For the Labour day weekend (Sept 1st in Canada), I decided to ride
down from Moncton, New Brunswick to Digby, Nova Scotia to visit my
brother and at the same time take in the Wharf Rat Rally.
Long term weather predictions were good, so I decided to take the long
trip around and take in the Cabot Trail as well. This a picturesque
area filled with ocean views and climbing twisty roads. I put on a new
rear progressive shock/spring, loaded the bike with my camping gear,
told the wife I would miss her & took off..
I got as far as Amherst (about 50 -75 km) when I noticed that the rear
tire was going flat. I popped into the local Kawa dealer for a quick
fix & I was off again (good thing I had a spare rear tube as they were
out of stock). I took route 104 to Cape Breton & transferred to Route
105 wanting to do the Trail in a counter clockwise rotation (closer to
the cliffs & better view). I stopped at a campground near St
Margaret's village and enjoyed a warm evening without bugs. In the
middle of the night it started to rain (so much for accurate weather
predictions). Next morning I stored my gear and took off. The rain
was so hard at times that I had to depended on my GPS (60Csx) to give
me advance warning of sharp curves. Rain continued until I finished
the Cabot Trail & then the sun came out (so much for the view).
I took the 104 / 101 heading for Digby following the 110 kph speed
limit (would I say anything else?). I got to Truro and decided that my
mount & I needed a break and did a quick stop at Tim Horton's coffee
shop. Upon dismounting I noticed that the gear lever was soft on the
down push and upon closer examination saw that the weld was broken. I
had removed the damaged after market shifter and had relaced it with
the OEM until the new shifter came in, but never did the switch. Oh
well only 300 km to go and my brother is a mechanic, no problem ,only
open road ahead if I shift lightly I'll get there, or so I thought.
Relaxed I got on the bike and lightly took off. I rode 20 km and had
to stop for bridge construction, shifter fell off 60 feet past the
construction area. Walked back to the bridge working crew and asked
them if the had a welder to weld the shifter back together. Needless
to say their welder puts out enough juice to weld inch steel, my
shifter would have gone up in smoke . Two of the welders teamed up and
asked me to take the shifter off , and then promptly brazed it
together. I have to say that those Nova Scotia Dept of Transport guys
were great. The only thing they wanted in return was a handshake.
Off I go again and this time make it to Digby in 1 piece. The Annual
Wharf Rat Rally hadn't begun yet so I keep going to Meteghan to see my
brother. Since it was a long weekend Wayne & his friends would be
camping at their so called Redneck camp. Got to the camp and met with
Wayne and other relatives and had a quiet evening. Camp was made up of
a variety of sleeping accommodations including regular (but old)
trailers, a stripped down Dodge Voyager van (sleeps 1 short man in the
back with his livingroom where the steering wheel used to be), a
fiberglass emergency boat (sleeps 2 snugly (preferably opposite
sexes)), a community kitchen (good food, not weight watchers
approved), a community shower (shower head connected to a high
capacity agricultural pesticide sprayer, decontaminated of course).
Toilet facilities included a flush toilet , you need some home
amenities (flushing directly into a large hole in the ground). And the
"piece de resistance" was a 6.5HP roto tiller converted into a 4
wheeled buggy capable of hauling dirt, tree branches etc. I had missed
the chariot races (had been held the week before). The chariots were
subcompact cars cut off behind the drivers seat with tubing welded on
and a trailer hitch so they could be pulled by an ATV. Open concept
so no protection from the flying mud, seatbelts available.
Next day I went to Digby and participated in the Wharf Rat Rally. Last
year, according to security, participation was between 6000 - 8000
motorcycles. This year the attendance was estimated to be between
20,000 - 25,000 participants. For this event the main street in Digby
was cordoned off from traffic and only motorcycle riders could ride in
on their mounts. Orange County Choppers (OCC) had brought in a few
bikes and there were other specialty builders as well. The general
attitude was great, the sun was out, temp in the high twenties. The
best part was looking at the regular bikes and checking out the
various add-ons. Last year I seemed to have been the only dual sport
at the show. This year I saw at least 6 other KLR's and 1 Suzuki
DR650. I will definitely go back next year.
