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Grace (BikeHedonia)

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Posts posted by Grace (BikeHedonia)

  1. Hello my glamourous people, how are you all doing? Long time no word. 

    I can't remember where I was up to.

    I hurt my knee in Cambodia. There's more to come on that story.

    I got the HiVolt Moto Tours business off the ground in Chiang Mai. We now have a fleet of brand new CRF300Ls for our customers to fang around the jungle on. Got them all kitted out for dirt. Bookings for the upcoming riding season, weather should be perfect in about a month. Customers seem happy.

    I am apparently, productively employed. Good God.

    Wonders will never cease.

    Currently in Oz for a flying visit to catch up with old friends and shop for bike parts. Back in Asia this weekend.

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    • Like 5
  2. On 17/06/2022 at 04:17, Marcel said:

    On Ixon textile motorcycle jackets... Prices seem reasonable... Hate buying of the net without checking it out first.. 

    I have been riding across south east Asia in a cheap Ixon mesh jacket for the last five years. I have crashed multiple times (bitumen and dirt) and it's saved me every time. Absolutely can't fault it, the best value for money of any gear I purchased for the trip. Leaves Klim for dead. 

    I use it with my Dainese back protector (fits in the back armour pocket just fine; jacket was sold without back armour). 

    • Like 2
  3. @Slowlycatchymonkey thanks for the epic ride report, so glad you guys made it safely through the extremes of weather! Loved the sound of the dodgy hotel, it sounds convenient, awful and hilarious. Once upon a time, after I'd been turned back from the Thai border three times in one night, I ended up sleeping in a shady Malaysian love hotel, the amenities were somewhat less but I would have hated to see luminol on that place.

    The things we do on moto trips... haha.

    Rest up and enjoy the festival! 

    • Like 1
  4. So instead of being miserable about my clutch I decided to do something completely deranged instead (as one does). The Hanuman Enduro Competition was so far out of my comfort zone, I really thought I must have lost my mind when I signed up for it. But it also turned out to be one of the destroying and affirming experiences I've put myself through in years (and I have a bit of a record of putting myself in out-there situations). It was just... wow.  

    I wrote up the full story on my blog bikehedonia.com 

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    • Like 5
  5. On 10/06/2022 at 13:47, Catteeclan said:

    I've never thought of a KTM being a long term bike as we know they're a bit fragile but you've got this one a lot further than most.

     

    Yeah, it's a high performance engine under a lot of stress and everything's made out of aluminium and plastic... not really a recipe for longevity. But we get along thus far. I've never rebuilt the engine yet, it's nearly 100,000km, so I can't complain too much.

    • Like 1
  6. On 10/06/2022 at 14:23, boboneleg said:

    100,000 kms on a 690 ans so far only one set of rocker arm bearings is pretty impressive.

    My mate had to have his engine fully rebuilt after only 13,000 miles because the bearings seized .

    Good on you Grace, keep going 👍

    Sadly i must disabuse you of this apparently success story... this is set number 4 lol. I've never had an engine seize because I watch those rocker arm bearings like a hawk (still, touch wood), but they wear out faster the older the engine gets. The first set lasted 45,000km, the most recent set only has about 15,000 km on them.

    • Like 1
  7. On 07/06/2022 at 16:43, boboneleg said:

    Bad luck Grace, my money is on the water pump impeller shaft seal has shit itself .

    Happy to report that you are all wrong, my water shaft impeller seal is fine! 😄 That's the good news. It was just a little hole in the radiator and they welded it up.

    The bad news is that my clutch is borked. Slave cylinder seal failed (again) and the master cylinder has been leaking for months. Ugh. My bike is a 2012 so still running the Magura system which is plagued with problems. 

    Clutchless shifted 150km to get out of Phnom Penh yesterday. That city is a headache, hard to find somewhere safe to park your bike and everyone always trying to snatch your phone. I am in Kampot. I have a race to ride, then options to reassess. Some days... weeks... months are smoother sailing than others. I also need a new set of rocker arms, I can hear the bearings are on their way out.

    Poor old girl is pushing 100,000km, a fair bit for the big single, bits are starting to wear out.

    • Like 3
    • Sad 2
  8. Well, I'm traveling solo again, no friends and no enduro bikes. Old mate couldn't get his passport back from the UK embassy in time to drive down so I ended up flying back into Cambo on my own.

    Yep, I'm back in Phnom Penh, this is KTM Rescue Mission Mk II. (The first rescue mission went nowhere because I was still waiting for the Laotian border to reopen by the time I had to skip back to run a tour in Thailand). So, here we are again. This time I expected smooth sailing - the bike had only beeing sitting for four weeks, not two years - but I get out of the shop and the temp light comes on, there's no water in the radiator.

    I pour water in, it comes out again. So off I limp towards my favourite mechanical magician, leaving a trail of droplets on the hot Cambodian road...

