nov. la-barstow-vegas dual-sport ride

DSN_KLR650
Dan Oaks
Posts: 880
Joined: Tue Oct 03, 2000 6:34 am

(nklr) moron hotdogs

Post by Dan Oaks » Sun Aug 12, 2001 5:17 pm

on 8/12/01 9:57 PM, Kimberly Kinville at kkinville@... wrote:
> I vote for reindeer sausage on a fresh hoagie roll, with saut ed onions and > deli style mustard. > > I am out of French jokes :( > > Mike Kinville > 00 KLR 250 > >
You've killed Rudolph; you bastard! -- Cartman

Kimberly Kinville
Posts: 14
Joined: Mon Jul 23, 2001 11:57 am

(nklr) moron hotdogs

Post by Kimberly Kinville » Sun Aug 12, 2001 6:45 pm

From: "Dan Oaks" Subject: Re: [DSN_klr650] Re: (NKLR) MORON Hotdogs on 8/12/01 9:57 PM, Mike Kinville at kkinville@... wrote:
> I vote for reindeer sausage on a fresh hoagie roll, with saut ed onions
and
> deli style mustard. > > I am out of French jokes :( > > Mike Kinville > 00 KLR 250 > >
You've killed Rudolph; you bastard! -- Cartman Yes, 1st Rudolph, the Red Nosed Reindeer, followed by Blitzen, the Brown Nosed Reindeer, shortly after he was overheard commenting "My Santa, you look great! Have you been working out?"

Stuart Mumford
Posts: 1178
Joined: Tue Apr 11, 2000 6:45 pm

nov. la-barstow-vegas dual-sport ride

Post by Stuart Mumford » Sun Aug 12, 2001 10:30 pm

Bill, you da man. I did this ride with Darrel K. and Dr. Krok last year and there were 4 KLRs on the ride. Us 3 and some other guy. Was that you? I would really like to see a herd of Kaw's (moo) out there this year. You detailed the ride very nicely. Last year it was about 240 miles first day and 260 the next day I think. A great time, not crowded like you would expect, and a real hoot. Come on fellas, lets show these YZ/CR riding, haul-em-home in the pickup sissy la-la hairdressers/lawyers what a real dual sport looks like!! Like someone says in their e-mail signature, "Silly Yuppie, trailers are for Harleys" ;-) CA Stu A13 --- In DSN_klr650@y..., "RichardM" wrote: > --- In DSN_klr650@y..., "Stuart Mumford" wrote: > > >I'm gonna save my entry fees for the LA-Barstow-Vegas run in > >November. I would like to see a gaggle of KLRs there this year. > > Tell me more about this ride. How difficult? What's the terrain > like? How long does it normally take? > I posted a response to this last night, and it just went off into cyberspace, and never made it onto the list. Anybody else ever have that problem? LA-B-V: I've ridden this event 9 times. It's great. The scenery is spectacular. I plan to go again this year. The scheduling is not that great for people outside of the LA area, because it's always run on the Friday and Saturday after Thanksgiving, but even so, they get 300-350 entries. The first year I went, 1992, KLR's ruled. Out of about 350 bikes, about 150 were KLR's. The following year was the year the XR650L was introduced, so the number of KLR's went down sharply, and have continued going down ever since. Now there are literally just a couple. However, the trails are the same as they've always been, and there is nothing the KLR can't handle, especially if you've done any suspension work. The first day is half in the mountains surrounding LA, and half in the desert. The second day is all in the desert. The terrain is not the difficult thing on this ride, it's the mileage. It's not unusual for the second day to be 300+ miles, all in the dirt, so you have to get up early, stay disciplined, and keep moving in order to get to Vegas before dark. The hours of daylight are quite short in late November, and it's not fun being out on the trail after dark. Mechanically, the biggest hazard is flat tires. It's essential to carry everything you need to fix a flat on the trail, and it's a good idea to run 2-3 lbs more air in the front than you usually do for dirt riding, to minimize the number of flats from bashing rocks that pinch the tube against the rim. A handlebar-mounted roll-chart holder is essential, too. It's a great ride, very well organized, and put on by a bunch of very dedicated folks. Bill Woodson Madison, Wisconsin