Updates! (Finally)

Hello everyone.

So been remiss again in keeping this blog updated, though have been doing a few things related to this project.

This entry will be a list of updates to various things over the last 9 months, but just a quick summary.

Personal Health:

Upon my return from India, my gym had for some reason closed its doors.  I have still not found another good option and not been too good at working out at home.  I also started to eat out quite often again, so those two things combined have caused me to gain back 30 of the 55 pounds I had lost in 2021/2022.

I am starting again on fixing that, so will keep you updated.

Bike Updates:

On the motorbike front a few things have happened. 

To start, I bought a 2nd motorcycle in October of 2022.  I enjoyed the Royal Enfield Himalayan we rode in India so much that I decided to buy one for use here.  Was looking at a new model, but then a friend of a friend had a used one for sell.  So bought his 2019 model with only 900 miles on it, so practically a new bike still.  Had to get the fluids changed and a few adjustments made, but otherwise ready to go!

With the Suzuki, I did manage last year to get the crash bars installed and the luggage rack installed.  Also installed a mounting bracket above the instrument cluster to put the GPS on and room for other items if need.

I put a wrap on the windscreen to completely cover it, helps to shield the mounted electronics from sun, and the window was getting dinged up from rocks and bugs, and really do not need to look through it anyway, just there to deflect the wind some to help when riding.

This last week I finally got the luggage for the bike as well.  So now it is equipped with a new tank bag (old bag I bought to take to India already fell apart), rear pannier bags, a new duffel style top bag (the one I bought at the Overland Expo previously will now get used on the other bike), two roll bags for extra storage on top of the panniers and two small bags on the crash bars.

Riding Updates:

Still mostly just riding around town, though now using both bikes for that.  Done a few rides as well to nearby areas to run errands and such.  I have also ridden up to my relatives place a few times, and in November I rode the back road route on the Royal Enfield bike.  This route left the north edge of Scottsdale and using just back forest roads I was able to get all the way to the small town along I-17.

The ride was quite amazing for scenery, the road was a bit of a challenge and did manage to come off the bike once after some loose surface on a steep hill moved me to side of road where things were even more loose.

Travel Updates:

India trip blog is done, but I will post the link in another entry in a day or two.  Still working on the videos, but hopefully that will start churning out in the next few weeks, probably take about 1-2 months to get it all done, but finally getting better with the editing tools.

I will be attending the Overland Expo again in May.  Will again ride up and camp, though this time will have proper luggage to haul stuff and hopefully not forget anything again!

Should be a fun trip, and with a little luck, might meet up with some round the world riders that I have been following on YouTube that will be in the area about then.  If things work out time wise, may spend a day riding with them around the Flagstaff area, or maybe up around the Grand Canyon.  Will wait to see when they get into this area (they are currently somewhere in South America still I believe, not sure how far ahead of their video posts they actually are).

Content Updates:

So this blog is of course supposed to be my main outlet for this project, though I have not really kept it as active as I should.  However, it is not the only place where things are posted.

There is also a Facebook page, YouTube Channel and have photos on Google Photos.

I will be putting up another post in a day or two to link all those together, just need to make sure I have them all configured to work.

Wrap up:

So that is everything over the last 9 months in a nutshell.  I will be putting up additional entries on many of those to give more details and link any photos or videos as needed.

Watch for those updates in the next week.

Thanks for reading and take care.

Chris

Summer is here.

 Hey everyone.

So the summer heat is here in AZ, so not sure how much I will go ride, but we did complete our ride in the Himalayas of India last month in June.  I will be making a separate blog for that trip and will link it here when done.  I will do a quick highlight though for you.

It took almost 2 days to get to India (when you factor in time zone changes).  A total of about 20 hours of actual flight time and 7 hours sitting at transfer airports between the 2 flight legs.

Got into Delhi very late on Sunday (around 10pm).  Took roughly 2 hours to get out of airport, most of that used up in Immigration.

A car was waiting for me to take me the mile down the road to the hotel, and by time I checked into that it was nearly 1am on Monday.

Next morning I had breakfast and then hung out in the room till it was close to check out time.  Then checked out and went down to lobby where I met another rider who was also staying at this hotel (which by random luck turned out to be the hotel where the group would meet up to start our tour).

We all met up about 1pm and had lunch while the tour was discussed, final payments were made and documentation handled.

The organizers had procured 6 taxis to drive us the approximately 400 miles to Manali.  We departed a little after 3pm.

17 hours later we arrived in Manali!!! 

So a quick nap, then lunch, then we got to check out the bikes, take them for a test ride (and to fuel them up so ready for morning departure the next day) and then dinner and hanging out in the garden area of the hotel.

So now after nearly 4 days of activity, we finally got to start riding the bikes.

Day 1: We rode out of Manali via some back roads into the hillsides, then eventually hit the highway.  Later went up over a small pass (only about 10,000 feet) and then to a campsite in an old farm field on the edge of the forest areas.

Day 2: We rode down to the highway and followed it till we turned off to ride up to Chitkul along a road hanging from the cliffs.  Then we came back down that road a short way and camped that night in a campground.

Day 3: We came back down to highway, then after a short ride went up the mountain side to reach Nakla where we had to get our Inner Line Permits.  We also had lunch here.  Took roughly 3 hours for all that, then was back down to the highway and stayed on that till we reached Nako for our hotel stay. (Tonight one of the riders had some issues and decided to leave the tour).

Day 4: We left Nako and after a permit check we then went off a side road to visit a temple with a preserved mummy, then back to highway and a stop at a monastery.  Then we rode off into the back country at Pin Valley National Park and camped along the river at a camp area deep into the park.

Day 5: Rode back out to the highway and then on to near Kaza where we took a ride up to Komic Village at 15,000 feet.  There we had some tea and sat for awhile, then came back down via another route to see a large Buddha statue, and then back to Kaza to reach our hotel. 

Day 6: Left Kaza and visited the nearby Key Monastery.  Then off along the rough highway over Kunzum pass (just over 15,000 feet).  On the other side we went off on another rough road to reach Chandrataal (Moonlake) where you could hike a mile or so up to the lake (I chose not to do this).  We then stayed at a campground nearby camped at close to 15,000 feet which was our highest camp I believe.

Day 7: Back down to the rough highway for what was probably the most technical riding along a barely visible trail over rocks and dirt (and yes, this is still a highway!).  We eventually reached the paved route of the Manali-Leh Highway and went up the road to Sissu and our hotel.

