Thursday, 11 February 2010

10,000 Bikes!!


There is a small town in the west of the UK called Wootton Bassett that has become an un-official centre of respecting the UK war dead from the current conflict in Afghanistan. The town is near a military airbase where soldiers killed in the conflict are repatriated and the town is on the route for the hearses carrying the bodies of the dead from RAF Lyneham.

The mother of a soldier who died in an explosion in Afghanistan had the idea to set up a charity to provide support for those directly involved in the conflict. “Afghan Heroes” has been launched by a group of mothers with the aim of helping our service personnel directly on the front line. People have been holding fund-raising events and sending the proceeds to the Afghan Heroes organisation and one such event has caught the imagination of the biking community in the UK.

On Sunday 14th March, which is Mothers Day in the UK, there is a planned motorcycle ride through the town of Wootton Bassett to RAF Lyneham to show support for our troops fighting in Afghanistan. A special website was set up for bikers wishing to attend to register for the event and in just a few days, registrations reached 14,000 people on 10,000 bikes. I was one of those people that registered.

Due to the overwhelming support for this and in the knowledge that the town is very small, the organisers have had to suspend the registrations, but have said the event will go-ahead. I am trying to imagine what 10,000 bikes might look like – if the event goes ahead, I will take photos and let you know!

Tuesday, 9 February 2010

New Paint for my Road King


A little while ago I was trying to decide whether to repaint my Road King. Well, the decision has been made and yes, I am going to do it. The bike has been stripped down and the tank, two fenders and two side panels have been delivered this morning to Tony Evans in Wolverhampton who is going to do the paintwork. I met with Tony a couple of weeks ago and we discussed some ideas about what we might do. This morning we met again and finalised those plans and Tony starts on the paint job this week!

No. I am not going to say what he is going to do, but you can look forward to seeing the completed paint work in a few weeks time.

You can see Tony’s work on his
website.

The picture above is an example of Tony’s airbrushing skills. I hope he doesn’t mind that I lifted it from his website......

Monday, 8 February 2010

Saturday, 6 February 2010

London Motorcycle Show

I went to the London Motorcycle Show on Friday and I must admit I was a tad disappointed. Considering London is a major global City, the show was quite small and whilst most of the major bike manufacturers were there, there were some missing. KTM for example. However, after not being at the other major bike show in the UK at the National Exhibition Centre in Birmingham at the end of last year, it was good to see both Harley-Davidson and Ducati at the London show. Overall though, it was just a bit small and I wondered if this was just a sign of the financial crisis but then I remembered I had been to the same exhibition centre about three weeks ago for the London Boat Show and compared to that the bike show was less than half the size of the boat show. There were just less stands and vendors at the bike show than I had expected.

I did see some interesting bikes, some neat bike accessories for sale, and some friends. I even bought a new helmet for my tour of the USA – something subtle and understated.

Here are some pictures from the show........



The new crash helmet I bought especially for my US tour!!....














A Moto Guzzi concept bike....















A really nice restored Triton....














A low custom bike that I liked the look of....















The engine of a beautiful trike by Destiny Cycles....














Another stunning bike by Destiny Cycles....



















The new Norton Commando....














A wicked looking drag bike....

















Not my thing, but these Ducati's looked fantastic....
















A Victory that had been given the Cory Ness treatment....














Sunglasses feeling unloved, waiting patiently for somebody to buy them....


















Friends Ron and Caroline Brett who run Brett Tours – a European wide motorcycle touring company....



















I did take a few pictures of the new Harley-Davidson 48 Sportster – probably my favourite new stock bike at the show, but the pictures were all out of focus (so I lifted this one from a H-D site).....

Thursday, 4 February 2010

Busy, Busy, Busy ! ! !















Oh my, it has been a busy few days. Here is my week so far.....

Monday - attended my Visa interview at the US Embassy in London. (Application approved).

Tuesday - found a more experienced shipper for transporting my bike from London to New York.

Wednesday - my sons (Jeremy’s) 21st Birthday (HAPPY BIRTHDAY JEM).

Wednesday - decided I would go ahead with the new paint scheme for the bike.

Wednesday - went over the 1000 hits mark on my blog. Thank you, dear readers :-)

Thursday - rode the bike. Yeah. First time this year!

Thursday - took the bike to Warrs (H-D dealer) to strip it down ready for painting .

