The Fake Hedonism of Motorcycle Travel / Motorcycle Trip Bosnia / Royal Enfield Interceptor 650

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Free Miles MC

Free Miles MC

Ай бұрын

In todays episode we are talking about the Fake Hedonism of Motorcycle Travel
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Пікірлер: 548
@monawoka97
@monawoka97 6 күн бұрын
What I got out of my 9 day motorcycle trip this spring, more than anything else, was simplicity. It was just so unbelievably refreshing to reduce my daily concerns to such a small and simple set of tasks. Cover miles. Don't run out of gas. Eat food. Find a place to sleep. Enjoy the views and being on the bike. That's it. It's so tactile and direct and straightforward. The complex stressors of modern day life create this vague, unending sense of worry. It's difficult to ever know if you're truly done. There's always this feeling that there's something you're forgetting about that you should be tending to. There's also more you could have done at work. There's always the fear that your relationships are slowly fading because you're not giving them enough attention. On a motorcycle trip all that falls away for a while. It made me remember how simple life can be and I LOVED it.
@nickolaskays8192
@nickolaskays8192 5 күн бұрын
Well said....Thankyou
@stevetheaxe
@stevetheaxe 5 күн бұрын
Great points mate. Thats wahat i get too
@furthereast6775
@furthereast6775 5 күн бұрын
Great description I feel you. I get that from backpacking in the mountains far more. Task at hand is literally find a place to sleep, find a water source, navigate our off trail route through landscape. It’s the ultimate.
@backpackmark
@backpackmark 4 күн бұрын
Spot on
@hayduke
@hayduke 4 күн бұрын
@@furthereast6775 Exactly, I was going to say the same thing. I love short-ish through hikes (1-2 weeks) in wild places. For me nothing resets the artificial 'needs' and 'priorities' of the modern urban reality better than backpacking. Although it's a privilege and requires being financially comfortable, carrying everything you need on your back with your only concerns being making it to the next camp site is hugely satisfying and rewarding.
@zoydpatterson1817
@zoydpatterson1817 28 күн бұрын
Absolutely agree with the points you made on this topic. Just do something for yourself the way you want to do it - without being a victim of marketing and trends.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
I think doing things for yourself is the Central one ☺️
@C_R_O_M________
@C_R_O_M________ 15 күн бұрын
People understand that marketing has embedded elements of deception and they DO take that into consideration when they are making conscious decisions. What differs among people is the level and quality of those conscious decisions themselves: are they really conscious or are they driven by unconscious and unresolved issues?
@rolliverrolliver1155
@rolliverrolliver1155 5 күн бұрын
Great perspective! At some point in time everything seemed to be about doing what you love to the extreme. That, however, is not reality. Don't buy the lies. Life can only get so good. Be happy with it. There is a lot more to it than doing one thing.
@Mountainchip
@Mountainchip 4 күн бұрын
Excellent question. I wish more people thought about things this deeply. After 35 years of all kinds of riding I don’t think I can live life to the fullest on a bike. Don’t get me wrong, I’d give up most things before my bike. It’s just that there is a lot more to life than bikes. (Yeah, that’s hard to say.) And yes, my 2011 950 Adv is an “adventure” bike. But it’s only called that because of the marketing. The actual adventure comes from the rider, like you say, the bike isn’t important, adventure is in the rider. I get a bit miffed at the grand “adventure” bikes that never even get dirty. Too many people being too concerned about image. Obviously the marketing works. However, no matter the bike, as far as I’m concerned, adventure only starts where things go off plan. That’s where you start to find out about yourself.
@C_R_O_M________
@C_R_O_M________ 3 күн бұрын
@@Mountainchip what bike is that again?
@happywanderer5632
@happywanderer5632 15 күн бұрын
I find that long distance motorcycling clears your mind. It's like meditation. The road disappears beneath the GPS's blue line of destiny, your body controls the bike by muscle memory, without conscious input, leaving your mind free to wander, to observe some new sight, to connect it to some past experience, and to reveal an insight that is sometimes a minor epiphany. Audacious construction and vast skies inspire awe, admiration, wonder, humility. You feel your smallness and are reminded to try to make a difference in the lives of those around you. The emptiness of the desert inspires anxiety, as you are far more aware of your vulnerability and your reliance on the kindness of strangers if things go pear shaped. You feel your loneliness and are reminded of the importance of friends. When you’re travelling solo, you have only the task in front of you, and the monkey chatter in your head, reminding you of what’s behind you. On a good day, the monkey chatter is silenced by the rhythms of the road, and something you see triggers the spiritual gift of a new inner monologue. Happiness isn’t something to chase. It happens organically, unexpectedly, and infrequently, like a Spinning Top passing through its axis; for a microsecond in perfect balance, a beer commercial moment before it continues the momentum of its wobble. You can’t find happiness, all you can do is spin the Top faster, to give it stability, so it oscillates less, giving it a better chance to pass through its axis. Riding spins the top.
@nogerboher5266
@nogerboher5266 8 күн бұрын
I've been doing this with my car since I was like 19 and didn't even know about all the adventure or travel nonsense. Whenever I would feel bored, stressed and fed up with all the modern, capitalistic, democratic nonsense lifestyle, being forced to waste 9-10 hours on ''a job'' every single day of my life just to be able afford to live my life, as well as many, many other big impact, stressful things in life... I would just pack and prepare my car, wait for Friday, get off work and hop in my car (without GPS) and just drive as far as I wanted to, wherever I wanted to and just get lost in nature with no idea where I'm going and with no reason why - I just went until I felt rested, relaxed and ready to head back home... Sometimes I would cover over 2000 kilometers from Friday to Sunday and I wouldn't be back until Sunday nighttime... I would mostly camp somewhere or sleep in my car but I've also rented rooms in random small towns quite a few times... And as of 2021, I've been doing the same thing with my bike. Last time I did this was 2 months ago, I ended up all the way in Austrian Alps, camping in some random village for 2 days. I was so refreshed and in peace by that trip that for the next 2-3 weeks, I slept like a baby and was unbothered by ANYHTING... Most freeing, mind clearing, back-to-reality feeling ever!
@richardweeds9566
@richardweeds9566 6 күн бұрын
Lol😂
@billyarsenault1970
@billyarsenault1970 6 күн бұрын
Or you could just smoke a joint and go for a spin instead. 😂
@happywanderer5632
@happywanderer5632 6 күн бұрын
@@billyarsenault1970 LOL, Dope never did anything for me. Just gave me a headache and made me feel sick. I'll stick to motorbikes :)
@daweshorizon
@daweshorizon 6 күн бұрын
You might be over-thinking here. Have a beer and chill. Love and peace
@fuglbird
@fuglbird 27 күн бұрын
I couldn't afford a car when I got my first motorcycle in 1978 for 1100 EUR, a two stroke three cylinder Suzuki GT550. I saved 4 hours compared to the train when I visited my family in the weekends. My girlfriend and I went from Denmark to Monaco and back on that bike on a three week holiday with tent and sleeping bags. We didn't have credit cards back then and we ran out of money after an unexpected repair and a front wheel puncture on the Autoroute. We only had money left for fuel. We lived on a baguette and camped on edges of football pitches on our way back. That was a great trip. It was never a struggle.