Day 8: We rode up the Manali-Leh highway to our first pass (Baralancha-La) which was nearly 16,000 feet.  Then back down and across the high mountain route to Sarchu where we camped at a campground for the night.

Day 9: We left for the longest ride we would have (250km) in a single day that would include 3 passes (all between 14,000 and 16,000 feet), each of the 3 slightly higher than the last, plus a long stretch of high plains between pass 2 and 3.  We then came down into the river valley along the better surfaced highway (much of this route was paved, but not in best of shape) and into Leh and our hotel.

Day 10: Today was a rest day with no riding as we had to change the bikes out for new bikes with a different company (regional monopolies and such).  We spent much of the day walking around the shopping/market district in Leh and having some good non-Indian food for once (by this time many of us had grown tired of Indian fare, and for myself, it had not been agreeing with me for much of the trip anyway, even though it tasted amazing!)

Day 11:  Today we made our attempt to go over Khardung-La and into the Nubra Valley.  This was the highest pass on the trip at close to 18,000 feet.  However, it was raining when we left Leh and at higher altitude that meant snow.  The pass was not allowing motorbikes or some cars from going over at the security checkpoint.  After waiting around for 30 minutes, the group came back down out of the cold and most of us decided to return to Leh as it was not looking like we would be able to make it over, or at least not in time to reach the Nubra valley for our camp.  A few decided to go back up to the checkpoint and wait, at least hoping to make the top of the pass (they did, but only after another 3 hours waiting).  Rest of us just enjoyed another afternoon/evening hanging out in Leh.

Day 12:  Since today would have been our return trip from the Nubra Valley, there was no riding planned, so we all decided to make a 2nd attempt at reaching the top of Khardung-La to at least say we did that.  Again the weather up high was not as nice (though much better today) and the security would not let motorbikes go up.  We waited for about 3-4 hours and then many of us decided that was enough.  Weather started to get worse, so we figured it was not going to happen.  A few did stay and about 2 hours later they did get the chance to go up, but I had enough of the cold and had come down with the rest of the group earlier and just spent more time in Leh. (Today 2 of the riders made the decision to leave the tour as they were tired and wore out and decided they had done all they came to do).

Day 13: We rode out of Leh and then up and over Chang-La pass which was around 17,500 feet.  We then came down the other side and reached Pangong Lake, the highest salt water lake in India.  Only 4 of us made the trip to the lake, and a few others had come up the pass, but then returned to Leh.  We camped along the lake in a large camp ground complex that night. (3 of the riders decided to leave this day as well as they were not interested in the last days of the tour).

Day 14: Rode back up and over Chang-La to return to Leh and our hotel.  The group then all proceeded to have dinner together.  Most of us had flights back to Delhi in the morning (except 2 who had opted to spend an extra night in Leh on their own).

The next day I had a noon flight from Leh to Delhi which was mostly smooth, though still an interesting experience.  Arrived in Delhi and took a cab over to the hotel nearby and met up with another of the riders who I had agreed to share a room with till we both departed.  Today was Wednesday and my flight back to the US did not depart till late on Friday and the other guy did not leave till Saturday morning.

After arriving in Delhi and having lunch, much of the rest of the day was spent in the room sleeping or watching TV as we were both wore out at this point.

On Thursday, we both took an excursion from Delhi by train over to Agra and visited (all part of the organized tour for just the 2 of us) the Taj Mahal, the Agra Fort, and a few local shops dealing with local crafts.  This trip included lunch and the guide for all the sites.  Was quite an amazing time and then we took train back to Delhi and had dinner.

The next day the other guy met up with his friend (who had spent an extra day in Leh) and they explored Delhi.  I stayed at hotel, as I was originally going to check out and go to the airport and spend the day waiting there since I was going to do my PCR testing there.  However, since the PCR test requirement was ended while I was in India I decided not to waste my time doing that or sitting at the airport all day, so I extended the hotel stay another night so I could spend day in the room to re-pack my bags and rest some more.  Then after dinner with the other two (the guy who was sharing room with me moved over to the other guys room now) I checked out and left to the airport.  After going through some not too horrible lines there I then waited to board flight which thankfully was only delayed a short bit before we took off just after midnight.

Spent the next 15 hours in flight, then had a 13 hour lay over in Montreal (which became 14 hours), and then a 5 hour flight back to Phoenix.

Once back in AZ I got home and pretty much slept for the next 30 hours!

Over all an amazing experience, and the other blog will have far more detail and photos and video as well.

Already trying to decide on a trip for next year (other than my own riding around AZ and the western states which I will try to start getting more time with as things cool off).

Till next time.


Riding Gear

Hello,

So as I mentioned last time, I was going to do a bit of video of the riding gear. 

So I filmed a few spots and edited them together.  Not the best job, few things I now see I did wrong (like moving camera between takes) and not marking out where I was standing, but then it is just a quick video, nothing too special.

Hopefully I will get a bit better over time and learn the software better as well, some things I think would have made it better, just could not figure it out in the time I had.

But now here is the video going over my riding gear history and where things stand today.

The Riding Gear

For reference as I was unable to figure out how to put the text in the video (without it being annoying).

Old gear: Nolan Helmet, Rocket Gloves.

New gear: Shoei Helmet, Klim Jacket/Pants/Gloves, TourMaster Boots

Enjoy.

General updates

Hey everyone, so been awhile, but wanted to come on and put a few updates here as to what has been going on and some things coming up.

First off, I have not been doing much interesting riding, just trips around town, and over to nearby places to shop or do errands that I can manage on the bike, so getting some miles, just most of it in the city.

I finally did pick up some better riding gear though.

A few weeks back I bought a new helmet, so now I have a good helmet that has all its internal padding in place, so it fits snuggly and comfortably.  Also no longer dealing with cracked visor, and this one also has the built in sun visor as well, so helps with those bright sunny days.  Ended up buying a Shoei helmet as the place was out of the Klim one I wanted to look at and the Shuberth helmets just did not fit quite right.

Also picked up a proper riding jacket and pants that gives me the proper protection to stay safe on the bike.  Better materials, vents, pockets and better weather protection (though not 100% water proof, still need to find an outer layer, either the one the company makes to work in tandem with the stuff I bought, or some thing cheaper that will keep me dry, but not look as fancy).  Also has all the proper pads and such to help with impacts should I go down on the bike.  Went with the Klim Baja jacket and pant set.  Not only was it the one I was looking for as a really good option for all but the wettest/coldest riding, but they actually had the set in stock, in my size and the color I wanted....so took that as a sign I should buy it.  Bit pricy, but my research seems to indicate it was well worth the cost.

