Monday 30 June 2008

About the bike.


There were a couple of options when it came to buying a bike for the trip. The first was to buy a bike in the ' States, given the strength of the pound against the dollar. The second was to buy at home and ship to the start point, which would cost more but cut down on paperwork and preparation hassles.

The bike needed to be on road and off road (unsealed/dirt roads) capable, have a decent-sized fuel tank, excellent reliability and reasonable comfort for several hundred mile days. At first I was looking to buy either a 2008 Kawasaki KLR650 or a KTM 640 Adventure in the US state of Montana, as there is nothing in the way of sales tax to pay (and what a sweet place for test riding!). The KLR ticked all the right boxes, according to Kawasaki they'd even sorted the notoriously uncomfortable seat for 2008. In the end I decided I wanted a more road-oriented bike as the vast majority of the route would be on sealed roads.

The next bike on my list was the Suzuki DL650 Vstrom. Fitted with appropriate protection and decent tyres it would handle dirt tracks, was good on fuel, comfy for mile munching and could carry a decent load. I eventually decided to buy in the UK as I had a part exchange, and although that now means I have to pay for shipping to North America, at least the bike will be run in and hopefully prepared before the trip starts.

I bought the DL650X, which came with a bashplate under the engine, handguards and engine bars to hopefully save some damage to the bike if I drop it, and a short windshield. I ordered a centrestand too, in case I have to remove a wheel on the road. When I picked it up the bashplate was not fitted as the fittings had not been supplied, and it came with about enough fuel to get me to a petrol station. Ahh, customer service :)

Cheers,

Frase.

Friday 27 June 2008

A note on planning.

Planning has always been something that happens to other people. If all you ever have to think about is making certain you are fully clothed before you leave the house for the same commute day in, day out, then actually sitting down and figuring out what you need for five months on the road (let alone in other countries) can be quite daunting.

Several people I've chatted to have remarked that I don't seem to have planned much. This is mostly true. I've taken a lot of time and care over working out what I need to do to get the bike (and me!) to the start point, and I've organised the paperwork I will need (ok, ok, I'm waiting on a couple of minor bits like Insurance) to get to the end. I've even got some maps.

But the general idea of the trip is to point the front wheel south and use the Force.

Meantime I set up a SmugMug account for my pictures at http://frase.smugmug.com. This will be used as a repository for trip photos, and I guess in conjunction with this blog should provide a good online record of the journey.

Frase.

Thursday 26 June 2008

Hello...

This page has been set up in response to many requests for some sort of diary of my planned Motorcycle journey from the shores of the Arctic Ocean at Prudhoe Bay in Alaska, to the bottom of the world - Tierra Del Fuego, Argentina. I'll be visiting 15 countries and (hopefully) dipping my toes in four of the world's oceans.

Internet access and laziness permitting, I'll keep this blog as current as possible.

Finally, my apologies to anyone who got here from Google expecting a Rolling Stones tribute. You Can't Always Get What You Want :)

Fraser.