Simple speeding fine becomes £1,000+!

Believe it or not, there is one technical motoring offence considered to be 10 times more serious than breaking the speed limit. No, it’s failure to disclose the identity of a driver or rider alleged to have been speeding.

I found this out to my cost when I returned home from a very enjoyable seven-and-a-half-month trip to the Middle East and South Africa. The sun was shining, the weather was dry, and all my trickle chargers had kept my bikes and car alive. Joy!

Next morning, however, was a vastly different story. I started opening the mountains of mail that had piled up in my absence. One of the first envelopes contained a notice from a company called Marstons Recovery saying I owed them £1,089 in unpaid fines. For what?! A scam, surely. I continued to open the envelopes and the story slowly unfolded.

Apparently I’d been caught by a speed camera doing 47 mph in a 40 mph zone two days before I left on my long odyssey. I found that odd, because I’m always careful these days not to exceed the posted limit, but I had indeed ridden the route indicated that day and so I guess the information was correct. So be it: a fair cop, and all that.

The problems began with all the stuff that happens afterwards. You have 10 days to inform the police who was riding the bike at the time of the offence, but obviously I didn’t – I knew nothing about it, because all the letters arrived after I’d flown overseas. So I didn’t see the reminder, threatening a £1,000 fine and six licence points if I refused to provide the information demanded. Of course, I couldn’t respond to that, either.

Then came a letter from the court saying that I’d been fined £1,014 and given six points on my licence, which helped explain the letter from Marstons Recovery telling me I owed them that money – plus their own collection fee of £75. Ye gods!

Needless to say, I spent some time over the next two days investigating my options. Calling the number on the Cheshire Magistrates’  Court letter resulted in a voice message saying that my call couldn’t be taken at this time. I called five times and got the same message. I then emailed the court and received a reply advising me to contact Marstons and a body called the Single Justice Service, which I duly did. At least this time I was put into a queue system – a 25-minute queue but an improvement, nonetheless. A helpful lady said she’d email me a link to an online form I could fill in and submit to have my case reviewed in light of my circumstances. She said that Marstons would be informed about my request and that they might consider putting the bailiffs on ice while the matter was reviewed – but suggested I call them too.

I did, and another very polite lady said that they were acting in compliance with a court order and couldn’t withdraw their demand. However, they could offer me a payment plan and they would repay the amount in full if the court review found in my favour. I was pretty confident that it would because it turns out there’s a statutory obligation to take into account the defendant not being aware of the charges, the hearing or the court date. It happens quite a lot, it seems – mainly when someone moves house and fails to inform the DVLA of their new address. I took the payment plan, figuring that I might get the whole mess sorted out before I had to pay the second or third instalments.

Having submitted my reasoning for having the case reviewed in court, including a copy of my airline ticket to show I’d been out of the country, I was surprised to find that the response came by email, not regular post. If only the police had been required to notify me by email, perhaps in addition to snail mail, then the whole crazy situation would not have arisen. The second surprise was that I now had a court date less than two weeks away where I could plead my case.

I wasn’t particularly nervous about appearing in a magistrates’ court and was fairly confident that I could present my case articulately. However, I was unprepared for the daunting scene that awaited me inside the court doors. The usher led me in and pointed to the dock, a raised platform surrounded by three tall panels where I was told to stand. In front of me were three magistrates, sitting on a tall dais way higher than the clerk of the court, who himself sat on a dais above four court officials working away at computer terminals. And there was little ol’ me.

The clerk of the court was a star. He asked me some basic questions, read out the details of my case, asked me to confirm that they were correct, and reiterated to the judges that I was out of the country when all the paperwork started flying and so was incapable of responding. I saw a copy of my flight details pop up on one of the magistrate’s screens. The judges looked at each other, spoke quietly, nodded among themselves, and told me that the original court conviction for not identifying the driver would be quashed, and with it the original sentence. A wave of relief swept over me, helped on its way by the very real feeling that I was standing in a dock like a criminal.

The lead magistrate then asked me how I would now plead to the original charge of exceeding the speed limit. Guilty was my only realistic option. They conferred some more and said that I’d be fined £100 plus costs of £40, including a compulsory “victims’ surcharge”, and would get three points on my licence. Never has receiving a speeding fine brought such a sense of relief!

The issue for me is that this whole episode caused a lot of expense, inconvenience, worry and wasted time. Had the police been required to notify me electronically of the offence at the outset, I could and would have ‘fessed-up to being the rider and paid the fine on  the spot. Ah, you ask, but did they have my email address? In theory yes, because I always supply it and my mobile number when taxing my vehicles with the DVLA, which is where they went to get my postal address. Providing your email address is voluntary, but I do it anyway. It’s 2025, and I reckon the majority of drivers and riders have an email address. Those who haven’t could still be reached by post. Eliminating the postal delivery for all others would have the country a whole bunch of money, too.

It also raises the question of the logic behind imposing a fine of £1,014 for not informing the police who was riding. The reason has to be that it allows the penalty points to be allocated to the appropriate person: unfair to award them automatically to the registered owner if someone else was riding. The question must be whether the allocation of penalty points has made a significant difference to road fatalities? If it has not, then there’s a whole slew of admin involved that could be eliminated by copying countries that impose only a simple fine for speeding.