@davidphillips7255
@davidphillips7255 25 күн бұрын
Great bike. I put 30,000 km on one of those. When Cycle magazine tested the middleweights in 75 they called the GT550 " Understated Fast and Friendly: The King of the Middleweights".
@C_R_O_M________
@C_R_O_M________ 15 күн бұрын
It surely depends on the company!
@mithrandirthegrey7644
@mithrandirthegrey7644 7 күн бұрын
Did the same except solo in 2008. Took my bike and just headed south from England with destination nowhere. Ended up meeting a girl in France and another one in Italy. It was an awesome summer. To be fair though I could have done the same journey in a cage. The MC had nothing to do with the people that I met. I just enjoy the wind in my face when traveling.
@Nonicknameleftforme
@Nonicknameleftforme 7 күн бұрын
That is a nice story and to be honest... I don't think today a relationship would survive such a change of events in a holiday. Great that you two overcame the problems and still enjoyed the time spent together.
@jonathanr72
@jonathanr72 6 күн бұрын
That's impressive buying anything using euros in 1978.
@Chartil
@Chartil 27 күн бұрын
This rings very true mate. I've been zig zagging around Australia on my bike for 25 years. I do seasonal harvest work and travel from state to state chasing the crops usually living in my tent. I get backpackers expecting some guru wisdom and dissapointed when I tell them my major skill is knowing where the best meat pies in Australia are located. Flipside some GS guys seem confused that I do a lot of living off my bike ( X 300 baby Versys) like I'm doing it wrong with all the wrong gear. Riders shocked to hear after Cherries finish I park my bike up and go fishing until apples start as non stop riding sucks ass everything is balance.............. Current highest ranked Pie (Chunky steak Pie @ Little Kiwi bakehouse Nerang Queensland)
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
Wish I tried out that bakehouse in Queensland wen I was on a surf trip through Queensland but hopefully I visit Australia a second time ☺️
@roelfkromhout
@roelfkromhout 8 күн бұрын
I can see how non stop riding on a baby Versys might suck a little lol. Still, I respect it.
@stevetheaxe
@stevetheaxe 5 күн бұрын
Have you had one from uncle bucks bakery in Yarck mate? Im licking my lips as i right this?. My wifey and me ride from wagga to melbz to see our granddaughter a lot and always tske the extra 3 hrs to go tbrough the mountains. Two tbings we must do each time is uncle bucks for a pie and vanilla slice donut and a hefeweizen from king river brewery.
@collyernicholasjohn
@collyernicholasjohn 4 күн бұрын
Thanks for tip as a pie connoisseur myself. Will check out Nerang I can recommend C&Js pastries Kilcoy.
@Chartil
@Chartil 4 күн бұрын
@@stevetheaxe No way I just went there for first time after lady Pear season I was touring about and yes absolute god level. 😁
@233kosta
@233kosta 4 күн бұрын
I enjoy riding to the airbnb, enjoying some decent mountain roads, then going home.
@richardsmith5249
@richardsmith5249 28 күн бұрын
One of my most memorable moments was not really an adventure. I was driving an old Dnepr sidecar outfit across the country to go to a party (admittedly it was about 200 miles away). About 50 miles short of my destination, the machine died. It was a lovely, sunny early evening among cornfields, with no people and no traffic. The problem was a loose wire, easily fixed. But, sitting there by the side of the road, it was so idyllic, so blissfully peaceful, that I almost regretted how quickly the problem was resolved. In the event, I sat there for maybe another 10 or 15 minutes, looking at the fields and the sky and the sun, and my old outfit, soaking it all in, before finally resuming my journey. A very little bit of adventure, but a lot of enjoyment.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
That is a very Beautiful Story ☺️
@Backtoreality1873
@Backtoreality1873 25 күн бұрын
Inner peace my friend. I admire you for recognizing this small window and living in it for a while.
@IkkeBareAnders
@IkkeBareAnders 17 сағат бұрын
Been right there myself on a 1997 Ural 😆 It died next to a slow flowing river, sun setting in the distance. Beautiful.
@SandraOrtmann1976
@SandraOrtmann1976 12 күн бұрын
I used to watch motorcyle "travel" channels a lot. However, as my husband and myself put together a camping set ourselves, I noticed that we will do no more "offroading" but the gravel road on the campsite. Yes, we are total glampers. We have our basecamp at the campsite and explore the area. On road. We did this one time now and it was a lot of fun. We are absolutely no rebels. We enjoy riding our bikes a lot. Otherwise, we are admittedly no different than we people who travel by car. Boring, I know. We also do not film anything. We really just do it for ourselves, to spend time together and relax. That's it.
@gtheofanopoulos
@gtheofanopoulos 4 күн бұрын
I travel with my motorcycle, just to turn my bike at as many corners as possible. That's it. No other reason. No cameras, no SM posts, no telling others about it. Just fckiing break, turn and accelerate the bike. That's awesome. Not what I live for. But, just plain awesome.
@renatobfa
@renatobfa 13 күн бұрын
I think that social media spoiled that idea and made people overhype/overthink motorcycle travel in general, but also, most people do it in this day and age to videotape themselves and generate clicks, which is quite the opposite of its original purpose (to enjoy the freedom, to 'forget the world' and the problems, to meditate', to just appreciate the view, nature, etc etc). I would guess that the people who do motorcycle travel and are most happy would be those that share that experience with just their friends and family in the moment right there, in the flesh, and don't bother to record anything to post on social media. Maybe I'm just old, but social media made life a bit fake and looking like a movie we already watched before.
@KosmicKitchen
@KosmicKitchen 3 күн бұрын
Well said, social media ambitions corrupt the travelling experience. One tends to perceive the world through a telephone lens, instead of one's own eyes and soul.
@robertclark5874
@robertclark5874 3 күн бұрын
Social media kinda ruined everything that way. Traveling, motorcycling, eating. I rarely ever used it or followed much.
@ramsy66
@ramsy66 Күн бұрын
Social media is like a drug addiction. You know you shouldn't want it or enjoy it but you just can't help yourself once you've hit a certain level of usage. It becomes a habit and starts to seep into your subconscious. I think recording and sharing adventures is perfectly fine if you're into that. So long as it doesn't become all about generating income by gaining as much attention as possible with click bait.
