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Meeting
Any one from the South going over to the meeting. I am thinking of going over on the Thursday and coming back on the Sunday. Not been to Ireland before on the bike so should be a good few days away.
Been looking at the ferry from Fishguard to Rosslaire, its got to be a better ride than going all the way to Liverpool, and means a longer ride in Ireland.:scooter: |
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Hope to see you there! Liam |
Nuts travel
Already been in contact with Nutts, just waiting to see if any one else from my area is up it. Looking forward to the meeting as I have not been away on the bike for overa year.
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Nutts Travel
First the bad news
I have just received an email from Rita at Nutts Travel advising that the return ferry costs for Stena have increased to £85 to end of June and £89 in July/August.All other return ferry costs remain the same. For full details check out the HU Ireland meeting details or phone Rita at Nutts Travel. The good news. These return ferry rates from and to Ireland are available to all Horizons Unlimited members/ participants. If you can't make it over to Enniskillen on 28/30 May you now have the opportunity to plan your holiday trip at a later time. Remember to mention Horizons Unlimited to get advantage of these rates. Liam |
Not sure if this will tempt or scare you!!
A few intrepid eejits have been exploring the boreens and backroads of the West of Ireland using the excuse of planning a runout for this event. If you are attending (and if not why not!!?) you may now be faced with a very difficult choice. Either a runout through over some spectacular routes OR attending a series of presentations and practical demonstrations some of which will take place at the same time. We are working to allow you to do both! Quart into pint pot comes to mind! Looking through the current registrations, it is heartening to see quite a few ladies will be attending. There will be plenty to interest everyone. Liam |
Look fabulous... if they don't mind a lady with the will but with no off-road experience as of yet trying to keep up and most likely ruining the fun. Hmm... that might be ill-advised! I hope there's room to attend a bit of both.
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Colly :scooter::welcome: |
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Now you should know, Colly, that all sorts of interesting people turn up at a Horizons Unlimited meeting!! Looking forward to meeting up with you both. Liam |
Thought the following article which appears in the May edition of Bike Buyers Guide should be shared with a wider audience. It was written by Paul Browne, a presenter at the Enniskillen meeting.
Please do not reproduce elsewhere without Paul's permission. Enjoy and, if you haven't already, get registered and prepare for a great weekend. Liam How To Have A Great Big Motorcycle Adventure. Paul Browne Now that the economy has been completely ruined there has never been a better time to leave the country. If you're one of the lucky ones with any money left at all you could always cash in whatever chips you have over from the good old days, get on your bike and ride off into the sunset. In order to do this you will need to do a few things. Buy a motorcycle. Unless of course you already have one. In that case you're well ahead of the posse. Anything with two wheels and an engine is acceptable. People have traversed the globe on machinery as varied as an R1 to a HD Electra Glide and lived to tell the tale. No matter what you end up buying or bringing there will always be someone else who has a bigger, faster and all round better version than yours. The owner of the afore mentioned fabulous machine will also possess limitless time in which to pontificate as to how and why his/her motorcycle is better than yours. It's usually around this time that the solitude aspect of long distance motorcycling touring starts to make a lot of sense. Find somewhere to go. This is a highly fluid goal. While you are on the way there you may find yourself otherwise inspired. I once knew a man who went to Greece on his summer break from college, he forgot to stop wandering and ended up on an island in the Gulf of Thailand two years later. All the trouble, love and drug crazed, gun toting lunatics that you find or find you will just add so much depth to your experience. Spend ages and ages looking at other peoples blogs who've already left. Re read The Long Way Round, Jupiter's Travels and The Investment Biker. Then send off for a Touratech manual. Start to panic about what to do when you get a puncture in Bolivia. Go to Halfords or similar and buy loads of shiny spanners. Go back to Halfords a day later and buy a box to put them in. Get a massive set of panniers and fill them full of everything you think you may need. Bow tie, cuff links, a tux and