My first night in Moab this year I met an older gentleman in front of the
store at Canyonlands Camp ground who was riding a 1998 KLR with 46,000 miles
on it. I asked him if he was here for the rally and he said with a southern
accent, "no, I'm just passing through". "I am on my way to Alaska". "Where
are you from ?"I asked. "Mississippi" he replied. I noticed that his KLR 650
had a tall windshield with a sign that said "Please don't clean the bugs off
my windshield" He had a Russell Day Long seat, highway pegs, centerstand, a
large round disk welded on the end of his side stand, a Kawasaki KLR tank
bag, and hard luggage saddle bags. He told me that he had another KLR at home
with 80,000 miles on it and a garage full of BMWs but he preferred his KLR
for long distance travel. He had been to Nova Scotia and Mexico all with in
the last year, and with the exception of traveling south of the border, he
camps out every night and has a daily budget of about $30.00. About this
time, I noticed that a guy named Kris on a Honda XR 650 from California was
riding into the campground. There had been a lot of buzz that day that he had
ridden straight through from California in one day, a distance of over 1000
miles in 13 hours. I pointed to him and said to the old timer, "hey, see that
guy over there? He just rode 1000 miles in one day. The old guy said "hell,
that's nothin. I used to do that all the time back in the fifties before it
became fashionable". I asked him how the misses feels about him going off on
these long trips (cuz my misses definitely has a problem with it) and He said
that she used to ride with him everywhere back in the old days but now she is
content to stay home and research the family tree. We compared notes abut our
KLRs and had a wonderful conversation about touring. The furthermost I have
ever ridden in one day is 350 miles, and I have no long distance touring
experience, so the old man was a real inspiration to me. When it was time for
me to head back to my campsite, we exchanged business cards. His said:
John Lyle
Over 70 years old
Over 700,000 M/C miles ridden
North to Alaska
South to Honduras
East and West
Sea to Shining sea
Mississippi IGOFAR
Mike Roberts
Vancouver WA
A14
88 Honda GT Hawk NT 650
89 Honda GB 500
74 Ducati 750 GT
70 Norton Commando (Kenny Dreer special)
57 Triumph TR6/B
55 BSA Gold Star
Ps. If any one wants his phone # or address, contact me off list
parking advice part ii nklr
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- Posts: 44
- Joined: Sun Jun 11, 2000 12:53 am
70 years old and 700,000 m/c miles
Geez Mike, you've been riding that bike everywhere lately. I hopethis trip was sans 'dump it in the dirt'. don 

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- Posts: 13
- Joined: Sat May 06, 2000 3:40 pm
parking advice part ii nklr
I'm getting in on this thread a little late, but...
I'd recommend "baiting" the tree or the area under the tree or both.
Seed the ground, spread peanut butter on a limb(s) and cover the area
with seeds, put up feeders that're inconvenient to take down, etc...
This should bring a butt load (pun intended) of birds to shower that
vain chariot with lovely acidic birdy love. Make sure you use seed
appropriate to the largest variety of bird you have in your are. I
think pigeons are the most poop proliferate, and those rats with
wings will eat anything.You can do it at night and noone will see
you.
As much fun as the other stuff sounds, you can't get arrested for
feeding the birds. Although I do like putting a 'sorry about the
dent' sign (watching them stress would be fun, whether they parked
legally or not), and taking up a full parking space...near the front.
KeB
--- In DSN_klr650@egroups.com, k650dsn@a... wrote: > Thanks for all of the..er...*orginal* ideas. I talked with security at lunch only to discover that the 4Runner belongs to our new CIO. To rub salt in the wound, he wants that spot to be his reserved parking space because it is underneath a beautifully full cottonwood tree. They are going to restripe the lot this weekend and there won't be anymore designated motorcycle parking. > > My W650 looked so pretty under that tree... sniff, sniff. > > Gino, licking his wounds.
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