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Which Bike? Comments and Questions on what is the best bike for YOU, for YOUR trip. Note that we believe that ANY bike will do, so please remember that it's all down to PERSONAL OPINION. Technical Questions for all brands go in their own forum.
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  #1  
Old 28 Feb 2007
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Dear Margus,

before your pink BMW glasses fall off your nose from excitement:

My main critics were directed at the F650.
IMHO the F650 (any model) is a pathetic bike. That's my oppinion based on 6 Funduros and two GS / Dakar.

I said lucky you if you have a R-GS as BMW at least bothers to sort out some of the weak points.
I don't think you find a lot of bikes where you have to synchronise anything after replacing throttle cables.

If running engine, clutch and gearbox in one and the same oil would not work then nobody would do it. Even BMW does it on the F 650.
A separate gearbox and a dry clutch is not a quality feature.

And now you can keep on praising your Nazi tank.

We keep on riding our agile and lightweight reliable and low maintenance Jap crap.
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  #2  
Old 28 Feb 2007
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Thumbs up F650

Quote:
Originally Posted by lecap View Post
Dear Margus,
My main critics were directed at the F650.
IMHO the F650 (any model) is a pathetic bike. That's my oppinion based on 6 Funduros and two GS / Dakar.
If the F650's are so bad, then I wonder why it took you 6 funduros and 2 GS'es to find out. I guess you wanted to be very very sure they were realy so bad :-)

My experience with the F650GS is very good. I did ride it from home in Holland to the NorthCape and back (+ 8000 km) and only had to oil the chain every morning and add 1/4 liter oil only once.
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  #3  
Old 3 Mar 2007
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Hi Patrick,
You wrote;
> If you had followed Lecap's posts for a few years like I have you would know
> why he had so many BMW's. Actually, he had these bikes and a bunch more...
> you see he runs a Travel Tour Rental outfit in South Africa.
That explains a lot. I was wondering why anyone would buy bike after bike that he didn't like but if you buy them all at once, that is different. (and to bad it you are dissapointed in all those bikes)

> Ride On!! (bring parts)
I will, but without a lot of parts.
My BMW is "innocent untill proven guilty" and until now it is very innocent in reliability :-)

Any bike has some + and some - but in the end, you don't buy a bike on specs only but also very much because you like that bike (unless you use the bikes to make a living like Lecap does.) and I like my BMW very much.
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My bikes are a Honda GoldWing GL1200 and a Harley-Davidson FXD Dyna Super Glide

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  #4  
Old 4 Mar 2007
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Exclamation all bikes are good

I started this posted because I had a need for a bike to ride two up , my choice were the 1200GS,the 1150,the DL1000, I tried all of them and did like all of them but my wife love the confort of the 1200GS 2005, I don't understand why everybody is trying to fight to prove that their bike is the best, I owned many bikes from the old 80GS ,ducati 900ss, guzzi and many more.I crossed the sahara on my old GS, tarvel accross SE Asia on a XR250R, did all europe on my FJR1300ABS and travel from Miami to Terra del fuego on a XL250 without any problem ,lets stop to fight over which bike is the best because to me they all are great , and if you are ready to pay the price and accept thier default your are alway driving the right bike. Our strengh is that we are traveller and that we choose the motorcycle as our transportation ,lets not get vain and self center about whos got the best one.

Hendi
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  #5  
Old 4 Mar 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by HendiKaf View Post
I started this posted because I had a need for a bike to ride two up , my choice were the 1200GS,the 1150,the DL1000, I tried all of them and did like all of them but my wife love the confort of the 1200GS 2005, I don't understand why everybody is trying to fight to prove that their bike is the best, I owned many bikes from the old 80GS ,ducati 900ss, guzzi and many more.I crossed the sahara on my old GS, tarvel accross SE Asia on a XR250R, did all europe on my FJR1300ABS and travel from Miami to Terra del fuego on a XL250 without any problem ,lets stop to fight over which bike is the best because to me they all are great , and if you are ready to pay the price and accept thier default your are alway driving the right bike. Our strengh is that we are traveller and that we choose the motorcycle as our transportation ,lets not get vain and self center about whos got the best one.

Hendi
Because people are passionate...and it's more fun.
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  #6  
Old 4 Mar 2007
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By God (or any other deity) what a pissing contest...

Hey guys! I have a Guzzi Quota! Flame that one instead, and let the poor guy have his BMW, V-Strom, Transalp or whatever he likes.

