Motorbiking

"Biker" for me usually means motorbiking, though I also have a couple of mountain-bikes... see Trail Bike

My current motorbikes are a Honda CBR600RR ABS 2017 and a Kawasaki Ninja Z250SL.

Previously I have owned: Kawasaki ZX4-RR (Ninja anniversary edition), Honda CRF300 Rally, Honda CBR600RR 2005, Honda CBR600FW, Honda VF750F, Yamaha FJ600, Suzuki GSX750EX, Yamaha FJ750, Yamaha XJ900, Kawasaki Z750 and I passed my riding test on my Kawasaki KH250.

See also my Motorbiking web links

 Passo Manghen 2047 m.

Forest of Passo Manghen

Passo Manghen (2047 m.) turned out to be one of the most challenging mountain passes I’ve ridden in quite a while. The route up from Castello Molina di Fiume rides steeply through a forest of tall pine trees. The road is narrow and the hairpins tight. The south road is more open but still steep and scary.
On to Passo Broncon (1616 m.), disappointing scenically but some fantastic riding. A route to keep the rider guessing: no stacks but number of 270° hairpins amongst a challenging variety of curves.

Read more: Passo Manghen 2047 m. - Passo Brocon 1616 m. - Passo di Sommo 1341 m.

Lakeside at Riva del Garda

MORESCO BRIDGE ON THE TANARO RIVER, CUNEO

My ride to Riva del Garda, the town at the head of Lake Garda, started in Cuneo in Piedmonte. Breakfast in the loggia of the hotel looking over to the Alpi Maritimi, clear above the morning mist in the Po valley. Then another long hot bash across the plain, passing towns whose names I see more usually on wine lists: Alba, Asti and Mondovi, etc.

Read more: Riva del Garda

at the Colle di Tenda -1871 m.

Italian portal of the tunnel di Tenda

The Col de Tende links Nice with Piedmonte, following the rocky gorge of the river Roya; a route familiar to the Romans but a new route for me. The head of the valley is a famous tunnel. Opened in 1882, it’s 3.2 km long and running between 1321 m. on the French side and 1280 m. altitude on the Italian side. You miss the scenery so after passing through the tunnel I doubled back up the hairpins of the Roman route, past the modern ski resort at 1400m. to the pass at 1870 m. It’s a natural boundary: the topography changes at the col from the deep gorges and ravines of the Mediterranean side to gradual opening out, almost like a fan, to the plain of the river Po.

Read more: Colle di Tenda -1871 m.

Z1000SX hire bike

Z1000SX at the statue of David at Marseille beach

Z1000SX 2017 taken charge of... checkout ride around Marseille.... ready to roll to Austria for GLME Summercamp 2017.
That's the statue of Davide at Pointe Rouge,  Marseille beach.

Not sure about the Kawasaki paniers, as I'm thinking now, they'll stay in Marseille and I'll use a tail bag as I usually do. I can't get that much in them and they're a liability for filtering in traffic.

GLME 2017

Col du Galibier - south

Col du Galibier - north

I saw the faraway white of Mt Blanc but in that weird sunlight you get just before a storm sets in. That was from the col du Galibier (2642 m.): all to the north looked dodgy weather, so rather than the big tour I had planned, I reran much of the col road a couple of times as practice of my riding style and technique. The north of the col works well for that and also the col du Lautaret (2058 m.): that’s a Route Nationale so the road is wider, the surface fairly reliable, but importantly curves are bigger, wider and longer, more sweeping in every respect so quite a different riding style again.

Read more: Col du Galibier - 2642 m.

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En route from Marseille to the Alps

I'm riding light for a week on the mountain roads of the Alps. No laptop, although I do have my SLR camera but photos will have to wait till I'm back in Marseille..

I left Marseille for a long ride north via the Col de la Croix Haute (1179 m.) to Saint-Gervais under Mont Blanc. A bit of rain towards the end of the day which cleaned the Provence dust off my white leathers and boots but didn't soak me through.

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