Monthly Archive for April, 2007

A Conversation with Steve Williams, Scooter in the Sticks

by D. Brent Miller

If you are not aware of the web site, Motorcycle Bloggers International, you should take a look. MBI is a collection of riders who write about their two-wheeled travel adventures. Recently, MBI held it’s 2007 Awards. Winning the Best Motorcycle Blog for writing and photography is Steve Williams who produces Scooter in the Sticks.

Photo courtesy Steve Williams, Scooter in the Sticks.

Steve Williams lives and rides in central Pennsylvania. He is a father, husband, friend, photographer, and a teacher and project manager of communications and marketing technology at a Pennsylvania university. He brings all these skills and talents together for Scooter in the Sticks.

Steve’s ramblings through the Pennsylvania countryside are a delight to read, and his thoughts on motorcycling and scooting safety are instructional.

Please take time to listen to a conversation with Steve Williams.–DBrent

 
 Steve Williams: Publisher of Scooter in the Sticks: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (12)

Sometimes, all you want to do is ride

by D. Brent Miller

The weekend weather is extrordinary–sunny and warm. It feels more like late spring than mid April. All you want to do is ride. Forget the trip plan or any kind of riding plan. Just get on the bike and go.

And to make it meaningful, leave the camera at the stable. No stopping for self portraits. No pulling off the road to photograph the bike in a beautiful landscape or parked next to a monument of any kind. No images of any kind of the bike alongside a twisty, lonely road.

It’s just you, the machine, an idea to ride east or west … or north … or south … or any combination thereof.–DBrent

Donuts build better relationships and houses

by D. Brent Miller

The best investment my wife and I made in our last house was to purchase about $100 worth of donuts for the carpenters and crews that built our house. Yes. Donuts!

As a result of those delectable treats delivered to the home construction site, we were able to build a few relationships with the framing crew, who were soon suggesting to us, ” If we moved this, or did that … we could improve ….” Our house was very well constructed and had a few features that were not in the actual floor plans. It was a wise investment, and we felt the return on investment was a very good one, although not really measurable.

There is something about the offering of food that brings people together, whether it is a sit down meal with friends, a helping hand at a disaster site, or appreciative workers on the job. Food, and in this case donuts, establishes a common ground and helps build relationships.

And so it goes, having just returned from our new home site, with the framing crew hard at work erecting the outer walls, but taking time for a dozen fresh donuts. They thanked me and waved as I drove off … with one of those donuts in my hand.–DBrent

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Review: American Borders by Carla King

by D. Brent Miller

[Note: Listen to the podcast interview with Carla King at the end of this article.]

Although it has been more than a decade since Carla King rode her Russian-made Ural with a sidecar around the North American continent, her recently published book is just as fresh as the day she originally posted accounts of her travels on that new-fangled thing called the Internet. Well … that’s what it was in 1995–something that very few were paying attention to or using. My how times have changed in just a short decade.

King’s original posts were on an Internet service called Global Network Navigator (GNN), which few people have probably every heard of.  However, I happened to have had a GNN account … and an AOL account … and before that a CompuServe account. When AOL bought GNN, hundreds of thousands of AOL subscribers were finally introduced to a portal to the Internet and the incredible world of cyberspace. And, there was Carla King riding her Ural motorcycle around the country and writing about her adventures. I believe I even sent her an e-mail or two of encouragement and praise.

 And now … here’s the book. Finally!

American Borders
A solo-circumnavigation
of the United States on a
Russian sidecar motorcycle

by Carla King

Published by Motorcycle Misadventures
2007, 228 Pp., $16.95

ISBN 13: 978-0-9646445-0-2

Available at www.MotorcycleMisadventures.com

King’s travelogue begins with “Aren’t you scared?” It’s her beginnings with solo travel and the decisions that lead up to this trip. Although there is plenty of motorcycle adventure in the book, it is also a personal journal of traveling alone as a woman, the kindness of strangers, and the difficulties of putting an ancient motorcycle design to the test on North American roads. Every chapter tells of some mechanical breakdown that not only tests the limits of the motorcycle but her own demeanor and phsychological well being. And yet, she finds ways to overcome everything, doing much of her own maintenance and relying on the brand new USA distributor of Ural motorcycles.

As you read about her adventures, you can hear yourself thinking, “I’d quit.” But, she does not. She perseveres through numerous breakdowns, and it is in those moments that she provides the best snapshots of traveling alone and the people she meets. Had it not been for the breakdowns, this would not be the travelogue it is. For those unplanned stops along the way provide the very essence of the book.

The book is hard to put down. A few of her entries are very personal encounters. You want to keep reading to learn how she overcomes obstacles, both mechanical and human, and whether or not she makes it to the next planned destination.  Her descriptions of riding through gorgeous landscapes and vistas, and the zen of lonesome roads is poetic. It is a wonderful travelogue that is sure to inspire the adventurer in all who partake of its chapters.–DBrent

Carla King

 
 Carla King: Review of American Borders [33:46m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (26)

Trip Planning, Part 3

by D. Brent Miller

You have the route planned, and you are counting down the days for your two-wheeled adventure. The last thing you want to do is just start throwing things together the night before you leave … or the day of! Take some time to think about what you need and what you want to take along.

