Horizons Unlimited - The HUBB

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-   -   A Question of Morality - Flag Stickers (https://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hubb/travellers-questions-dont-fit-anywhere/a-question-morality-flag-stickers-90633)

Arma 5 Feb 2017 22:01

A Question of Morality - Flag Stickers
 
Ok, this is a little tragic to admit, but I'll put it out there, I'm man enough to stick my head out of the metaphorical trenches and take it...

I recently traded in my Tiger, the first bike I've left Europe on and was very sad to lose my lovely collection of national flag stickers on my topbox. Seriously, it actually factored into my decision to make the trade. Yes, I am tragic. Not that I, ultimately, was sad to loose the boxes themselves, bloody heavy things.

So I ask you - what is acceptable when it comes to putting national flag stickers on your bike, or any other piece of hardware?

Should you only have stickers for where that particular piece of hardware has been? Can you replace the flags for the countries you have visited with that piece of hardware only? What about countries you flew to?

What if replacing your bike means that your wife suddenly has more flags than you do? Ghastly thought, that, but it's happened. Should you tamper with her brakes to ensure a write-off? On the other hand what if you have a bike which claims to be well travelled with only 1000km on the clock? Would that make you, pardon my French, a bit of a knob?

I should add: need to thank me for raising the really important questions folks. I consider it a service to the community, I really do. Stimulating debate on the topics which really cut to the very core of the community. The core of human experience in general, if we're honest with ourselves...

grumpy geezer 6 Feb 2017 00:52

I am not sure what the issue is. IMO the maps show where you have been.

markharf 6 Feb 2017 04:09

To me, the stickers show where the BIKE has been. However, I admit that I mourn the fact that neither of my current bikes has earned more than a paltry few flags, while the one I recently got rid of had scores.

The problem is that if I try to see it any other way I could bankrupt myself buying flag stickers for the other several score countries where I've rented bikes, driven cars, or just wandered around on local transport. What's the point?

Once or twice I've purchased extras, which I feel free to stick on anything I please, including bicycles, cars, motorbikes and my front door. These have included, for example, "El Fin del Mundo" stickers from Ushuaia, and "Pinheads from Hell" stickers from Neptune Mountaineering (Boulder, Colorado). Those are exceptions.

My condolences to Arma. I feel your pain.

Mark

John A 6 Feb 2017 08:35

Stickers on bike / panniers etc show where it's been.

Badges etc on you show where you've been.

YMMV.

To the OP, if you bought a bike with loads of stickers where you haven't been, would you remove them?

Arma 6 Feb 2017 09:20

Quote:

Originally Posted by John A (Post 556708)
Stickers on bike / panniers etc show where it's been.

Badges etc on you show where you've been.

YMMV.

To the OP, if you bought a bike with loads of stickers where you haven't been, would you remove them?

I definitely would remove them, it would feel dishonest to keep them on. I've not been there, I'm more important than the machine. But it still somehow feels wrong to put on places the bike has not been to.

I've considered putting the stickers on my helmet, showing where I've gone, but what happens when I get a new lid? It's interesting that we apply some kind of soul to the motorcycle, it's got its OWN set of stickers. Gear doesn't have a soul, badges are transferable.

backofbeyond 6 Feb 2017 09:25

Ooh, a moral philosophy conundrum. This is where we get to find out what people are really like - honest and upright salt of the earth types who'll only use stickers where they and that particular bike have been together (and when the bike goes the sticker rights vanish with it) or slightly dubious "it's all about me" egoists who'll plaster anything anywhere, particularly if there's money involved. Note my value judgements in selecting those adjectives. :rofl:

As I had a catholic upbringing with strict moral rectitude at the centre of the curriculum :rolleyes2: I started my travel "career" with stickers as the glue that cemented the partnership between me and the bike. We did it together. Look at what we've achieved, where we've been. Sadly though it didn't take long for my slightly dubious real character to bubble to the surface and I was seduced by longer legs, a prettier face and an easier ride. My short and squat, slightly pudgy little Honda had to go. To remember the good times though I kept the CDs in the shape of the sticker covered top box. Should I use it with the virgin queen, the new love of my life but rather innocent of the ways of the travel world? Too damn right I should, these things are expensive!

