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-   -   Sold my R1150gs and bought a bicycle..... (https://www.horizonsunlimited.com/hubb/overland-bicycle-travel/sold-my-r1150gs-bought-bicycle-44364)

ampr1150gs 30 Jul 2009 11:32

Sold my R1150gs and bought a bicycle.....
 
Last year I decided that the cheapest way for me to see the world was to sell my motorbike and by myself a bicycle.

I set off on 18th July 2008 and here I sit in Kathmandu, Nepal a couple of stones lighter. I haven't quite given up on motorbikes though and was lucky enough to borrow a 500cc Enfield in Pushkar, India and a 350cc Enfield to ride the Manali - Leh Highway.

I've got a webstie Bicycle Touring: Acoustic Motorbike - A bicycle journey around this small blue planet which has a blog and also links to some videos / photos. I've just uploaded a video to YouTube of my ride down the Rothlang La (pass) and you can view it here: YouTube - Rothang La (India)

Feel free to contact me if you are planning a similar trip.

Aidan

MikeS 30 Jul 2009 13:49

Stunning photos by the way! Looking at them really doesn't help my mood as I sit writing reports at my desk!!

devildiver 31 Jul 2009 20:10

Oh mate thats so cool. Those pictures are fantastic! Will be following the blog.

Good luck

Manx 18 Aug 2009 21:34

Same thought had crossed my mind, swop the engined two wheeler for a leg powered one. Will be following your blog!

Good luck!

oldbmw 18 Aug 2009 22:11

Bit more extreme than myself. I sold my bmw r80rt and bought an Enfield.. think it is abit up on a push bike :)

JHanson 28 Aug 2009 15:08

Lovely photos, Aidan.

ampr1150gs 1 Sep 2009 12:19

Thanks for the comments on the photos.
The trip has been great so far and I certainly don't miss spending money on petrol / spairs and repairs.

Aidan

*Touring Ted* 24 Feb 2011 11:07

I'm planning to swap an engine for muscle power on my next trip too....

Did you find it an easy transition ? Ever frustrated with lack of progress ??

mark manley 25 Feb 2011 07:04

I did the swop last year for a tour of SE Asia and found it hard but enjoyable work, you see a lot more on a bicycle and get more interaction with locals. A couple of times I put the bike on a bus or train when I didn't fancy the road ahead. For my next trip I am considering splitting the difference and taking a 125cc motorbike now that I am use to the slower pace. The medical insurance is also a lot less on a bicycle or small motorbike.

The Cameraman 25 Feb 2011 16:49

Hi MArk,

just get yourself a Yamaha Serow!

I've never regretted the day that I sold my R1200GS and took the tiddler option.

Regards

Reggie

Belle 25 Feb 2011 16:56

Second what Reggie said. :thumbup1:

Flyingdoctor 25 Feb 2011 17:46

We're slowly taking over the world. Serows rock! :thumbup1:

DougieB 26 Feb 2011 13:40

Quote:

Originally Posted by *Touring Ted* (Post 325574)
I'm planning to swap an engine for muscle power on my next trip too....

Did you find it an easy transition ? Ever frustrated with lack of progress ??

I did about a year or two ago, gradually doing more bicycle and less motorbike. all the clichés that motorbikers claim, "...part of the scene..", "maps becoming 3-dimensional", etc, apply even more so to cycle touring.

my motorbike touring seemed to have evolved into a long list of goals, and I just rode around ticking them off. it seemed a bit, disconnected with where I was.

as to lack of progress, it's exactly the opposite. my motorbike touring is measured in 'fuel tanks'. you look at the map, and think, "that's one and a half tanks away, I can make that today." but on the bicycle, even touring at home, the slower you go the more that seems to happen. on the bicycle I measure progress in terms of how little I think about the next place on the map.

for example, I've just been doing some touring at home; over the last few weeks. I took 7 days to cycle Inverness to Orkney. the time it took was neither intentional or unintentional, it was just how long it took. but those 7 days were packed full of all the stuff touring is supposed to be about.

I could ride (and have ridden much further) that on a motorbike in a couple of hours. I would have missed out on so much.

I think what killed, or seriously wounded, motorbike travel for me was taking that GS back from Bamako to London. I did the Bamako to Barcelona in 8 days or something. to me these big bikes rob any sense of achievement because they are so damn easy to ride. even the enfield across west africa proved to be a pretty straight forward experience. I was just whizzing past so much stuff, because I had this idea that I have to so see some 'progress' on the map.

don't get me wrong, there are people doing exceptionally adventurous things on motorbikes, and there are others who are doing less exceptional things and thoroughly enjoying themselves. but I think the days of romanticising about Ted Simon's first trip, for example, are over for most of us. Simply because we're not able to conjure up the same state of mind that was possible back then. these days we are people who seem to want to pre-plan, have insurance, have bomb-proof equipment, have instant communications back home, etc, etc.