The key to a successful trip is what you need. What you want to take along depends upon the carrying capacity of your motorcycle. When I am traveling by car, and sometimes by air, I always manage to take things I don’t need. You know how it goes … “If I have some extra time, I’ll do a little reading.” So, I take a stack of books and magazines. “If I have an afternoon free, I think I’ll go hiking.” So, I take along those huge hiking boots, fanny pack, water bottles, extra maps, etc. Did I find extra time to read? No. Did I find time to go hiking? No. But I took all that stuff with me anyway. Why? Because I was thinking about what I could take instead of what I needed, and that is a huge difference on a motorcycle.

Okay, you can do this mathematically. The gross vehicle weight of the bike is _____, and it’s carrying capacity is _____, and you weigh _____ (we won’t go into specifics here). That means you can only carry so many pounds of gear (carrying capacity minus your weight equals available weight for stuff). To seriously overload the bike runs the risk of structural damage. Case in point: Ewan MacGregor and Charley Boorman and their Round-The-World ride on two BMW GSers, documented on film and book, titled Long Way Round. Somewhere in the desolate area of Asia, one of the bikes had a structural failure–too much weight, and the frame finally gave out. They needed a good welder in the middle of nowhere.

It’s not likely that you will encounter something like this, because you most likely won’t be riding around the world, trying to carry everything you want. If you go, you’ll go with what you need. Another great example is hikers on the Appalachian Trail. They all start out with huge packs and everything they think they will need. Along the trail, hikers find places to ship gear home, or leave behind for others–things they don’t want to carry anymore because the load is too heavy. They narrow the load down to what they absolutely need.

What you absolutely need is going to vary a little because of personal preferences. And, there are plenty of other resources out there for your reading pleasure. One of the best is Motorcycle Camping Made Easy by Bob Woofter. Another is Adventure Motorcycling Handbook by Chris Scott, and if you are planning an RTW, this book is for you. Online resources include Horizons Unlimited and American Motorcyclist Association.

Here is what I pack on my Honda Shadow Spirit VT1100:

  • Enough clothes for the length of the ride plus one day. I always carry an extra set of basics, just in case, but I can also get by on two pairs of jeans. And I carry a pair of shoes that allow me to get out of the motorcycle boots. All of this goes into a waterproof duffle bag (purchased from Cabellas) and is strapped on the bike between me and the pillion back rest. It provides an excellent back rest for me for those long miles. If the ride will be more than six days, I plan to visit a laundromat or hotel/motel laundry facility.
  • Basic tools, tire gauge, tie-downs or bungee cords, a rag or two to clean the windscreen and my helmet’s visor, and a rain suit. All of this goes into the two soft-side saddle bags. I also carry a bike cover. It is in it’s own bag and is usually strapped on either the luggage rack or on the side of the duffle bag providing additional back-rest comfort.
  • My Cortech Mini Tank Bag contains maps, compact digital camera, digital voice recorder, and a reporter’s notepad. This bag is magnetic and stays in place … period. It is also very easy to remove when I stop for gas or food. It goes with me if I leave the bike.
  • In the top of the waterproof duffle bag, I carry my laptop computer. I can’t say enough about how waterproof these bags are. Everything stays dry, and I was never worried when one of my most recent rides was 300 miles of rain. And … these bags are very affordable!
  • The last item I carry is an optional one for me. I get by very well carrying the Canon Powershot Pro 1 in the tank bag. Most of my images on the road are made with this. It is an 8-megapixel camera with automatic and manual camera controls, and features a famous Canon “L” series lens–the ones with a red ring on the lens barrel indicating Canon’s best. But, this camera will only do about 80% of what I want on the road, which means I need to carry additional professional camera gear for those other shots if I am on a journalistic adventure. When needed, I take my Canon ID MkII camera with three lenses–a Canon 16-35mm 2.8L, Tamron 28-300mm, and a Canon standard 50mm. I could probably do without the 50mm, but it is a great lens with a 1.4f aperture. It lets in a lot of light for those low light situations. This gear is carried in a small camera backpack that straps on the luggage carrier and the back of the pillion backrest. There, it is easily accessible, but is not waterproof. It will fit into the waterproof duffle bag, but it is a tight fit with everything else in there. I also carry a light camera tripod.

Honda packed for four-day trip.

What you don’t see on my list is camping equipment. I have always wanted to take a motorcycle camping trip, because camping was the way of our vacations when I was a kid. Heck, I even went camping on my first honeymoon! (Do you think there is a correlation with why that didn’t quite make it to 10 years?) Lin, my wife of almost 21 years and I have enjoyed several camping trips, but as we have grown older as a couple, we look for more relaxing accommodations. But, I still think I will go MC camping soon. So, I have thought about what I will take and how I will carry it on this bike … or … the next one!

Start making plans for your next two-wheeled adventure. See you on the highway!–DBrent