I was actually "agonising" about all of this about a year ago (but didn't think to pose a question about it here). I collected about half a dozen stickers during our USA trip in 2015 but, with one eye on resale value, didn't want to plaster them on the GoldWing. So what should I do with them. There's not much point in buying them if they're just going to sit in your wallet but I did have slight reservations about putting them on another bike. In the end though a couple of bottles of beer cut through millennia of "original guilt" (as they so often do) and they went on my 125 Suzuki. A year on nobody has asked me how I got the Suzuki to Yellowstone or what the hell is an OBX. Sometimes I wonder whether we just make rods for our own backs. :rofl:

ccaa 6 Feb 2017 14:00

Divorce, my friend, divorce.:rofl:

jordan325ic 7 Feb 2017 03:15

Country stickers relate not only to the bike and not only to the rider, but in the relationship between the two. Therefore, if you sell the bike, the stickers are lost. If you buy a bike with stickers, they should be removed. Anything else would be a little disingenuous, in my opinion.

Which isn't to say I don't mourn the loss of the "Пиво, сиськи, рок-н-ролл" sticker the Russian bikers put on my last bike before I spoke Russian.

Overland Tonka 24 Feb 2017 11:19

Have to admit once we started to go down the flag sticker route we didn't stop there..
Restaurants, camping, hindu gods, islam, football, surfing etc and even one i found in Mali with Gadaffi and 2 AK47's.
The car has become plastered all over which we have found breaks the ice and strikes up good conversations with locals.

Tim Cullis 25 Feb 2017 23:09

http://www.artsixmic.fr/wp-content/u...he-qui-rit.jpg

I really miss my extra large 'Le vache qui Rite' sticker.

g6snl 26 Feb 2017 00:23

My stickers go on my panniers and my panniers go on any of my bikes. They tell my story, not the bikes story. I will never sell my story :)


g6snl -Tim

xfiltrate 26 Feb 2017 01:50

Stickers and Flags... and Women???
 
Interesting comments.
What I find missing here is the objectification of the motorcycle itself. While most men have no trouble objectifying women at one time or another, they just get rubbed the wrong way when asked to objectify their motorcycles.

Let's face it, motorcycles have no clue where they are, how far they have traveled or give a sh.. who is looking at them. Women do! Motorcycles, are objects. Women are not. Sometimes the only way to establish a value judgement is to compare comparable magnitude. Motorcycles are not women, and stickers or flags are like notches on one's six shooter representing men killed. I am sure each of the killer's pistols are notched with each kill.

Just as I would never consider myself having been with a woman, unless I was,
I would never consider myself having been to a country - represented by stickers and flags on my motorcycle, unless I was. It is not the woman, the country or the motorcycle that my personal collection of stickers and flags represent. It is me and my relationships and my travels. And, it is my integrity, which has very little to do with which bike I was riding.

My conclusion, motorcycles are objects, women are not, and six shooters are like motorcycles... So, while I own three motorcycles, one in Argentina, one in Spain, and one here at the ranch in Arizona, I have posted all my flags representing the countries I have ridden on each of my three motorcycles. But, while I have had relationships with many women, I am only with one... and would never wear the scarf or banner of another, ever.

Let's be confused no longer.

xfiltrate. Eat, Drink and fly all your flags wherever you want, but respect your woman, she is not an object.

I really get it that many of you will have no clue of what I speak here. No worries man!

backofbeyond 26 Feb 2017 09:18

Quote:

Originally Posted by xfiltrate (Post 558276)

I really get it that many of you will have no clue of what I speak here. No worries man!

You're certainly amongst the more cryptic contributors here Ed :rofl:

Quote:

Originally Posted by xfiltrate (Post 558276)
. So, while I own three motorcycles, one in Argentina, one in Spain, and one here at the ranch in Arizona, I have posted all my flags representing the countries I have ridden on each of my three motorcycles.

The only downside of course is that you have to buy three stickers each time! :rofl:

It's just a pity really that these things can't be re-cycled (literally). I've bought so many stickers over the years that have gone when either the bike has gone or when the panniers or whatever they've been stuck on has disintegrated with old age. Often the only bit that survives intact is the sticker. I've tried removing them with a hairdryer but it never really works. Unless you're the sort of person that keeps the same bike for ever they're only going to be a record of the last few years. I suppose if you had a series of bikes with suitable steel components you could use fridge magnets instead but (other than a fridge) its been a while since I've owned anything like that.

