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| garthunkle |
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 garthunkle Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 18 Jan 2008 Karma :    
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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 Posted: 21:59 - 17 Apr 2008 Post subject: |
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Right a few hints
Switzerland (may have changed) you need to buy road tax on the border , it lasts till the end of the month so plan to get to swizerland a few days before the end of the month , it expires while you are in the country = hefty fine AND have to rebuy the road tax sticker.
Again as per usual do not over estimate the distance that you can do in a single day, Manchester -> Reims 482 miles , seems easy right? 70mph for 5 hours and you are there right? , wrong took me 6 hours just to get onto the M2 to dover , 90 minutes to cross to France, 2 hours getting lost in Calais and wandering towards Dunkirk , and a further 1 hour burning towards reims till I got hungry and lost in St Omar , then another 2.5 hours going to Reims.
THEN to top it off another 3 hours to find a hotel room.
Thus do NOT overestimate distances that you can do, and if you have a big day like I did in terms of miles , pre-book a hotel for your first night!.
But as said you'll have a hornet and you'll be even slower than me since you will have to stop to fill up every 100 miles my CBR at moderate speed gets 160 till I'm on fumes.
Bring a can of petrol , for psychological reasons , there were some panic moments when I was running at 1/4 a tank and would some how miss all the petrol stations in the area.
Be wary petrol I recall cost 1.30-1.62 Euro per litre , since the £ has dropped alot thats £1.20ish a litre.
Be wary of tolls its 1/2 for bikes in France 100% for bikes in Italy , they theoretically are cheap but they really add up BUT for time vs money they are worth it, part of the reason I took so long to get to Nice was I barely ever touched the autoroute (motorway).
bring 3 maps, I destroyed 2 on my way out there.
Take it easy you are a long way from home, although on the N202 I rode like a nutter, I look back and think it was kind of stupid , but just incase get your E111 card.
Keep the speed down in villages and accelerate after you exit them its where speed traps are, you are 30mph over the limit they take your bike you are faster , ok I am a hypocrite but I'm lucky yes I did maxx out the CBR in France, you may not be so lucky!.
Have a read of Maurice's tours
https://motocapers.com/
Austria is to be avoided , and 2 weeks might be enough it might not the problem with distance is all you do is ride and not see anything interesting , which defeats the point of touring you may as well go round the M25 a few times.
You also need to choose your route with care!.
If you go via the N5 into switzerland the approach is fantastic , but then you miss the small twisty bit around Belgarde and the Aix Le bains bit where I was chased by a cop, and the N85 , N202, if you go down to my route you miss the swiss passes , etc, you can't do them all.
bring a camera and report for us this is manditory!.
Oh and generally northern France is boring until you get near Dijon for the N74 which is hard to find, thus is may well be worth the tolls and half a day or boredom to sit on the autoroute. Its also quite cold in Northern France it seemed.
Champagne route is seriously boring straight as the eye can see, but you can max out your bike which is interesting for about 30 seconds, but watch out , there is a nasty surprise in the middle a hump back bit where I hit it at 'high' speed and suddenly heard the revs shoot right up , and thought ooh dear I'm going to die. ____________________ Spain 2008France 2007Big one 2009 We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will. In the end, your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it is worth watching. |
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| garthunkle |
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 garthunkle Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 18 Jan 2008 Karma :    
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 Posted: 22:24 - 17 Apr 2008 Post subject: |
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Wow Itchy, some fantastic advice there!
I'm pretty sure I will get a TomTom, will make life a lot easier. Especially as an inexperienced rider. Also I imagine that will help with petrol planning as it will have stations on the map.
Somebody told me about this route:
"For a two week tour I would take the channel tunnel, ride back roads thru France towards Besancon, then ride north along the Route des Grandes Alpes towards Evian on Lake Geneva. Then head across Switzerland and northern Italy to the Dolomites around Cortina d'Ampezzo (do yourself a favour and base yourself somewhere round here for a couple of days. Every road in the Dolomites is a winner). Then head to Ljubljana, across Hungary to central Slovakia, then head back via Czech republic (maybe southern Poland), Germany, Luxembourg and Belgium. The large section of this route between Besancon and Ljubljana is fantastic for biking, though I generally love biking thru all of rural France and Germany too."
What do you make of it?
What luggage would you recommend getting for the Hornet? Remember the new model has a stubby exhaust so there should be more options.
We are planning on staying in youth hostels, don't really want to bring camping gear.
Also, what else will I need to get for my bike? Is it worth getting the Honda windshield? Which Scottoiler should I get?
Roughly how much a day should I expect to pay a day in fuel costs for the Hornet? ____________________ ------
CBT Passed: 26th Jan 08, Current Bike: Varadero 125 |
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| barnhatter |
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 barnhatter Nitrous Nuisance

Joined: 05 Jan 2005 Karma :  
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| dodger |
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 dodger Traffic Copper