I have a sense I'm now on the lunatic fringe of things. I want to break that cord with home, when I'm away. I don't want continual contact with the familiar things. Even if I'm only in Inverness I can feel free by doing away with phone, internet, plans, etc. a lot of people seem to be heading towards the commercialisation of touring, and I'm running away from it :-)

two books I've read in the past year or so sum up what I'm thinking. A Time Of Gifts, Tim Fermor Leigh. And, Full Tilt, Dervla Murphy.

I don't think we can ever get back to that form of travel, we seem to know too much these days. but the bicycle, I think, makes it easier to travel more naively in today's world.

Vaufi 26 Feb 2011 20:12

Quote:

Originally Posted by DougieB (Post 325956)
I did about a year or two ago, gradually doing more bicycle and less motorbike. all the clichés that motorbikers claim, "...part of the scene..", "maps becoming 3-dimensional", etc, apply even more so to cycle touring.

........

I don't think we can ever get back to that form of travel, we seem to know too much these days. but the bicycle, I think, makes it easier to travel more naively in today's world.

1+ :thumbup1:

Crusty 26 Feb 2011 20:18

Dervla Murphy is, IMHO, one of the best travel writers of all time and Full Tilt is one of my favourite travel books of all time.

She writes with a style and distinction that's from a time which, as you say, has long gone. No harm in employing a bit of that style in your own travels though...:)

Be careful though, If you read some of her other books you could find yourself trading the pushbike for a mule...:eek3:

mark manley 27 Feb 2011 06:07

Quote:

I have a sense I'm now on the lunatic fringe of things. I want to break that cord with home, when I'm away. I don't want continual contact with the familiar things. Even if I'm only in Inverness I can feel free by doing away with phone, internet, plans, etc. a lot of people seem to be heading towards the commercialisation of touring, and I'm running away from it :-)
I can relate to this, when travelling at home or abroad I never take a mobile phone, I don't have one, computer, sat nav etc, the feeling of detachemnt is quite liberating and enjoyable.

DougieB 2 Mar 2011 16:24

Quote:

Originally Posted by Crusty (Post 326008)
Be careful though, If you read some of her other books you could find yourself trading the pushbike for a mule...:eek3:

yeah, I briefly thought about that book but decided against it. I read Anne Mustoe's first book, which I thought was really good; in the spirit of getting of your arse and travelling. but by the second book she'd become a 'travel writer' and the magic/naivety had gone. I'm now only reading the first-born of authors who travel places.

cheers

Vaufi 3 Mar 2011 10:58

Quote:

Originally Posted by DougieB (Post 326477)
yeah, I briefly thought about that book but decided against it. I read Anne Mustoe's first book, which I thought was really good; in the spirit of getting of your arse and travelling. but by the second book she'd become a 'travel writer' and the magic/naivety had gone. I'm now only reading the first-born of authors who travel places.

cheers

Quite so. Same with Bill Bryson, Ted Simon or Bruce Chatwin... It's a pity actually :(

Caminando 19 Mar 2011 21:12

Brilliant idea about the bicycle....you may be on the wave of the future. Well done to you.:biggrin3:

Can't agree above with Crusty about D. Murphy; she is a very popular writer but also a very poor writer, devoid of any style. She regurgitates local tourist info, and bores us to death with her trivia. She also writes ad nauseam about her kid, who is not in the least interesting.
Sorry if you like her, but there are many thousands of better writers.

gixxer.rob 20 Mar 2011 10:44

Depends on the traveller
 
Although I can understand what is being said about travelling at a slower pace and without mobile phones, sat navs and laptops.

I think it completely depends on how you travel in the first place. If you are the type that must plan, record and tick off sites it will always be a point to point, next, next type journey. If your biggest problem in whether to turn left or right at a intersection then you will see all you want too. Some people like to do it and get the t-shirt others like take their time and see what there is to see. I am a bit of both at different times during a ride.

Slowing down would certainly help with this but only if you are open to what you are slowly passing by.

monsieur 30 Oct 2012 11:02

Hello Aidan!
Interested in hearing your story - any plans to resurrect your bolg?

ampr1150gs 20 Nov 2012 19:33

Hi Monsieur,
I'm back in Ireland at the moment and staying with friends / family so I haven't had the time to do my planned revamp of the website. Hopefully I'll be exchanging on a property next week and then I'll get to work on the blog and book.

Aidan


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