Women Riders: Why I ride: To see the world
Posted: Tue Jul 14, 2009 10:32 pm
Women Riders: Why I ride: To see the world
Neda would leave it all behind and just ride her bike if she could.
By Neda Skific-Lee
My husband and I got into motorcycling together five years ago. We started with short day and weekend rides around Ontario, Canada, and then ventured farther and farther from home each consecutive year -- coast to coast through the United States, to Hawaii, then Western Europe and just this year New Zealand!
If it were up to me, I'd live a nomadic motorcycling lifestyle full-time. Being on the road a lot and not having to worry about being a consumer the way we are in day-to-day living in Toronto, Canada, makes life much simpler yet enriching at the same time.
I think that's probably the most rewarding thing that I get out of motorcycling. I can leave society behind when I have to and yet still have points of contact through interactions with people during my travels. Motorcycling is the best way to see the world. I wouldn't do it any other way.
Neda would leave it all behind and just ride her bike if she could.
By Neda Skific-Lee
My husband and I got into motorcycling together five years ago. We started with short day and weekend rides around Ontario, Canada, and then ventured farther and farther from home each consecutive year -- coast to coast through the United States, to Hawaii, then Western Europe and just this year New Zealand!
If it were up to me, I'd live a nomadic motorcycling lifestyle full-time. Being on the road a lot and not having to worry about being a consumer the way we are in day-to-day living in Toronto, Canada, makes life much simpler yet enriching at the same time.
I think that's probably the most rewarding thing that I get out of motorcycling. I can leave society behind when I have to and yet still have points of contact through interactions with people during my travels. Motorcycling is the best way to see the world. I wouldn't do it any other way.