To help with layering, I also went and picked up a pair of lightweight convertible pants at REI.  Similar to a pair I had before that finally wore out, these are light material, but durable, can zip off the legs to make shorts, and has adjustable waistline setup to not require a belt.  Light enough to fit on under riding gear, and good to wear around camp sites or hotels after rides.  Lots of pockets as well.  Also picked up a pair of lightweight, durable underwear to try out.  These are supposed to be comfy, odor resistant, strong enough to do the job, but can be washed by hand and air dried in short time frame, so if they work out, will really reduce the amount of under garments needed.  Not yet had a chance to test wear them yet though.

I still need to figure out the outer layer stuff for rain, right now just have a cheap poncho I can slip on if it rains, will help, but not perfect.  Also want to get some longer thermal leggings for cold riding, some light weight t-shirts for base layer on upper body as well.  I have a nice adventure shirt I can use for after riding that is nice looking, durable, quick washable and lots of pockets, and long sleeves that can roll up to short if need.  Had it for years, and with the weight loss it actually fits me again.  So that will work.  Also have the few pull over fleece jackets to use as a middle layer for warmth in cold weather.  Want to pick up a balaclava head piece to use for cold riding to protect neck as well, found one on Amazon, just need to order it yet.

Last item is new gloves.  Ones I have were cheap and wearing out already, so will get a bit more durable set this time, and then hopefully figure out a wet/cold weather outer layer for them if possible?

For the bike, not yet figured out what I want for luggage, and some of the other gear I still need to do some research on, or it is on back order or out of stock, so will just have to wait on it.

I did finally hook up the GPS to the battery, so now it will power off the bike, so that will be nice.  I also am looking into constructing a better mounting setup for the GPS, and perhaps the GoPro that will allow better mounting for not only usability, but will keep it better protected from wind and such while I ride, and free up space to put a mount for cell phone and hopefully some extra power ports for charging stuff while I ride.

I also picked up some extra accessories for the Go Pro. Mostly extra adhesive mounting points and some additional hardware spares.  Battery charging ports, another case for all the spare stuff, some tripods and selfie sticks to better use the gear on and off the bike, and some other mounting options.  Also a water proof case for the Hero 9 to help protect it in really wet riding. 

I then picked up the Max 360 camera to allow 360 video and photos to be taken, some really interesting options for footage with that one, been playing with it last few weeks to see what I can do with it.  

I also sent an old camera I had off to convert it to InfraRed, which will help create some more artistic photos along the way, played a bit with it on a recent road trip (by car) and does pretty good.  Look forward to doing some more experiments.  I will look at putting up some examples in next few weeks.

Lastly I picked up a case to hold memory cards for the cameras, so I do not lose them or risk them breaking.  Just need to buy more cards now.

Still looking into drones.  The one I wanted seems to have come end of sale, so no longer finding it out there, and the new one is just really expensive right now, so probably going to hold off till later this year before I take the drone plunge.  Lots of things to think about with that.

Also looking still at better camp gear options, while what I have works, there are probably a few things I could improve either quality, functionality, and or transportability with.  Some things I do not have at all that while they are not a huge deal right now, will be needed on more remote and longer trips coming in the future.

As for trips, I am going to try and do some extra back country riding hopefully in the next few weeks to try out the bike on dirt roads.

I will also be attending the Overland Expo again this year in Flagstaff.  It is coming up next month in May this year, so will hopefully be less likely to rain like last year.  Will again ride up and camp on site with the bike, so will have another chapter to write about then.

And lastly, it looks like the India trip will be a go this year.  Borders are open, tour operator is running the trip and things are looking good.  I have picked up the airfare, insurance and done all the research for visas and the medical stuff I will need to have ready.  Got my COVID booster this week, and will check into a few other vaccines that are recommended, though not required.  A few things I need to work on as well that relate to the trip, but should be ready to go.  Paid the next installment on the cost, and just need to get a hotel booked for the 1st night, then we will be mostly ready.  Getting close and getting bit nervous, a big trip, hopefully things go well!

That should provide quite a few chapters and updates along with some video and photos.  Of course I will eventually edit together a nice mini film or several episodes about that trip, but that will take time once I return, as I still need to learn how to do that kind of stuff.  Editing software I have is a bit confusing, so will see how it goes.

Not much else for now, but things are starting to move along, so hopefully will start seeing more updates here (and I may soon change the visibility of this page to public, so it can be found easier by people!)

Till next time.

Quick update on the health side.

So last October I posted about the journey I was on to improve my health.

Since then I did manage to lose another 10 pounds, bringing total weight loss to 45 pounds and 6% of body fat.

However, work schedules and some other things did get in the way of riding as much and never did get the mountain bike dusted off.  So since November things have pretty much stayed where they are, I gain and lose in a 5-6 pound range each 7-10 days, mainly due to eating out and still ordering too much food when I do.

I also stopped with the home delivery meals for several reasons: cost increases, quality decreases, missing items and delivery delays that were causing food to get close to spoiling before I got it.  Also was having harder time getting meals cooked with busier schedules at times.  

So have been trying to eat more at home, but sadly moved back to more microwave or quick prep items, so not quite as healthy.

I am still working out at the gym, renewed in February for another 6 months, and also picked up some small things to use at home to work out (now just need to actually use them, been lacking there).

Sadly I have injured myself now a few times, first the elbow, then the knee and now the elbow again, dealt with missing classes due to work and or feeling sick and the last week my allergies have been killing me, and making sleep difficult, so that has impacted everything I do.

Hopefully the rains this past weekend will slow down the allergies (air needed a good washing).  Knee is better, hoping elbow will heal up soon, been slowing down at gym and dropping the size of weights to not over do things.

Going to start trying to work on diet again, need to just remove the restaurants from meals other then maybe a monthly reward of a pizza, perhaps a weekly visit to something not pizza and eat at home more, and try to improve my options there some as well.

So while things have slowed, and stopped forward momentum, not really sliding backwards yet, so still time to get moving forward again.  Did a hike last week (even with the allergies) and moved about 1 ton of rocks from one side of yard to the other, and still quite a bit of work to do there, which is quite a workout!

Will let you know in a few months how things are going again.

Chris

First 2022 Update!

Hello everyone,

So been awhile since I have updated this and a few things to report.