Adding insult to injury, the whole case hinged essentially around a single mile per hour. I did 47 mph in a 40 zone; at 46 (10% plus 2 mph) the police would not have prosecuted. I know there has to be a cut-off point somewhere, but this just made the episode even more frustrating.

If you see a Gold Wing or a Rune pottering around this summer at a few mph under the posted limit, that’ll be me!

Our smallest and largest Hondas hit the Dales between rainy days

Great Britain has had a rubbish summer. I know this for two reasons: first, I wasn’t there, and secondly because the Met Office confirmed that it’d been the coldest summer for nine years.

I spent June, July and most of August out of the country, staying at our place in South Africa. But because the technology makes it so easy, I frequently checked the weather back home and found that, almost every time I checked, it was warmer and sunnier in the depths of South Africa’s winter. This was great for riding, because most days down there it was in the low 20s, dry and sunny. Unfortunately, I didn’t get out on the bikes that much because my wife and I had committed to major house maintenance: sanding all external woodwork (and there’s a lot of it) back to bare wood and applying three coats of varnish, with careful application of wire wool and turpentine between coats. That took about seven weeks.

Then, in the absence of a plumber willing to do the work, we spend about three weeks installing a whole new wastewater treatment system, which was exacting, laborious and ultimately successful. In between times, I got out on the newly repaired V-Strom and the trusty Tiger 800; unfortunately, the TL1000S had developed a bad case of seized front brakes, so the green beauty had to stay in the garage. I’ll get to it next time.

Back in England, it was now late August. My wife wanted to get some riding time in on her new CB125, and I wanted to get better acquainted with my “new” (to me) Gold Wing. Hah! They’d been on trickle chargers and were all ready to go, but it was raining. Or cold. Or both. We had to wait until about the last day of August to brave the elements, but we did manage it.

We rode some wonderfully empty backroads up into the Yorkshire Dales to the Cat and Fiddle pub, which was closed. Turns out it’s been closed for years and now operates as a whisky distillery. I’ve passed it many times without knowing! Happily, we were there for the roads, the views, the sunshine and the fresh air, and there was plenty of all four. It was the first time we’d used our Shoei Neotec 2 Sena intercoms bike-to-bike, which was novel, and they worked well. Normally for us it’s just a rider-pillion thing. There was a bit of whistle through the system from the wind, I admit, but we’ll figure that out. For now, it was just an opportunity to enjoy our new bikes. Peter professed herself happy with the 125, while I wondered why I’d waited so long to get a Wing. It’s fabulously comfortable, natch, but handles like a bike several hundred pounds lighter. Brakes well, plenty of power for my needs, great torque. It’ll take us back to Norway next summer and, if the weather doesn’t play nice, the Wing will take it all in its stride.

Going Chinese? I don’t really think so!

Would you buy a brand new bike off the showroom floor that couldn’t be delivered on the agreed date because it had a part missing? No, me neither! Which is a shame, because it was all going so well…

My wife, Peter, used to have a full motorcycle licence. She’s owned a Suzuki GSX750, a Yamaha Star 1100 and a V-Strom 650, and ridden a whole host of 1980s bikes. She currently owns a Triumph Tiger 800XC and a Yamaha TW200. Unfortunately, she let her South African licence lapse while living and working in the UAE (sadly, no licence-till-you’re-70 there) so needs to get a new one.

She duly took her CBT training and  started to get some current UK two-wheeled experience on the Suzuki Address 110 scooter she took over from our emigrating son. She wanted something more substantial with a ‘manual’ gearbox to ride before taking her test, so we went shopping online for a suitable 125.

That was an interesting experience. It’s been about 45 years since I last rode a 125, a Honda CG125 I had on test for Motorcyclist Illustrated. I recall it was a thoroughly nice 125, albeit woefully underpowered for the commute from our home in Gravesend (at the time) to central London. My first surprise this month was the price of new 125s from the big four Japanese manufacturers: some of the best cost more than £5,000! Low-mileage, one-owner used examples were also well into the £3,000 mark. To get down to the £1,500-£1,800 we fancied paying for a bike that Peter would use purely as a test-passing vehicle, we were looking at much older, multi-owner bikes.

Along  the way, I found an ad for a Hanway 125 SC, which looked impressively like a Ducati Scrambler. A review of some road tests showed that it was well-received by the media and produced 15 bhp, which is the maximum for a learner 125 and significantly more than the 10-11 bhp offered by more mainstream bikes. Even better, there was a brand-new, pre-registered example on sale for £2,699 at a dealer near us.

We drove there and examined the Hanway, a pre-registered Benelli and a two-owner Honda CBF125, all at roughly the same price. Peter felt the Hanway, a stylish beast for its size, looked like the best bet, and I agreed, so we paid a £100 deposit and agreed to pick it up the following Friday.

We called first thing on Friday to say we were on our way to collect the Hanway. The salesman we’d been dealing with was out but a colleague asked us to wait until 11:00 so they could get the paperwork ready and make sure the bike was clean from its brief road-test by the mechanic. Our original salesman, a very impressive and helpful guy in my opinion, called shortly afterwards to explain that there was a problem.

They’d discovered that a mechanic in their workshop had cannibalised the Hanway to source a part from the switchgear for some other bike. They’d have to order a replacement from the parts depot, but it was close by and they should have the part before the end of the day and they’d fit it as quickly as possible. We were disappointed, naturally, and a little concerned. What kind of dealer would allow a mechanic to cannibalise a new bike on the showroom floor and not at least order a replacement immediately?

