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| Evergreen |
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 Evergreen Derestricted Danger
Joined: 14 Mar 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 09:09 - 07 Apr 2016 Post subject: RTW-touring & working |
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Hey there,
so I'm planning to ride around the world on a bike; first leg (South America) done, next up is Africa. The idea is to ride around the whole continent following the coast - Morocco to Morocco via South Africa, basically.
Took me 1,5 years to ride South America because a)small bike - a Chinese 150cc; b)money - ran out somewhere in Argentina, had to find a job and continue a few months later.
Now South America is easy - no need to get visas in advance, the whole continent speaks one (easy to learn) language, folks are friendly, dead easy to find a job, work a bit and carry on. Africa seems a bit trickier - most countries require all sorts of fancy stuff like carnet de passage, you have to get your visas in advance, limited stay in pretty much every country, a bunch of different languages; and I find myself wondering if finding a temp job (say,teaching English, working in a hostel reception etc) in Nigeria or Somalia is as easy as in Peru or Chile?..
Does anyone have any experience of travelling & working, especially in Africa?
When I came back from South America I figured I'd just work here in England for some 2-3 years, save some $$$ and then go, but it's driving me mad to be stuck like this and the only other alternative I see is just go and find work somewhere on the way.
Thoughts? |
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| R1stu |
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 R1stu Shrek!

Joined: 12 Mar 2003 Karma :   
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 Posted: 13:22 - 07 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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I hear that Somalia has a roaring trading for sea fairer if you can drive a speed boat well and fast
On a serious note, from watching LWD/LWR and similar programs and Rod on here, Africa is a PITA for just getting into the country, let alone working there.
Personal safety be my 1st issue. ____________________ Carbon closet tart! https://www.bikepics.com/members/r6stuk/02r6/
Stolen bike. 2000 R1: https://www.bikepics.com/members/r6stuk/00r1/
Current bike 1991 Honda ST1100 Pan European, 1986 Honda cb350sg (Finished) |
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| mrbox |
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 mrbox Wonderwall

Joined: 30 Nov 2013 Karma :     
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 Posted: 13:42 - 07 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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I would suggest searching HUBB for the answer  ____________________ Current bikes: RE Himalayan, Bandit 12, MZ250ES |
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| Snowdonia Rider |
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 Snowdonia Rider World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Oct 2014 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:02 - 07 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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Around South America on a Chinese bike? When money runs out you find a job and work until you can move on?
WHAT A BLOKE!
Fair play to you, at least when you're old and you look back at your life you can say "I did that".
In one of the bike mags recently ( can't remember which one, possibly 'Ride') there was a monthly feature about riding through Africa on (I think it was) a TTR250. The jist of it was that riding through Africa was a PITA and a bit scary, although epic at the same time. Personally if it were me I'd have many many contingency plans!
Africa seems to be more dodgy than usual these days, can't you ride another continent and after that, see if Africa has gotten better?!  ____________________ I want your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle.
Suzuki GP125 Suzuki GSX600F Suzuki SV650S KTM EXC250F SkyTeam Bongo 125
My YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/SnowdoniaRider |
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| Evergreen |
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 Evergreen Derestricted Danger
Joined: 14 Mar 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 16:50 - 07 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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| under_rated wrote: |
 WHAT A BLOKE!
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I'm not a bloke, I'm a girl:)
And that Chinese bike held just fine for well over 40 000 km both on and off road, through and under water (fell off a bridge ), so I don't really get why so many people find it ridiculous? Plus, I learned to ride in Peru and they mostly only ever sell Chinese bikes in smaller towns. I had no clue that small+Chinese=sorta funny. I ride a Japanese 850cc these days but if it was a choice between small cheap bike and going round the world or a big shiny Japanese/German parked in the garage I'd still rather go travelling:)
What's PITA? And why should Africa be scary?
Turns out you actually do NOT need a carnet for most African countries, yay!
So now it's just the question of visas and work. I'm on HUBB, but same problem - people actually save money/sell/rent out their houses etc and then go travelling rather than just go & work on the way with a very few exceptions-people getting sponsored, living off writing/photography or some badass long distance IT jobs. I suck at IT and photography, can write but don't really see how to make money from that, so what's left is temp jobs every 3-4 months while travelling; I'm just wondering if it's easy to find/get them. I'm not talking about legal work visas and permits, pretty sure the local farmers/hostel/bar owners won't really care, but I'm just curious about the availability. |
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| Undinist |
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 Undinist Nearly there...