@daweshorizon
@daweshorizon 5 күн бұрын
Ride your bike. Have a beer. Don't overthink. Chill. Repeat. Well that's me anyway. Love and peace.
@ORflycaster
@ORflycaster 3 күн бұрын
I have no idea who first said it, but “ride your own ride” is the 100% accurate truth. Don’t worry about marketing, social media, or friends. Ride for yourself in the manner that YOU enjoy, whether thats one hour rides or one year tours around the world. Don’t succumb to main character syndrome. Just ride the bike that you love on the roads that make you smile. And if dressing up like a pirare, Power Ranger, or “adventure rider” makes you feel extra special for some sort of perceived validation, then so be it. You’re getting that from motorcycling too. But if you find yourself only going through the motions in pursuit of a fantasy that someone else portrayed, and it feels like a grind rather than grins, it’s time for honest self reflection and a possible bike sale.
@nickbarber2080
@nickbarber2080 4 күн бұрын
"You...may have gone to the stars. And you came back because you found nothing there except, again, yourself."
@briancaldwell6799
@briancaldwell6799 23 сағат бұрын
yep.....like astronaut monkey.....sent him in rocket but he was flyin to fast to see ...
@patfinnegan467
@patfinnegan467 7 күн бұрын
I suggest that you stop and take a hike every day you ride. The exercise and quiet solitude are uplifting especially after a rough ride. Yet, when you get back on the bike, the ride is exhilarating and relaxing at the same time. Perhaps after the enjoyable but intense effort of a rigorous hike, the bike covers miles so easily it is difficult not to enjoy. And then when you finally hit pavement again where you can accelerate it feels like heaven!.
@Juergen732
@Juergen732 28 күн бұрын
Aaahhh.. I sense another First World identity crisis coming on.. well rest assured Miles, I am in total sympathy. I found that I was more in love with the "idea" of motorcycle touring than in the actual "doing" of it. It came as a shock and disappointment to me that motorcycling really wasn't that much fun or satisfying as I had idealized it in my imagination. So, I got what I could get out of it and moved on. Nothing lost through the motorcycling experience, I didn't get hurt or worse..killed, and I am now the wiser for it.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Actually huge Respekt that you managed to have that level of introspective and realize that and accordingly adjust. I don’t think many people can do that ☺️
@suzyamerica4679
@suzyamerica4679 26 күн бұрын
To summarize the summary - riding motorcycles is not your thing. No biggie.
@Dave-sw2dm
@Dave-sw2dm 18 күн бұрын
There are those who have motorcycling in their blood, and those who do it for a time.
@zed5129
@zed5129 2 күн бұрын
Yeah I agree. I enjoy short blasts of fast motorcycling, but a long trip on bike makes me wonder why I'm not in a car.
@zed5129
@zed5129 2 күн бұрын
@@Dave-sw2dm @suzyamerica4679 How many IOMTT riders do you reckon do massive motorcycle trips? Do you think they "have motorcycling in their blood"?
@mockbattles
@mockbattles 5 күн бұрын
There is nothing better than a long strip of smooth tarmac on a sunny day.
@elwood62
@elwood62 17 күн бұрын
I love to travel and traveling by motorcycle is much more enjoyable than in a car. I bought into the “adventure” craze years ago, but luckily realized it was stupid before I was able to spend a lot of money on trying to achieve the ultimate status. There will always be someone telling you that you’re doing it wrong. Wrong bike, wrong gear, wrong destination, etc. There is no wrong way to do it. Enjoy life, ride when you can, and get over trying to meet someone else’s idea of what true motorcycling looks like.
@Kihera-zd8re
@Kihera-zd8re 2 күн бұрын
i was just wanting to ask what people thought about travel in a car vs a motorcycle. Thanks for sharing :D So far i have only driven my car (not manual) for 5 hours alone, I don't have a license for motorcycle driving but am considering getting it in the future if it's possible i will like it :)
@edwinmccracken2686
@edwinmccracken2686 4 күн бұрын
What a great discussion point, I came to this conclusion myself recently. My plan now is to hook a trailer to my camper, get a small, light, lower capacity bike and do it in comfort. Me doing me, and not worrying about the crowd.
@903lew
@903lew 28 күн бұрын
I think, for me, that the disconnect and the contrast is what does it. Where do I want to go, what do I want to do when no one in the world has any demands on me? A few weeks ago I was touring the Baltics and stopped at the historical museum of Raseniai. I was only going to refill my water bottle but the nice lady asked me if I wanted to see the exhibit. I tell you, I was in tears before we had left the first floor of what she described as ‘a small museum in a small town in a small country’. Would never have stopped if travelling any other way. Is this possible when working whilst travelling? I’m not sure. But the very point of my travels is that I don’t know what will happen. Adventure for me is not knowing. I do it on a Tracer and it does dirt roads when I need it to. But it’s not the road, it’s not the bike. It’s the people you meet and the places you see. Pink soup and fried bread in Vilnius, swimming in a lake in Latvia because it was too warm in gear to do anything else. “Adventure bikes”? Shit, I can do that on a Honda Dream.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
I really Like This Story it’s so wonderful
@MrTewaka2
@MrTewaka2 27 күн бұрын
I have a stand alone voice in my head that loves to travel. We have the best conversations when alone and on a journey. It sounds like BS but the best decisions I've ever made have been in these situations. Not everyone has a guide, but there's much to enpowerment and enlightenment in these moments.
@hotrod3061
@hotrod3061 5 күн бұрын
i could care less what anyone thinks, long distance motorcycle travel is the greatest form of therapy for me
@boredmalcontent
@boredmalcontent 5 күн бұрын
That american phrase makes no sense - it's a double non-negative. You *could* care less obviously?
@zoydpatterson1817
@zoydpatterson1817 4 күн бұрын
@@boredmalcontent Perhaps "I couldn't care less" is what he meant? 😃
@boredmalcontent
@boredmalcontent 4 күн бұрын
@@zoydpatterson1817 Whoosh!
@hotrod3061
@hotrod3061 4 күн бұрын
@@zoydpatterson1817 i could care less about what some random on the internet thinks of my grammar, i think people knew what was meant
@zoydpatterson1817
@zoydpatterson1817 4 күн бұрын
@@hotrod3061 Sorry, no offense.
@crispinleslie
@crispinleslie 27 күн бұрын
I just enjoy riding a motorcycle- and I am very nosy. I ride a KLR because the ergonomics suit me. I’m not a rebel, I’m not a trail blazer and I feel no need to pull wheelies or drift through corners. I regard every ride - even to work- as a micro adventure.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
The klr is an amazing workhorse
@marcbrasse747
@marcbrasse747 27 күн бұрын
The best motorcycle is the one which actually fulfills your needs. The one your in full control of. It starts with filtering out the fashionable stuff and finding out what you really like and need. My favorite bike is the 1989 Honda NT650 GT Hawk. 170 kg. Between 50 and 60 hp. Nobody needs more.