Over the winter I did a few short trips on the bike to visit family in the area, and the usual riding around town, so nothing really new on actual travel, but really got to doing research into gear and seeing what others were doing on their longer travels both in country and overseas.

Following several people on YouTube and Facebook has opened up lots of research topics and lead to some interesting changes in perspective and even choices in gear that I was looking at.

I recently completed most of my home improvement projects I had setup for last year and am now able to start moving funds towards the cycling projects.  Have been saving and setting aside incoming funds from various sources to be spent on this project and this last month I finally started to spend those funds.

I will go into a bit more detail on them in a future post on each, and have photos/video, but have finally acquired a new helmet and proper riding jacket and pants to use.  So now have a complete outer layer.  Also trying out a few options for base layer and mid layer clothing to see what works so I can get some of that purchased.

I also picked up quite a few additions to the GoPro products to enhance my ability to use the GoPro Hero 9 in various capacities.  Some selfie/wide view poles, various types of tripods and mounting points to put on the bike or myself and ability to keep power to the camera and charge batteries, along with more batteries and SD cards.  So should be able to film in lots of different ways using the same camera.  Also picked up waterproof casing so I can use it in hard rains or even dive with it (not a diver, but might be something I pick up along the way lol). 

I then picked up the GoPro Max which will allow 360 degree filming, lots of interesting applications I can see for this based on some usages I have seen from others, will be fun to try it out and learn to use it and the footage in my stories.

I am still researching a drone, but that will probably be a later in the year purchase, lots of things to consider there and some legalities on using them I need to check into first to make sure I will not run afoul of any laws without knowing about them.

I also sent off an old point and shoot camera to convert it into a Infrared camera, seen some footage done by another photographer and it was amazing, so thought that would be something I would like to try and see if it can add another layer to images I take on my future travels.  Hopefully have it back next week.

I also picked up a new helmet mounted camera/comm system that should allow me to film from my helmet viewpoint and I will be able to narrate right into that video what is going on, and save time having to voiceover it later.  Really liked the results I saw from some other riders using it and think it will be a useful tool, and should I ride with other riders at some point, may be able to link them up and stay in communications with them.

Next month I will settle on some of the bike updates like luggage and other storage, some minor enhancements to things on the bike, hooking the GPS up to power (it is mounted now, but not yet connected the power leads to battery).

Will also get some of the crash protections installed, maybe some extra lights...not sure I need them yet or not, and working on some custom mount ideas for things like the GPS, phone and other items that I would like to have easily usable on the front of the bike.  Not sure when I will move on buying them, but will at least get some research done.

In the bigger news, I am pretty sure my big riding trip to India will finally take place this year.  Borders are open, tour leader seems to be positive it will go forward and things are looking clear for the trip, so I booked my airfare today! Worst case I have to change the tickets to something else, but a few other options for trips I could use it for, though not all bike related, but any travel will work.

So hopefully in the next few weeks I will get some good short day trip and maybe even weekend rides in with the new gear and cameras at work and start putting something other than words up here!  Will start working on learning how to edit video as well, got some software today that was recommended by a friend who uses it for doing videos and the results have looked good, so hopefully I can make it work, otherwise, lots of other products out there.  Bigger challenge will be learning the tricks and figuring out how to use the application.

I may try to make the trip to the Overland Expo in Flagstaff again this year, though it is moving back to its normal time frame in May, so might be a bit close to my India trip, so not sure yet, will decide in a few weeks.

So will end this for now, and will try to get a few videos up going over the new gear and discussing some other things in the next month or so, practice fodder for the video editing if anything LOL.

Till then

Project fix myself

 Hello again,

Wow, 2 posts in a single day, better check to make sure the world did not just end!

So I wanted to post another item today to cover another aspect of my journey to this grand adventure.  Along with getting gear and riding to boost my experience and gain new riding skills and confidence, I have been working on fixing myself as well.

When I finally got serious and started working on this project, I was kind of ignoring the 800 pound gorilla in the room, my health.

At the time I was overweight (and got worse over the last few years) and horribly out of shape.  It hurt to get down on the floor to do something (forget the concept of bending over to do that), was hard to stand up without using something to help lift myself up, even hurt getting up out of my chair in the evenings after watching a movie or TV show.  I was tired quite often, had trouble moving around, and it was quite a chore to tie a shoe or boot.  I could break into a sweat walking across the house and got winded on a single flight of stairs many times.

Something had to change (okay, I had to change, but took some time to get that point beat into my skull...more on that coming up).

I had spent a good half my life eating quick meals from the microwave or fast food in the earlier days of my career when I was mostly broke all the time and always in a rush as well.  As my career matured and I could slow down a bit and afford better things I started to eat out more, just slightly nicer places, which of course came along with slightly larger food portions.

Sadly the first decade of my doing this I had a nuclear metabolism that would burn off calories almost before I ate them.  Eat a whole pizza, would lose 2 pounds....so it seemed I was never going to really gain weight or have issues (I was 6 foot tall and weighed about 160 pounds).

Then slowly over a period of about 1 year (the year 2000 to be specific) I eventually realized my clothes did not fit very well anymore, I was a bit more uncomfortable and moving around was harder.  After ignoring my actual weight for quite a while I finally stepped on a scale and almost fell off from shock.  In just over a year I had somehow gained nearly 60 pounds!!

Since then I have slowly gained and while I have on more than one occasion worked to lose some of it, I never seemed to lose as much as I gained and within 6 months to a year I would gain it back and then tack on another 15 pounds for fun.  

I was finally reaching a point where I was very close to crossing that 300 pound mark.....and that was completely unacceptable.  So I started to make a few changes to my diet, trying to eat out less, or at least limit what I ordered.  This had very limited results, but the weight gain slowed down and even stabilized for some periods of time.  I was experimenting with different weight loss ideas and plans and not really seeing much success, or finding things that caused weight loss, but not anything I would be willing or able to keep doing constantly.  I realized that while I needed to work on the diet, my larger issue was the mostly sedentary life I had.

I sit at a desk all day for work, then sit at a desk all night working on other stuff, or sit watching TV, or sit in a car going someplace to sit and watch something or do something that takes little effort.  However, doing anything physical was a painful and very difficult thing to manage, and was hard to force myself to do that (basically I did not do it).

But in March of 2020, the world changed and with it I was forced to change and from that I was able to finally get this train wreck back on a track that was heading in the right direction.

