his 125 Honda (posty bike). He told us that he left France and via many countries finally arrived in Australia. His aim was to circumnavigate Australia. He had a fair amount of luggage roughly tied together with ropes. He told us that his Honda didn't miss a beat. He put the bike through its paces along all sorts of rough roads. This is another example of a small bike being a great tourer. By the way, his petrol costs were minimal.
  • @henryhyam5148
    Good points and well made, as always. I resigned from the 'fully farkled GS brigade' more than a decade ago. Last year I travelled 1350 miles through France, over the Pyrenees and back via Bilbao on a 1972 Moto Guzzi 500cc single with 25bhp and a top speed of about 60mph - and camped for half the trip. It was relaxed, fun and stress-free. Setting off again next month, possibly on a my newest bike - that is only 48 years old. Old bikes are fun too.
  • @johnycat7373
    I am a cyclist and biker. I came to cycling late after getting too many injuries running. Best tour I ever did was the Pyrenees on my road bike. All the famous climbs, passes between Spain/Andora/ France (took a diversion on a whim to the Spanish Basque Country) On my own in a Landrover and small mountain tent. No camp sites booked . No itinerary. Woke up and decided over breakfast what to do. Stay another day or move on. Cycled 8 hours a day. At cycling speed, and height similar to a motorbike, you take in so much more of what’s around you and you have an amazing sense of achievement after climbing a couple of famous cols. I have now transferred this outlook to motorcycling. Nothing booked. No route planned. If you have a tent and a small gas stove you are good. I now live in central France. Motorway cruise to the mountains (Honda vfr 800 mk1 Crossrunner , smallest bike I have ever had) and just go where the wind takes me. Cycling has taught me a lot about how to slow down time….
  • One of my favourite stories was a couple riding from Britain to what was then Yugoslavia, on an elderly Velocette. Another was a chap going round the world on a 125 Vespa. Adventure is a state of mind, not engine displacement.
  • @brikfiend
    Humongous mileage rides are simply a form of sadomasochism on a motorcycle. 100 -200 miles a day is a nice distance if you take in the scenery and stop for food etc .
  • What Ewan and Charley did on the BMWs wasn't 'touring', it was an expedition. Thre is a big difference...
  • I just want to stay off main roads and explore the unspoilt parts of Suffolk, Norfolk and Lincolnshire.
  • @__kvik
    "Because a small easy to handle motorcycle that's not particularly fast, frees you up to just enjoy yourself" -- that's so true. I currently have four bikes at my disposal: a Honda VTR1000 road rocket, a BMW R65 daily commuter, a KTM 300 hard enduro, and a Tomos APN 6 moped. The Tomos sat neglected in the shed for years as I didn't think much of it next to all the other options. This spring, however, something pulled me towards fixing up the little thing just enough so I can go for a quick spin around the block. Then as soon as I was on my way I had the biggest smile in a long while, enjoying myself immensely, riding back and forth through all the local trails we used to ride as kids, taking every turn there is, stopping without hesitation for anything that seemed interesting to observe. If I was on my KTM I'd just fly past all of it in a few minutes, whereas on a small incapable bike it felt like a true adventure.