Far Easterner Rider

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Stir
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Posts: 8
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 2:56 pm
Real Name: Martin Misa
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 35
My Motorcycle: 1996 Yamaha Vmax

Re: Far Easterner Rider

#11 Unread post by Stir »

Hi Sunshine and Ceemes.Yes, you will get to know a bit about riding in our country.

What Ceemes said was true... and too many motorcyclists (take note, not riders) die on a daily basis. We don't have a very nice image here because of the Media hype every time one falls down. Urban riding requires different skills. It is not a matter of disciplined riding because everybody else around you will be unpredictable.

But provincial riding is exhilarating. I have ridden from top to bottom, taking ferries and sleeping in rooms that are less comfortable than tents. But there are hotels with amenities too running from $30 a night. My last long ride buddy 7 months ago is a German American fellow Vmaxxer. We covered over 3,000 kilometers in an 8-day ride with four dolphin-escorted ferry rides. There are no exotic foods on the roadsides like the ones you will find in India or China (rats, cats, snakes, monkeys, etc.) but you will have to train you pallet to eat native food like scallops in coconut milk for $.34! That was in Leyte (Creemes mentioned having wanted to ride there) where we found lunch in a small town within spectacular mountain and coastal twisties. Surprisingly, you will always find bottled water or Coca Cola and bakeries.

Provincial road quality is good but not without its obstacles because nobody really complains until the Government repairs. There will be no blinking lights nor pylons to warn vehicles of transitions from cement to dirt. It's really a matter of honing up your road alertness and how you discipline your speed according to what you can see. It's actually universal and the Philippine roads are not all that bad for cruising and the GPS maps are reliable.

Riding in the Philippines is more than enjoying the wind against your resistance. It's even more than smelling the ocean, rain, trees and the fields. You will always be greeted in small town stop-overs by hospitable and friendly locals and you will instantly take a peek at their culture. Security is a concern in some areas but riders have always been spared from bad intentions. In Mindanao, I left my foreigner friend in a major city, Davao while I rode 600 kilometers through a very notorious area called Maguindanao. Though I do not look Malay, I speak fluent Tagalog and know bits of other dialects. It was a bit hairy but I refused not to ride in my own country.

Riding today is not like what it was 12 years ago when there were hardly motorcycles in the countryside. I remember having to walk my bike on 1st gear for about 4 kilometers to get to a vulcanizing shop. They knew nothing about motorcycle tires so I had to do it myself and handed them the tire interior for patching and heating under an old truck piston with kerosene flaming on top.

Today, with the influx of small motorcycle imports, there are motorcycle mechanics everywhere specializing on jerryrigging in times of emergency. I recently had my scooter rewired in a provincial trip when I thought a genie appeared before me. It was a burning harness 200 kilometers from homebase on a Sunday! I found a mechanic who undid all my fairings and rewired the spaghetti in three hours, soldering every connection. Being an old-timer rider himself, he knew what highway robbery was and he charged me only less than $5 for labor and material!

Generally, the Philippines is a socially rider-friendly country. But like in all countries, your lane is your own lookout.

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Grey Thumper
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Posts: 1434
Joined: Wed Apr 25, 2007 11:21 pm
Real Name: Dino
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 9
My Motorcycle: 2004 BMW R1150Rockster, 2015 BMW R1200GS
Location: Manila, Philippines

Re: Far Easterner Rider

#12 Unread post by Grey Thumper »

Stir wrote:My last long ride buddy 7 months ago is a German American fellow Vmaxxer. We covered over 3,000 kilometers in an 8-day ride with four dolphin-escorted ferry rides.
Does this happen to be Achim? (Well, he's the only German I know with a V-Max). What a cool and crazy Kraut.

Anyway, sorry for the OT, back to your stories of the road . . .
"If you ride like there's no tomorrow, there won't be."

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Stir
Rookie
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Posts: 8
Joined: Wed Jul 27, 2011 2:56 pm
Real Name: Martin Misa
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 35
My Motorcycle: 1996 Yamaha Vmax

Re: Far Easterner Rider

#13 Unread post by Stir »

Grey Thumper wrote:Does this happen to be Achim? (Well, he's the only German I know with a V-Max). What a cool and crazy Kraut.
Right on the dot bro!

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Perfect cone shaped volcano Mt. Mayon

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Huts along the countryside

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What Ceemer missed out on - San Juanico Bridge Leyte

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Coastal Roads in Samar

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Road Hogs

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Ferry Ride

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ceemes
Legendary 2000
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Posts: 2153
Joined: Fri Jun 22, 2007 5:35 pm
Real Name: a big secret
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 26
My Motorcycle: 1998 Triumph Trophy
Location: Burnaby, BC, Canada, Sol 3, the Milky Way Galaxy, the Known Universe.

Re: Far Easterner Rider

#14 Unread post by ceemes »

Yeah, I missed out on that bridge. We did look at renting a 250CC Honda for a couple of days in Caragara. However when I took it for a short test run, I found not having brakes sort of cooled my enthuism. There is a floating restrautant in Tucloban run by an ex-pat Canadian who serves the worlds worst Poutine. He had a nice little 500CC dual sport and I found out a bit too late he would of been willing to loan it to a fellow Canuck and rider. But I did do a bit of riding while there.

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Always ask why.

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Grey Thumper
Legendary 1000
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Posts: 1434
Joined: Wed Apr 25, 2007 11:21 pm
Real Name: Dino
Sex: Male
Years Riding: 9
My Motorcycle: 2004 BMW R1150Rockster, 2015 BMW R1200GS
Location: Manila, Philippines

Re: Far Easterner Rider

#15 Unread post by Grey Thumper »

:lol: Man, do you look unhappy.
"If you ride like there's no tomorrow, there won't be."

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