Well, that's what I'd call a good long weekend - got lots of riding time in, on both two and three wheels. Took the Ural to see an old Army buddy of mine on Saturday, he lives about 2hrs away and runs his own bike shop strictly for sidecars. He's pretty good at it, too, having collected customers from all over Canada and the US. We spent some time digging through his garage and looking at a good used Dnepr sidecar, as well as a '74 Velorex boat tail unit that needs a bit of TLC. See, I'm thinking of putting a chair on my Harley now.
Sunday we went Ural-ing around the county, stopping in at a storage unit of a co-worker who was trying to get rid of a massive stock of clothing. He's actually doing it as a favour for his friend, who went through a depression after his mother passed away and went nuts just buying stuff with his inheritance. So there were literally boxes full of brand new, never worn, brand-name clothing with the tags still on them just sitting in storage and he wanted to get rid of it all. So for $100 I got three pairs of Levis, two Wrangler denim shorts, two heavy duty t-shirts, two leather belts, a brown suede jacket, a fleece lined vest, two pairs of hiking shoes and three watches. Now that's what I call a deal!
Yesterday I finally dragged the Harley out and went for a cruise. We rode along the St Lawrence River all the way to Iroquois Locks, one of the many control gates along the river where all the big cargo ships have to pass through. Unfortunately we timed it wrong, as no ships were scheduled until later in the afternoon, so we had an ice cream and took our time riding home. All together we rode about 700km this weekend, during which my Harley rolled past the 51,000km mark and the Ural hit 1,400km. It's been a pretty good season for riding so far.
But back to putting a chair on the Harley...
That damn Ural and Dnepr have corrupted my soul; I had forgotten how much fun it was to have a sidecar and I find that the Ural gets more road time than the Harley lately because it simply has a bigger fun factor. The weird thing is, though, when I got the Dnepr and then the Ural I had no problems adapting to the difference in riding style - and believe me, there's a difference between two and three wheeled riding techniques - but yesterday when I saddled up the Harley I felt like a newbie rider for the first few km's. I've had that bike for almost two years now but in the space of only two weeks of riding the Ural I almost had to re-learn how to ride it all over again. And all I can think about now is putting a sidecar on it so I can have two rigs - the Ural for running errands and leisurely rides and the Harley for commuting and higher speed touring. The Ural is comfy enough, but at 95kmh it's pretty much running at 80% WFO and the ride can get a little buzzy after awhile. The Harley, though, is a friggin' Barco Lounger on wheels and is glass smooth even at speeds of 130kmh; if I were to hook a sidecar to it my cruising speed would naturally be reduced to around 110-120kmh, but that's all I would need to stay alive on the major highways. I wouldn't DREAM of taking the Ural on HWY 401 - doing 95-100kmh is just too dangerous on a road where the average semi trailer is hauling at 110kmh, so a "hacked" Harley would be a better choice.
I still have a lot of thinking to do...