The COVID pandemic that shut the world outside my house down forced me to stop eating out for nearly 2 months, and start buying food and eating at home.  I of course just bought mostly quick microwave meals or simple things to cook, most of which was not what you would call healthy, but the smaller portions and less heavy foods did have some impact.  I stopped gaining weight, and even started to lose a bit, though not much.

After things opened back up, I started to go out again, but had actually enjoyed the new variety of food from cooking at home, so I also kept doing that more, and I also started to decrease the amount of food I ordered when going out.  This helped to maintain my weight, but did not lose anymore.  However I was still not eating really well.

Late in 2020 I decided add a bit more variety to my diet as I was kind of stuck in a rut with the few restaurants and always bought the same stuff at store to cook at home.

So I started to order meals from one of those home delivery services that send you food every week to cook and that started to open up some new possibilities for me.

The first part was that it required me to start eating more vegetables and many other items that I would never had bought at the store on my own.  This helped me improve the health aspect of my diet quite a bit, and I even started buying some better foods for meals I prepared on my own. But I still ate out quite a bit and mostly fast foods or heavy plates of carb and fat loaded foods still.

Doing some experiments during this time I did find out some good information about how my body responded to some food types as well, which I have tried to incorporate into my continuing dietary plans.

So now that I was eating at least somewhat better, I decided to look into some options for the physical work I needed to do.

A chance ad on Facebook (yeah, they do occasionally show you something useful) for a local fitness training gym intrigued me with the challenge they were offering.

The hook was that you had to lose 25 pounds or a certain % of body fat in 6 weeks.  If you succeeded, you would be refunded your money for that 6 weeks.  If not, well, you still got 6 weeks of time hopefully well spent.

The program was not cheap, but besides the workouts that were being aimed at my age group (no more 21 year old instructors thinking that I could do 100 pushups like I was walking to the back yard of my house), the trainers really did spend time trying to work with you to adjust the work out to fit your abilities, while also trying to push you a little to make sure it did some good.  They also included a real dietary plan that made sense and was more structured than other places I had looked at in the past. 

Plus, in a first compared to any other gym I had looked at or tried, there was no offers or pushing me to buy THEIR protein or other supposedly necessary drink or sludge that would miraculously make everything work out.  While they recommended 2 protein drinks a day in the meal plans as a mid morning and mid afternoon snack, they did not care what I bought or where I bought it as long as it met the dietary needs of protein content and minimal carb and fat content.

So I signed up, and this time I decided I was going to take it serious and followed the meal planning (which was a bit restrictive, and while it could be maintained indefinitely, I am too much of an epicurean to do that).  I figured I could give it at least 6 weeks though.   I started by attending the workouts 3 days a week (the minimum commitment they asked for) which were each about 40 minutes long. 3 weeks into it I started to attend 5 days a week, and for the last 2 weeks even went in on Saturday to make it 6 days.

My results were spectacular.  In the 1st 2 weeks I had already lost 60% of the weight I needed to reach the 25 pound goal, so it was looking like this might work.

At the end of the 6 weeks I had succeeded in losing 26.5 pounds and 3-4% body fat!

I was now feeling pretty good, not only from a mental viewpoint having that kind of result, but obviously was not as heavy, clothes were fitting better and I found I could now move around without the pain and getting up and down from the floor was now something done without much hassle.

So I took my refunded money and signed up for another 6 weeks, figured I had nothing to lose at that point.

When that was done (I actually went 7 weeks, as they worked with me since I was on vacation for 1 of the weeks during that time) I had only lost another 4 pounds, and no real change in body fat.

However,  I had also started to go back out for many of my meals, and was back to eating my home delivery meals (which I had suspended for the 6 week period as they did not fit the meal plan well enough to spend the money on them during that time).

Knowing then that I could make some small adjustments and keep seeing results, I decided to sign back up for 6 months (which did lower the cost per week as well).  I have since been working on eating less again.

So now we have caught up with today.

For the month of October I have decided I will not go out to eat at all and only eat my home delivered meals and meals I cook or prepare at home (might still be a few microwave options, but will try to cook most of them).  The first week results; dropped 5 pounds and another 1% body fat.

So in a little over 4 months I have lost 35.5 pounds, 5% body fat, regained a large amount of flexibility and movement, and even started to rebuild muscle and increase strength. This I have seen by how much easier I can do certain things and the less pain I now feel.

I really noticed it in my riding compared to how I would feel during and after a ride just 6 months ago.

I am hoping that the lack of restaurant foods for this next month will allow another decent weight drop. I will then slowly go back to eating out some (I mean, the food is really good, and it forms what little social life I have and gives me a reason to leave the house for a bit), but the hope is to limit it more, and again try to change what I order and how much I order.

Combined with the increased range of food options I have picked up from the home delivered meals, and discovering lots of food things that I actually now enjoy that a year ago I would have sworn I disliked and refused to eat, it should be easier to still enjoy a meal out, but not cause so much issue with my health.

The worst case I see is that I will start to maintain weight where I am, much like what I saw over the last 30-40 days where I was not gaining, but also not losing.

But to hopefully sweeten the deal, now that I can get out and do more without pain and suffering, I will be planning to not only ride the motorcycle more now that the cooler weather has arrived, but will be dusting off the mountain bike and getting back out on it too.  Also plan to get out hiking some as well since there are many nice trails within a 15 minute drive from my home.

With the better control of diet and a big increase in physical activity (I do not plan to reduce my workouts and have lately started pushing myself more during them) I should hope to see a continued weight loss, though possibly slower, but that is fine.

Well, now that you have read the account of my fitness train wreck that has now gotten back on the track, I will in the future continue to spend more time on bike trips and gear stuff :)  But I will drop a note now and then on the fitness progress, as it will play a large part in any success I have in long distance ADV biking trips in the future.

Thanks for the read and hope you all are well.  If you have any specific questions about any of the above, just contact me and I can provide more details about specific products, companies or concepts I have found or done, just in case you have a need to fix your self too :)

Chris

New toys! Bike gets a small upgrade.

Hey there!   

Finally getting back on here after a 2 week break after my super enjoyable weekend and less than enjoyable ride back home from the Overland Expo :)

Today we discuss one of the new items I picked up while at the Expo.

I finally had the time to install the Atlas Throttle Lock I purchased while at the Expo and had issues installing at the campsite.  The info I picked up the following day and finally getting a closer look at the bike last weekend allowed me to determine what I needed to do.

So turns out that my bikes rubber grips installed over the edge of the throttle piece on the hand bar.  So I could not see the plastic ridge that I need to install up against on the throttle piece and was instead trying to install on the hand bar itself (which of course does not move and would not have helped!)