Joined: 08 Oct 2013 Karma :   
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| Snowdonia Rider |
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 Snowdonia Rider World Chat Champion

Joined: 17 Oct 2014 Karma :   
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 Posted: 20:04 - 07 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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| Evergreen wrote: | | under_rated wrote: |
 WHAT A BLOKE!
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I'm not a bloke, I'm a girl:)
And that Chinese bike held just fine for well over 40 000 km both on and off road, through and under water (fell off a bridge ), so I don't really get why so many people find it ridiculous? Plus, I learned to ride in Peru and they mostly only ever sell Chinese bikes in smaller towns. I had no clue that small+Chinese=sorta funny. I ride a Japanese 850cc these days but if it was a choice between small cheap bike and going round the world or a big shiny Japanese/German parked in the garage I'd still rather go travelling:)
What's PITA? And why should Africa be scary?
Turns out you actually do NOT need a carnet for most African countries, yay!
So now it's just the question of visas and work. I'm on HUBB, but same problem - people actually save money/sell/rent out their houses etc and then go travelling rather than just go & work on the way with a very few exceptions-people getting sponsored, living off writing/photography or some badass long distance IT jobs. I suck at IT and photography, can write but don't really see how to make money from that, so what's left is temp jobs every 3-4 months while travelling; I'm just wondering if it's easy to find/get them. I'm not talking about legal work visas and permits, pretty sure the local farmers/hostel/bar owners won't really care, but I'm just curious about the availability. |
My apologies for assuming you were a bloke
PITA is Pain In The Arse, and from what I've read/heard etc it's scary in the sense of personal security and the fact that conditions can be so tough and things are far and few between.
I knew a bloke who did 6 months on a Yacht in the Caribbean, he said it was incredibly boring but the money earnt was literally all disposable as expenses were all paid for. He said he didn't get as much free time as expected to explore a new country etc but at least he came home with a healthy bank balance. ____________________ I want your clothes, your boots and your motorcycle.
Suzuki GP125 Suzuki GSX600F Suzuki SV650S KTM EXC250F SkyTeam Bongo 125
My YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/c/SnowdoniaRider |
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| Undinist |
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 Undinist Nearly there...
Joined: 08 Oct 2013 Karma :   
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| TheDonUK |
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 TheDonUK World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Feb 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 04:23 - 08 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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Where can I find/Apply for these superyacht jobs?
Evergreen, I think it's obviously going to be more difficult to work as you go in Africa as compared to South America. I don't know what kind of money you are making back home but it's got to be an order of magnitude more than you would on the road no?
My theory on this is and has been it makes more sense to get paid 80-100 quid a day at home than to work for room and board abroad. You just have to suck up the boring bit of being at home.
Am in Peru now and while not as cheap as Bolivia you can still live comfortably for 10 quid a day including a private room and eating out... South America FTW!
Africa just does not appeal to me for most of the reasons mentioned. But that said once I finish this to California/Canada/Alaska I suppose it is the next logical destination when I invariably get itchy feet again... ____________________ [Current Bikes - GSXR-750 K5 & C90-97 ] [Previous Bikes: Runner 125, YBR 125, GS500, Bandit 600, Hornet 600, ZX6R-99, C90-99, R1-99, XT600E-04, GSXR-750 K4, CRF250L '16] |
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| Evergreen |
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 Evergreen Derestricted Danger
Joined: 14 Mar 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 09:42 - 08 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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I'd appreciate info on those yacht jobs as well!
Don-yes, I'd make more money working here than in some remote farm in Zimbabwe for sure, but the point is, working in the UK and saving=wasting lots of time sat at a desk in front of a computer which I absolutely hate; working in a farm in Zimbabwe=significantly less $$$, but you're on the road/some exotic place. I too survived on 10, in fact usually much less than 10 quid a day in South America (lots of wild camping/cooking own food etc), so I don't need much but as I want to travel for at least 2-3 years or more that's still a lot of money.
As for Africa being unsafe/rough, I guess that's just individual perceptions/media influence and levels of comfort. I'm perfectly fine on sand/gravel/mud roads, camping, and cooking my own food; as for safety, I know at least one other female solo rider who's currently in Uganda and says she's having the time of her life. So that's that. Some folks need five star hotels, fancy meals and tour guides - and that's of course fine too, but...saying 'Africa is scary and unsafe and rough' without even having been there just doesn't make a lot of sense.
Don-yeah, you do get itchy feet pretty soon:) I'm going nuts being stuck in the matrix-hence the idea to get out asap and just sort of wing it along the way. |
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| linuxyeti |
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 linuxyeti World Chat Champion
Joined: 06 Oct 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 10:24 - 08 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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| Evergreen wrote: | I had no clue that small+Chinese=sorta funny. |
That's becuase over hear there is a great deal of prejudice towards chines bikes, actually chinese anything. I have years worth of comments telling me chinese bike, or bikes, will crumble to dust, spontaneously combust, suddenly grow horns, and gain a trident !!
Of course non of that has been true, but hey, why let the truth get in the way  ____________________ Beware what photos you upload, or link to on here, especially if you have family members on them |
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| c-m |
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 c-m World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 May 2006 Karma :   
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| Evergreen |
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 Evergreen Derestricted Danger
Joined: 14 Mar 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 15:44 - 08 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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Can you get from Morocco to the south without flying over certain countries?
I don't see why not? Tons of people do just that every year, and turns out most even do it without the carnet or getting the visas in advance which is very reassuring because I can't be bothered with too much planning and paperwork in advance (or rather, I'm just lazy). Most HUBBers say that the DRC, Angola and sometimes Nigeria can be a bit tricky when it comes to getting visas at the borders, but then again if you aim for small border crossings and have loads of time on your hands I'm sure it's ok.
Sure Africa isn't as stable as South America, but again most world travellers will tell you the same: use common sense, ask the locals for advice and you'll be fine. I have zero fear or concerns about my safety in Africa.
C-m: no, I don't have a ride report or blog. But would be happy to have beer and compare notes! |
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| TheDonUK |
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 TheDonUK World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Feb 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 18:27 - 08 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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Evergreen, I think you definitely have the right attitude to get it done. I think it's much better to go in time-rich and cash-poor than the other way round, then the inevitable problems and setbacks just aren't such a big issue with time-pressures.
Also I think Africa a solo female is certainly doable, harder than South America for sure, if only for the many different languages (How cool is it that you can speak Spansh from Argentina/Chile to the United Stated!)
In Santiago I met a 70 year old lady, Linda Bick who had bought a YBR125 and did a little 3 month tour around Chile, Peru and Bolivia. And back in the 60's or 70's she rode all of Africa, if not solo then with one other female riding buddy.
Also I considered buying a chinese bike for just over 1000 USD, compared to the price of my CRF i could have bought 4, ride one untill it goes fuck, throw it in a ditch and buy a new one lol.
C-M: How did you get on man, last we spoke there were shock problems? Did you get the pleasure of dealing with South American Aduana?  ____________________ [Current Bikes - GSXR-750 K5 & C90-97 ] [Previous Bikes: Runner 125, YBR 125, GS500, Bandit 600, Hornet 600, ZX6R-99, C90-99, R1-99, XT600E-04, GSXR-750 K4, CRF250L '16] |
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| Undinist |
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 Undinist Nearly there...
Joined: 08 Oct 2013 Karma :   
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 Posted: 16:33 - 10 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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Superyacht jobs - there are masses of them advertised by employment agencies https://www.google.co.uk/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=superyacht+jobs+ But they are mostly for people with experience. Getting your first job can be tricky. I just happened to be in the right place at the right time. But I was hired 'under the counter' - no employment agency, no training - so I was stiffed with a terrible pay rate - $80 a day or something. But I only had to work 8 hours a day. Sometimes the rest of the crew would do 100+ hours per week. When the owner or guests are aboard, most of the crew have to be available 24/7. Forget about days off or 8 hours of solid sleep.
If I were starting from square one I'd probably read all the advice on the agency sites and maybe call a few of them and try to get them chatting. Then perhaps I'd go to one of the ports which has lots of specialist suppliers for superyachts - maybe Antibes or Fort Lauderdale - and I'd pay to get some basic maritime safety training so I could get whatever certificate is needed. (It's illegal to employ someone who doesn't have a certificate.) Then I'd walk up and down the berths with my CV, maybe hang around in bars in the evening, looking for a captain who would give me a day's trial as a junior steward or deck hand. It wouldn't be hard - the people who get these jobs are very ordinary human beings.
