Oct. 6. Yokohama to Fuefuki near Mt.
Fugi. 155 km
Finally the rain stopped and I needed
to get back on the road. I had a place to stay with a guy named John
from the Gaijenriders forum. He lived near Mt. Fugi with his wife and
kids. He and a friend were starting a new motorcycle shop.
http://www.apexmoto.jp/. On the
way, I saw a few crazy motorcycles riding slow and revving as loud as
they can. Later when it was getting dark, I saw another group. This
time riding in the same direction as me. A few of them had 4
cylinder street bikes with skinny chopper bars, high seat back and
long strait pipe exhaust that went way up in the air. Others had 2
stroke triples with a 3 into 1 pipe with no muffler. Just a trumpet.
Later I learned they were Bosozoku. The Bosozoku Gangs used to be a crazy biker gang.
Many Bosozoku would then go into the Yakuza Gangs. They aren't
“badass” and scary now.. they are just annoying. I found Johns
place and we chatted over a few beers. We made plans to ride the next
day near Fuji.
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At a bike shop. A Honda "Monkey" and "Gorilla". |
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Fuji behind the clouds |
I didn't take this video. But you can hear how the like to "rev" and see the styling. Its quite funny.
Oct. 7 Fuefuki To Shizuoka. 188 km.
John took me on some very good twisty
roads. He was riding a WR250 with supermoto tires and can ride that
thing pretty well. When It got tight he pulled away from me like I
was sitting still. I had my bike loaded, but still. I was quite
surprised how quick he was with that bike. After about 50 km of
twisties with John, we split up. He went back to work and I went
south. I knew I wanted to go toward Nagoya then Kyoto but I didn't
want to take expressway. On my GPS map it looked like a few small
roads went through. One of them was blocked for construction. Another
was a dead end on to a goat path. I had to back track some but on the
3
rd road I tried, it went through to the heavily populated
area near the ocean. It wasn't long before my stomach was making
noises and I decided to find a hotel.
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The only picture I have with John in it. |
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Road less traveled? |
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The arrow is so I stay on the right... I mean correct side of the road. |
Oct. 8 Shizuoka to Nagoya. 247 km.
Oct. 9 Nagoya.
Oct 10. Nagoya to Kyoto. 137 km
There are so many good twisty roads in
Japan. It would be a dream on a supermoto. My memory of the roads in
Japan will be this: Small roads twisting their way up and down
mountains, along emerald blue rivers, through tunnels just big enough
for a small truck and epic views. Most of the time, the road is only
1 lane so you can't go very fast. The hostel I found in Kyoto didn't
have a place to park my motorcycle. So I put it in pay parking a few
blocks away for $2. Normally I would NEVER leave the bike in plain
sight that far from me. But this is Japan. Its making bad habits.
When I go into a store, I leave my keys in it, I leave the GPS on the
dock, I leave my camera in the tank bag, I leave my helmet and gloves
on the bike. Nothing happens. Its crazy. Its like a utopia of Safe.
Oct. 11. Kyoto.
Oct. 12. Kyoto to camping in Wakayama
Pref. 181 km
It took me all day to get to the
camping spot where I was meeting up with 9 or 10 guys from
Gaijenriders. I go there just after dark so I had to cook and set up
the tent in the dark. We drank some beers around the campfire and
planned the ride for the next day.
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Owner of "Cafe Ride". A motoshop/coffee shop. So great. |
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His race bike. |
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Easier to build a bridge then to cut the mountain. |
Oct. 13. Riding in Wakayama with Gaigan
Riders. 165 km
We were up earlier then I am used to. I
knew we were all going to get along just fine when the breakfast
menu was Johnsonville brats and coffee. I did some fly fishing in
the river while we waited for another guy to show up. I was able to
catch some fish, but they were very very small so I threw them back.
Later I would see people keeping these fish. Japan is like Russia
with fishing. Anything can be eaten so don't throw anything back.
This makes it difficult to find healthy fishery anywhere close to
populated areas.
We had a wide variety of bikes that
day. My 690, a KTM 450sm, BMW 800, 2 BMW 1200s, a cruiser, and a
naked 4cy street bike. Since we were on roads that were not used
much, the surface was dirty with pebbles and rocks. Nick on the 450
was following me pretty close and hit a large rock. It was a square
rock about the size of a soccer ball. I didn't see it happen, but I
know the exact rock because I swerved to avoid it. We stopped about
10 minutes later to wait for the group and I heard a hissing sound.
I did not know it was possible to get a “Snakebite” puncture on a
tubeless tire. Well it turns out it is possible. He hit the rock so
hard the sidewall of the tire had 2 small pinch holes. Surprisingly,
the rim was not dented, bent or cracked. These guys didn't have much
experience with fixing a tire on the side of the road so I gave them
a free lesson. First I broke the bead and tried to clean around the
bead. I thought the air was coming from the bead. That helped, but
then we found the 2 holes. So next I pulled the tire from the rim.
Unfortunately, no one had a 17 inch tube we could throw in the tire.
I sanded the inside of the tire to expose new rubber and wiped it
clean with a rag/gasoline. Then I applied a patch. Since the patch
was on the sidewall, I didn't know just how long it would last.
Getting the bead to set was the next challenge. I put a tie down strap
around the center-line of the tire and tightened it down this helps
push the bead onto the rim. After ½ hour of messing around, the tire
was finally seated on the rim and back on the bike. Next we had to
worry about people running out of gas. I had to give Nick a few
liters to make it back to a town with fuel. That insured I would be
drinking for free that night. There was a natural hotspring 1 km from
the camp so a few of us walked to soak. There are many “onsen” in
japan where hot water comes from the ground. This particular one was
just a few holes in the small rocks people had dug next to the river.
The river water was cooler but the water in the pools was warmed by
the ground. The further from the river you sat in the pools, the
hotter the water was. Again we drank beer around the fire while
cooking meat, veggies and brats. The BS was spread on thick that
night.
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The crew |
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Good but dirty roads |
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Noah's tire changing school. |
Oct. 14. Wakayama to Tokushima. 197 km
+ 2 hour ferry.
I rode past a few custom bikes parked
on the road. I looked back to see a sign “Bagdad Cafe and Rest”.
I thought this would be a good place to have some lunch. The owner
had a sweet old Ducati bevel head. I really like these old ducs. The
look great and sound even better. He cooked me some noodles with fish
and vegetables for lunch. A few days later, a friend of mine sent me
this link to his blog. It appears he liked my story as much as I
liked his.
http://bagdad.exblog.jp/20841888/ The ferry left at 4:30 so I had a good sunset on the way.
I tried one hotel and they wanted $90 so I went to a hostel in the in
a small village near the ocean. I think I was the only one staying
there. It seemed like I may have been the only one staying there for
a long time. I left the window open and slept to the sound of waves
on the shore.
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Awesome Rally car shop. |
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She was traveling on a sweet little 250 Honda. |
Oct. 15. Tokushima to Takamatsu. 149 km
Oct. 16 Takamatsu.
I woke up in the morning to rain and
wet cloths so I stayed put for the day. Later that evening the sun
actually came out and I had a great view of the sunset from the 6
th
story hotel room.
Oct. 17. Takamatsu to Matsuyama. 175
km.