Today I took off the brush guard from the throttle side and after getting several light sources on it (damn my bad near sight vision!) I figured out how to pull the rubber grip back off the plastic edge, but did have to cut 2 small sections where it appears the rubber grip was looped over a catch of some kind.  I could not see how to remove it, so just cut the rubber, the device could not install securely otherwise and the rubber grip is not going anywhere anyway, so this is not impacting the bike.

I then loosely installed so I could determine the gap and adjust the device accordingly by adding another rubber pad to the device to allow it to work since the distance was a bigger gap now. (watch the below video and that will probably make more sense).  Once the device was prepared, was a quick install and secured it all down after I put it in the best position to be usable over the full range of the throttles movement.

I just tested its use out there in the garage without running the bike and it appears to work.  I will take it out for an actual test ride hopefully tomorrow and see how it works in action.

This should greatly reduce stress on my hands when riding long distances.  Even the 2-3 hour riding sessions to the Expo and back took a toll on my hand and wrist with having to constantly hold the throttle in place to maintain speed and being unable to remove my hand while the bike was moving without of course slowing down rapidly.

Now I should be able to find my ideal speed, set the lock and then relax my hand, and if need even remove it from the grip for short periods of time to stretch it or my arm or use the arm to adjust or grab something else on the bike (not something you do often, and always recommended to keep both hands on the bar at all times for safety, but being able to do a quick task or movement is nice to have).

So below is a quick video I did of the installed device and its basic operation.  Enjoy!

Atlas Throttle Lock

Guess what? We did a thing!

Hey everyone.  Long entry ahead. A few videos and photos as well.

So been quite a few months since my last update and until this weekend there was not much to report.  As usual had been riding around town just to exercise the bike and took a few short rides over to Scottsdale for quick errands, but nothing really big.  During this time I did manage to get bike in for some maintenance since it had been a while, and while I had not yet hit the mileage, the time was long enough we did the next scheduled maintenance anyway.  Bike was at about 3200 miles as of a few days ago.

However....drum roll....we FINALLY took an actual trip on the bike!  Yes, after 3.5 years of owning it, we finally actually used it :)

I had bought a weekend pass to attend the Overland Expo West in Flagstaff last month.  Went with the camping option as well.  This was not only a great opportunity to see some vendors and products up close, and play with them and talk with vendors about various product needs, but also attend and learn some cool things from those more experienced and also to network and meet other riders.  It was also the perfect time to take an actual trip on the bike.

Over the last year I have reached a point in my riding that I feel really comfortable around town, my riding has become almost instinct now. I do not ride along thinking about how I need to shift, or brake or corner or anything, I just do it.  So it was time to finally get out on the open road and do a long ride.  (Until now, the longest ride was the 75 miles to a relatives place north of Phoenix, which was an adventure in its own sense, but was just a ride staying with family, so did not pack or take anything other then simple change of clothes.)

Now remember, my bike is basically a stock bike still.  I had to figure out how to pack a weekends worth of clothing, some food and water, tent, sleeping bag, cameras and various other things I thought I might need or want on a bike with no storage/luggage on it.

I put most of the stuff in a decent sized duffel style bag I have.  The tent was in it's own bag and sleeping bag was also in a bag.  I put water bottles in a small lunch box cooler and then using the bag on the bottom, arranged the rest on top of the bag on the rear seat/rack space of the bike.  It was then covered with a cargo net I had and 2 bungie straps to hold it down.  Everything was attached to everything else.  I looped the tent bag strap through the sleeping bag strap, the cooler strap was looped around the tent, and the tent strap was also trapped in the Velcro of the handles on the duffel, so it all became one large block.  

The cargo net had 6 attachment points that allowed it to cover all sides with a decent tension to prevent any serious movement, then the 2 straps where used to keep downward tension, and those straps were woven in and out of the cargo net to hold them in place in case they would come loose, did not want them flapping around, flying off or getting tangled in rear wheel.

It all worked, though looked a bit precarious and was not an ideal setup.  I could feel the difference in bike balance with that weight so high up on the back, and the wind did knock things around a bit more with that large mass sticking up, though probably no worse than riding with a 2nd person on back (and far less heavy)

The event itself ran Friday through Sunday.  I rode up to my relatives on Thursday evening, as they are at roughly the half way point.  This allowed me to ride up when traffic was lighter than during the earlier times of day, and as I was half way there, allowed me to arrive fairly early in Flagstaff without having to be up so early.

Spent the night and then in the morning repacked the bike, added a few food items and beverage, and also decided to slip the duffel into a large garbage bag to offer some protection against water if it would happen to rain (there was a small chance of rain, but still a chance).

Left around 7:30 a.m. and had a decent ride up to Flagstaff.  Along the way I tested taking a few videos with the GoPro which I had installed on the bike to see what kind of footage I could get. (Sadly I accidentally deleted them all earlier today in a bone head action, so the few videos I got, while they worked nicely, are no longer existing!!)

Arrived at the exit to reach the Fort Tuthill grounds and pulled off the freeway.  The traffic instantly became a standstill.  Took about 30 minutes of creeping along to get down the highway to the entrance, then into the park and then to the check in lines.  They checked me in and gave me my wristband (but failed to give me the other things I should have received, had to track them down later).  And then pointed me to next person who directed me to the motorcycle camping spots (which were actually right where they were standing).

Pulled off and then parked bike along parking lot and walked around a bit to find a spot.  Camping was festival style, no assigned spots, no saving spots, just find a area large enough for your tent/bike/gear and claim it.  I found a spot about 50 feet away that met my needs, so proceeded to unload the bike and place all the gear in a pile to save it.  Then moved the bike over and parked it there (after having to find a rock to place under the kickstand so it would stay stable and not fall over, ground was too soft for the center stand to work right.)

Setup the tent, loaded everything inside and organized it some, then headed over to the main event grounds which were about a half mile walk away.

The tent setup

Day 1 at Overland Expo

Once inside it was overlanding overload!  Every conceivable variation on trucks, bikes, campers and gear of all kinds was there.  I first tried to find main event booth to get my t-shirt I had pre-purchased, but was directed to wrong spot, and they let me know where to find it that day, or the new location it would move to on Saturday (which is when I actually went and picked it up).  I then walked around the entire place looking mainly for the motorcycle related vendors and of course noting where other vendors were that might be interesting, as well as checking out some awesome expedition trucks that I will never be able to afford anyway!

For the serious Overlander! 