The pay can be huge - the rule of thumb for a captain is $1000 per annum per foot (of the boat's length). So on the boat I was on https://www.charterworld.com/?sub=yacht-charter&charter=yacht-samar-1342 the captain would be getting something in the region of $250,000 per annum. And he banks almost all of it. The jobs all come with free food and accommodation, and you can't spend any money when you're at sea. Even junior crew earning $3,000 - 4,000 per month spend a lot of their free time on the internet on property sites, looking for rental properties to put their cash into. After ten years they can't stand the life in their floating prisons any more, and they go home rich.
The basic jobs for unskilled people are steward (i.e. waiter) or deck hand (i.e. the monkey who ties up the boat.) Both jobs are at least 75% cleaning. Novice deck hands need a basic bit of seamanship. Just knowing how to sail a dinghy would be plenty. Stewards can make a career out of it - chief steward, then purser. On a big boat the purser would get $100,000-ish. Deck hands can do officer training - bosun, first mate, etc. - and end up as captain.
People with relevant specialist skills - masseuse, hairdresser, helicopter pilot - can get full time jobs on the big boats, and their pay and conditions can be very good.
Often the only way to take a holiday is to quit. Staff turnover is huge. Some of the more enlightened owners like to have a permanent crew of people they get along with, so they give you a 3 months on, 3 months off contract, at full pay all year round. But this is only for those who make a career out of it. If your main focus is travelling, you could work for 6 months, save £20,000, travel for a year or two, and repeat. Easy peasy. If I had my time again maybe I'd do it. |
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| c-m |
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 c-m World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 May 2006 Karma :   
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| Evergreen |
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 Evergreen Derestricted Danger
Joined: 14 Mar 2016 Karma :    
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 Posted: 11:36 - 11 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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Don-hahahahaaaa South American aduanas!! sometimes I thought they were specifically designed to drive the gringos mad:) I got it even worse cause I bought the bike in Peru-was held up for 10 days at the Bolivian border trying to sort out all the real and fake documents because apparently Peru and Bolivia have stricter rules about 'importing vehicles'.
On the other hand I also sorta appreciated the chaos-I lost my number plate in Bolivia and thought the Argentinian border folks were going to eat me for lunch, but it turned out nobody cares if you have a Monster sticker instead of a number plate
Undinist, thanks for such detailed info!! Will definitely look into that.
c-m the more I look into Africa the more I'm convinced it's perhaps a bit more difficult than South America, but not by much. I want to ride around the whole continent, so that will include Kenya and Ethiopa. The only annoying thing is I wanted to do Israel eventually too before coming back to Europe, but apparently they won't let you in if you have a Sudanese visa in your passport
Don't know about freighter cruises from Dakar, but once you get that far why not just continue to South Africa and ship from there? |
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| MCN |
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 MCN Super Spammer

Joined: 22 Jul 2015 Karma :   
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 Posted: 11:37 - 11 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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It is all very adventurous to scoot off on a world tour.
Just don't come crying to us when you get stuffed by the popo at almost any North African check point and they have hundreds because there are a lot of thievists down there. As like South East Asia.
I remember a story in a bike mag where a guy set off from home to 'do' North Africa.
I think he was robbed down to his skidders on day three or four and had to get his family to bail him out to get home.
Not saying it can't be done but why? ____________________ Disclaimer: The comments above may be predicted text and not necessarily the opinion of MCN. |
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| Undinist |
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 Undinist Nearly there...
Joined: 08 Oct 2013 Karma :   
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| TheDonUK |
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 TheDonUK World Chat Champion

Joined: 20 Feb 2006 Karma :   
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 Posted: 18:22 - 13 Apr 2016 Post subject: |
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| MCN wrote: | Not saying it can't be done but why? |
The experience? The Adventure?
I read somewhere that motorbikes were fairly dangerous too, why do we ride them?
Evergreen: I rode around Chile for one month without a Licence plate or insurance because their DVLA was on strike... the police dident really give a shit. Also had to wait one month for my larger fuel tank to clear chilean customs! Aduana, you hear stories but damn... ____________________ [Current Bikes - GSXR-750 K5 & C90-97 ] [Previous Bikes: Runner 125, YBR 125, GS500, Bandit 600, Hornet 600, ZX6R-99, C90-99, R1-99, XT600E-04, GSXR-750 K4, CRF250L '16] |
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| c-m |
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 c-m World Chat Champion
Joined: 12 May 2006 Karma :   
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| TCFA |
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 TCFA Trackday Trickster
Joined: 25 Aug 2013 Karma :  
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 9 years, 355 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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