Jeeez...
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  #7  
Old 4 Mar 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by indu View Post
By God (or any other deity) what a pissing contest...
Jeeez...
well then I'll add my $.02.

the beauty of simplicity is you can fix it.
the bane of technology is you're at the mercy of it.

I sold the '02 RT because it was more likely than not to strand me. after you check fuses, it's a tow...you can't fix a Hall Effect Sensor on the side of the road...you can generally fix points...or clean out a carb if necessary.

at $16K+ there shouldn't be input spline failures, clutch slave seal leaks (especially crochetted in that far)...the ground bolt for the battery negative cable on a sophisticated electronic system shouldn't be that inaccessable...valves shouldn't be carboned at 28K, and final drive crown bearings shouldn't fail at either 50K or 80mph on a machine of that price.

bad gas clogging the in-tank filter is no whiz-bang fix in an approaching storm either.

I'm sure the airheads were worthy, but the latest offerings have traded something valuable for something shiney. I bought it on reputation and sold it on experience. you can keep your meters, high tech dependancy, and magic beans. a travel machine in strange lands needs first to be fixable, and only then secondarily dependable. Dependable first then a surprise not fixable is no prize. breakdowns I can handle, no solution is inexcusable.

and ... I didn't care for BMW's attitude of infallibility and denial when it was perfectly obvious to me there were glaring issues. case in point, I opened it up 6 months before the 3 year warranty ending to check on the transmission spline...I had heard an alarming volume of issues on the net...my spline was OK, the clutch friction disc showed evidence of spline wear, but good enough to use, but I did find a weeping clutch slave...I took it in for a warranty replacement to find much to my surprise the warranty was up 2 weeks prior...I was told it started when the first mile was put on at the dealership, not at the time of sale to the original owner...and tho the slave had obviously still failed while under warranty, I was denied, and had to buy one out of pocket. That was just plain wrong, and a battle wasn't worth the effort. He may have gotten me for $16K+ once, but repeat business is non-existant from me...dealer, company or product.

lastly, it's perfectly fine with me for you to choose any bike based on any criterion...so this isn't "pissing" ...it's merely personal experience.

the 1981 Suzuki GS750EX I bought for $1,600 and ran for 20 trouble free years prior to trading it it in on the BMW was the standard of reliability motorcycle manufacturers these days should aspire to...save me the illusion of the smoke and mirrors.

enjoy your BMW...I didn't.
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  #8  
Old 4 Mar 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by indu View Post
By God (or any other deity) what a pissing contest...
Yes it much better to keep quiet and keep the myths alive!

Quote:
Originally Posted by indu View Post
Hey guys! I have a Guzzi Quota! Flame that one instead, and let the poor guy have his BMW, V-Strom, Transalp or whatever he likes.
For me this is not a discussion about the best bike but I react when people write stuff I find directly wrong (hard to sync, not possible to work on the Can bus roadside, hard/impossible to drive offroad….)
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  #9  
Old 5 Mar 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
Jan,
If you had followed Lecap's posts for a few years like I have you would know
why he had so many BMW's. Actually, he had these bikes and a bunch more...
you see he runs a Travel Tour Rental outfit in South Africa. I can't think of a better test of bikes than this type of thing. And I'm sure if the BMW's were trouble free and cheap to run LeCap would still be hiring them out.

Now, he has gone to DR650 Suzuki's and KLR's. A wise choice, IMO.



Good news for you. But I've read reports here and elsewhere for years and years and my opinion is many riders have A LOT of problems with F650's on the road. Much more than any Jap 650. BMW bikes have problems unheard of
on Japanese machines. I'm sure not ALL have problems but a fairly high % seem to act up.

Glad to hear you've had good luck! Ride On!! (bring parts)

Patrick
Thanks for setting that straight, Patrick.
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  #10  
Old 5 Mar 2007
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Lecap's company

Hi Lecap,

Do you have a website of your company ? I have family in South Africa and sometimes when I go there I borrow my uncle's Harley LowRider and sometimes I rent a bike.