dress shoes are a necessity as is a copy of the Lonely Planet for every country you may visit, after all you'll need to be ahead of the game if you get invited to dinner in the Mexican consulate in Panama City won't you? Once you have all this junk assembled take exactly half of it and put it in the shed or attic. Pack the other half in the panniers. It doesn't matter which half as its all totally useless and you can dump the other half on the road once you've figured out what you really need. Quit your job and say goodbye to your friends. Everyone will be insanely jealous. Questions such as 'How will you get a job when you come home?' and 'Isn't it dangerous in Belize?' are actually pathetic cries for help. Don't give them any quarter unless you want a last minute pillion. Parting gifts of guide books and phrase books are only intended to sabotage your fun. Buy a satellite phone. Only use it to call the folks back home from the top of the Andes on the last Friday of the month, the same day that their measly pay hits their account and their massive mortgage leaves it. They'll be glad to hear from you and they'll be happy for you. The fact that they keep asking if you've been robbed, run over or bitten by a snake isn't wishful thinking, its just concern. Really. Learn how to ride a motorcycle. Seems obvious but you'd be surprised. You can pick up the basics in the car park of the lucky dealership you've decided to award your business to, but it is going to go better if you know which lever does what before you head for the Pashtun Pass. Find out which bits are going to break and bring spare ones. Nobody likes sleeping against the side of a Dengue Fever fumigation shed on new years eve because BMW EWS rings fail. Petrol versus diesel. If you're riding an Indian manufactured Royal Enfield it may run on Diesel. Everything else runs on petrol. Read the label on the pump. If there is no label ask. Presumption is the mother of all cock ups. If you're doing this properly then you've never been here before so how do you know that unleaded is labeled black and Diesel is labeled green? Pick some motorcycle clothing. Depending on how deep your pockets are, the options are limitless. As with the motorcycle you choose, your gear/equipment will never match the quality and general fabulousness of those good time motorcyclist we all know and love. It not just Japanese girls who are slaves to brand names! When you find yourself 20,000KM from home trying to smoke a cigar while travelling at 100KPH, wearing motocross boots, shorts and a t-shirt you've probably achieved something by way of balance. Sort out your finances. You don't really need to worry about this. Max your cards and delude yourself that everything will be ok. It will be. You can always sell the rights to your book and TV show, its not like any one has ever done that before. Talk to someone who's actually done it already. If you want to do this stuff for real you can meet motorcycle travellers in person and get the answers you need to set you on your way. Travellers, including continent hoppers and Round the World bikers, will talk about their adventures. Horizons Unlimited are hosting their first Irish Motorcycle Travellers Meeting which will take place from Friday 28th May to Sunday 30th May in Enniskillen, Co Fermanagh. For more information and registration details go to: http://www.horizonsunlimited.com/meetings/Ireland2010. This is your best opportunity to find out what it takes to get out of the rut and find out what this long distance travel stuff is really all about. Please don't arrive in a car. |
Great article... just don't like that "Please don't arrive in a car" line. I can't help that I don't have a bike right now, it's 4 wheels or nothing. :(
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Arriving on 6 wheels
Dont worry, I am afraid I like my comfort now that I have attained the half century so I am arriving in my motorhome with my Harley on trailer so there.
Oh I have done the rough camping from sleeping in tent, bus shelter, a barn, or just beside my bike. By the way I have a brand new 125 for sale, you interested , get u started. C U all soon no matter what wheels we have, as long as we have the travel passion. Good article tho:scooter::taz::funmeteryes: |
It sounds like there's going to be a lot of wheels there! I'm bringing a motorhome and an xt600e and I know of at least one other motorhome/bike combo coming - all welcome - as long as you intend to travel on a bike!
drew |
I hope someone ordered weather like this for next weekend! :Beach:
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Oh ye of little faith!
Sure the sun always shines in Fermanagh. even when it rains:palm::innocent: |
PRE-Registration is now closed, but we do have space still, so just come!
See you there! All the details at: http://www.horizonsunlimited.com/meetings/Ireland2010 Grant and Susan |
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