sidetrack said:Mud, rain, rocks and a 220KG bike solo
BullFrog said:Sheez Martin!!!!!
I read this from the beginning now and I was spiritually not in the office for a while....
Lekker stuff, man!!!
Osadabwa said:You get into some fun riding for sure, and a lot more often than me these days. Making me jealous as hell! That slippery mountain track looked refreshing alright, after all those flat tracks.
Also, there is a sure-fire method for sorting out you KTM when one of its many adorable little "known" problems sends you walking again:
1) Tuck a rag into the fuel tank
2) Strike a match
3) Stand back
Then say it was stolen and go buy an XR650R with the insurance money! In RSA they're readily available and those boys keep them in really good nick. You could buy 4 of them for the price of another big Katoom too, so plenty of leftover scratch to get a cushy seat, pimp the suspension and, uh, that's all it needs actually...
Just kidding of course... kind of... carry on!
:snorting:
sidetrack said:Mud, rain, rocks and a 220KG bike solo
Noneking said:sidetrack said:Mud, rain, rocks and a 220KG bike solo
Takes some serious guts to do that on your own. :3some:
A few OOO fok moments there :imaposer:sidetrack said:Looks like riverbeds you were riding, lots of fun :thumleft: Ours close to Ofcalaco in beginning of video. Penge bit of a cheat on lighter bikes and Orrie can be done in the time it takes Kid Rock to sing a song :biggrin:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WZ5P237ozBU&feature=emb_logo
Clockwork Orange said:Loving these trips you are sharing with us. It seems you use satelite imagery a lot for your route planning. Do you then check these tracks against T4A or similar? How else do you know if its private land etc? ABSOLUTELY NO criticism, I love the way you go about your exploration, I am just trying to learn from you.
Thanks for that explanation[emoji106]Xpat said:Clockwork Orange said:Loving these trips you are sharing with us. It seems you use satelite imagery a lot for your route planning. Do you then check these tracks against T4A or similar? How else do you know if its private land etc? ABSOLUTELY NO criticism, I love the way you go about your exploration, I am just trying to learn from you.
I don't use T4A for planning. I mean I have them on GPS and in Basecamp as background, but I use satellite images and routes on Googlemaps to plot my routes.
The trick to find public land is easy: I'm looking mostly in tribal lands - former homelands being prime target for best riding or at the frontiers - generally along the borders and places where nobody goes are your best bet. Occassionally I run into private land and have to backtrack, but if you start in the right area, your chances of success are multiplied. You can also judge whether the land is public or private to an extent from satellite images. Nicely regimented civilzed country with right angles - private land. While tribal / public land is indicated by chaotic settlements and criscrossings of little tracks.
That is why best adv riding around iis in places like Botswana, Moz, Lesotho and Swaziland, much much less so in Namibia (apart from Bushmanland and possibly Ovamboland), and in SA here up north and east where homelands used to be. There is zero potential for proper exploratory adv riding for example in Western Cape which is one big private property essentially.
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