I'm also thinking about buying a cheap bike (BMW R45/65) and leaving it at my uncle's house. I'm not sure what to do so I'm gathering information about the possibilities now.
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My bikes are a Honda GoldWing GL1200 and a Harley-Davidson FXD Dyna Super Glide

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  #11  
Old 5 Mar 2007
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> There is an active I-hate-BMW club going on here<

please don't include me in that.

brother traded his 76 750 airhead (bought new) on his '99 1100S (bought new), and bro-in-law had his 00 LT (bought new) when I bought my 02 RT (bought new)...I had every intention of loving that machine...even read Mein Kampf afterwards to get the whole experience. I also had a VW Bug shop for years a while back and not only knew every nut and bolt on the cars and loved them, but also was way into the 1930s German design thing. I even had a sister marry a Hitler Youth from Koln ... my father was a US WWll GI and while the sparks flew, I came to realize the Kraut was the single most amazing and successful man I've ever seen in real life...came from nothing and became a multinational oil business tycoon...and I mean serious money...not only motivated, but a gentleman from A to Z.

I had every reason and probably more background than most to want to love that BMW motorcycle.

The "facts" are they are enjoying a (well deserved) 80(-) year reputation that begat arrogance and chased by the Japanese motorcycles ("Busa Killer") to produce anything that will continue the illusion of mechanical superiority...and that meant spline issues, clutch slave failures, final drive bearing failures, and fuel injection issues that went denied, tho a twin spark was introduced to address the issue in denial....and when you pay the premium for that level of abuse, you either have to smell the coffee or continue preaching in the tradition of the Spanish Inquisition where dissenters are squashed for self preservation.

If that 02 RT was "right" I'd still be happily putting miles on it and bragging to anyone who'ld listen....that was a $16,300+ mistake I don't intend to repeat.

I know of a '76 900 (R) with 18K miles needing love I would buy...but not another new BMW at those prices.

it's fine with me if you are devoted to a brand name, flag, or Holy Man...but that 02 RT was the biggest piece of crap I've seen in a while...and my mechanical background runs the whole gambit from mundane and normal to these projects I did a while back. a 1780s log house restoration from the ground up

and a 1956 Flxible Visicoach with the original Fageol Twin Coach from the ground up


it's entirely likely you don't even comprehend the work or open mind involved to venture where angels fear to tread...but when I tell the tale of my 02 RT BMW it's neither out of some motorcycle rag hype nor the illusion of inexperience.

I'm sure your position operates from a similar depth of experience?...because I can get all the hype I need from the sales literature.

I certainly don't "hate" BMWs...it's just that in my experience there was more sail than ballast...a whole lotta feathers and not much chicken.

the bike was bought in 6-02 for $16K+ with a top case and pad and traded in 11-06 for $7900 w/28K miles...didn't even hold it's value as well as expected...but I had to bail before it bit me hard.

that's just facts from my perspective. I didn't just roll into town and fall off a turnip truck when it comes to motorcycles and mechanics...I sincerely hope yours is a better experience than mine...and my attitude is fine. the pictures above should demonstrate historically just how far I'm willing to stretch and give the benefit of the doubt. The BMW dealer I bought from sucked...and I'll be happy to share that experience with you as well...if asked.

I certainly don't mean to offend, but I hope BMW gets it better than what I saw first hand. If that bruises your ego of insults your God...my apologies...but I can only stand by my experience...based on my experience...lots of experience...huge friggin' experience...wide...with scars...chicks dig scars...

My impression is they put too much power thru a 1930s design and hired college kids with more credentials and certificates than actual talent, pushed by egomaniacal managers and excutives who's image can't absorb critique...and it went astray...simple as that. The HP2 is a prime example of public masturbation.
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  #12  
Old 3 Mar 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by petesonhisway View Post
Well it seems racist bigotry is still alive and well in South Africa.
Well said, Pete. That's a nasty and ignorant comment, Lecap. Why don't you spend a few years on Robbins Island ....and quieten down for a while?
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  #13  
Old 28 Feb 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by lecap View Post
Dear Margus,

I don't think you find a lot of bikes where you have to synchronise anything after replacing throttle cables.
This is just too stupid....

Like som other bikes you have should synchronise after replacing throttle cables, mine lasts 50.000km -70.000 km...
How many times have you changed the clutch on a jap Bike after 70.000km? The Beemer has still 70.000 km left...

Guess what kind of bike....


Easiest way of synch is to meassure the the distance of the open cable with a ruler, it will always run pretty good after this.
The propper way is to use a 6 mm tube and fill it with water/petrol/oil and adjust it propperly.
Anyway, 15 minutes max.


Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
Oh, I see. Another pissed off BMW rider.
Trust me mate, if you were along on some of our rides we'd have you on your knees begging for mercy in no time. Bring your GS (and AAA cover)
Patrick
It's usually the driver who is the limit, not the bike:
YouTube - BMW Motorcycles HP2 at Erzberg MC Rodeo 2006!

