In turkey you're supposed to take bike to expensive customs impound lot before leaving the country. Most people don’t and that get fined though the fines are small.
In Georgia limit on time bike can be in the country is 90 days IIRC, so if it is more, you would need to go out to reset the counter. Alternatively you can turn in your license plate, title, and registration to customs and have temporary georgian registration/plate issued and this would let your bike stay for 3 years.
The downside you won't be able to enter Turkey on georgian plate (turkey requires registration country and passport match) and most likely russian customs will deny entry to russia. There isn't any law on this but I had seen 2 people having TIP denied and them turned back on georgian border.
In Armenia you can do full year for 1 vehicle and many travelers store their bikes/vehicles with 3Gs camping about 40min outside of Yerevan.
Beside Armenia, 1 year/1 vehicle rule is applicable to other countries in Customs Union: Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Belarus. You need to indicate that bike will be stored for 1 year (default is 90 days) and the counter sets when you enter the Customs Union zone, so it doesn't reset when you say cross border between Russia and Kazakhstan or Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan.
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