On Sunday Aug 30th the weather report said that hurricane Hanna was
supposed to hit Halifax next day so I got the bike packed up, said
goodbye to some good people and hit the road (afternoon). Start of the
trip was nice, sun was out with wind in the back, what more could you
ask. Got close to Windsor (near Halifax) and the rain started. With
the rain came strong winds. I stopped in Windsor to gas up both the
bike and yours truly. The rain was coming down hard. People were
looking at me as if I was nuts especially when I told them that I
would be taking the Rawdon hills shortcut (twisty roads, hairpin
curves, deer & pickup trucks). Geared up, put on my fluorescent safety
vest and took off. Rain was so bad that I had a hard time following
the speed limit. Again the GPS was useful in indicating upcoming
curves. I was nearly out of the Rawdon hills when I hit a newly paved
stretch of road. The center yellow line was tape not paint. For some
strange reason the rear tire lost traction & started swerving side to
side, speed was 70kph with a curve coming up. I instinctively stood up
on the pegs and rode it out until the bike regained traction. The loss
of traction was so bad that my mind was already calculating where &
how I would crash. All I can see is that the rear wheel touched & spun
out on the yellow tape. Bike was not easy to control with all the
gear on board.
Anyways I finally made it out to hwy 102 just south of Truro. Rain had
finally stopped and some stars were peering through. Another 3 hours
and I would be home. After about 15 minutes of riding I heard what I
thought was rain hitting my helmet so I slowed down a bit. After a few
minutes I realized that my visor was still dry . Slowed up some more
and realized that hail was bouncing off the bike. Slowed down some
more and rode it out.
Stopped in Truro and met a couple fellow riders who had also gone to
the show.
Made it home in 1 piece.
Equipment used: Progressive front springs, Progressive rear shock &
spring, Kenda 270 tires (34 PSI), Ortlieb saddle bags, Helen 2 wheel
compression bag & cloth bag, various tools in tool tube, 2 tubes, dual
star tank bag, Canadian tire tent, Mountain equipment coop air
mattress and stove (dragonfly), Garmin GPS (60CSX).
Missing equipment: gear shift lever
All in all a very good ride with over 1600 km completed in 4 days. As
for the Cabot Trail? The year isn't over yet.
Brian.
nklr "i love election season"
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- Posts: 2246
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memorable ride (klr)
On Sat, 18 Oct 2008 22:46:41 -0000 "hill_buster"
writes:
SNIP> For the Labour day weekend (Sept 1st in Canada), I decided to ride > down from Moncton, New Brunswick to Digby, Nova Scotia to visit my > brother and at the same time take in the Wharf Rat Rally. > > Long term weather predictions were good, so I decided to take the > long > trip around and take in the Cabot Trail as well. This a > picturesque > area filled with ocean views and climbing twisty roads. I put on a > new > rear progressive shock/spring, loaded the bike with my camping > gear, > told the wife I would miss her & took off..
<><><><><><><><> <><><><><><><><> Brian, Thanks for a very nice ride report. I must have deleted over 100 messages in the last two or three days without reading them. Your post made it all worth while. : ) Hope you get that ride on the Cabot Trail in soon. Best, Jeff Saline ABC # 4412 South Dakota Airmarshal Airheads Beemer Club www.airheads.org The Beautiful Black Hills of South Dakota 75 R90/6, 03 KLR650, 79 R100RT ____________________________________________________________ Click for free info on getting an MBA, $200K/ year potential. http://thirdpartyoffers.juno.com/TGL2141/fc/Ioyw6i3l7wXz7wMUiB9xG8PRFy7o71ksUaMRjpCHbxfgf88xkMSbHW/> All in all a very good ride with over 1600 km completed in 4 days. > As > for the Cabot Trail? The year isn't over yet. > > > Brian.
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nklr "i love election season"
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "albatrossklr" wrote:
Apparently a candidate for President, according to a campaign ad by John McCain. Things are definitely getting nutty out here. We have two typical politicians running for President. But on one side you have the scent of desperation causing them to spin these lunatic conspiracy theories about how the other candidate is a terrorist, a communist, a secret Muslim, probably eats babies at night, and on the other side they're gloating about how great their candidate is. Demented. Completely demented. The only conspiracies out there are in the heads of idiots who will believe any black helicopter nonsense spooned down their mouths the small circle of conspiracy theorists that they listen to, and for the other side, the notion that any Presidential candidate in this day and age is going to be anything other than a machine politician for one machine or another is so ridiculous as to almost cause involuntary giggles.> Agree with the synopsis, what's a Paris Hilton?
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