First Long Roadtrip
#11
I went on my first long trip last year. The one thing I would do is do a test run packing. That way the night before you're not deciding what to leave behind (probably yours and not hers lol). Lip balm has been said but I will say it again. Also for me I don't wear gloves that often so I bring a small thing of hand lotion. Also cash, we ran into a small gas station that didn't take credit cards. Phone charger, I know obvious but should be said. And I second the under armor. I don't like wearing a jacket either and this stuff allows just a long sleved t-shirt for riding. Day and night glasses in case you do any riding at night.
And the last thing you should plan on bringing is an extra day. Just in case. After the last trip I'm always going to work in an extra day in case of weather. It sucks when it's pouring or worse and you "have" to get home for wrk or whatever.
Have fun man, and it's cool that your girl is going. Mine says "the Harley thing can be your thing". I'm not exactly complaining though. HAHA.
And the last thing you should plan on bringing is an extra day. Just in case. After the last trip I'm always going to work in an extra day in case of weather. It sucks when it's pouring or worse and you "have" to get home for wrk or whatever.
Have fun man, and it's cool that your girl is going. Mine says "the Harley thing can be your thing". I'm not exactly complaining though. HAHA.
#12
My wife and I do an annual week or so trip and the packing thing is certainly different for two. I ride an Ultra so there is some pretty good storage but still, we have always taken too many clothes, and since you are staying at friends take the opportunity to wash clothes. I would definitely try to do with only three days worth of clothes in layers. Take your old streched, worn out underwear and socks and throw them away as you go. I always take long sleeve t-shirts, that keeps the sun and wind burn to a minimum. You will need some good rain gear, the extra cost for the good stuff is worth it in the rain. It will get cold somewhere so cold weather gear is in order. I pack a leather jacket, or cordura, a sweat shirt or better yet a fleece shirt or vest. The sweat shirt or fleece can be worn alone for the not quite so cold mornings. One pair of riding boots and something else to wear after riding, I usually take something like dock shoes they pack easily and are light. If you know your itinerary close enough ship some clothes to the friends, switch and ship the dirties back home, it costs a little but well worth not having to carry it. Most of the big road bikes really can't be worked on on the road. I carry a minimum tool kit to tighten things that vibrate loose, but you really can't fix a flat or change a tire on the road, have a good towing plan. I do carry a tubeless plug kit and a small electric air pump to maybe get to the next town and a siphon hose just in case.
We put our rain gear, gloves (two kinds, light leather and Cordura lined cold weather gloves) in a roll bag on top of everything so it is easy to access. Also a couple of the neck gaiter/warmer things are invaluable in cool or cold weather and they take up zero room. The bike really handles differently with two people and luggage, so I can't stress enough about packing very light. Cash is good, there may be some out of the way gas stops that don't take a credit card, but if you stay on most main roads that shouldn't be a problem. If you wife is the type and can leave the hair dryer, make up kit, shoes at home then you are ahead already. Most of all have fun. Oh everybody in the group doesn't need a GPS, ideally let someone else take it.
We put our rain gear, gloves (two kinds, light leather and Cordura lined cold weather gloves) in a roll bag on top of everything so it is easy to access. Also a couple of the neck gaiter/warmer things are invaluable in cool or cold weather and they take up zero room. The bike really handles differently with two people and luggage, so I can't stress enough about packing very light. Cash is good, there may be some out of the way gas stops that don't take a credit card, but if you stay on most main roads that shouldn't be a problem. If you wife is the type and can leave the hair dryer, make up kit, shoes at home then you are ahead already. Most of all have fun. Oh everybody in the group doesn't need a GPS, ideally let someone else take it.
Last edited by harleyflyboy; 04-28-2010 at 04:14 PM.
#13
I'm sure there will be push back from other members on this but....
Forget the tools and make sure your road side assistance membership is paid up. If this were the 70s or 80s I would not make this statement because we HAD to carry tools in that day. But I can't remember the last time I had a mechanical problem that could be remedied along side of the road. HD quality and dependability has really improved over the years. If you must carry tools, split them up amongst your group. Each of you decide ahead of time what the other person will bring. This goes for other 'must have ' items (read: wife needs). Have to pack a hair drier? Only one or two bikes should take one and have the ladies share. I hate doing laundry. If you are going to stay at a friends and this stay is in the middle of your trip, send a UPS package to them with clean clothes so they are there when you arrive and then send another one back to your house with the dirty clothes (and any trinkets you've picked up along the way). If shipping clothes is not an option, do minimal laundry and take along your rat underwear, t-shirts and socks to throw away as they get dirty then buy some new along the way.