@randomdude9262
@randomdude9262 25 күн бұрын
Well, some of us do. I'm a one-day tourer, I like to be back home by sundown. So the only way I can make it to the good places is to just haul ass on the motorway until I get near the destination, where I get off the motorway and cruise around for a couple of hours. So my ideal bike is a big bore sports tourer that can keep the pace of 180-200 km/h with no strain but also fun and agile on the twisty mountain passes.
@marcbrasse747
@marcbrasse747 25 күн бұрын
@@randomdude9262 There are a few contradictions in that. Big bore tourer and nimble? I'd be eating you in the bendies. 🙂180 to 200 km/h? That's even becoming to be very complicated in Germany. Good roads are however never that far away there anyway. I think you simply live in the wrong place. 🙂
@C_R_O_M________
@C_R_O_M________ 15 күн бұрын
Any serious motorcyclist needs to have at least 3 motorcycles at any time in his/her garage. Less than that and you run into ugly compromises. After 20 years of riding I have concluded that there's a need for a street, an enduro and an adventure motorcycle and every one of them have their irreplaceable purpose.
@marcbrasse747
@marcbrasse747 15 күн бұрын
@@C_R_O_M________ (Mumbles behind hand) Did I say that Honda is the only one? 😁But no off-road (semi or real). For blundering onto non paved roads the Honda also suffices.
@autismion
@autismion 11 күн бұрын
@@C_R_O_M________ I have a dual sport, an enduro and a trials bike. So I guess I need 5 bikes? An adventure and a supersport? Sounds about right. Or I could have just the dual sport. Or. Uhh. Damn I want a 2 stroke enduro also. nc750x, tenere 700, or tracer 9 gt? Wish I could have them all. But I could probably get by with just a trials bike and one between adv/dual sport.
@rodrigodepazos3771
@rodrigodepazos3771 28 күн бұрын
In my case, in general, I travel some weekends, many of them just for the day, and not take away much time from spending with family. And I enjoy the trip, the views, getting to know new places. Sometimes by waiting for "the big trip" we miss out on enjoying the daily and possible journeys. Greetings from Uruguay!!!
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Yes that is very true often the little trips can be the most enjoyable ☺️
@DuffyLasker
@DuffyLasker 3 күн бұрын
motorcycle adventures: minimalist travel, away from crowds, unknown, reliance on yourself, meeting unusual people, traeling to unusual places
@concernedcanadian8460
@concernedcanadian8460 6 күн бұрын
I've criss crossed Canada twice on a motorcycle as a young guy. These days, I'm good going out for a few hours max...do some exporing, get a bit of a thrill. Puts a smile on my face every time.
@vincenash1358
@vincenash1358 28 күн бұрын
Wow what a great philosophical mind bomb ! Your understanding of English is better than mine and I’m English 😂 an amazing video and felt like you where talking to me personally 👍
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thanks for the compliment. And I am very glad you liked the philosophical approach ☺️
@Amory98
@Amory98 27 күн бұрын
MY understanding of English is better than you, and I'm an Asian! Was reading Merry Wives of Windsor once on a train when ran into an Englishman and he asked in bewilderment "you read Shakespeare?!" "To kill time, yes" said I. When I asked him why doesn't he, he was humble enough to let me know he can't read Shakespeare haha. Bizarre times.
@garyhoward4064
@garyhoward4064 4 күн бұрын
You make interesting points. Our brain demands some forms of struggle surmounting to feel higher emotion, alive and satisfied. Climbing a mountain, playing a tennis match, solving problems, gardening, raising kids, etc. Often, the satisfaction only comes afterwards and creates a film in your memory which you can live again and again at your discretion, typically when about to fall asleep, or when you are feeling down. Btw, nice choice of music.
@9356079
@9356079 8 күн бұрын
i love riding motorcycles but not on bad roads or during bad weather.
@gedlyman1
@gedlyman1 26 күн бұрын
I just hit this channel because I was curious about the interceptor and became more interested in the comments section, Why? Having just completed a road trip by myself from Cartagena Colombia to Ushuaia in Southern Argentina and back again over a 1 year and 3 months period I have become very introspective with regards to many facets of my life in general, spending hours alone riding through remote mountains, sometimes paved other times rough and dangerous terrain certainly enlightened me about what I was imagining before I left and what was the reality. Many times I just felt like I wanted to turn around and give it all up, I was tired mentally and physically and I just wanted to go home. I’m not sure why I kept going, it was a subconscious decision made by a part of me I wasn’t able to control. It’s been a couple of weeks now since I arrived back in Cartagena and I’m reading this comments section with great interest, never realized so many bikers were equally introspective with a great ability to communicate their thoughts, thank you.
@Frakaphoto
@Frakaphoto 3 күн бұрын
very interesting
@ThorbenSteiner
@ThorbenSteiner 27 күн бұрын
I still remember us in Portugal. Me as your backpack and we rode the bike so much and slept so little right after months of surfing and sleeping in a car together. I was so exhausted that I nearly collapsed on you 😂
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
I remember you fell asleep on the motorcycle 😂😂
@edwardcharlton1396
@edwardcharlton1396 28 күн бұрын
I've just completed a trip from Northern England to France and back on an Interceptor 650. The most exhilarating and intense part was blasting through 150 miles of an amber weather warning for rain on the A1. It just wouldn't have been the same in the car.. half way through my banana split was a large tea, surprisingly blissful. Love your content, and the views in Bosnia!
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
That Sounds like a lovely Trip
@suzyamerica4679
@suzyamerica4679 26 күн бұрын
@Edward - just got back from my 5th time to Wallowa Valley Rally in the USA. By the 3rd one, I was leading rides, and this time I got to lead a spirited pavement ride (sport touring bikes 650cc+) from Enterprise OR to Asotin WA and thence to the ghost town of Chesterland WA. In between those first two points is the infamous Rattlesnake canyon, a series of twisties with cliffs off to one side. Still riding my first bike (Versys 650) and putting 10K+ miles on it most years. Presently in the process of acquiring a true desert-rat classic bike, the Honda XR650L. Keep the rubber side down! :)
@douwe4549
@douwe4549 28 күн бұрын
My adventure bike is a measly suzuki freewind that costed 1200 euro, it is bloody perfect. Does not impress no one, its just a tool to feel free..
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
I am curius about the Suzuki Freiwind now 😂
@davidskogley3570
@davidskogley3570 26 күн бұрын
I had one for three years as well and it was a wonderful bike. The DR 650 engine the bike has is, as the Germans say, "ein Gedicht".
