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#1
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Adv' mc magazine
Hi riders
UK's "Bike" magazine latest edition has a special Adventure motorcycling section. (Grant, liked your words) Is there a magazine dadicatet to the subject alone?
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Dare! My ride from Dead horse to Ushuaia 2009 is at www.harpatka.com It's in hebrew but lots of pics and some translation Yoni |
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#2
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Hi
i usally buy MSL (motorcycle sport and Leisure) has a lot on the touring and equipment/bikes involved Used to be one called adventure motorcycling but it went under bout a year back. not enough mainstream readers i guess? |
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#3
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Road Runner Motorcycle Crusing & Touring.
http://www.rrmotorcycling.com/ In the August 2005 issue the have an article about Horizons Unlimited and another one on South Africa. Both by Ramona Eichhorn and Uwe Krauss |
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#4
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One magazine I've come across with an 'adventure motorcycling' bias is the American Dual Sport News. Interesting tech articles, bike tests and product reviews. It also has some travel reports, which do have a bias towards the Americas, but then it's a US mag. IMHO well worth the subscription fee. Subscription's available to readers outside the US.
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#5
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Tourenfahrer is the best out there but it's only in German.
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My photos: www.possu.smugmug.com |
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#6
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Steve
I wonder if Tourenfahrer know that there are 70 times more english readers than german...Today every small fashion magazine is translated monthly to 6 languages ![]() Yoni
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Dare! My ride from Dead horse to Ushuaia 2009 is at www.harpatka.com It's in hebrew but lots of pics and some translation Yoni |
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#7
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Given the boom in interest in Britain following Ewen and Charlie's jaunts, you'd think there would now be an adequate market for "Adventure Motorcycling" here. But I don't see any publishers rushing in. A book with the same title was published recently. I received it as a birthday present and I'm very pleased with it. Okay, in doesn't go into huge detail so old hands will have little to learn, but the photography is good and book as a whole highly inspirational for riders and would-be riders. I won't say wannabees. Serious riders are IMO better off with the Adventure Motorcycling Handbook. But there's a lot to be said for nice big full-colour pictures. Quote:
Last edited by SpitfireTriple; 19 Mar 2009 at 21:58. |
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#8
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What with TWO's offer for adventure stories posted elsewhere on the site, and with bike's latest feature maybe the UK's motorcycle magazine editors are finally starting to realise that there is a fair proportion of bikers that don't really care if the new R1 will shave 1 second off of their laptime or not!
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#9
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Motorcycle travel magazines
I would'nt hold your breath on that. I Contributed articles to Motorcycle Voyager together with a photographer and they went bankrupt owing a lot of money to everyone. Following that debacle the photographer put a lot of effort into launching a motorcycle travel publication, and had a magazine publisher very interested, but the economics were just not feasible. For a starter, motorcycle travel is expensive. To produce engaging travel articles with high quality photography means that the people involved need to be paid. It is too costly.
Magazines choose/prefer to go with the sometimes talented amateur who they can pay GBP150 rather than people who do it for a living, and they get away with it because, you, the reader continue to settle for sub-standard text and photo quality. Why would you buy a magazine when you can read the talented amateur online? Surely you want to read something that blows you away and see photos that really excite you? That is what professional journalists and photographers are paid to do. |
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#10
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The economics are not there. The magazines cannot pay what professional writers so richly deserve; whining about it doesn't change that fact, so get over it and let's move on. |
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#11
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Cheers for that, will have a look. I used to get GlobeBusters Sport and Leisure, but became bored very quickly.
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#12
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As a former subscriber to MS&L I'm getting bombarded with special offers to rejoin at a rate that suggests to me they are worried. They should be to be honest, they won't sell me £100 worth of chip wrapper while it's got VFR's and the usual 600cc sports bike on the cover.
Anyone know how hard it would be to get the German mags translated? Isn't it a case of automated translation, proof reading, correction and printing? I'd give that a chance even if it is all Touratech and BMW's over anything I've seen in the UK. Once it's going I'd guess you could add in UK/US written items until you've got a true sister publication. Andy |
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#13
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(running for cover...)And do magazine subscriptions really cost 100 GPB?! That's nuts! |
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#14
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If the demand was there for a magazine costing £20 an issue that paid its full-time professional staff writers and photographers £500 a day for Pulitzer and National-Geographic quality work, it would be on Smith's shelves right now. It ain't, so it ain't. Quote:
, or sitting on beaches grinning. No doubt their mothers like to see such images of their handsome sons. I don't. I have no time for their vanity. I am not opposed to people putting pictures of themselves in their blogs of course. Blogs take a lot of time to put together, and it is only right that their authors personalise them to reinforce their happy memories of their trip. But the blog author isn't paid. If I'm paying for something, I will not tolerate family snaps of magazine staffers on glorified holiday. Show me the bikes and the places. Not the faces. (Ouch). Quote:
If on the other hand magazines continue to pay themselves to go on expensive jaunts that most of us have to save up for they will eventually bankrupt themselves. Motorcycle magazine staff writers and photographers have had a good life. But like it or not (and I suspect not), they need to face twenty-first century reality: It's coming to an end. You are being steadily and inexorably replaced by "amateurs". I am amazed by how blind people will be when they don't want to see the writing on the wall. PS: pharris: It may not sound like it from my comments above but...Welcome to the HUBB. Last edited by SpitfireTriple; 23 Mar 2009 at 18:19. |
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#15
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(running for cover...)
, or sitting on beaches grinning. No doubt their mothers like to see such images of their handsome sons. I don't. I have no time for their vanity.
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