That's my minimalist approach
Forget the tools and make sure your road side assistance membership is paid up. If this were the 70s or 80s I would not make this statement because we HAD to carry tools in that day. But I can't remember the last time I had a mechanical problem that could be remedied along side of the road. HD quality and dependability has really improved over the years. If you must carry tools, split them up amongst your group. Each of you decide ahead of time what the other person will bring. This goes for other 'must have ' items (read: wife needs). Have to pack a hair drier? Only one or two bikes should take one and have the ladies share. I hate doing laundry. If you are going to stay at a friends and this stay is in the middle of your trip, send a UPS package to them with clean clothes so they are there when you arrive and then send another one back to your house with the dirty clothes (and any trinkets you've picked up along the way). If shipping clothes is not an option, do minimal laundry and take along your rat underwear, t-shirts and socks to throw away as they get dirty then buy some new along the way.
That's my minimalist approach
Now...all of those situations were remedied by a simple tool kit that packs in about the same space as my Glock. I don't ride without either.
#14
#16
Last edited by doc_cj; 04-29-2010 at 12:58 AM.
#17
I try to pack for any possible conditions we might get into... especially since you are going into some pretty high elevations, you never know what you are going to get. I would guess you will go from hot as hell to cold as ice within the course of your ride. I would rather fill up my space with different options for riding gear and pack less t-shirts, pants, etc...
When we went on our 3 week Alaska ride, my buddies ended up shipping half of their "random" clothing home one week into it.
It's already been said, but, it bears repeating... get good raingear!!! Do some research and find truly waterproof gloves... most of the ones that say they are, are not. I didn't do this on my first big roadtrip... I thought "we can just wait out the occasional rain cloud". Yeah, that doesn't happen.
The mesh jackets are worth their weight in gold for hot weather riding... cool as a T-shirt but keep the sun off your skin (and your skin on you if something goes wrong). You can soak your shirt with water and put the jacket on over it and you have air conditioning for a short period of time (drys pretty fast at 75mph).
The small tool wrap that comes with your bike is awesome... everything you need for minor adjustments and the things that are easy fixes along the road. If it's bigger than what the tool kit can handle, it's probably to big to fix on the road.
When we went on our 3 week Alaska ride, my buddies ended up shipping half of their "random" clothing home one week into it.
It's already been said, but, it bears repeating... get good raingear!!! Do some research and find truly waterproof gloves... most of the ones that say they are, are not. I didn't do this on my first big roadtrip... I thought "we can just wait out the occasional rain cloud". Yeah, that doesn't happen.
The mesh jackets are worth their weight in gold for hot weather riding... cool as a T-shirt but keep the sun off your skin (and your skin on you if something goes wrong). You can soak your shirt with water and put the jacket on over it and you have air conditioning for a short period of time (drys pretty fast at 75mph).
The small tool wrap that comes with your bike is awesome... everything you need for minor adjustments and the things that are easy fixes along the road. If it's bigger than what the tool kit can handle, it's probably to big to fix on the road.
#18
You said your taking your wife with you? Ive done many long rides with my sons, but only one with my wife and that was last week. I rented a Ultra Classic for the trip, one way it was only 400 miles to our destination, plus another 400 miles of riding around once we were there, total was 1250 miles start to finish. Point, my wife was going to KILL me. She got bored even with the radio on, she got cold even with good riding gear and a full face helmet, there is nothing worse than a unhappy female passenger, unhappy men bear down and take it most of the time. Do a test run of 100 miles one way and back and see how she holds up.
Set your bike up for comfort, I would ditch that short windshield and get a proper sized one that gets the air buffeting off your face, get a used ultra classic seat off of ebay so both of you are comfortable. Use chap-stick, by the end of the trip your lips will crack and fall off if your using a half helmet and short windshield. Im assuming your going to have a tour pack on the rear, pack as much weight in your saddle bags to keep the weight centered low. Carry a good roll of electric tape, I use this when it gets just a little cool out, tape the bottom of pants around your boots to prevent a draft, plus you can use it for other fixs if needed.
