Monday, October 1, 2012

BLUE RIDGE MTS. RIDE REPORT Sept 2012

BLUE RIDGE MTS. RIDE REPORT
My Sept 2012 trip from NJ to Ft Lauderdale FL and back
















Click on the link below to view the active map.
 Red line is Southbound. Blue line Northbound
http://www.scribblemaps.com/maps/view/BlueRidgeMt

The Blue Ridge Parkway is a National Parkway built during FDRs' Civil Works Program during the 30's. The parkway runs for 469 miles, mostly along the Blue Ridge Mts, a major mountain chain that is part of the Appalachian Mountains. The parkway begins at the southern terminus of Shenandoah National Park in Virginia and runs to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park near Cherokee, North Carolina. It is a non-commercial road and traffic is limited to RV's, tourists and motorcycles. The speed limit is 40mph. Cell Phone service is spotty to none and gas can only be had by jumping off the parkway and heading into a town a few miles. The Blue Ridge Parkway offers some of the best rural motorcycle riding on the East coast with abundant twistys and a variety of campsites along the way. The views are spectacular and viewing pull overs are frequent. I highly recommend this ride.

Stats:
Total Miles Traveled: 3055 miles
States traveled thru: PA, VA, GA, SC, NC, DE, MD, FL
Highest Elevation: 6683 ft. Mt Mitchell N. Carolina
Coldest Temp: 35 Deg. Mt. Mitchell 
Total riding time: 5 1/2 days (3 on the blue ridge)
Nights camping: 4
Total meals purchased on trip: 2
Breakdowns: 1 stator, 1 locked up back brake
Day1: Allenhurst to #1 marker campsite in The Blue Ridge
Day2:  campsite#1 to campsite#2 (it takes a full day of riding to reach each site)
Day3: campsite#2 to campsite#3
Day4: campsite#3 to Ft Lauderdale FL (blue star) 15 hours
Day5.5: Return trip: Ft Lauderdale FL to campsite#4 onto NJ

Equipment list:Sleeping bag, back pack, stove, cooking fuel, kettle, spoon, food, water, earplugs, toilet paper, tools, BMW manual, air mattress, leatherman multi-tool, Gps, Tent, tire tubes, maps, compass, head lamp, lighter, empty gallon water jug, oil, axe, pain reliever, clothing, small bible, camera, tire pressure gauge, towel, solar powered cell phone charger, air pump, first aid kit, shaving kit, rain suit
Equipment failures: Gps burned out, 1 boot sole destroyed, 1 air mattress.


The Good: The weather was excellent for the entire trip. The middle of Sept has those crisp mornings and warm afternoons, Everything on the Blue Ridge Parkway, the views, people, historical stuff and the roads were awesome. Camping on Mt Mitchell was a treat at 6683 ft up in the clouds, The Blue Ridge Parkway was virtually empty except for the occasional RV and fellow riders so riding was peaceful.

The Bad: Bears outside my tent, 4 hours of sleep a night, I95 is the most mind numbing of highways, and trucks! The buffering that occurs at 75 mph when a truck gets near you while riding is like being in a losing pillow fight at high speed.

The Ugly: Hitting a piece of truck retread at 70 MPH on I95 and almost crashing.

The Weird: Happened upon some Gypsies one afternoon when I rolled into a campsite. I relocated across the mountain & took my chances with the bears instead.

If you have never been riding thru The Blue Ridge Mts, I highly recommend it!



Grandfather Mt. N. Carolina
3 days of roads like this and some wild twistys too!

In the valley

Up in the clouds. Mt. Mitchell Elev. 6683 ft.
Downhill, Off camber, decreasing radius turns



Bringing coffee was great except at night when all the critters came out sniffing around my gear looking for Juan Valdez

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Who Is She????

  Thats what I asked when I stumbled upon this picture a year ago. After a few hours of internerd searching I found her story. Check it. Elspeth Beard - One of the Early Globetrotters - Motorcyclist Online

Product of The Week

I highly recommend this sun glass cleaner! Now I know what you're going to say -c'mon Shane how hard is it to clean a pair of sunglasses??! Well I was skeptical when the cute sales girl at the Blaze table during Daytona Bike week tried to sell me on this stuff. She put a little Blaze on my glasses and rubbed it in then used a clean cloth to rub it off, calm down now, and HOLY SHIT! I dont know what kind of bat shit is in that stuff but it makes your lenses amazingly clean -way beyond what any glass cleaner can do and everything looks a little more vivid. Its an anti fog as well. So I bought some Blaze and now the real test comes. Everyone of my friends who steps into my garage gets their glasses cleaned by me with the stuff and their reaction is the same. Holy shit! Wow my glasses never looked this way ever! Every time they stop back at the garage they go right for the Blaze-then the beer. Try it and see.

Friday, September 7, 2012

ADVENTURE RIDER FORUM aka ADVRider.com

ADVRider.com is a cool web site for those who travel the world via motorcycle. You can follow riders as they post  pics in real time along their journey thru exotic places like Cambodia, S. America, Africa the Ukraine, Australian Outback etc. Interesting ride reports, pics, stories, sketchy border crossings, breakdowns days away from civilization, impassable rivers and the amazing people riders meet along the way. A lot of excellent info on equipment too. My fave post is the kid from France who was working in China and decided to buy an Enduro and ride it back to Paris. His ride turned into total mayhem. Check it. http://www.advrider.com/forums/


Welcome to Asphalt Redemption

This blog was created to document my motorcycle journeys on and off the road.
Hope you enjoy! Shane Von Cycles



   Throughout my travels I've met a lot of interesting people. A wide array of characters that no screenwriter could ever dream up. Some people I've met were very nice, some excelled in the art of Douchebaggery and, some I have met were uniquely inspiring and some can change your life or at the least -the way you think about it. I've met random people in remote locations that are still my good friends to this day. I've met famous people who turned out to be completely ordinary, and ordinary people who believed they were famous. I've met people who have tried to kill themselves in various ways and people who have tried to kill Me in various ways. Some have made me laugh and some have made me -not really laugh. I once met Ben Vereens' Dad, and there was that girl I met in a shop in Helsinki ......  When traveling long distances via motorcycle, you will inevitably find your fate in the hands of generous strangers who will help and guide you along your journey. You may only know them for a short time, but the difference they make can be great.
       As far as Honda riders go its a toss up. Some you meet -really are nice, and the others you meet need to sell their Hondas and buy a BMW.  Shane