@lauraiss1027
@lauraiss1027 28 күн бұрын
I have no experience but imagine that lifestyle of full time traveling motorcyclist is pretty close to hobo lifestyle.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
Yes thats pretty mutch Right
@davidmatthews3093
@davidmatthews3093 27 күн бұрын
Not at all. I travel in comfort and take all the luxuries that I need with me.
@lauraiss1027
@lauraiss1027 27 күн бұрын
@@davidmatthews3093 by full time travelling I meant youtubers who travel for years non-stop.
@MD_is_me
@MD_is_me 16 күн бұрын
That's where the term "scooter tramp" comes from although "scooter hobo" would indeed be more accurate since the scooter tramps I met as a kid worked while they were in town if there was work to be had.
@BlackdogADV
@BlackdogADV 27 күн бұрын
I’m on my second GS, it’s a 2010 1200GS with over 100,000 miles of exploring. I bought an Interceptor 650 a few months ago that I turned into a Scrambler. With its short suspension travel, small fuel tank and 18” front wheel it will never be a capable adventure bike. Gravel roads like in your video no problem. I even mounted extra fuel cans on the pannier racks. But for a 2 up camping trip to the Arctic Ocean you need an adventure bike. I’m really liking the scrambler but I know its limitations.
@tareqibnziyad4732
@tareqibnziyad4732 4 күн бұрын
I love the way you analyze the topic of motorcycle travel. Thank you.
@DavidFranklin-fu7st
@DavidFranklin-fu7st 4 күн бұрын
Very good point. The whole "adventure bike" idea is, of course, a marketing idea and not an invitation to self realization or fulfillment. Those concepts are more to be associated with relationships, being a generous and self aware person doing good and taking real life altering chances on things that will matter in the long run, like creating families, creating new wealth and knowledge for yourself and to share with others, a legacy of something of yourself left for the world after you disappear into the ether from whence you came - rather than miles racked up riding goat trails on remote mountains. Aside from that, riding motorcycles is a truly fun diversion, so, carry on.
@antibant18
@antibant18 28 күн бұрын
100% agree with you! I traveled from Germany to Greece with my DR650 and realized that the off-road stuff which I had planned didn't really fulfill my craving for adventure. A hard challenge like that is exciting at first, but then grinds you down later on. The people I met along the way made may Tour the adventure I was really seeking.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
But really amazing that in the end you still found what you where looking for ☺️
@silverdale3207
@silverdale3207 25 күн бұрын
I think it depends where you live , I'm in New Zealand and we have some beautiful places that are quite remote that require access via private property or rough 4wd tracks which is best on an ADV, lakes , abandoned gold mining towns and remote huts etc. Same I think with Australia. I grew up spending time in the bush tramping etc so that's where I feel the most at home on my bike, i do enjoy the road as well though if the scenery is good.
@chromaticAberration
@chromaticAberration 28 күн бұрын
Damn, I love your channel... You absolutely nail it! I own an Interceptor, I'll be 69 years old later this year and I'm planning an european road trip this sommer (maybe not as far as yours, though). That said, your video recalled some memories... I've actually been in this country in 1964 (It was Yugoslavia back then and I was only 9 years old) with my parents and my younger brother in an already ageing Peugeot 403 and we probably drived on the same dirt roads as you just did! We had a lot of fun, even when the car broke down a couple of times, always meeting awesome people always ready to help... Sleeping in the car or in a tent on the roadside (To be waken up by the Milicia because it was illegal!)... you get the picture. At the end of the day, it's not so much about the material challenges but mostly about interacting with people, experiencing another culture and enjoying the landscape.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
I am so happy that my video made you reminisce about past days I have similar memories of a road trip I did with a friend to go surfing in Portugal when living out of my car ☺️
@4940markhutchins
@4940markhutchins 27 күн бұрын
Cool insights! Motorcycling is a recreational pastime and that’s about it (there are exceptions like commuting to work or basic transportation in a lot of countries, etc.). There are popular sayings that go like ‘you never see a motorcycle parked in front of a psychiatrist’s office’, or ‘wind therapy’, but it can be a deceptive waste of time with nothing to show for it in the end if you’re not careful. You don’t find yourself out there, you don’t resolve your mental, moral or relationship issues by riding motorcycles. That comes from other approaches to life that takes more explanation than what can be offered here. But it can be fun, and I enjoy riding and seeing beautiful sights at times on my touring bike, especially with my wife along, or with a couple of buddies.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
Honestly riding with some friends sounds super fun
@catmate8358
@catmate8358 15 күн бұрын
Very well said, nothing to add. Saying it as a guy who rode to the Sahara on a motorcycle.
@mathiaswagner7125
@mathiaswagner7125 28 күн бұрын
Totally agree. For me personally I dont need to struggle and stress myself in my freetime. I just go on short trips for 1 or 2 days on the weekends. see something new, have something nice to eat, enjoy riding and also chilling
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Those short trips deserve a lot of praise to that’s also what I wanted to say with the video ☺️
@alendervic999
@alendervic999 28 күн бұрын
i truly loved your reasoning. the shot and your choice of ideas and words was beautiful. thx man!
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thank you for the kind words ☺️
@_Safety_Third_
@_Safety_Third_ 6 күн бұрын
Love your thoughts on the topic :) I think if I was going on a motorcycle "adventure" (including lots of dirt/gravel roads), I would want the lightest possible dual sport bike, and the least bulky luggage possible, to guarantee the least amount of struggling possible.
@emilenossin5098
@emilenossin5098 6 күн бұрын
For me adventure motorcycling is certainly not struggling. That's why I got a T7 World Raid, so that going on unpaved roads towards areas the tourists skip, it's not a struggle. Because I want to enjoy the scenery, I want to take nice photos, I want to enjoy the camaraderie with my friends. And that's also why we don't camp but pick nice little hotels or bed and breakfasts. Not that one needs a T7 (or a GS Adventure which I traded in)), but it does get me comfort, safety and reliability and I have the budget. Very inspiring landscapes you filmed, really wanna go back to that area and explore further.
@DikiciMotovlog
@DikiciMotovlog 28 күн бұрын
Lovely shot at 8:35 Not many people realizes how much effort goes into this sort of shots including the editing... :)
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thank you for appreciating stuff like that ☺️
@binbrown8690
@binbrown8690 14 күн бұрын
I noticed that as well - very well done. Must add a fair bit to any journey time to set up and get these shots. Nice editing, the way the footage appears to gradually zoom out towards the end, where the gravel from the tyres gets kicked up near the camera. Bravo!..
@claychastain2254
@claychastain2254 5 күн бұрын
You nailed it brother. My explanation of needing adventure is that we envy previous generations of explorers who were discovering new things. I spend a lot of time trying to get as far off road with the hope of seeing something that no one else ever has. But when I think I've found it, I look down and see a used condom. Dammit!