... but Sala use to ride pretty good:
YouTube - BMW Motorcycles HP2 at the GCC Goldbach!

People that have used the Hubb for a while know that Margus has been around with his GS:-)
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  #14  
Old 1 Mar 2007
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Smile A long shot...

Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
Not all BMW riders can do this. For them, maybe a Jap bike is an easier deal?
Suzuki, and most Jap bike companies, have about 10 tens more dealers world wide than BMW. So if you get in trouble, dealers are everywhere in many countries.
You can get help from any tech or car shop anywhere in the world on most cases, there isn't much need for a speciefic dealer these days. DHL, Fedex etc works max few days package delivery all around the World to get your parts ordered from the "civilized world".

All this moan about reliability, brakedowns, where to get help, dealers, etc etc sounds like people are going just a way too paranoid these days. No wonder why we still have wars going on the Earth.

So if your Suzuki's blows up and engine completely mechanically seizes in the middle of nowhere, so what? You'll die soon after on the spot because of that?

This can happend on any bike. Doesn't matter if there's written BMW on it, or Honda or a HD, doesn't matter if the bike costs 500$ or it costed 500,000$ for you, nothing is mechanically perfect.

I tend to think people miss the sense of adventure these days and massivly trying to model illusory stability and social well-being they experience in their everyday lives (a stable "home-work-home" route) onto adventure travel and assuming the same philosophy should apply there as well, with no surprises coming up, a static system, assuming that all goes as expected and is 100% safe. Then better get a tourist spa package to Hawaii!

I.e. compare the travel stories done in the 70-80s on BMWs or Enfields or even HDs into third-world, lot of technical problems, no dealers around, but that's what makes it interesting. Compare them with dozens of modern date travel stories where not much happends.

Remember the good old sayings:

"Adventure starts where things start to go not as planned."

"Travel is galmorous only in retrospect."

What do you want to remember in your old age if you've done only short travels where the bike worked 100%, just another boring travel story to remember, or is it ultra-interesting somehow for you to read the same stuff all over again?

As Grant sayed: it's somehow really good if you brake down in the middle of nowhere, you get to know locals while you order your parts and work on the bike. A chance for a real contact with the locals that you don't experience much on "regular" travels. There's a thing to remember and write in your travel book! Think positive!

What I'm simply tring to say here is that there's no definitive truth about machine's reliability versus travel. I think most of current date bikes are realiable enough to get you anywhere in the World or multiple circles around it if your really want it, possible even on a 50cc scooter. And from this point of view, on chooshing the bike it's better to focus on the character of the bike rather than abusing your brain with the dogmatic information of 'realiability' going around in the internet that only makes people more paranoid. So the question is: do your really LOVE to ride THIS bike?

Yes?! Then pack up and go! Enjoy!

Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
the new CANbus system and fuel injection. What do you think?
I'd stop moaning, japs will soon have a similar system and then you start to think it's "normal". Time goes on and listening only Mozart doesn't bring on the evolution much. BMW has made the first step forward, they have guts to do it as we know and they can suffer the "teenager" consequences as well being the only real tester of the new system.

Japs will proabably just copycat it later when it works convincingly.

I think diagnostics equipment you can carry on the road is pretty effective on the current date, and will be much more in the future. If they catch up, a small compact diagnostics computer that fits into your pocket, you can take on the road, then the hassle with the electrical issues like on the current regular wired bikes will belong into history.

So I think the direction the BMW is going is positive and I'm pretty sure it's the future of bike's electrics, others will follow sooner or later.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
I've stopped checking my valve clearances now at 54,000 miles. The valves simply do not move. Suzuki reccomend a check every 12,000 miles. I think BMW say 6000 miles? The Vstrom, like all Suzuki's, uses same oil for engine and gear box. Seems to work quite well. Do you think your BMW shifts better than my Suzuki? The Vstrom does not shift that well compared to most Jap bikes but its still better than most BMW's, even the new 1200's.
What's the point of ultra-smooth shifting when it shifts smooth enough?

What I really like about the boxer twin engine is the pulling power starting from VERY low rpms, @2K there's already decent pull for a fully loaded bike - thus I need to shift very little, most of the city I can ride through in 3rd gear.