We called mid-morning the following day and spoke to the manager; our salesman wasn’t there that day. He said the part had arrived but they didn’t have workshop staff on site till Monday; however, they’d get to the bike as soon as they could.

“I have to say I’m not very impressed,” I told him. “Why would you allow a mechanic to take a part off a new bike and not order a replacement straight away?”

“It seems we did,” he told me, “but unfortunately that part never arrived. Anyway, cannibalising showroom bike is a common practice – all dealers do it.”

He may well be right, but the “part never arrived” bit did it for Peter and me. We’d been willing to take a punt on a Chinese brand we’d never heard of because the price was good, the test reports were favourable and it looked great. But this was a new bike, already missing a component, and the parts ordering system had proved fallible. The dealership had a workshop that didn’t work on Saturdays, and they couldn’t give us a firm delivery date beyond “as soon as we can”.

We did the logical thing and cancelled the order, and happily they didn’t fuss over refunding our deposit. I went online straight away and found three Honda CBF125s for sale at Staffordshire Honda in Newcastle-under-Lyme, so we headed there. The three bikes had between 250 and 850 miles on the clock. The lower-mileage white bikes were ex-demonstrators, whereas the red model with 850 miles was a one-owner bike in seemingly excellent condition. We bought it on the spot, for £100 less than the Hanway. The dealer said his workshop was fully booked for the next two weeks but since the bike had had its first service only a few weeks earlier they’d put it through the workshop immediately for a safety check and we could ride it away. Had we gone for either of the white models, it would have been 10 days before we could have taken delivery.

I rode the bike the 20 miles home and found it perfect for the job it was about to do. Peter loves it and gets out to practice her skills as often as she can. I can’t speak highly enough of the service we received from Staffordshire Honda that day – it’s worth a visit even if only to see the wonderful collection of modern classics on display there. I’m not going to name the Hanway dealer, because it seems well-rated online, the salesman was a solid guy, and maybe this was a one-off. He lost one certain sale and another likely one (a BMW K1600 GTL on the showroom floor that took my fancy). But I can’t help feeling that we had a narrow escape and ended up with the better brand and the better bike.

45 years on, I finally bought a Wing!

I rode my first Gold Wing in August 1979; three years later I wrote the book Gold Wing; but it’s taken until last Saturday for me to actually own one. Almost 45 years is quite a wait, and I haven’t been disappointed.

That first Wing ride was memorable for many reasons. As a motorcycle journalist at the time, I’d recently come back from the launch of the 19709 BMW range in America. I’d joined seven other British journalists to sample the then-new R100RT, R100T and a few others I don’t now recall. It was probably the sheer joy of stunning California and Arizona scenery in 80-degree (Fahrenheit) weather in February that turned my head, but I liked those bikes – so much so that I ordered a new R100 Autumn Special in a glorious metallic green when I got home. I wanted that bike so much, and was thrilled when I picked it up from Slocombe’s on V-plate day, 1 August.

The following day found me at Honda’s UK headquarters in Chiswick to collect a brand-new GL1000 K3 Gold Wing. By the time I arrived home in Gravesend, I knew I’d made a mistake in buying the Beemer. To my mind, the Wing was the better bike – and it would have cost me £30 less to boot! I rode both bikes back-to-back that week and found the Honda smoother, quieter (the BMW had a tappet rattle that never went away), more comfortable and more powerful.

When I was asked to write a book on  Gold Wings in 1982, the logical place to go was Wing Ding, the annual gathering of Wing owners in the US. That year it was held in Steamboat Springs, Colorado, and I rode there on a spanking new metallic brown and gold Aspencade on loan from Honda US. Again, I admit to being seduced by the ride and the scenery: through the San Bernadino mountains, across the Mojave desert, into Las Vegas at 1 am and out again at 2 am, vast stretches of nothingness in which at one stage I didn’t see a light or sign of another human being for 30 minutes. It was 95 degrees at midnight, and what I did see was the “billion stars all around” from The Eagles’ Peaceful Easy Feeling. Fabulous bike, memorable ride over several days, awesome trip.

Yet I didn’t buy myself a Wing. There was a mortgage to pay, young children to raise, so I focused instead on more affordable second-hand machinery: a CX500, a CBX (should never have sold that one), a new Firestorm, a Kawasaki 1500 Vulcan, two Honda Valkyries, a Suzuki TL1000S, a Ducati Sport Classic, a Rocket III and finally a third Valkyrie. Oh, and then a Rune. But no Wing. Until last Saturday.

The Valkyries always appealed to me because on balance I have preferred naked bikes, and the Valk is basically a naked Gold Wing: same 1500cc flat six (until the Wing went to 1832cc and left the Valkyrie behind) but with the look of a traditional motorcycle: an engine, a petrol tank, two wheels, lots of chrome, and plenty of smooth, silky power. None of that plastic nonsense!

