Chronicles of Cross-Country Motorcycle Adventure

---
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

3.15.2010

Travel Planning Resources

GOOGLE HAS PUT images of the entire world online, for free. Think about how amazing that is. Last year, in “Virtual Traveling for the Rooted Hobo,” Marc Latham talked about using this technology to explore the far corners of the world from the comfort of your office chair. The Street View feature even allows you to virtually tour UNESCO World Heritage Sites. Getting off the beaten path can be difficult when you’re carrying the same guidebook as everyone else, and though wandering aimlessly has an undeniable allure, the world is so huge that worthwhile adventures sometimes need objectives.

If you combine these tactics with a rented car, bicycle, or motorbike, the potential for discovery during your next trip will be wide open.

Google Maps
Satellite View

Google is constantly adding higher resolution images to their satellite photo database, so by now almost every city in the world is covered. Really, try it — pick a town in Kyrgyzstan you’ve never heard of, zoom in, and you can probably make out individual cars.

Even with high-res satellite photos it’s hard to tell exactly what’s on the ground, but large features like craters are easy to pick out. Satellite view is also useful for planning how to get there — the map overlays aren’t always accurate and don’t give any idea of road conditions, so it’s helpful to be able to spot the route yourself.

Google Maps
Photos

Picasa and Panoramio allow users to assign coordinates to their uploaded photos and overlay them onto Google Maps. This gives a level of detail you can’t get from satellite photos, but the real adventure utility is spotting worthwhile destinations in the middle of large expanses of nothing.

In the example above you can see there are a lot of photos tagged on the Plain of Jars, but there’s a separate cluster on the bottom right as well. That’s a town that’s home to a ruined temple, bombed hospital, and other interesting relics, but it’s rarely mentioned in any tourist literature and seldom visited.

Google Maps
Wikimapia

Though Google does integrate with Wikipedia, Wikimapia takes the idea a step further and allows anyone to outline, tag, and describe any feature in the world.

This is invaluable in large cities, where something awesome could be hiding just around the block.

Street View

Street view is only available for a few countries, but it’s probably the most useful thing Google’s ever come up with.

Google Maps

The most practical aspect is that you’re able to see the front of buildings from street level, which saves a lot of number-hunting when you’re trying to find that perfect little coffeeshop you heard about with nothing but an address.

If you’re traveling by bicycle or motorcycle, it’s also a great tool for finding the best route to take.

There are plenty of other non-travel-specific resources on the Web that can come in handy, like Flickr and Wikipedia. With a bit of fooling around, you can find the sites that work best for you and the methods of use that contribute most positively to your adventure style.

3.14.2010

The Motivation

As the first entry into this journal I figured I might as well mention the motivation behind this cross-country motorcycle trip. It really all started when I was a kid flipping through pictures of my Dad raising hell on two-wheels as a "young buck" in the Air Force. Then came all the stories behind those pictures about riding all over the United States and in Panama that had me hooked. It wasn't that the stories were spectacular or had hair-raising plot twists to them but the freedom of just going on these trips alone and having no responsibilities outside of your line-of-sight interested me. The only thing that mattered to him once he was on the road I'd imagined was what kind of crazy people or event is going to come across his path. I envy that feeling. Couple that with my love of the outdoors that I share with my buddy Cole and my brother and you have a recipe for an amazing adventure.
So here was this fantasy I had built up in my mind festering for decades and the stars had not aligned at any point to allow me to pursue this adventure. Then about a year ago it hit me as personal events in my life began to unfold that everything that had stopped me from even attempting something like this were other people in my life. I would think "Well I probably shouldn't get this motorcycle because I will need money soon for a house down payment" or "I cant take that much vacation just for myself because I probably need to save it to visit family with the girlfriend" blah blah blah.... And then one day it just didnt matter. The girlfriend was gone, the money saved up for the house payment just sitting in the bank, and all the plans I had in my head for the next couple years went out the window. Screw everything else I'm doing it. I got up off the couch picked up my laptop and started planning. I researched the bike I would need, how much time would be needed to cross the country, what National Parks are on the way, and how much money I would need to save to pull this once in a lifetime trip together. And I must admit its much harder to put together than one person might imagine.
Hopefully this hasn't been too much personal information and scared you off from following this blog any further but I felt like I needed to give some context to the story and motivation behind what some might consider an irrational or sudden trip. Plus this might go ahead and answer those questions of "Why all of a sudden are you taking this trip?" To which I answer, "For Me."