If it was a racing-sportsbike with some 15Krpm redline with gears having very small differences and whole day you need to kick up and down gears in a fraction of a second then yes, ultra-fast shifting would be required. But it's definately not my cup of tea for riding long rides, I prefer lazily low revving "torquey" engines with few gear changes, especially on travelling I find it to be a very good pro for a long distance bike.

With my bottom end, I haven't yet experienced any similar displacement bikes that pull so well start from the idle as R1xx0 boxers do.

And this is the character I really like on the bike on travelling and every day communiting, makes a grin in my face.

Most rivals toast the R1xx0 engine from high revs like a toy but again it's not my cup of tea and I'm thankful BMW has optimized their engine for the real life conditions not following the peak horsepower specs run to be in the competition with others for the 'biking n00b market' that only look on the paper on deciding which bike to buy - I rarely go near to the redline on travelling and the sweetest part is the mid-revs that I use the most every day and where I really like the character of a boxer engine. The redline is already @7.5K, for a 1080cc twin it's quite a respectable spec, I personally much prefer it over the screaming bikes that most of similar capacity v-twins and inline multis are nowadays (i.e. only 80cc smaller V-Strom's redline is much higher @9.5K). Different strokes for different folks.

While everyone seem to run towards to the peak performance spec (which means more revs) I'd like to go to the opposite direction. Couln't imagine travelling with a 18,000+rpm revving F1 engine on a big trailie bike... Pointless.

I've always fancied about lightweight (for a) diesel big trailie too, with some 4K redline and loads of torque right up from the idle, shaft drived of course. Would make a fantastic bike for my needs.

Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
At 54,000 miles my Vstrom still uses almost NO oil. Can most BMW's say the same? I have travelled with many BMW riding buddies for over 20 years. Even
the new oil heads are using quite a bit of oil, some like a liter in a 1000 miles.
Not all of course, but many do use some oil. Why?
There is some truth in it in some way. All bmw oilheads R850/1100/1150/1200 have VERY stiff oil rings, it takes at least 30,000kms to run them in, the practice has shown. Newer bikes haven't reached this mileage and they do take relatively lot of oil especially when the bikes are very new. From first 1000kms I think there goes even 0.5 to 1 litre of it, that's what i've heard. Oil consumption stops around after 30,000kms, I've experienced it on my both R1100GSes. On my 17,200km expedition to Iran and back (w/o no maintenance at all on the bike) it took exacly 1.5 litres of oil, which does 88 millilitres per 1000 kms and I consider this to be a trusty spec for an air-oil cooled engine going through Iran and Turkey's summer weather in the heat boom (+35 to +45C sauna). I wouldn't trust the bike that consumes no oil at all per very long mileage, I'd doubt this kind of bike works in a long term. Think how big the mechanical movement is in the engine and how much lubrication there is needed. As a side note: my Suzuki I4 took about the same amount of oil using only quality full synth oils made for wet clutched motorcycles.

Note that on GS I use the cheap semi-synth oils I can find from car shops. Using quality oils reduces the consumption considerably on boxers.

Stiff oil rings come as pro later on. There's lot of oilheads with 300K+ mileages with NO top end overhaul done and the oil consumption and the compression are within specs. So the top end's resource of the engine is excellent for a big capacaty twin. I also know an older airhead with over 300,000+km on the clock and uses no oil if using high quality Castrol synthetic, thus the consumption also depends lot of the quality of oil.

As Ali Baba put the picture with 450,000+km done R1100GS, there are many of them very high mileage capable.

One of the reasons for additional oil consumption is the boxer concept itself actually - using side stand regulary can increase the oil consuption. Reason is there that using side stand puts one cylinder head above the horizontal axis, and if the engine stopped in the crank position leaving "bottom" cylinder's exhaust valve open means that a small gulp of oil left from the last stroke will flow into exhaust. It's considerably reduced on the new oilheads tho (if you remember the smoking airheads in the morning after they've been left on the sidestand for a night ), but it's still there, it's a "feature". That's why you see many boxer bikers use centre stand mostly rather than side stand for a night stay.

Hope this explains it.



Quote:
Originally Posted by mollydog View Post
Tell us more about your travels Marcus. Is it expensive to tour in Eastern Europe?
OK, some offtopic for the relief then. Baltics: it's cheaper (fuel, food, accom, ...) than most of western Europe. Also for the big trailies it's an ideal playground - lot of gravel roads you don't see everywhere in the western Europe, and also the main tar roads are very shaky.

Currently it's like this here, winter:


But we have also warm summers, riding season is around 7-8 months.