Notify your credit union or bank of the days your going to be on the road. Ive had them shut down my cards for usage when out of state, they thought the cards were stolen.
Your traveling with 10 people, someone is going to get weird, take it with a grain of salt, stay calm.
Set your bike up for comfort, I would ditch that short windshield and get a proper sized one that gets the air buffeting off your face, get a used ultra classic seat off of ebay so both of you are comfortable. Use chap-stick, by the end of the trip your lips will crack and fall off if your using a half helmet and short windshield. Im assuming your going to have a tour pack on the rear, pack as much weight in your saddle bags to keep the weight centered low. Carry a good roll of electric tape, I use this when it gets just a little cool out, tape the bottom of pants around your boots to prevent a draft, plus you can use it for other fixs if needed.
Notify your credit union or bank of the days your going to be on the road. Ive had them shut down my cards for usage when out of state, they thought the cards were stolen.
Your traveling with 10 people, someone is going to get weird, take it with a grain of salt, stay calm.
#19
I'm sure there will be push back from other members on this but....
Forget the tools and make sure your road side assistance membership is paid up. If this were the 70s or 80s I would not make this statement because we HAD to carry tools in that day. But I can't remember the last time I had a mechanical problem that could be remedied along side of the road. HD quality and dependability has really improved over the years. If you must carry tools, split them up amongst your group. Each of you decide ahead of time what the other person will bring. This goes for other 'must have ' items (read: wife needs). Have to pack a hair drier? Only one or two bikes should take one and have the ladies share. I hate doing laundry. If you are going to stay at a friends and this stay is in the middle of your trip, send a UPS package to them with clean clothes so they are there when you arrive and then send another one back to your house with the dirty clothes (and any trinkets you've picked up along the way). If shipping clothes is not an option, do minimal laundry and take along your rat underwear, t-shirts and socks to throw away as they get dirty then buy some new along the way.
That's my minimalist approach
Forget the tools and make sure your road side assistance membership is paid up. If this were the 70s or 80s I would not make this statement because we HAD to carry tools in that day. But I can't remember the last time I had a mechanical problem that could be remedied along side of the road. HD quality and dependability has really improved over the years. If you must carry tools, split them up amongst your group. Each of you decide ahead of time what the other person will bring. This goes for other 'must have ' items (read: wife needs). Have to pack a hair drier? Only one or two bikes should take one and have the ladies share. I hate doing laundry. If you are going to stay at a friends and this stay is in the middle of your trip, send a UPS package to them with clean clothes so they are there when you arrive and then send another one back to your house with the dirty clothes (and any trinkets you've picked up along the way). If shipping clothes is not an option, do minimal laundry and take along your rat underwear, t-shirts and socks to throw away as they get dirty then buy some new along the way.
That's my minimalist approach
I don't know what kind of harley u ride, but **** loosens up on the rest of ours with some regularity.
I carry tools to address most external problems and I also have AAA plus RV just in case. I have had to take off my heel shifter and use it for the toe shifter last road trip when the toe shifter stripped.
I fixed my buddy's dad's headlamp that same trip some 1000 miles before.
I never have had to call AAA for my motorcycle, and that includes a stuck shifter pawl on my ducati. But that isn't to say it won't happen.
I do know I am not going to be in some sunset valley in northern nowhere Montana saying "****, I can't get reception. Maybe I can use the phone as a hammer and the credit card as a screwdriver (which just may work, come to think of it).
My advise,
Go light on clothes. Think double duty.
Carry rain gear, and boots, no matter where u ride there will be a time if you ride long enough.
I carry a cooler, something good to drink while I sit on a rock somewhere, and a good camera.
Take your time, and have fun!
#20
i have made some of the adjustments for long trips.. i bought the 10 inch windshield so it protecrts a little better and a sundowner seat ...
and i know what your talking about with the TP roll... even at 24 years old nature can be abit inconvenient sometimes
thanks for the tips everyone... keep them comming...
and i know what your talking about with the TP roll... even at 24 years old nature can be abit inconvenient sometimes
thanks for the tips everyone... keep them comming...