I borrowed a new Wing in ’88 for a week and loved it; I rode a friend’s 1800 down to Devon to buy the TL in 2005 and loved it; my wife and I rented one in Colorado for a week in 2011 and we both loved that, too. I was looking for a replacement for my Rocket III Touring and found a lovely Valkyrie in Blackpool, so for the next 10 years that became our primary tourer. But our trip to Norway 18 months ago got me thinking that the Valkyrie wasn’t necessarily the answer anymore. I messed up the rear suspension settings and that made the bike harder to manage at low speed; the handlebar position and angle seemed to cause me arm pain that didn’t happen on my other bikes; and the lack of modern amenities like built-in satnav, heated grips and easily lockable luggage suggested that maybe the time had come for a replacement.

Online reading suggested the Triumph GT900, which weighed about 100 kg less and had lots going for it: flatter bars, built-in satnav, heated grips. Or the BMW R1250 RS, which added shaft drive to the mix. Then while shopping for a new 125 for my wife to re-take her test (blog to follow) I saw not one but three BMW K1600s at prices that seemed more affordable than I’d have guessed. A test ride or two seemed in the offing.

Then last Friday I rode my Rune to Bill Smith Motors in Chester to have a new front tyre fitted. The tyre stuff didn’t work out, because the mechanics reckoned it was too hard to raise the front end of the 440kg Honda to get at the wheel. While I waited, however, I spied a very nice-looking red 2007 Gold Wing with 39,500 miles on the clock. A return trip that afternoon on the Valkyrie allowed the dealer to consider a trade-in offer. They called at 11:00 next morning with a deal that I felt was fair, and by 3pm I was riding home on my first Wing.

Initial impressions confirmed what I already knew: it was smooth, powerful, very comfortable, very sure-footed and a pleasure to ride. The riding position promised an easier time for my right arm, the centrally locked luggage system suggested easier moseying while touring, and the general amenities (fairing, great seat, radio, MP3 player, reverse gear, heated seats, heated grips, air-adjustable suspension) augured well for our future tours. Only time will tell. It’s been a long wait, almost 45 years, but I sense it’s all come right in the end.

A Knysna journey into my biking history

It was like a window back into my personal motorcycling past, laid out across the vast open floor for my delight: there was my 1977 Yamaha XS750 triple; my Triumph 3TA 350 twin; my Jawa 175 split-single two-stroke; my friend Kevin’s Triumph Tiger 200 single. Interspersed among them were several bikes I had ridden during my years as  a road-tester: a BMW R100RS, the BMW R100RT I’d ridden across the Arizona desert; the Honda 1978 CX500 whose launch I’d attended in France, the Yamaha XT500 single, the Honda CB750F from 1981…

I was on a much-postponed visit to The Motorcycle Room, a museum in Knysna on the Garden Route in South Africa’s Western Cape. It’s about 25 minutes down the road from our home in Plettenberg Bay, and I’d been meaning to go there since it opened, with some 85 bikes on display. The wait wasn’t entirely in vain, though, because by now its collection has expanded to some 150 motorcycles. And this January day, I had the whole place to myself, alongside my friend Pete Meadowcroft, a BSA owner from way back.

Knysna is a quirky town, built along a beautiful tidal lagoon on the Indian Ocean, with a busy marina, a nice mic of touristy shops and restaurants, against a backdrop of the Tsitsikama Mountains. If you’re in the area, it’s well worth a visit and a meander, even if you’re not into old motorcycles.

The museum isn’t entirely my cup of tea, to be honest. I like my classic cars and bikes to be in mint condition, restored if need be to better than new – none of this “patina” nonsense so beloved by Wayne Carini of Chasing Classic Cars fame, and so many other classic vehicle buffs! Some of the bikes in this collection are in great condition, and one or two of the more recent BMWs look brand new, but many are a bit tired and some are plain rusty. And that’s the stated intention of the museum creator, Colin Stunden, a former enduro racer. He’s picked up a wide variety of old and not-so-old bikes, some designated as barn finds that await some degree of restoration.

My interest is mostly in road bikes, too, which means that about half this collection isn’t really my thing at all: there are scores of off-road bikes, most of them seemingly KTMs, which is great if you’re into that sort of thing but otherwise not very compelling. Others who admire the world of knobbly tyres will doubtless be engrossed.

There was a lot of metal to hold my attention, regardless. One of my first-ever bikes was a Jawa 175, bought from a scrapyard for a fiver in Dublin in or around 1969. My good friend Seamus, a wizard with things mechanical and electrical, was able to make it run – as long as it was connected to a transformer that was plugged into the mains! I don’t recall riding it very far… Here in Knysna were several examples of the same split-single concept under the Jawa and CZ brands.

The Triumph 3TA was of the bathtub variety and black, with that strange upturned rear mudguard thing. Mine came without the bathtub, happily, and was an ex-police bike, also black, that I had professionally painted in the metallic green of the Opel Reckord of the early ‘70s. I lingered over that Yamaha XS750, which brought back happy memories. My wife and I bought the then-new triple back in ’77 with a wedding gift that was intended to buy a three-piece suite. It was one of the first Japanese bikes with shaft drive, presenting an attractive alternative to the BMWs of that era. We rode it from London to Rome and back and enjoyed it hugely, although the XS850 that followed it a year or so later was even better to ride.

Memories were triggered too by the Honda CB750F in the Knysna collection, because I had one on test the week my daughter Elizabeth was born, back in June 1981. I remember being so elated at her safe arrival that I rode home from the hospital through country roads at about 1:30 in the morning, pulling a joyous wheelie the first chance I got. The bike was okay, as I recall, although the 900cc version was more fun.