    But it's all good, because we make it to the workshop without any further red lights. I settle in to wait for the head mechanic to reappear, and hopefully solve all my problems...

    Well, some of them. Can I just say, the Thai baht to USD exchange rate is murder.
     

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    • Like 5
  9. Anyway, I made it back from Cambo safe and sound... just two days before Laos reopened its land border, which is what I'd been waiting for the whole time! Nevermind. I'm now planning the next foray back into Cambodia from Thailand and this time, I'm going to have a crew. My Thai friends were all jealous when they heard about all the fun I'd had without them, so now I've convinced one friend to drive with me - with our enduro bikes on his truck - all the way down to Kampot where there's a big enduro race on 10, 11, 12 June. It should be fun!!

    • Like 4
  10. But I digress. 

    In Cambodia there were magnificent abandoned ruins, with no-one around. I didn't go to Angkor Wat, I just rode alone along the King's Road... temple ruins to temple ruins. Highly recommend. 

    This is my favourite video from my whole month in Cambodia. I just wanted to show you this place. It was incredible. 

    I did, however, receive a complaint that the dirt roads featured were too good, and thus the videos were boring. 

    Next time I'll make sure I only film the quicksand sections 😉  Quicksand temple quicksand temple!

    Grace

    • Like 3
  11. On 16/05/2022 at 13:51, Slowlycatchymonkey said:

    Nice one. Your new Singaporean friends seemed good humoured about their crappy bikes. Are they going to join you in Thailand?

    They were indeed. Really nice, good humoured people, it was a real pleasure to meet them! Normally I ride alone because most people are not such good company when dealing with the travails of life on the road, but these guys were ace. I'm hoping they'll come up to Thailand for a ride soon, although fortunately/unfortunately they are gainfully employed which means they might have to wait a while for their next set of holidays to roll around... 

    • Like 4
  12. 31 minutes ago, Slowlycatchymonkey said:

    Theres also an enormous amount of dental decay in toddlers in the UK.

    Poor nutrition during pregnancy (babies teeth are already under the gums when they are born) coupled with the poor education that led to that state then continuing to work its magic causes a lot of problems. Its hard to believe but fizzy or sweet drinks in babies bottles in some areas is common.

    Then there are the well meaning partially educated who are trying to do the right thing by switching to raisins, apple juice and other perceived healthy alternatives that equally cause rot. Dried fruit is worse offender because is sticks in the teeth and keeps the acid production going until its brushed out.

    Health promotion in the UK is patchily done and poor. Its always consisted of finger wagging, guilt tripping messages and a like of punitive measures after the fact rather than education before the damage is done, this causes the majority of people to completely switch off to any official channels because no-one likes being told their lifestyle choices are wrong and whatever has happened is probably their fault.

    So there you go, theres a lot of prevalent preventable disease in the UK. Heyho.

    I would have imagined that, having the NHS (which is awesome) makes public health everyone's (and every govt's business, even the conservative ones) because goodness knows nothing is as cost effective as prevention. But... ah yes... sorry I was living in a fantasy world for a moment there. Prevention is much longer than the election cycle, and as you say, people don't like being told what to do... 

    Speaking of dental decay in toddlers... it kills me that in Vietnam and Cambodia it is almost impossible to buyany UHT milk which has not been sweetened and (this is the worst part, for me) that includes the milks which are specifically marketed to toddlers as being vitamin enriched especially for toddler nutrition. People simply don't have the education to disbelieve marketing like that, and I think to myself: those companies could be making almost as much money selling that milk without the added sugar. Almost, of course, but not quite. Like the Nestle baby formula scandals, it's just so sad that capitalism trashes the health of whole populations for such negligible marginal gains.  But, I guess I'm off on a tangent here... I think we're on the same page anyway.

    • Like 1
  13. 12 minutes ago, Slowlycatchymonkey said:

    One on cafe lattes how apposite!

    Malnutrition is an interesting topic, suffered in every country for differing reasons. In the UK it's generally due to lack of education resulting in rickets. The remedy for the nations malnutrition (after discovering the terrible state of the working classes meant they weren't fit to fight a war) was to introduce free school milk in 1946 and that to a large degree worked. Then Thatcher thatcher milk snatcher decided to stop this in 1971 and so we see the necessary return of rickets in the UK.

    What I find most surprising is knowing the impact poor diet has on peoples lives that nutritional education wasn't introduced to the UKs education curriculum til 2014 so we'll continue to see a disproportionate number of childrens lives effected until the better educated 2014 generation are the breeders!

    WOW... I am very familiar with rickets from my Dickensian through to between-the-wars readings but I had NO idea that people in the UK are suffering from it again. That is WILD. And that nutrition wasn't in the curriculum until 2014... crazy. Really interesting, thank you so much

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