Joined: 13 Jul 2005 Karma :  
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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| Shay HTFC |
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 Shay HTFC World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Mar 2007 Karma :  
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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 Posted: 22:39 - 18 Apr 2008 Post subject: |
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| garthunkle wrote: | Wow Itchy, some fantastic advice there!
I'm pretty sure I will get a TomTom, will make life a lot easier. Especially as an inexperienced rider. Also I imagine that will help with petrol planning as it will have stations on the map. |
Bah GPS ruins it I found by accident some darned fine routes down in France with GPS I'd have missed them and gone via the N route and not have the funny cop chasing moment.
| garthunkle wrote: |
What luggage would you recommend getting for the Hornet? Remember the new model has a stubby exhaust so there should be more options. |
Just don't bring TOO much plan to bring paniers out unexpanded costs you more fuel , aerodynamics and alters bike stablity.
| garthunkle wrote: |
Also, what else will I need to get for my bike? Is it worth getting the Honda windshield? Which Scottoiler should I get? |
If you want your shirts when you get back to still fit you get a screen doesn't have to be the Honda one, else just take it on the chin, on my NTV trips down to Plymouth (a mere 300 miles) taken a 'high speed' would make my neck ache sometimes.
Scotoiler which ever you fancy, the official one is expensive , but works for the lazy , the home made ones also work are alot cheaper but you need to remember to shut the drip valve each time you stop, and bring a can or two of oil.
| garthunkle wrote: |
Roughly how much a day should I expect to pay a day in fuel costs for the Hornet? |
I used to budget £10 for 100 miles , due to my heavy handed approach to throttling a high (cough cough 12x10) cruising speed I used more, but since the £ is tanking against the Euro I'd probably say £9 per 100 miles , to be safe.
Also absolutely most importantly
I'm not being ghey or anything
..... no really take this, bring some lip chap stick or some moisturiser , and apply it each time you stop , it may sound ridiculous but your face is being air dried at high speed for 6-9 hours a day, with warm dry air, by day 3 I couldn't part my lips they were so incredibly crusty with dried skin. Oh and drink plenty of water.
Alot of the skin on my chin also got flakey too.
Oh and ear plugs too.
AND on motorways and stuff stretch your legs now and again, helps keep the blood flowing and reduces fatigue a little. ____________________ Spain 2008France 2007Big one 2009 We all die. The goal isn't to live forever, the goal is to create something that will. In the end, your life will flash before your eyes. Make sure it is worth watching. |
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| Shay HTFC |
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 Shay HTFC World Chat Champion

Joined: 18 Mar 2007 Karma :  
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 Posted: 22:57 - 18 Apr 2008 Post subject: |
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Bring GPS, but don't rely on it.
Like I said in another post, it totally ruins the principle of exploration. You want to get to know where you are travelling through and begin to be able to map place names and regions to the country. Working out your own route and finding out where you are when you are lost improves your own mental map of the world so much more!
And like Itchy says, it will direct you along the most efficient roads, not the decent, out of the way ones. On a motorcycle trip, the fun is not necessarily at your destination, but en route to your destination. Why ruin it by taking the efficient, but boring sat nav routes?  ____________________ Full Motorbike License - GS500E '95 |
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| garthunkle |
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 garthunkle Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 18 Jan 2008 Karma :    
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

Joined: 07 Apr 2005 Karma :     
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| benvanwell |
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 benvanwell Nitrous Nuisance

Joined: 10 Apr 2007 Karma :     
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 Posted: 14:31 - 19 Apr 2008 Post subject: |
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What I did was take lots of michelin maps, and a tomtom. Most evenings I decided roughly where I wanted to get to by the end of the next day. This destination was programmed into the satnav. I used the maps to plan a route, and also went wherever took my fancy, for 90% of the time. The last bit of every day I used the satnav to navigate to whatever accommodation I had planned/found.
I wouldn't like to rely on the satnav because it'd take away half the fun, but it was bloody useful for getting around cities and for finding petrol.
Oh and another thing - the one thing that caught me out badly. If you use the automatic pertrol pumps, with a uk card, what happens is that they ringfence 99Eur from your account (the maximum petrol it will dispense) and don't release the "change" until the transaction has been confirmed. This will often take 3-5 days....
I used them a lot over one weekend, until I tried to get some petrol on Monday evening and my card wasn't accepted. There was not enough money available although there should have been about 600Eur left. Luckily I managed to persuade an old French guy to come to my aid and use his card for me after I gave him cash. ____________________ Currently Riding: Triumph Sprint ST 1050
Previous: GSF600s, GS500, BMW F45, CG125 |
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| garthunkle |
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 garthunkle Two Stroke Sniffer
Joined: 18 Jan 2008 Karma :    
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| Itchy |
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 Itchy Super Spammer

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| king kong |
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 king kong Nearly there...

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| benvanwell |
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 benvanwell Nitrous Nuisance

Joined: 10 Apr 2007 Karma :     
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Old Thread Alert!
The last post was made 18 years, 29 days ago. Instead of replying here, would creating a new thread be more useful? |
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