Other machines in this eclectic collection include an 80cc version of the ubiquitous Honda 50 step-through, made in India under an Indian brand name. There was the odd Matchless, a smattering of BSAs, a few Ducatis, a Laverda or two, an Aermacchi, a few scooters, a Harley and a host of scramblers, motocrossers, adventure bikes and trail bikes. If you’re ever in the area, it’s well worth stopping off and spending an hour browsing through The Motorcycle Room. You’ll find it on Thesen Island, clearly signposted near the end of the quay, with several excellent waterside restaurants and bars a few steps away. Entry costs R160 (about £7). Maybe you’ll meet a slice of your own motorcycling past there, too.

Stiffer shocks sort low-speed weave

It’s official(ish) – I’m not losing the ability to ride a heavy touring bike, two-up, with luggage, at low speed. Phew!

Readers may recall my mentioning that I found the Honda Valkyrie harder to manage at very low speed in traffic during our Scandinavian odyssey this past summer. It felt like a pendulum, the back end wanting to sway and me wrestling with the handlebars more than I ever had to do before. It was only when we arrived home, three weeks later, that it occurred to me that my failure to raise the pre-load on the rear suspension might have been to blame.

The only way to check was to load the bike back up to holiday levels and try again. Before that could happen, Ihad to get my Givi brackets welded. My wife Peter had spotted that the welds on the top of both brackets had started to split, which in itself might be an indication that I’d been overloading them for years. Found a local welder in Middlewich who repaired them for £20, which I though was reasonable. Refitting the brackets went against the grain, because the bike looks a while lot better without them, but needs must.

I filled the two panniers with clothing and camping materials to take them to the 9 kg apiece they’d been in the summer, refitted the Kuryakyn roll bag and long waterproof roll-bag, filled them with the same kit we’d carried in August, and added the windscreen and magnetic tank-bag (a handy if heavy item, but at least the weight is carried where it can’t cause any real issues). I jacked-up the rear suspension to level 4, where it should have been, instead of 3 where it had been, and set off.

Happily, the tendency to slalom at low speed and the need for constant tiller-like adjustments at the handlebars had all but disappeared. I stopped, raised the setting to 5 and tried again – even better. So I wasn’t surrendering my riding skill to old age – just the mental alertness to realise more quickly that the shock settings might have something to do with the problem. In any event, I’ll be ditching the Kurykyn roll-bag for a second plastic roll-bag, saving 3.5 kg of high-up, behind-the-axle weight in the process.

I’d been prepared to change bikes for something lighter if the suspension changes hadn’t made any difference. My head had been turned by a BMW R1250RS, which weighs only 236kg compared with the Valkyrie’s 309kg, and the new Triumph Tiger 900 GT Pro, at just 198kg and 21st-century features like built-in satnav and a phone charger. There might still be a reason to switch, however, because the Valkyrie still generates a pain in my right arm in four places (wrist, forearm, bicep and shoulder). I reckon that’s down to a ruptured bicep tendon some years ago. Not much I can do about that now (if it was going to get reattached, it needed to get done within weeks, and the evidence suggested it wouldn’t be worth the aggro). I find that I can ride my very sporty Ducati for a couple of hours without triggering the arm pain, but it can appear within 30 minutes on the Valkyrie, even one-up without luggage. So the latest plan is to build my arm muscles with weights and see if that helps. If it doesn’t, then a new bike might still be in order. I’ve got the winter months to find out…

The Norway trip: stuff that worked, and stuff that didn’t

Every motorcycle tour teaches me something, which I then try to incorporate next time to make the whole experience even better. You’d think that after 46 years, with some time off for other pursuits and more conventional family holidays, I’d have it all sorted now, but either I’m a slow learner or you never stop learning.

One innovation we tried this year was to bring very few clothes. Normally I’d bring a spare pair of jeans and maybe a week’s worth of T-shirts, underwear and socks. My wife Peter is usually a bit more sensible but generally we’d both carry more stuff than we needed. This time, to save weight and space, we cut that right back: we carried only two to three changes of underwear, T-shirts and socks. Mrs Peter had seen an ad for men’s underwear designed for camping and said to be fast-drying, so I bought three pairs. At a sale in one of the camping shops I bought a pair of very light, thin, Factor 50-rated long trousers for wearing off the bike, which meant I could ditch the spare jeans. Speaking of jeans, it took me years to work out that the pain in my backside that seemed to set in within hours, regardless of what bike I was on, was largely down to the seams of the rear pockets. When the world seemed to switch to stretch jeans, and conventional non-stretch ones were hard to find and very expensive, I followed the herd and bought M&S stretch jeans and found that not only are they supremely comfortable on a bike, the pocket seams are far softer and the sore bum problem has disappeared.

I forgot to include this colourful, hand-painted 2CV at our Dunkirk campsite in a previous blog

Travelling with far fewer clothes worked just fine, the new underwear less so. It took exactly the same time to dry as conventional items, so that was a tenner wasted. Obviously we had to wash our clothes every night or second night, but it made perfect sense. Our microfibre towels dried almost instantly and are indispensable. The attempt to take less stuff almost had us leave our traditional Kuryakyn roll bag behind, but at the last minute I decided we needed the extra space for stuff like trainers, flip-flops and sleeping bags; we’d have been better off without it, as the extra weight high up and far back proved to be a pain. We’ve had the Givi panniers for several years; they work, but aren’t waterproof, aren’t pretty and are too wide for easy filtering, so we’re exploring affordable alternatives, which may not exist. Even a scuffed pair of OEM Valkyrie hard panniers seems to command £1,000 on eBay, which just seems too much.

