Thursday, 24 May 2012

Twenty-Four Days

Twenty-four days.  It's a long time.  I've taken some bike and snowmobile trips before, but nothing ever close to this long.  How do you prepare for something like this?


I'll share with you some of my planning experiences, and we'll see how well it works out over the next several weeks.


Planning the basic route.
While I did want to leave room for sponteneity, I thought it was important to at least rough the route out.  I figured it was important to have a general idea of where to be day to day so I would end up at home according to the plan.  For anybody planning a road trip (on a motorcycle or not) I would highly recommend the Harley Ride Planner.  You are able to customize routes more easily than Google Maps and also download your route directly into a GPS.  I ended up working out this rough plan for my trip.  The majority of days in the plan are 400-500km in length as I didn't want to turn it into a marathon and take all the fun out of the trip.


Camp or Motel?
To me if you're travelling with a friend it's a no brainer.  Stay in motels.  Splitting the cost of an inexpensive motel is the same cost or less than a campsite.  But when I started planning I was under the assumption that I would be riding the whole thing by myself, so I figured camping was the only affordable way to do this. So I set out to figure out the best way to motorcycle camp. (As it happens now it will be about 60% travelling on my own and joined later by friends.) 


I ended up settling on a "camping-lite" approach - I wouldn't plan to cook myself but rather get food at restaurants and the grocery stores meal by meal.  My camp would strictly provide me cheap lodging.


I ended up with the following gear:


Camp Chair. You can't camp in any sort of comfort without a chair at your campsite.  The trouble is you have to pack it on a motorcycle.  My friend Graham is an experienced big mileage touring guy on his BMW and highly recommended the Kermit chair.  It packs up tiny, it's well made, has a back (i.e. it's not a camp stool) and is actually quite comfortable to sit in.  A word of warning - it's stupid expensive for a camp chair, but I challenge anyone to find a chair as comfortable, well made and breaks down to such a small package that will easily pack onto the back of a motorbike.




Redverz Tent.  It's a tent designed for motorcyclists and has a motorcycle garage built in.  How cool is that?  Graham also recommended protecting the tent poles from getting bent or crunched when secured to the bike.  I opted for a draftsmen's drawing tube cut to length and seems to work well.




Bedroll, air mattress and pillow all came from Mountain Equipment Co-op.  If you've never shopped there, they specialize in a lot of back country camping stuff that all packs up small.  My new favourite things are compression sacks.  Great for packing your bedroll up tightly.  (I also bought one to pack up my rain suit - it works great!).  All the camping stuff is then packed into large dry bags (also from MEC) and secured to the bike's carrier using cam straps.  I would have liked to get it all in one dry bag but wouldn't quite all fit into the largest one - so I ended up with two.


I also made sure I picked up a headlamp for around the camp at night, a leatherman and a lanyard for my camera.  And I'm sure there's a million other things I will be looking for but this setup will have to do.


Bike Shipping
I checked a couple of places but settled on TFX International.  They specialize in vehicle transports.  They picked it up at Jacox HD in Mississauga and delivered it to Calgary HD as my starting point.  The guys in Calgary tell me it arrived in perfect condition so I guess it went ok!


Hopefully some of this information will be useful to you if you're planning a trip too.


In the end I have no idea if I did enough planning or too much.  I guess the 24 days following June 1st will surely tell me.

Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Damn Australia.

It all started about 18 months ago.  I was engaged in a conversation as Canadians do, moaning about the injustice of the typical vacation time Canadians receive compared to people in other countries in the world; most notably Europe.  I shared what I thought was a great vacation policy common in Australia.  


I'm not sure if it's legislated or just a common benefit but it goes something like this:  After ten years of employment with an Australian company, the employee receives a three months of paid leave, recurring every tenth year.  Wow, I thought.  How great that would be.... and then the wheels began to turn.


I hadn't had a summer off since finishing Grade 8.  Wouldn't it be great to take two months off with my wife and kids for the summer?  Being married to a teacher who has her summers off, I thought maybe I could have just one - but this would take a lot of planning and saving.


With the a summer off I had always wanted to take an Epic motorbike ride around Canada and the US.  My buddy Mike and I had discussed this idea several years ago after getting hyped up watching Ewan McGregor and Charley Boorman's Long Way Round.  But I didn't want to burn half the school vacation away from the family riding my bike.  The solution?  Take three months off instead of two and ride the bike while everyone's still in school!  


Fortunately, I work for a great company and my bosses supported the plan, as there was lots of time to plan for this amount of time off.  (I also thank God I have a very understanding and patient wife who supports me indulging in my gas powered adventures.)


I wanted to be home for my daughter's Grade 8 grad, so I decided to cheat a bit and bypass the ride though the prairies and ship my bike to Calgary and start from there, so I can enjoy a nice leisurely daily pace of 400-500km/day.  A couple hours in the morning, a few in the afternoon.




My bike the day it shipped.  It arrived safely last week in Calgary.




So, here I am now 18 months later and I'm counting down the days before I leave for Calgary on June 1st for my 24 day riding adventure.


Can't wait. 

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

Welcome to My Blog

Thanks for coming to visit....umm...join?.... follow?....read (?) my blog.  As you can tell, I've never done this before.


If you're reading this, it probably means you know I'm taking some serious time off work this summer and for part of it I'm taking an "Epic" motorcycle trip for several weeks through Canada and the US.  It also probably means you are mildly interested in following along with me on my adventure.


I was going to post pictures and comments on Facebook, but I've been informed by web experts (including my children) that Facebook isn't the way to do it.  A blog is the way to do it.


Since I don't really know what I'm doing, hopefully you'll cut me some slack.  I'll try to post some good photos and journal about what's going on day to day.


Enjoy!