@zed5129
@zed5129 2 күн бұрын
Lol!
@fa7842
@fa7842 25 күн бұрын
This was very important, Thank You!
@burgundypoint
@burgundypoint 6 күн бұрын
Going off road is supposed to take you to view sights and locations that you normally wouldn't experience by staying on the paved road. Sometimes the expectation doesn't meet reality, and sometimes it exceeds it.
@RRRRefuelRideRace
@RRRRefuelRideRace 18 күн бұрын
The adventure happens on the way. That is so true. I was on a tour in Bosnia just a month before you. The videos (the Series) will be ready for December.
@advswede
@advswede 27 күн бұрын
Thanks for sharing ,great video and good music in the end :)
@wolfganglueger1691
@wolfganglueger1691 28 күн бұрын
Wow, what amazing footage! What an amazing philosophic attitude! The amount of struggle someone "needs" depends on your capability, depending on experience and age of course. I am, for myself, done with the "adventure bike" (offroad) stuff, i have done it, happy to stay mostly on paved roads now! Asking what you have learned about yourself? I think the wrong question, i can tell you: Feeling the intensity, that's it! At latest when you get stuck in a silly job (in the office?) as most of us, you will treasure those experiences sooo much... There is no way out for you, you will always come back and be hungry for these experiences! The bike does not matter... i've had everything from 1k up to over 30k...the experience is everything! Most GSs live their lifes in shiny garages beside SUVs... what a shame... ;-)
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Yes those experiences ofcourse will always beat the office job. I know the feeling of sitting at work completely disassociated counting the bumps in the wallpaper while having nothing to do and moving my computer mouse occasionally to seem aktiv
@swingset1969
@swingset1969 5 күн бұрын
I was doing this style of travel and "adventure" before I knew it was a thing. I was poor, had a DT175 that barely ran, but every chance I got I took a trip on it. You don't need "lifestyle". A $4000 used Honda dual sport and some basic gear and you're in. People complicate and make it as obsessive as they will, but it needn't be anything but a simple getaway for a day or two, or a round the world thing.
@BS-jw7nf
@BS-jw7nf 3 күн бұрын
For me the joy of travel, whether when roadtripping in a car or motorcycle, or just normal travel on foot and public transit, really comes from just putting a point on a map and seeing if I can get there. And the stuff you find on the way will teach you a lot about the normal lives that the people you pass try to live. This social media notion of adventure really castrates what real adventure is for me. The reality of travel is that you might drive for hours and see jack shit on the most monotonous roads imaginable, but when you do finally turn that corner and find this small nugget of beauty, it’s just the best thing.
@two_wheeled_guide
@two_wheeled_guide 4 күн бұрын
I totally agree with your point of view: I can be many things, all important to me, yet they are just parts of who I really am, of my character, my thoughts, my inner self. I am vegetarian, but that's just a personal choice. I ride my motorcycle for the pleasure of riding (actually I bought a GS just because I liked the bike. That's all!). I studied history of art and I remember a professor at first year of university reminding us that "we dedicate ourselves to the study of art, philosophy, literature, music, but let's keep in mind that for some other people mountaineering is more important than all these things together".
@CCooke-nm2be
@CCooke-nm2be 8 күн бұрын
Totally agree, personally I find a 150km in one go plenty. I know there seems to be the background pressure to travel massive mileage . For me I have found it much better to do less mileage and stay longer in the places I visit, absorbing the surrounding, rather than travelling through them in a blur.
@Bikergramp57
@Bikergramp57 5 күн бұрын
Very interesting perspective. Excellent video.
@hayduke
@hayduke 4 күн бұрын
This is so thoughtful and well put - not something I typically expect from a random youtube MC video. Thank you for producing this content and articulating this idea of 'fake hedonism' so well. I purchased a brand new 'light adventure' bike a couple of years ago after talking myself into it and have since realized that the mostly arrow straight highways and backroads where I live are very dull to ride on.
@DragosDreamer1989
@DragosDreamer1989 5 күн бұрын
I believe Elspeth Beard's book "Lone Rider" resonates with your main idea of this video, that long distance travel on a motorcycle is not all sunshine and rainbows. My longest trip was just over a week long into the Alps, by myself, but it was the most fulfilling moto-trip I ever had. Mostly because I did what I wanted, when I wanted. I rode at a pace I was comfortable with, I planned my trip and my days EXACTLY how I wanted, and it all went great. In the end it is your own time, money and physical effort, so spend them wisely, as YOU would like to spend them... not how social media urges you too.
@SteveInskip
@SteveInskip 2 күн бұрын
Yes, I much prefer that than the sickly-sweet travel channels that are around at the moment. Another worthwhile read is Going the Wrong Way by Chris Donaldson.
@unwrangler11
@unwrangler11 20 күн бұрын
Your outlook on adventure and struggle ring so true for me. Thanks for reminding me to enjoy the banana split as well as the ride.
@BelgianDoomer
@BelgianDoomer 28 күн бұрын
godspeed miles! superb music at the end there haha
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thank you for the appreciation and tuning in to so many of my videos ☺️
@pujapete3665
@pujapete3665 16 күн бұрын
ditto van life....subscribed.most sense i heard in a long time
@BasecampNorth
@BasecampNorth 7 күн бұрын
Great thoughts - things to consider. Love your quote: Don’t forget to enjoy the occasional banana split. Happy trails - cheers from a Scandinavian Himalayan 450 ☮️🍺👍🏻🔥
@kevineffa5664
@kevineffa5664 27 күн бұрын
A lot of wisdom from a young man … love your videos
@PovilasPanavas
@PovilasPanavas 12 күн бұрын
A good video. I did a "test" run last year September with 30 day trip on a rented motorcycle. The idea was to see how I like it, and if I do, to buy my own motorcycle and travel a lot. I haven't travelled before on motorcycle, so that was quite an adjustment. First week was quite hard, and then I learned to book hotel for two nights, it gives enough time to plan my next city and places to visit, also to visit the place I'm staying at, and just to have easier schedule and be more rested. I also reduced the expected mileage form 500-600 to just 250-350km per day. I would even take Uber to places in capital cities, because it was too hot and pointless to ride a motorcycle for 10-15 minutes. So, totally on point about that longer trips gets tiring, and the pace needs to be slowed down. At the end of my trip I was thinking that if I was to continue my trip passed 30 days, I would need to rent a place for a week, and just be lazy in a single spot to recharge. And then continue again. After all this I decided that travelling 2-3 months then taking 2-3 month break, and travelling again should be a very good approach for me. I'm starting my trip with now my own bike in September again, and plan to ride till mid November. It's warm for a long time once one goes South in Europe. And no plans for being influencer. Too much work for me. Thank you for your video and all the best!
@lcdubs7847
@lcdubs7847 5 күн бұрын
Some great advice. Thanks.