The Oxford magnetic tank bag is invaluable and is a definite keeper. It weighs a lot, due to the magnets, but the weight is not in a place where it causes problems, and we’ve long since perfected a double-act for removing and holding it during refuelling. The waterproof cover is a bit naff, billowing away in the wind but never actually disappearing.

One area for future improvement is our riding gear. I’ve long been a fan of Motolegends, the Guildford-based bike clothing specialists. They send out regular missives about great gear, and a few weeks before we left they wrote at length about the unsuitability of winter waterproof suits for summer touring. What they said made perfect sense, but I didn’t fancy spending a fortune on new stuff – have you seen the prices of riding gear these days? Wow!

My Rukka jacket and trousers are 19 years old and, barring one 100-mile rain-soaked trip in 2020, have always kept me dry and warm. As an older laminated suit, it’s also quite heavy and devoid of air vents, so it’s far from ideal on a 30°C day in summer. For that, I have a Hein Gericke summer jacket with plenty of air vents, but it’s not waterproof and it’s not warm. We’d been advised to expect temperatures between 5° and 30° in Norway, with possible rain, so I wore the Rukka. Next time, I’ll follow the advice from Motolegends: wear a summer riding jacket and maybe Rokkertech jeans (at £300-odd a pair!) and pack a waterproof Scott jacket and Scott trousers for rainy days. My wife swears by her Scott jacket over her leather one and says it keeps her warm, too. It should mean I stay much more comfortable on warm-to-hot days and won’t have to find room to stow the bulky Rukka pants.

My short Daytona boots were great, staying warm, dry and comfortable throughout, but not too warm on hot days. My Triumph winter gloves were perfect for the wet, cold days, but the well-worn IXS summer gloves I’ve used for about eight years have started bunching on the right palm and causing callouses on my throttle hand, so they’ll have to be replaced. Our Shoei Neotec 2 helmets are basically fine, especially with the convenience of the neat intercom system, even though my head is between two sizes: one removable liner is too tight around the forehead, the other lacks padding on the top of the head. The ‘accessory’ sponge Motolegends supplied solves the top-of-head issue most of the time. In any event, with £560 invested in the Shoei, it’ll have to last a few years yet.

The Garmin satnav was the subject of a separate blog. It still works, and God knows we’d have got totally lost without it many times, but I think it’s time for a change to something more modern and less clunky. So there are a few things we need to do before the 2023 touring season in that endless quest for perfection.

Time to consider a change of touring bike?

Is it time to wave goodbye to our beloved Honda Valkyrie and try something smaller, lighter, more modern? I mentioned when writing about our Norway trip that I’d found my Valkyrie a bit of a handful at low speeds in heavy traffic. It hadn’t been a problem before – was it me, or was it the bike?

When we got home, I weighed our luggage equipment. I was a bit surprised by the results: the round Kuryakyn bag that sits on the rear carrier weighed 3.5kg empty, when the factory weight limit for the carrier is 3kg. We normally pack two sleeping bags in there (1.5kg combined), along with sundry items like a tent lamp, Peter’s Scott waterproof jacket, some adapter plugs and charging wires for the phones and helmets, and a beanie (this trip only). The total with gear was probably 6kg. On top of that we pack our two super-thin air mattresses in a plastic waterproof roll-bag, weighing a further 1.5kg, so we’d been carrying between 7 and 7.5kg up high and well behind the wheel spindle. Some obvious room for improvement there: I plan to ditch the Kuryakyn bag and replace it with another plastic roll-bag, which weighs almost nothing; that would give us a total of a fraction over 3kg back there.

VRCC Norway friend Tommy Oppegaard told me he’d upgraded his rear suspension to take the extra weight of a trailer and suggested I consider the same. That got me thinking: I’d stupidly left the rear shock preload settings at 3, which I used for normal UK riding, instead of 4, which I’ve always used in the past for two-up touring. I realised this early on but my wife said it was comfortable for her and the suspension wasn’t bottoming, and we weren’t planning on riding fast so that we could conserve expensive fuel, so I left it at 3 and forgot about it. It now occurred to me that this could have been a contributory factor to the pendulum effect I’d felt, so that now needs investigation.

I can’t do that just yet, because while we were in Germany we noticed that a weld on each chrome Givi pannier bracket had started to split. The splits never got any worse, but nonetheless they can’t be left like that, so I took them straight off when we got home. We both far prefer the look of the bike without the panniers, so I’m in no rush to get the brackets welded and put everything back on.

While I was weighing everything, I found that the Givi panniers weigh 5kg each and the brackets 1.1kg, meaning that the panniers and brackets add 12.2kg to the bike before we add even a pair of socks. With the Kuryakyn bag, it all comes to 15.7kg of luggage equipment. Maybe that’s not out of the ordinary for motorcycle luggage (I’ve never bothered to check before), but it got me thinking that I need to check out other options before re-fitting the Givis. My last Valkyrie had the factory panniers from the Touring model, which weren’t ideal (won’t take a full-face helmet and aren’t that capacious) but looked fabulous and probably weighed less. I knew from my initial search for luggage some years ago that they were horribly expensive now, borne out by an ad last week on eBay for a second-hand pair, complete with a few paint scuffs and rusty hinges, for £1,000!

