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A bit of a ride: back on the road - Printable Version +- The CB1100 Community Forum (https://cb1100forum.net/forum) +-- Forum: Honda CB1100 Discussions (https://cb1100forum.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=5) +--- Forum: Seat Time (https://cb1100forum.net/forum/forumdisplay.php?fid=9) +--- Thread: A bit of a ride: back on the road (/showthread.php?tid=11912) Pages:
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A bit of a ride: back on the road - Cormanus - 11-23-2014 Day 7: Sydney-Cooma 534 kms [url=https://mapsengine.google.com/map/edit?mid=zwzS5Q1Lo7Yk.kCzuy0yEum3I] Six days had passed since I left home. I’d had a great ride to Sydney and a great weekend spending time with my son and catching up with an old friend. I had the pleasure of meeting Mrs Pterodactyl. Finally, on the evening of the sixth day, I got to enjoy one of Sydney’s spectacular storms. We get them at home too, but they’ve been scarce of late and it was good to be reminded of how much water can fall from the sky in a very short period. My son and I only just got in the door of the local pizza shop before the skies opened. In the morning, the remnants of the storm were hanging about. There was no rain, but it was overcast and the forecast for later in the day was pretty bloody awful. Pterodactyl and I met at a service station (that’s gas station in American) near to both of us, refuelled and launched ourselves into Sydney’s commuter traffic. Cleverly we were going away from the traffic along a route Pterodactyl had devised. It would be all new riding to me. Pterodactyl sets a course south A 30 kilometre ride had us at the Loftus Oval next to the entrance to the Royal National Park. Here we stopped to meet Jalalski (as he is known on the Australian Netrider forum) who was to be a our companion on the way to Phillip Island. And while there, too. Jalalski had made the pilgrimage south with Pterodactyl in 2013 and had decided he needed to upgrade from his GS500F to something larger. He’d done an amazing deal on a Triumph Sprint, a worthy companion for the CB1100s, and was looking forward to putting it through its paces. From left, Jalalski, Pterodactyl, Cormanus The ride through the Royal National Park is amazing, although many would say too heavily speed limited. The road is narrow with the bush often coming very close to both sides of the road and it twists and turns away enough to make a motorcyclist drool. There was not much traffic and we made good time. Royal National Park At the southern exit from the Royal National Park looking south to Wollongong and the Sea Cliff Bridge. We didn’t ride the Sea Cliff Bridge as Pterodactyl had other plans for us. We took to the Princes Highway to skirt Wollongong, turning right when we reached Albion Park to head up the Macquarie Pass towards Robertson and its emponymous Pie Shop. Princes Highway Heading inland towards Macquarie Pass One of the early corners on the way up the Macquarie Pass The road narrows Another great road. Well done, Pterodactyl. The climb up the pass is well worth the effort, although it is easy to get stuck behind a car for long periods. By the time we got to the Robertson Pie Shop, it was considerably cooler, the sky was looking more forbidding and I thought we deserved the cup of coffee and Portuguese tarts. Both were good. Our tour guide then took us back down the mountain to Kiama through the very pretty Jamberoo Rd. Although the ride from Albion Park to Kiama was effectively a 56 km detour, it was a damned sight prettier and more fun than the 17 km dash down the highway. That’s the joy of riding motorcycles: it’s often more fun to take the long way. We travelled on down the Princes Highway stopping for fuel at Berry before turning left at Nowra to begin the climb to the highlands. The sky looked increasingly ominous and it wasn’t long before Pterodactyl pulled over, climbed off and started to haul on his wet weather gear. Jalalski and I followed suit. Not a moment too soon. Even before we were back on the bikes the rain started to fall. Hard. I’d like to report it was just a shower and we were quickly through it. It wasn’t, and it was to keep going for the rest of the day delivering, to me at least, an object lesson in the inadequacy of nearly all motorcycle wet weather gear in really wet conditions. I confess it was a bit of a shock to realise that my hitherto waterproof boots were slowly filling up with water; that the seam in the crotch of my trousers was failing and parts of my jacket just weren’t doing their job. I suspect a set of ocean racing wet weathers may well be the only thing really up to keeping the water out. We stopped in Braidwood for something to eat and a coffee and decided not to take the planned route as it involved a reasonable stretch of dirt and Pterodactyl was a bit concerned about crossing one low-lying creek on the way through. We detoured via Queanbeyan, just over the border from Canberra, Australia’s capital, and then punched into a strong southerly wind for the 100 or so kilometers to Cooma . It was approaching dark when we finally arrived at the Swiss Motel. We were relieved to find an old fashioned oil-filled heater which did stirling work drying all our wet gear. Dinner at the Alpine Hotel was welcome and acceptable, if unmemorable. RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - Pterodactyl_imp - 11-23-2014 I must add that Cormanus' discomfort on arrival at Cooma and being wet and cold was eased considerably, and quickly, by a couple of tots of Sailor Jerrys 80 proof spiced rum. I just happened to have a bottle in my saddle bags, next to my first aid kit. Purely medicinal of course. Cheers RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - Cormanus - 11-23-2014 How did I forget that? Golly that rum was good. And effective. And it makes an appearance later in the story. Thanks Pterodactyl. RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - Rocky_imp - 11-23-2014 Nice post RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - metallyguitarded_imp - 11-24-2014 Fantastic write up and photos! I seriously wish I could have been there to experience it alongside you guys. Your report came awfully close to putting me right there. Note to self: Add Sailor Jerry to first aid kit! A bit of a ride: back on the road - Elipten_imp - 11-24-2014 Yea but be careful if Bundy and vegamite appear. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - Cormanus - 11-24-2014 Elipten, as you might imagine, my recollection is hazy, but I'm pretty sure Sailor Jerry's potion was manufactured from best Bundaberg sugar. Day 8: Cooma-Omeo 435km [url=https://www.google.com/maps/d/edit?mid=zwzS5Q1Lo7Yk.k64GZBehWGws] Early the day before, we’d realised Pterodactyl’s tail light was not working. It was hard, but Jalalski and I restrained him from making a long, voluble protest on the forum about the poor quality of the CB’s manufacture. He seemed to think a tail light should last more than 40,000 kms. Jalalski was up very early and replaced the globe which fixed the problem. He’d also been watching the news and seen that Sydney had been pelted by an unseasonable storm. There was chaos in the city as snow had fallen on the Blue Mountains to the city’s west (where I’d been riding only days before). There was a logjam of traffic and we were very pleased not to be making our way out of the city in it. The forecast was not all that encouraging, although the weather was expected to improve as we made our way south. And, of course, we had to ride across the highest country in Australia to get where we were going. Pterodactyl and I had washed the worst of the grot from the previous day off our bikes. Jalalski laughed at us and pointed to the virtues of bikes with big fairings and lots of plastic. We had a leisurely breakfast and Pterodactyl went in search of an optometrist to get a replacement screw for his spectacles. By then it was raining, but lightly and sporadically. We donned our wet weathers again and set out on the Kosciuszko Rd for Jindabyne. There were occasional showers and it was cold. Mt Kosciuszko is the highest mountain on the Australian continent at 2,228 metres (7,309 ft) and sits in the Kosciuszko National Park, in the Snowy Mountains which also form part of the Great Dividing Range that Pterodactyl and I have ridden up and down for most of the length of NSW. In Queensland too, but not together. After Jindabyne the road becomes the Alpine Way and you soon come to the ranger station at the boundary of the national park. If you’re not passing directly through, they relieve you of some cash for the pleasure of visiting. At this point it was clear, even to the untalented observer, that the unseasonal weather had stretched south of Sydney. There’s snow in them thar hills! The helpful woman in the ranger station told us there were reports of snow up ahead. Jalalski, I think, asked whether other bikes had been through ahead of us. “Yes,” she said. “How many?” “Oh, about 30 or so.” “Have any come back?” “No.” So, have they not come back because they’ve all slipped of the road? Or is the road passable? After a bit of a huddle, as decision is made: we’ll push on. “You lead, mate,” they said to me. “Oh, good,” I thought, “They can watch me slide off the road.” It was beautiful. Yes it was cold. Yes it was overcast and there were occasional spots of rain. Yes the road was wet. But there was snow to each side of the road and on the hills and it was very lovely indeed. After a time we came to [url=https://goo.gl/maps/HfPeh]Dead Horse Gap. If you follow the link above, it will take you Google Maps and at least one photo of Dead Horse Gap on a dry day. It seemed a good idea to take some photographs, so I stopped and we all hopped off. While the shutters were clicking, some bikers came up from the way we were heading and told us it was snowing up ahead. Great! We didn’t get snowed on and had a lovely ride down the twisty Alpine Way and the Murray Valley Highway until we stopped for lunch at Corryong. I have no memory of what we ate It's completely irrelevant, but the Murray Valley Highway is so named because the Murray River that Pterodactyl and I spent some time beside on an [url=http://cb1100forum.com/forum/showthread.php?tid=3294&pid=47965#pid47965]earlier trip has its source in the Snowy Mountains. A view back to the mountains and signs of the weather improving RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - Cormanus - 11-24-2014 The better weather also meant I could hang my camera around my neck again. Just after this bridge, we turned left on to the Omeo Highway and a pleasant ride on a good road through low alpine farmland for about 55 kms until we reached Mitta Mitta where we refuelled. The road to Mitta Mitta Jalalski’s bike was well loaded with Ventura bags, saddle bags and God knows what else. It was a bit of a struggle for him to get on as the Ventura bags made the load too high for him to stand on the footpeg and swing his leg over. Fortunately Jalalski is a younger man than either Pterodactyl or me and was agile enough to develop an elegant hop-step to get himself onto the bike. It never failed to make Pterodactyl laugh. I didn’t quite catch it here, but you can get a vague idea. For around 96 kms from Mitta Mitta to just north of Omeo was—for me at least—the best road of the trip. It was twisty with generally gradual rise and fall. There was next to no traffic. The road was dry. It was well marked and, even better, on many a left-hand corner the vegetation had been cleared so you could see far enough ahead to be able to use as much of the road as you liked. Much of it wa the sort of low-alpine Australian bush I really like. Occasionally we raced alongside pretty streams. The only mild negative was the amount of bark on the road, probably from the storm the night before. We had a comfort stop by one of the streams And so it came to pass that we came to the Snug as a Bug Motel in Omeo, tired but very happy from a good day’s ride. Dinner was taken at the Golden Age Hotel, Omeo, in company with many another motorcyclist making the pilgrimage to Phillip Island. RE: A bit of a ride: back on the road - Django - 11-24-2014 Thank you very much for this continuous report. These are journeys, I really like! I really envy you. Great pictures, great trip! Btw. Jalalski is right about the virtues of bikes with big fairings and lots of plastic. ![]() Coming from there, I guess I have to accustom myself somehow to the idea, to clean my motorcycle more than 2 times a year.
A bit of a ride: back on the road - Elipten_imp - 11-24-2014 Thanks for the ride report. I look forward to every one of the down under reports. I only hope when I get to retire I can still ride and will have the ability to write similar reports. I love vegamite, but did not appreciate the Bundy. Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk |