It is, in many ways, a demanding way to travel. On a bike, you are exposed to the elements, the vagaries of the roads and the folly of fellow road users. On a bike, there is nowhere to hide. If it is hot, you swelter; if it rains, you get wet; and the biting cold of winter can leave your fingers aching in minutes. On the worst days, rain, cold, cross winds, ice, hail and fog take their turns to make each hour in the saddle a trial of perseverance.
It also has its own delights and joys. On a motorcycle, our lives are disentangled from our usual world, to the extent that everything that matters to us can be packed into a couple of small bags. Everything we need to survive is within arm's reach. The average backpacker carries twice as much, but on a bike there is nowhere to pack anything more and, since we have no space, no need to purchase anything new. Our motto— if you buy a tissue, throw out a tissue— is more than a cute adage. On the road, it is the simple rule we live by, and gives the journey an elegant, joyful logic. You don't need stuff to be happy.
High Road Rider Mike Hannan p10