Other than bikers notching their guns I've wondered who else buys travel stickers. Most places that have any kind of tourist footfall sell them but where do they end up? There's someone down the road from me with a VW camper literally covered in stickers but that's the exception. The few cars I see with them wouldn't be enough to keep the sticker presses rolling. Maybe people just buy them on the spur of the moment, put them in their wallet / purse and forget about them two minutes later. It's just something to be done when you've put some effort in to get somewhere.

Pete Groves 26 Feb 2017 13:14

To the OP.
It's an age thing .Get to a certain age and you won't feel the need to advertise where you or your bike or your panniers have been.
Wear where you've been on the inside.

g6snl 26 Feb 2017 15:32

Hey? Nooooooo......At a certain age you need them to remember which of the 195 / 196 countries you've visited :)

g6snl -Tim

xfiltrate 27 Feb 2017 16:57

Flag Sticker Shop
 
For those who have not attained that "certain age" and satisfied within,
there is always the Flag Sticker Shop, I buy the 50 flags per sheet and *distribute flags of the 220 countries that they have visited to all those who park with us in Buenos Aires - when we are in town. www.xfiltrate.com see ad on the Hubb.

Flag stickers, flag decals, country decals, country stickers, international world flag oval decals

I have discovered that the "flags" on my bikes more than pay for themselves by facilitating communication with people who are from one or the other of the countries displayed, or those who are interested in Argentina or the United States, where we have businesses. For me, the flags and our Motorcycle parking Stickers and Airbnb stickers ... are a great marketing tool for our motorcycle parking business and our Airbnb ranch. The flags serve as "ice breakers." I am always interested in meeting new people and making new friends. With the flags flying, I feel I have a contact point with many foreigners representing the countries I have visited. I do not feel a stranger if I am flying their flag.

I feel especially proud to help advertise the Dakar and fly their sticker... - an overland rally I have helped sponsor.

As I said, I do get it that some folks might not. Sorry for being so cryptic.

xfiltrate

lostintime 27 Feb 2017 17:38

I put my stickers on the panniers and I hang onto the panniers. They fit on many different bikes and even if they did not, I would keep tem as momentos.

Arma 27 Feb 2017 18:05

Quote:

Originally Posted by xfiltrate (Post 558385)
I feel especially proud to help advertise the Dakar and fly their sticker... - an overland rally I have helped sponsor.

I have to admit that's one which bugs me, you should only have a Dakar sticker if you (or you + bike, depending on the outcome of this thread) have competed in the rally. I do get that it's become a brand and that not everyone with a sticker is in any sense claiming to have done the rally, but it just bugs me.

A sticker means you've done a thing, been to a place, competed in a thing...

Tim Cullis 27 Feb 2017 18:46

Not everyone has the spare €50,000 needed to compete, so I'd like to think it's acceptable if you've ridden alongside the rally as an active spectator. ;)

http://www.morocco-knowledgebase.net/photos/r22000.jpg
2006 rally with Si Pavey, Matt Hall and Charlie Boorman

Following the Dakar Rally used to be such good fun and I did it several years running. Getting accommodation was always a challenge with so many in town and I remember five of us guys sharing a double room in Er Rachidia... and the little one said, "Roll over! Roll over!" So they all rolled over and...

Later the next day Charlie retired due to severe injuries to both hands but Si got to the end of the rally.

Some photos of the 2006 Dakar Rally.

Arma 28 Feb 2017 12:18

No issue with that either Tim! You were there which is a damn sight more than can be said for probably 90% of those with a sticker.

tmotten 28 Feb 2017 19:25

Am I the only one that always thought putting stickers or badges
(screwing up the waterproofing of some things!) on shit to show is more showing off than anything else. Always found it a bit of a poser thing. Never found my trips an achievement or anything. Not my bike trips anyway. But even some of the other ones...

brclarke 28 Feb 2017 20:27

I think stickers on your vehicle or backpack is a bad idea, as it can make you a target.


Sure, if you breeze into a poor village on your touring rig resplendent with farkles, folks are going to spot you for a foreigner and a mark - but why go out of your way to bring on extra attention?

lostintime 28 Feb 2017 20:43

Read up on Sticket Etiquette here

The Sticker Etiquette Thread | Adventure Rider


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