@GustavLessing
@GustavLessing 5 күн бұрын
Very insightful!
@FadyBujana
@FadyBujana 27 күн бұрын
Lovely video and lovely point of view. Our extreme boredom or simply lack of depth, has turned us into “adventure” junkies. Everything has to be an adventure now, life, career, relationships, travel etc. otherwise it’s not worth it, “you’re wasting your life if you’re not out here having an adventure”. I say that as someone who has come to the same realization. What happened to appreciating life instead of fighting and trying to win against it?
@villiamo3861
@villiamo3861 3 күн бұрын
Excellent comment.
@young_nomad_
@young_nomad_ 5 күн бұрын
I appreciate this video, I find it thought - provoking
@johanrensink8944
@johanrensink8944 11 сағат бұрын
"Do you need to go on the ultimate adventure and go to a country, which has a GDP low enough to be considered adventure worthy" - I love that I found this channel and your approach to optimising adventure :-)
@brunosampaio2399
@brunosampaio2399 3 күн бұрын
Great content, congrats!
@felixkraut6190
@felixkraut6190 6 күн бұрын
So tru. Thanks for being so clear about it.
@lucho1989
@lucho1989 Күн бұрын
Interesting video... It's amazing how others can sometimes articulate my own feelings or thoughts so well through words
@joshuajames1720
@joshuajames1720 14 күн бұрын
I think its a great question to ponder, nice insights!
@patrickohara1653
@patrickohara1653 3 күн бұрын
Nice to hear some honest reflection for a change.
@marcophez6907
@marcophez6907 Күн бұрын
Great vid! Love the honest appraisal too. I'm off to the Pyrenees (from Somerset, UK) soon, looking for 'adventure'. I can imagine loving it but with teh same state of mind that you have. Thanks for being real pal, and sending a bigup, from the UK 😃
@onerider808
@onerider808 19 күн бұрын
Always good to ask those type of questions. Often, they can’t be answered until you are thousands of miles into an exploring adventure.
@johnburgess2397
@johnburgess2397 7 күн бұрын
There is no mystical philosophy to motorcycling if your looking for something like that join a monastery. Motorcycling is nothing more than a means of transport, but it doesnt matter how bad you feel or how stressed you feel before you get on by the time your ride is over you have a smile on your face. When you ride you focus on 10 times more things around that a car driver which doesnt leave much left to focus on stress and thats most likely why you feel better, see it isnt mystical but it is fun.
@johnburgess2397
@johnburgess2397 3 күн бұрын
You say at the end of your clip that riding for a living would not give you the enjoyment and on that I disagree, I used to be a motorcycle dispatch rider and over 1.6 years covered 136000 miles and there was only 2 journeys that I did not enjoy both were to the same place and on both occasions I encountered freezing fog and on a bike thats terrifying but the rest of the time I loved it.
@TakeTheHighground
@TakeTheHighground 15 күн бұрын
I think you have some very fair points here. I’m new to motorcycle riding and am currently testing things out to see where I wanna take this journey. I’m having my first Offroad training day in 2 weeks and I’m looking forward to it because I feel that having the skill will be useful (as could be seen in your video), but I don’t know where this will take me. One point though: it seems that fulfillment is often on the other side of struggle. I’m not sure why but it seems to be that way - human nature? You definitely won a new subscriber here.
@Conzales
@Conzales 4 күн бұрын
👍 Well said. Fully agree. Of course a reliable bike is needed, but not an expensive one. Spend money on trips, not a second mortgage to own an adventure bike with all trimmings. Keep rolling!
@Hanse276
@Hanse276 28 күн бұрын
Nice video and nice thoughts :)
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thanks
@andrewdrogin
@andrewdrogin 2 күн бұрын
The most difficult thing not in just motorcycle traveling but rather in whole life itself is to learn to enjoy without goals, achievements and expectations. And not feeling guilty for things that make your life joyful and feel alive. Struggles are just a part of life that as salt in a soup makes it tastier.
@Chmetterling
@Chmetterling 28 күн бұрын
great MAssage ! Great Video!
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thanks ☺️
@mortenlangvik8883
@mortenlangvik8883 28 күн бұрын
Important dialogue. I reached the same conclusions as you. I enjoy getting on my bike in my free time and riding, but enjoying the journey, taking my time, riding to destinations that I really want to visit and stopping to do activities that I enjoy along the way.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thanks ☺️
@InPezonator
@InPezonator 26 күн бұрын
You're spot on here. You go, especially on a solo trip to leave your world behind and experience a new one, be in control of what you want to do, how and when. Having a commercially curated narrative to force you to ride longer, harder or whatever is a waste. By all means, push yourself if you want but for the right reasons.
@jworthe
@jworthe 4 күн бұрын
Love your bike!
@giostisskylas
@giostisskylas 28 күн бұрын
I have found that it is the existential challenges that make you realise that you are alive. I have never seen life as more valuable than when my life was in danger. Broken down to the hopefully NOT life-threatening motorbike tour, this means that it is the big challenges and the battle against yourself that remain in your memory and are seen as a great adventure from a distance. Your personality grows from this, and that is why it is right to make a motorbike tour a little more challenging. The wild times are over for me, but even today I have never felt more alive than with the Blade at 299 km/h on the Autobahn. PS: Du denkst zuviel nach... :))
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
It’s really nice to see how your perspective on this looks and nice how perspectives can be similar and different and the same time ☺️. Ja könntest recht haben ☺️😂
@SteliosPapagrigoriou
@SteliosPapagrigoriou 26 күн бұрын
Wise words. Thank you my friend
@jonbarlow3542
@jonbarlow3542 5 күн бұрын
Some serious life philosophy, & some stuff about motor bikes, thank you.
@pilotsproject
@pilotsproject 28 күн бұрын
13:43 oh, there are some dogs again.... nice philosophical lesson about adventure biking ✌ I guess some riders are using the term "pushing oneself to the limits" when it comes to the search of struggle enroute/offroad
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
Thank you for appreciating and This time it went a lot smoother with the dogs ☺️
@tobiasviktorsson7672
@tobiasviktorsson7672 27 күн бұрын
You are correct in all your points. It is not an alternative lifestyle silver bullet. You have to find what you want, what works for you and have realistic expectations. I have realized that I love riding regardless road types or bikes. It brings me therapy and a sense of being aware. During that time my inner self can make well founded decisions (or stupid ones). I don't see it as a particular life style nor as adventures as I don't look for struggles even though they of course happens from time to time. I really enjoy the banana splits and the vistas. Great episode.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
Thanks ☺️
@AlanDampog
@AlanDampog 4 күн бұрын
good stuff!