I had a late lunch (LONG lines) and then took some time to attend a few late afternoon talks, both on packing a bike.  One focused on solo travel needs (I missed about half that one) and the other on weight considerations in packing.  Instructor even gave me his typed up notes for that one when he was done as I had spent some time talking with him and he had seen me at the earlier talk as well which he attended.

Lunch lines!

I also stopped by a booth for a local bike business in the Phoenix area and bought a pair of riding boots which I needed. (Up till now I have been using hiking boots for longer rides, though around town I usually just wear my regular sneakers.)  Walked back to camp to take boots back and hung out there doing a few things in the tent and figuring out how I was going to sleep that night and setting up bag and such.  I had forgotten my travel pillow, so figured I would use my leather jacket I ride in as a pillow (did not work that well, even adding a pair of shorts into it to bulk it up).  I then left to go back over to see the film festival film that night which was a great 10 year look back on the BDR (Backroad Discovery Routes) organization and the work they had done.

Friday evening recap

After film it was back to tent, updated journal and then attempted to sleep.

That did not work out so well.  Temperature went down to about 45 that night, so was much cooler than I like, I kept my jeans and shirt on, even put my fleece jacket back on half way through the night.  My cheap sleeping bag while rated for much lower temps, was just not sized right for my height and body, so if I zipped myself into it I could not move well, and I had not picked up a ground mat, thinking I could deal with it, but nope.  Ground was hard, uneven and cold. Could not get comfortable for long and tossed/turned all night.

Woke about 7 a.m. and just moved around tent a bit doing things to wake up.  While the park had showers, I was not sure where they were, and had been warned that they were limited, and probably would be busy, and not very good either, so I had already decided before I left that I would just sponge bath with some water for the weekend. (Mostly outdoor event, figured the odor could be handled by deodorant).

Saturday Morning

Changed clothes and then picked up stuff I wanted and headed back to the event.  Saturday I had planned mostly to attend talks and had my agenda all setup in the event app (which was brilliant by the way).  Throughout the day I attended talks on getting published as a travel writer, what tools to pack, First Aid, How to pack for various travel scenarios, security practices when travelling and dealing with international borders.

Getting published panel

I also had some time to spend at several vendors and picked up other things that were of interest or need which were:

*3 year subscription to the Overland Journal (which also gave me a 1 year sub to an app based GPS as a special deal along with the discount).

*A new motorcycle focused GPS system to install on the bike from Garmin.

*A throttle lock device to basically give me cruise control for the bike.

*The AZ BDR map for riding route in Arizona.

*Another t-shirt from an overlanding media company whose videos I have enjoyed watching over last 2 years - and got to meet the main guy behind the company and who has been in all the videos.

One of the companies many trucks.

*A ground mat for use that night and a thermal insert for the sleeping bag to help warm things up some.

And of course lunch and a couple of beverages during the day.

After all that I went back to tent to unload and then hang out a bit trying to install the throttle lock on the bike.  Things did not go well, could not seem to get it to install correctly, then dropped the torx wrench which got trapped in my bike fairing, requiring a partial disassembly of it to retrieve, and then as it was getting dark, I had to remove what I had done so far and appears the screw in the device was stripped.  I got it out, but still not sure if the device was cross-threaded or not.

Eventually headed back to event space for the nights moto dinner and party to benefit a legal organization that works for motorcycle legal issues.  I had paid extra for this event when I bought my ticket.  Was a simple BBQ dinner and we all got a raffle ticket as well. Some live music and lots of people.  I of course did not win anything, and night was getting cold, so once over I headed over to the film fest tent, but it was half over, and while it looked interesting, was not sure exactly what the story was about, so decided not to stay.

Went back to tent, setup my new sleeping gear and then went to sleep.  It was much warmer and the ground mat did help some with the ground warmth and hardness, but did not work as well as they had talked or like the demo mat, but I did not spend much time trying to blow it up. (Supposed to be self inflating due to the type of foam used, but it did not seem to inflate much.  But picked it for 75% off retail, so for that cost it did something at least).

Woke up Sunday morning in a slightly better mood, but it was also not a good day.  Overcast, humidity was up and rain was predicted for a good part of the day.  I sponged off, changed clothes and then packed up most of the stuff so it was nearly ready for loading.  Then went back over to the event for a few last things I wanted to do.

It sprinkled for some of the walk down and then rained hard for about 10 minutes, but then stopped.  I visited one of the guys who had been on 2 of the panels I had attended Saturday.  He and his family have been living on the road for just over a decade, and he had written several books about their travels.  When I talked with him after the 2nd panel he did mention they had the books for sale, so went to find him this morning.  

I arrived but they had not yet setup, but they did have a sign with a web address on it, so I was looking at that to see what books would cost and see about having them shipped as I was not sure I had room to pack more stuff.  His son came out while I was doing that and I got into a discussion with him for awhile, then his wife joined.  She helped me find the stuff online which was currently on sale for the event and was able to put in the order for the new book coming out soon and it would come with all the other books and a t-shirt.  She also gave me her contact to reach her to get some info on some people they know who build luggage for bikes as well as some other references for bike related travel from people they knew or knew of at least.

After completing my online order I left them to go get some food, then visited the place where I had bought the throttle lock to check out the demo again, and was able to figure out what I was doing wrong, and the sales girl also went over a few things that helped clarify the install instructions, so hopefully I will get it installed sometime soon (was not going to try it with the threat of rain coming).  After a quick look at a few other things, and seeing if anyone had a good rain jacket I could buy (did not find one) I decided to head out before the rain became worse as it was predicted to do, and also beat the rush of leaving later in the day with everyone else.

At the nearly last booth as I was leaving, I spotted some solar powered battery packs and thought that would be nice to have and picked one up. I had earlier borrowed one on Saturday evening from my camping neighbor (who offered it when he saw me trying to charge phone on the bike).

Back at camp I did the final pack, pulled down the tent and packed it, got my riding gear (if you can call it that) on and loaded up the bike and secured everything.

Sunday Departure

Got bike warmed up and pulled back onto the park road and headed for exit.  Barely hit the highway and the rain started and started hard.  For the 3 miles to the fuel stop it was pouring.  I was already soaked when I pulled up to pumps.  After topping off the tank, headed back out to a downpour.  I was taking the back way home to avoid heavy traffic on the interstate which was always bad on Sundays even in good weather, riding it in the rain would have been a nightmare.

Took Lake Mary Road out of Flagstaff which would bring me down to highway 87 and then to Payson, and from there back to Phoenix. 

