A quick (GS) Adventure

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immigrant

Race Dog
Joined
Feb 14, 2011
Messages
1,942
Reaction score
850
Location
Canada
Bike
Yamaha Super Tenere
I got invited to a BMW Motorrad Demo day. Luck had it that is was 350km from my home, so I decided to make a day of it. Took off from work, passed the kids to the wife and got up early to see the sun rise "on the road".

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This "demo day" gives you the opportunity to ride 99% of BMW's lineup. You don't get to ride the HP4. That is reserved for the gods! You get to ride a loop of about 50-60 km which gives you enough milage to get a good feel of the bike. There is a lead rider and you cannot pass him. But he does not ride slow!  :ricky:

So i got to ride the following. They are ranked according to "Wow Factor":
S1000RR
S1000R
K1600GTL
F800GSA
F800R
R1200GSA
R nine T ( this was like riding a wild stallion. That subframe is so weak every time you change gears up or down and apply throttle it wants to throw you off the bike to the right. I was going to stop at first cause i thought I had a flat tire)

I do not want to get in to a bike debate. Whatever floats your boat is good with me. But i was expecting the R1200GSA to be " al off that and then some". I am not selling my Super Ten anytime soon!

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Those Akra pipes sound really cool.

Yes there were muffins, cookies, coffee and juice, and bacon and eggs and sausages and fried mushrooms. Yes the girls were nice to look at! Also got fed lunch and snacks between rides. BMW knows how to market their product. As always there are three types of people at these events. Those that actually ride BMW and are on a first name basis with all the staff and salespeople. You spot them wearing their all BMW apparel. Then there are the guys that can never afford a BMW, let alone ride a bike properly. They miss gears, stall in the parking lot, over rev the hell out of the poor bike and cannot hold a line on the highway to save their life. Then there are the guys that love bikes, toy with the idea of maybe getting a BMW but then reality sets in and they go back home on their Yamaha's  :p

I took a different route back home. The long way round. The road that you always drive past and ask yourself " I wonder where that goes?" The route that is not mapped on your GPS. Those are the best....

I rode mainly back (gravel) roads through farmland. There are hundreds of these old "homesteads" that were built by the "homesteaders". Mainly immigrants that felt the pressure in the old country and decided to seek greener pastures.

Canada gave 160acre lots for free, or rather for $10 registration fee. The condition was you had to clear the land and put a crop in within three years and build a house within 3 months and fence the land (???)

These people came here with pretty much nothing. Definitely not farm implements. They had to build a house, break land and put a crop in with zero  "local experience"

They must have had a real tough life, considering it is -30C for at least 4 months of the year and -15C for another 2 months. So building and farming had to take place in a 5-6 month window. And they had to stay warm in their "cabins"

I would have loved to meet this farmer. He clearly spent more time and money ensuring his animals were well looked after than on his own house. I also wonder how these people looked, were they happy, where did they come from, why did they leave their home country, why did they choose this spot to build and farm. How did they die. My neighbour said these homesteaders had to make it work. He is damn near 90 years old now.He tells me stories how they travelled 150km on a  horse sleigh to sell hides and skins There was no turning back. Most of them spent all their money getting here and buying material for barns and houses

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These were hand carved to fit in to each other

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The roof. that pully system was to haul bales in to the loft of the barn. It acted as insulation and it was kept off the ground.

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The house

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Interesting fireplace. I did not want to get closer to inspect because the floor had a "basement/ cold storage under it and i did not want to spend the night in a hole

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The above is just a little history and pics for those that care!! 1050km in a day on various bikes. How awesome is that!!
 
Very nice. Beautiful pics.
 
As ek so kyk en lees dink ek hoe bevoorreg jy is om daar in Canada te woon
en boer, maar dan dink ek aan die -30 en dan kry ek jou sommer jammer :eek7:
 
Lekker Immie, ja soos Chris sê, ek sou watwou gee om in 'n beskaafde land soos dit te kan woon.  -30ºC of de not :-\  Interessant oor daai ou plase. Word hulle nou nog bewerk of staan hulle leeg?  Die ou mense het harde bene gekou om 'n bestaan te voer, dis maar 'n feit.

Lekker om al daai fietse te kon ry.  Watter een sou jy kies as jy een moes koop?
 
:sip: I have seen a web site of a guy in montana that buys up these old barns and houses and makes the most beautiful furniture from the wood.  :3some:
 
The farms are being taken over by big companies. A lot of the younger generation go and work in the oil fields where the big money is at. It is sad to see the heritage getting lost. It is as if all the hard work of the first generations are going unappreciated. But at least the land is not going to waste. Some of these barns and houses are declared heritage sites and it is illegal to demolish.
Dragonfly-XC said:
:sip: I have seen a web site of a guy in montana that buys up these old barns and houses and makes the most beautiful furniture from the wood.  :3some:
I heard the wood in the old grain elevators are really sought after. The way the grain polished it can apparently not be replicated with regular sanding.

The F800GS was a nice bike. The seat was a little narrow and sloping forward a lot. Not sure if it is standard like that or if it had a different seat on. Apart from the seat i think i could be happy with it.
 
I'm not a big company but I'll take over one of those farms.  When do I start?  ;D
 
There are actually a few south africans farming here now. The downside is land is not $10 anymore.
Some more pics of the barn. This fascinates me because it was all done with very little help. There was no cheap labour. Each man for himself


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Thank you for this story.
I like those old barns, build one on my property, obviously not from wood, and lived in it for a year while building the house.
Now it is my workshop, office and bike garage.
 
I think neigbours helped when it came to building big structures like barns.
The Amish have what they call a barnbuild.

When working on a dairyfarm in Virginia i drove over to Pennsylvania twice to see how the Amish live and farm.
I asked a local in a town sitting infront of the ko-op if i would be allowed to work on a Amish farm because i had time and it seemed
interesting the way they did it.
His answer was a short NO!!
 
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