@CamTarn
@CamTarn 2 күн бұрын
Excellent essay - totally agree. Especially with the idea that motorcycle adventuring isn't for everybody: whether that's because of funding, mental/physical health, or just not particularly enjoying doing long days of many miles. For those for whom it does work, that's amazing and I'm happy for them. But for me, I'm building my adventures my own way, within my own limitations, and I'm happy with that :)
@dougr5379
@dougr5379 4 күн бұрын
Great video and a lot of great points. I currently own a R1250GSA and a Ducati Rally Sport both fully decked out with all the adventure gizmos from Touratech. My wife and I take a couple of rides each year mostly highway (300+ miles) The rest of the time, these bike only see short errand runs around the house and Starbuck coffee runs. A lot of my motorcycle friends have the exact same story.
@maleko2841
@maleko2841 15 күн бұрын
ive been traveling for 28 years. I am currently motorcycling Albania on the cf moto Mt450. I don't know if its about finding yourself, or finding fulfillment. For me its about exploration, Freedom, and finding secret things. The beauty of places. The struggle and difficulty is only a part of it. It takes some struggle to find the places that others will never see. I love travel and motorcycles. It does not define me but it simply is me. It is what I do because of who I am.
@FJBx100
@FJBx100 14 күн бұрын
Be careful in Albania. My son was biking through there recently, had a solo accident in the mountains on his Yamaha Tenere and the police attempted to jail and extort him. Luckily, a smart civilian at the police post understood what was happening, distracted the police so my son could escape. He literally had to escape! Corruption runs rampant there.
@maleko2841
@maleko2841 14 күн бұрын
@FJBx100 Thank you for sharing that experience with me. I will certainly be careful. When traveling, one can not know what will happen. A peaceful place can become dangerous or vica versa. It sounds like your son is a bad ass! Willing to escape when he had the chance. Sounds like a great adventurer to me. Time and experience have taught me to stay alert, to camouflage, to fight, or run, and to accept the consequences of my choices. Thanks bro, and tell your son he's awesome!
@justmyself1000
@justmyself1000 4 күн бұрын
Enjoying and insightful video! I agree with your thought process. I do go off road. I travel far many times to get to the off road riding. It's funny when I'm riding in some technical stuff off road....I'm not necessarily liking it at the moment. I even question why I'm doing it and sometimes vow to not ride in hard off road conditions anymore. But....at the end of the day, for some strange reason; I feel glad I did it and get up the next morning and do it again.....At the end of the days I'm going over in my mind what I could've done better and feel obliged to correct things the next day. One thing I do regret is many times missing out on beautiful scenery. I'm so focus on staying upright or not going on the edge of a cliff....that I miss out. Love sitting at camp with friends discussing the day and whatever topic comes to mind. At the same time I have NO trouble at all riding a highway on a straight flat road for endless miles just living inside my head. Talking to myself. letting my mind go free and I just rapid switch between multiple thoughts. I need it. I do wish I had more time on my trips. 1 week here and there and some weekends here and there are not enough! One thing I can't stand...is I just get in to the swing of things and have adjusted to the trip...then it's time to get back to my life at home just as I was adjusting. Always want some extra days in that time that I have adjusted...
@carlospatricio5495
@carlospatricio5495 27 күн бұрын
'm from Portugal, I've done several motorcycle trips around Europe with different types of motorcycles and in the end what gave me the most pleasure is the ease of talking to people. When you arrive on a motorbike you arouse people's curiosity, you are well received, people greet you. I'm older, I'm going to buy one. motorcycle with sidecar for comfort reasons. I think I'll make even more friends
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
That’s sounds great. I have heard mash has some quite compatetiv sidecars
@carlospatricio5495
@carlospatricio5495 27 күн бұрын
@@FreeMilesMC yes and just arrive One with a new two cilindre engine.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
@carlospatricio5495 when you get one of them please really make good research about the engine. Mash uses fake licensed rebuilds on some of there engines like the 650 and 125 platform leading to complete engine failure in sometimes less then 2000 kilometers. It’s info that’s pretty hard to get out because it’s basically impossible to make a video on that stuff without ruining a few relationships
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 27 күн бұрын
Still probably the cheapest way to get in to a side car but be aware
@lessmore444
@lessmore444 16 күн бұрын
Realistically very well reasoned, dude. Lots of people out there selling their dreams as the one we should all aspire to. Without sharing the less than glamorous (nightmare) aspects along the way. There’s plenty of truth in that “too much of a good thing” cliche.
@balrognemhed5222
@balrognemhed5222 6 күн бұрын
Ok, you got me; subscribed.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 6 күн бұрын
Thank you☺️
@veritasvincit2745
@veritasvincit2745 28 күн бұрын
As a 55 year old motorcyclist I can honestly say that my biggest two wheeled adventures were when I was 16 venturing out further than the bus routes on my Simson 50 moped. The last time was when I was 19 on an FJ1100 because that could cover a lot of miles in a short time so I saw many inspiring things. I liked touring France when I was 30 on an FZ750 and I gained my private pilot licence in 2005 seeking the same feeling of freedom but nothing felt as fulfilling as the first year on an unreliable restricted moped. That really felt like adventure.
@richardsmith5249
@richardsmith5249 28 күн бұрын
I got my pilot's licence in 1990. I persisted with flying for a few years, but I realised that I wasn't really enjoying it that much, especially given the expense. And I realised that I wasn't flying often enough to maintain an adequate skill level. So I knocked it on the head and went back to motorcycles.
@FreeMilesMC
@FreeMilesMC 28 күн бұрын
I feel similar about some of my first adventures and the Simson is a pretty interesting bike ☺️
@kentwood9821
@kentwood9821 3 күн бұрын
Well said. Adventure is much easier to find when the limits are real, in terms of time and resources. Years ago, being young with few other options, touring on a motorcycle, even a crappy one (perhaps especially) could be life changing. As we get older and have the means to ride pretty much whatever we want, and have a credit card to back us up as we go, it's a different experience and not likely to be or feel as life changing.
@Habitatu
@Habitatu 5 күн бұрын
I had the same realisation. I went on some crazy wild adventures. The stories I could tell you. But the reality is, I came home, cold wet, skint, and nobody cared. NOBODY. Nobody was interested in the slightest in my crazy wild Long Way Round adventure. And I started to question how much as a percentage, I enjoyed the actual motorbiking. Long noisy hard rides on featureless european motorways. The noise started to irritate me. I began to find it stressful. I had a couple of close calls. Then I got an old cheap car, and I haven't really touched the bike since. I wish somebody cared about my adventure HAHA. I thought that that was what happened as an adult, you did some wild or impressive thing and people wanted to hear about it. Turns out that it's "no not you" but they are hanging on every word of the handsome guy who went to the supermarket on his 125 HA HA. Do it if you will enjoy it but don't do it in the hope of impressing other people.
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