The rain out of Flagstaff was coming down so hard I could barely see, and visor was fogging up, so had to leave it gapped at the bottom which of course let some water in (though not much).  The old helmet I have, while doing its job, was not up to this much rain, and even worse since the visor is cracked form a fall it took last year.  (A new helmet is going to happen soon here).  By now my leather jacket was soaked through, and my jeans were soaked.  Eventually the rain lightened up and even stopped for a few minutes now and then, but always came back.  I also was now heading up in altitude before I would come back down.  So temperatures got cooler, I got wetter, and at 50-60 mph, the wind made things worse.

I finally reached Payson after about 2 hours of riding and was sopping wet and starting to feel numb and also hurting in other places.  My feet were now wet too, left foot was swimming in the new, supposedly waterproof boots, so not too happy about that.  I need to figure out if defective or was not sealed up correctly, or if perhaps my wet jeans were wicking and leaking water down my leg into boot, though still not sure why left foot was so much worse.

I stopped at a gas station to use restroom and was shivering while in there, body was aching and it was hurting to lift legs up and down while moving in traffic coming up to station.  I knew I needed to get out of the cooler temps, so that meant getting back down to lower altitudes sooner than later, and since rain was predicted to continue if not worsen later, was not going to wait.

Painfully got back on bike, got back on highway and heading south.  Thankfully a short distance out of Payson and you drop down pretty fast.  Temps which had reached 60 in Payson (from a low of 50 on Lake Mary road) were now going up to 64.  Rain let up for a bit, and traffic was moving well, and not too crazy.

About half way to Phoenix, near the top of a big hill, things ground to a stop.  Both lanes backed up, and soon saw patrol car lights and signs about an accident ahead.  Spent about 20 minutes moving along at a crawl, thankfully most of it downhill, so just coasted in neutral which saved my clutch hand some pain.  And of course the rain started up again, but at such low speeds was not as annoying.  

Finally passed the crash scene (horrible roll over of a single SUV, did not look good for who ever was inside.  Medical teams were already gone, they were just cleaning road and waiting for truck to remove wreck I guess) and was able to get moving again.

As we moved south the temps finally increased to 70, and rain let up for a bit.  Reached edge of Phoenix and thankfully that is part of town I live in (which is another reason I took this route, saves crossing most of Phoenix and all the traffic and stops).  I turned off for the last 3 miles to house and it started to rain again.

Pulled into garage and was exhausted.  Though I was feeling better now that I had warmed up, wasted no time in getting into dry clothes and then unloading bike, unpacking and spreading out things that were wet.  Tent was of course wet when I packed it, and had picked up a bit of moisture from the trip, so spread it out in garage. It needs to be washed as it was also dirty from 3 days of dust build up.  Most of the luggage was good and dry other than some moisture on the outer bags.  My backpack, which I had thought somewhat water resistant faired the worst.  It had taken on enough moisture to soak the papers and books inside, causing some fair damage to one book and many brochures and papers were messy, though not a big deal as most will just get tossed once I get details off them to research items.

After all that, I wiped off the bike to remove excess water and clean off the dust and dirt built up on it, then took care of some business around the house and then headed out for an early hot dinner!

So there you go, my first motorcycle adventure.  Probably told you way more detail than you care about, but figured I would make this first trip entry large enough to make up for the last few years of lame updates about me riding around town for no reason.

I learned a lot from my time at the event, from people I talked with, things I saw and the many mistakes I made as well as confirmed many things I knew and just had not done yet (like buying proper riding gear and getting luggage for the bike, both of those things now at the very top of my list and will be dealt with over next 30 days, so look for those updates coming soon).

Till next time, hoping you are spending your own time doing something interesting and fun or crazy and fun, but just enjoying life.

Can you say procrastinate?

Hey there.

Yeah, so another very long gap in my blog I see.   So the rest of 2020 did not really go as I planned.  Work was busier than expected, a few things I was working on with the house and finally had to do a major repair to the car. (Advice....do not buy Italian cars unless you like waiting around for stuff!).

With lots of uncertainty as to the final repair costs on the car (can you say OUCH), some things I needed to start addressing with the house, repairs due on my other car and just generally not feeling all that great physically I have not progressed much on any travelling with the bike.

While I have continued to ride around the local town and a few rides into nearby city areas, I spend most of my time at home now and that has not been great for my health.  Weight gains and a general feeling of fatigue have kept me from doing things many weekends.

So my goals and preparation for the trip to India have moved quite slowly.

And now sadly, due to the fact that things have not really improved, and recently even worsened in India, I have had to make the decision to postpone the trip for now.  It is highly likely that tourist travel will still be banned for the next few months yet and with my own health issues and not have prepared like I wanted, this is probably the best choice.

For now I am working with the tour operator to move my deposit to the summer 2022 trip, assuming spots are still open, they have been selling them almost faster than the 2021 spots as many people did not want to risk it this year to begin with.  If I cannot get into 2022, then will go for 2023.  So right now I should have plenty of time to prepare, and will feel much more confident on such a trip.  (Note, that had the virus situation calmed down and travel been permitted, I would have taken the trip, prepared or not, that is in some ways the definition of an adventure, is it not?)

So as things sit here at the end of April 2021, I have completed most of the automotive repairs, and have started a project for some home updates/repairs.   I am working slowly on starting the liquidation of some things and general cleanup and downsizing as well of junk I do not need, so as I build funds there I will start to apply those towards some of the new equipment I keep saying I need.

I am also trying to work on a plan for taking a long riding trip here in the USA this summer anyway, as I have saved up all my vacation time from work and I actually need to start using it or risk losing some of it as we can only have so many hours banked up.

I have not quite decided yet on when I want to attempt a trip, or for how long, and have a few different routes in mind, so am working on various cost/time projections to see what would work out best for me.  Will then start picking up at least the minimum equipment I will need to do this safely and efficiently.

The bike is also due for maintenance (over due technically) and has also been shifting strangely for the last few months.  I am going to try getting it in for service in the next few weeks here.

So here we stand again, saying things should start to get more interesting in the future, but all I can say is that is my plan/hope, but so far not been too good at keeping them for various reasons.  

This is actually why I started this blog back when I did though, to track and record all the failures and delays leading up to a big project, and maybe later to analyze what I could have done differently and learn not only for myself, but help others avoid doing the same on their own adventures.

Until my next update (which I really do hope will be only a month off) enjoy your time, stay safe and stay healthy!