Lot of gravel with some nice straights to test your bike's stability and top speed on the loose surface


And if you look for enough then you can find a footpeg scratching tar too:

(warning: don't try this at home, like I did with 1 hand only!)

But certanly many roads aren't that overcivilized, which is good for your riding skills:






Shaft drive comes in really handy often:




Islands have nice beaches and lot of offroad opportunities:













Almost forgot to mention that we have nice girls too who just love big trailies



All right, I've been vain enough with my pics. All yours now.

Cheers, Margus

Last edited by Margus; 1 Mar 2007 at 12:40.
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  #15  
Old 1 Mar 2007
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Nice pictures Margus, I guess I have to add the Baltics to my list of places I want to visit.
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Episodes below to listen to while you, err, pretend to do something or other...

Adventurous Bikers – We've got all your Hygiene & Protection needs SORTED! Powdered Hair & Body Wash, Moisturising Cream Insect Repellent, and Moisturising Cream Sunscreen SPF50. ESSENTIAL | CONVENIENT | FUNCTIONAL.

2020 Edition of Chris Scott's Adventure Motorcycling Handbook.

2020 Edition of Chris Scott's Adventure Motorcycling Handbook.

"Ultimate global guide for red-blooded bikers planning overseas exploration. Covers choice & preparation of best bike, shipping overseas, baggage design, riding techniques, travel health, visas, documentation, safety and useful addresses." Recommended. (Grant)



Ripcord Rescue Travel Insurance.

Led by special operations veterans, Stanford Medicine affiliated physicians, paramedics and other travel experts, Ripcord is perfect for adventure seekers, climbers, skiers, sports enthusiasts, hunters, international travelers, humanitarian efforts, expeditions and more.

Ripcord Rescue Travel Insurance™ combines into a single integrated program the best evacuation and rescue with the premier travel insurance coverages designed for adventurers and travel is covered on motorcycles of all sizes.
(ONLY US RESIDENTS and currently has a limit of 60 days.)

Ripcord Evacuation Insurance is available for ALL nationalities.


 

What others say about HU...

"This site is the BIBLE for international bike travelers." Greg, Australia

"Thank you! The web site, The travels, The insight, The inspiration, Everything, just thanks." Colin, UK

"My friend and I are planning a trip from Singapore to England... We found (the HU) site invaluable as an aid to planning and have based a lot of our purchases (bikes, riding gear, etc.) on what we have learned from this site." Phil, Australia

"I for one always had an adventurous spirit, but you and Susan lit the fire for my trip and I'll be forever grateful for what you two do to inspire others to just do it." Brent, USA

"Your website is a mecca of valuable information and the (video) series is informative, entertaining, and inspiring!" Jennifer, Canada

"Your worldwide organisation and events are the Go To places to for all serious touring and aspiring touring bikers." Trevor, South Africa

"This is the answer to all my questions." Haydn, Australia

"Keep going the excellent work you are doing for Horizons Unlimited - I love it!" Thomas, Germany

Lots more comments here!



Five books by Graham Field!

Every book a diary
Every chapter a day
Every day a journey
Refreshingly honest and compelling tales: the hights and lows of a life on the road. Solo, unsupported, budget journeys of discovery.
Authentic, engaging and evocative travel memoirs, overland, around the world and through life.
All 8 books available from the author or as eBooks and audio books



Back Road Map Books and Backroad GPS Maps for all of Canada - a must have!

New to Horizons Unlimited?

New to motorcycle travelling? New to the HU site? Confused? Too many options? It's really very simple - just 4 easy steps!

Horizons Unlimited was founded in 1997 by Grant and Susan Johnson following their journey around the world on a BMW R80G/S.

Susan and Grant Johnson Read more about Grant & Susan's story

Membership - help keep us going!

Horizons Unlimited is not a big multi-national company, just two people who love motorcycle travel and have grown what started as a hobby in 1997 into a full time job (usually 8-10 hours per day and 7 days a week) and a labour of love. To keep it going and a roof over our heads, we run events all over the world with the help of volunteers; we sell inspirational and informative DVDs; we have a few selected advertisers; and we make a small amount from memberships.

You don't have to be a Member to come to an HU meeting, access the website, or ask questions on the HUBB. What you get for your membership contribution is our sincere gratitude, good karma and knowing that you're helping to keep the motorcycle travel dream alive. Contributing Members and Gold Members do get additional features on the HUBB. Here's a list of all the Member benefits on the HUBB.




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