So much for the luggage: what about the bike itself? My lower back pain is probably a semi-permanent fixture, possibly an inevitable feature of being 68; some massive proportion of older folk suffer from it, I believe. My physio told me it was all down to bad seating posture, specifically crossing my legs and especially resting one ankle on the opposite knee – my long-preferred position for using my laptop. I’ve written hundreds of thousands of words in that way. Stop that, he said, and it’ll all go away. I did stop, months ago, and the pain improved considerably, but it hadn’t gone away.

However, I recall that the conventional wisdom used to be that the ideal riding position on a bike was one that splits the rider’s weight between wrists, bottom and feet. The Valkyrie’s cruiser stance puts all that weight on the bum, down through the spine. Can that be good for someone with lower back pain? Maybe a new bike with a less upright riding position would help? An hour or so on my Ducati Sport Classic after we got home suggested that the solution may lie in that line of thinking: no back pain whatsoever. Obviously the single-seat Duke would never make for a comfortable touring mount, even with its after-market, flatter bars, but maybe other bikes with flat-ish bars would work?

I sat on a BMW R1200RS in a dealership yesterday and the riding position certainly felt much more comfortable, and the 236kg weight would be an improvement on the Valkyrie’s 309kg. I owned a new BMW R100 back in 1979 and never really loved it, perhaps because the day after I bought it I rode the new Gold Wing K3 and decided that was better! In comparison, the BMW seemed too tappetty and unrefined. Still, it’s worth a test ride. The new Triumph Tiger 900 GT Pro looks interesting, too, with its 198kg and all manner of modern features, from built-in satnav to a phone charger. Having owned three Valkyries now, for a combined total of 15 years, not to mention the Valkyrie Rune for a further seven, I have a huge affinity for these bikes and a massive resistance to change. However, if changes in my skeletal structure mean that there might be more suitable touring bikes out there, it makes sense to check them out.

First, though, I owe it to the Valkyrie to see whether lighter panniers, a lighter carrier load and the correct suspension setting can redeem it. I’m hoping they can.

The worst rain of the trip came on the final leg to Cheshire

The Laon campsite lacked a restaurant but we rode into the old city and found a cobbled street closed to traffic where the locals were celebrating some festival or other (photo above). Jazz bands played and people ate and drank at outside tables, soaking up the vibe. The place was pretty full so we settled for an excellent kebab house where the waiter turned out to be from Afghanistan, where he’d been an interpreter for US forces. He told us that his young children would now grow up safe in France but he regretted that they would know little about their home country, which he doubted would be safe for any of them to visit again.

Peter reckoned she’d seen enough medieval ruins for this trip, so instead of exploring the city next day we went for breakfast at McDonald’s and headed for the coast. Our Flexiplus+ Eurotunnel ticket had been an expensive but necessary indulgence, given that, when we booked it, we had no firm return date in mind. Now, however, it meant that we could pay £10 to change the date and could take the train back that afternoon. Instead, we thought we’d spend one last night under canvas (well, nylon and polyester) and head back the next morning. The idea of camping close to Calais, with its hordes of economic migrants, didn’t hugely appeal, so we headed for Dunkirk and the campsite we’d planned to use on our outward leg before we’d changed the Eurotunnel timing.

The Camping la Lincorne site was on the edge of town, right by the beach and offered incredible value at €9 for the night; we’d been charged an average of about €25 at all our other sites. This one not only had a bar and restaurant but the barmaid cheerfully let us charge both our phones behind the bar. Like many Continental campsites we’d encountered, there were lots of permanent or semi-permanent plots where the caravan was almost welded to a wooden chalet or a large awning tent. There were relatively few basic tents. The pitch next to ours was occupied by a multi-coloured, hand-painted Citroen 2CV with matching trailer-tent. Its elderly occupant and his wife had driven all the way from the UK to Sicily and back in two weeks, which was some going. He wandered over to admire the Valkyrie and share his experiences owning a BMW R69 back in the day.

We dined very well and affordably in the on-site restaurant, Peter enjoying her first-ever taste of rum baba for dessert. Put off post-dinner drinks by the extortionate prices for the past three weeks, we celebrated the last night of our trip with whisky and Cointreau respectively. Up early next morning, there was time for fresh, warm croissants and coffee before riding the final 35 minutes or so to the Eurotunnel terminal at Calais. We didn’t know what to expect in terms of delays or queues, given the problems on the UK end three weeks earlier, but we joined a queue of perhaps three cars and were through in minutes. With the smug self-assurance of people who’d paid extra to travel with some form of priority ticket, we followed the purple road paint in the Flexiplus+ lane to the barrier and were first in line. The light turned green within two minutes, the barrier rose, and we road through, surprised at all this speed and efficiency. All channel crossings should be this easy.

Hah! It turned out that the only reason we were let through was to allow some car-bound passenger to get through and head for his train. We had to wait inside the barrier for perhaps 20 minutes before being allowed to proceed, waiting train-side to be joined by a group of other bikes waiting to board the last, as is the normal procedure for motorcycles. Those bikes had all paid the standard fare. Lesson: Flexiplus+ ain’t worth the money if you’re on a bike, although it does give you the ability to board the next available train, regardless of what time you show up.