Thursday - started looking for 40’s and 50’s movies actresses portraits for the bike

Friday (tomorrow) - going to the London Motorcycle Show.

Phew!

Monday, 1 February 2010

Like a Virgin.....



Sometimes, we do something that gives us a great deal of satisfaction. It can be something momentous, or it can be something small, but all the same it is significant enough to make us feel good. Over the weekend, I did something that was just like that – I booked my flights with Virgin Atlantic to the USA for my bike tour!!! 22nd June I fly to New York...... Yeah!!!!

Tuesday, 26 January 2010

Sat Nav Bad. Sat Nav Good.

Way back in 1979, the Boomtown Rats recorded a song called “I don’t like Mondays”. I would like to extend that to “I don’t like Januarys”. It is still depressingly cold here. And wet. The sort of wet that gets right through to your bones. What are you meant to do if getting on your motorbike means becoming wetter than a fish taking a bath and colder than one of Ben and Jerry’s specials?

Clean the bike? Done that.

Take the dog for a walk? Done that – got wet.

Buy a wake board? Done that, but it is too cold to use it.

OK, so a week ago I thought I needed something new to look at. You might have read my post back in December hinting to my dearly beloved that I might need a new Sat Nav for Christmas for my tour of the USA. Well, it worked :) and I sat there on Christmas day surrounded by discarded wrapping paper and with a big smile on my face, holding a box marked Garmin Zumo.

About a week ago, having seen it was raining AGAIN, I opened the box to give it a try. My initial impressions after a couple of hours were “why did I bother - this is a pile of poo”.

However having got over the teething troubles, I soon realised this was just what I needed. The next few days showed to me this would be very good indeed.

OK, before telling you, dear reader, why I like the Garmin so much, here is the scoop on the teething troubles. I opened the box to see there is no manual, which is strange, so I checked the packing list. Guess what? There isn’t meant to be a manual packed in the box! You have to go online to get one. Now, don’t get me wrong, I am all for saving the planet and not printing stuff unnecessarily (like in 6 languages) but this is pretty silly. They don’t tell you where to find the manual online, you just have to go find it for yourself, then if you are like me and do want a paper copy, you have to print it out yourself. Not a great start.

One of the things that attracted me to the Garmin was the ability to plot routes on your computer in detail and then transfer them to the Sat Nav unit. This means having to load the mapping software onto your computer. OK so far – loading it was a piece of cake. Then you have to unlock the maps. Garmin please listen to this – it was a TOTAL NIGHTMARE to do this. Two calls to their support department (actually very helpful) soon sorted this though, but why make it so difficult in the first place? I understand the need to do this, but why make it so that only people at Garmin can understand how to do this? Dumb, vey dumb.

The next thing to go wrong was in addition to the maps (Europe) that came on the CD in the box, my wife purchased one of the map sets (the USA) on a memory card that you place into the Sat Nav unit, which I did. However, there is no way to transfer those maps back to your computer to make the route planning easier. OK, so I need to exchange this memory card for a CD, so I contacted Amazon which is where my wife purchased the memory card. What came next was a bummer – to prevent people copying software, Amazon and their suppliers do not take back software, so even though I couldn’t copy it, I had to buy the same USA maps on a CD! I now have all of the USA maps twice. Not happy.

So, this all took a few days to resolve and of course when the new CD arrived I had to go through the stupid un-locking process again. Arrrrggghhhhh!

Anyway, now to the good stuff. Planning a route on your computer is so much better than doing it on a sat nav unit. It is so easy – you can see a proper map and enter waypoints with the click of your mouse, join them up to form a route and save them. So easy! This turned me back into a happy little boy. You can even then view your map in Google Earth to see what other highlights there are along your route that you might want to stop and see. I don’t want to sound too gushy over this, but having used this for the past few days, I am a convert. The TomTom system I have is now consigned to a cupboard and the Garmin will rule supreme I am sure.

Having planned a few test routes I went out and tried them on the road. Ok, it was in my car because it was STILL RAINING, but I am sure you will forgive me for that. The unit performed very well on the road – up to the high standard of the TomTom. The Garmin Zumo has a bigger screen, but a comparison of the two sat navs shows them to be about the same on the road.

I have yet to try the Garmin on a motorbike, but I am pretty sure it will be as good as in the car. I have already wired it in to the bikes power source, which was straightforward. I will rig up the very neat Garmin speakers (extra cost) inside my helmet soon and take it out for a test ride.

That is if it stops raining.