Our plan was to meet our son James for lunch in Shoreham before heading on home to Middlewich in Cheshire. He’d just moved there the previous week to take up a new job. A glance at the Garmin showed what looked like an unnecessarily long route, following the M20, M25 and M23. It was 101 miles and would take 1 hour 52 minutes. I thought that was unnecessarily out of our way: surely you could take the coastal route via Hastings and Brighton and that would be quicker? Garmin didn’t offer that option., but Google Maps did, and so we eschewed the motorways and set off on some ridiculous B road that was poorly surfaced, narrow, slow and deeply frustrating. So much for me learning stuff about avoiding the back roads!

We made it to our lunch in Shoreham only 15 minutes late, and afterwards took the fastest route back to Middlewich via the M25, M40, M42 and M6. After three weeks of rising more than 4,700 miles across seven countries, the worst rain hit us when we were about 40 miles from home! It rained steadily, then heavily, and we made it on to our driveway tired, safe, and still dry. The old Rukka and Peter’s much newer Scott and Halverssons did their job. It had been a great trip, even if we didn’t make it to the Lofoten Islands. The Valkyrie hadn’t missed a beat, but even though we’d tried hard to minimise our baggage there were still questions to be answered about our next foray. Was it time to change the bike? Change the luggage? Change the satnav? Time for some reflection.

A ride in the Black Forest with my head in the clouds

The holiday was almost over and we were just trying to find a different route back to the UK, avoiding not only the roadworks delays around Hamburg but also the boredom of the Hamburg to Calais sector. We stuck to the autobahn from Puttgarden at first but our Hamburg avoidance strategy brought us on to the back roads for a while, slowing progress considerably. Peter had chosen the Black Forest town of Baden-Baden as our destination, and we got back on the autobahn as soon as we could to cover the miles.

It felt good to be unbound by speed limits again; in Germany, even the camper vans travel at 80 mph! We came across a section of gridlocked traffic that brought back memories of Hamburg, but this time it was different: the cars in the fast lane pulled over to the left, almost hugging the central reservation, to allow motorcycles a safe and easy passage. We trickled past, the weight of the laden Valkyrie notwithstanding, and possibly saved 45 minutes on that stretch. One guy hadn’t read the memo and was blocking our path, but the guy behind him gave him a sharp horn blast and gave us a shrug and a grin to say “some people”! You gotta love German drivers!

Peter had found us a quiet and slightly weird campsite outside the town – weird inasmuch as we were the only people camping, and all the other caravans seemed to be semi-permanently attached to wooden chalets. The facilities were minimal but it had a decent bar and excellent restaurant, which seemed to be the place to eat for miles around: we had to book a table for each of our two nights there.

Baden-Baden, pictured above, is a beautiful and historic town, dating back to Roman times. It has a well-preserved Roman bathhouse, impressive town centre, old churches, a beautiful park – but it doesn’t possess a single bureau de change! Having stocked up with Norwegian krone in advance of our trip, in case our UK credit and debit cards didn’t work everywhere (they didn’t, but more about that in a later blog), but having spent less time than anticipated in Norway, we had loads of krone and not many euros. Staff in the banks shook their heads and suggested we try Stuttgart – 100km away! The relatively unhelpful attitude of the staff in two banks, the campsite and a mini-market was more an indication of disinterest rather than rudeness, but it was in marked contrast to the friendliness we encountered almost everywhere else.

Peter plotted our exit from Germany on a road called the L500, which I’d never heard of but apparently is much loved by German riders. We headed there after breakfast and enjoyed the first few miles as the road twisted and wound its way playfully up a mountain. The traffic was light, but it soon started to rain. Then we were in thick cloud, or possibly fog, reducing visibility to maybe 10 yards in places on an already very challenging and now slightly greasy-looking road. The morning’s ride suddenly became a matter of survival rather than unadulterated pleasure.

The Garmin will receive a blog of its own soon, but it is not a great tool for micro-managing one’s route in such situations – it’s too clunky and not great for seeing the bigger picture. Peter consulted Google Maps to find a way out of the cloud-bound area. It was a good thing, too – Google was able to highlight that our road was closed farther ahead, blocking our planned route into France, which the Garmin, not operating in real time, could not. With Peter giving directions over the intercom, we branched off the mountain road and descended into a valley, eventually emerging out of the cloud into much clearer weather and, near the French border, some welcome sunshine.

If past trips had taught is anything, it was that European motorways are rarely interesting. They’d also taught us that local roads in places like France and Germany take you through interminable villages with their little roundabouts, speed limits and speed humps. Many, perhaps most, of those roundabouts are so small and tight that there is no natural flow for a heavy two-wheeler, so it can be hard work. So it was that day, and after an hour of tedious travel we opted instead for the autoroute towards Paris and Calais. I remember on first long-distance trip in 1976 or thereabouts watching with envy from those rural French roads as the traffic sped past on the autoroute, which as an impoverished 22-year-old I shunned to avoid paying tolls. Yes, the fuel was more expensive on the autoroute, but we’d long since stopped caring, and €1.90 a litre for E10 no longer seemed extortionate after paying £1.90 in the UK earlier in the summer. We made faster progress toward the French coast and stopped for the night at a campsite in the medieval city of Laon.