Silk and Siberia
- Taipan
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Re: Silk and Siberia
Surprised he didn't have paper maps and a compass as a back up tbh? Not sure i'd want to be heading into that kinda territory without some sort of back up to electronic gadgets! Anyway, glad he's salvaging something from it and enjoying what he is now doing!
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Re: Silk and Siberia
I've done a couple of slightly remote two week trips. And by the end of those I've had enough of my bike and my mates and constantly haggling for stuff.
While going further afield sounds more exotic, it also usually means more open sewers, aggressive begging and biting insects. Some of the places he was talking were probably shitting in a bag territory.
While going further afield sounds more exotic, it also usually means more open sewers, aggressive begging and biting insects. Some of the places he was talking were probably shitting in a bag territory.
- Taipan
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Re: Silk and Siberia
My Wifes Uncle used to get those printed out directions from the AA! We met them at campsite in Spain nd I towed a cravan down there. He gave me a list of towns to head for and I had one of these on the dash so I knew I was heading in the right direction!Potter wrote: ↑Sat Jun 03, 2023 3:20 amI haven't done much touring but I've done a bit, in the 1990's we had a program on our computer at work that used to do printouts of the route, not pictures, just a list of the roads we'd need to take. We'd print off the main routes and then head off, swapping pages on the tank bag every day, we managed a lot of Europe just like that.
Today I have a satnav for my camper which I put the dimensions of it in so it only takes me along suitable roads!
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- ChrisW
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Re: Silk and Siberia
Maybe I'm being a bit of a luddite or overcautious,I look on Google Earth & on line maps but I like paper maps so I've never used a Sat Nav,I look at maps before I go & tape the directions to the tank.
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Re: Silk and Siberia
I know it's not quite the same, but did 2 months in eastern Europe 20 years ago with paper maps. Every morning there was a fresh list taped to the steering wheel and off we'd go. City/ town centres could be interesting, but other than that, map and compass were good.
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Re: Silk and Siberia
Pfft...I used to deliver Pizza for Domino's with only an A-Z (which didn't even cover my whole patch) for guidance and no option to look at it on the move. Deliveroo riders don't know they're born!
Basically the same thing as riding thousands of miles across Europe and Asia
Basically the same thing as riding thousands of miles across Europe and Asia
- Noggin
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Re: Silk and Siberia
It wasn't just the satnav - that was a final straw. I'm 100% sure that if everything had gone smoothly until that point, he'd have been perfectly capable of sorting maps and going on!! But when it's the next in a long list of things to knock you, it ends up being the final straw. Hell of a challenge to do that trip in a group, but solo you do need to be sure of things!!
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Re: Silk and Siberia
I used to know London pretty well when I was despatching... but today, it's changed so much some areas I simply don't recognise.
"If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer." Henry David Thoreau
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Re: Silk and Siberia
That's me with Belfast and I grew up there.The Spin Doctor wrote: ↑Sat Jun 03, 2023 2:20 pm I used to know London pretty well when I was despatching... but today, it's changed so much some areas I simply don't recognise.
I live in Ballymena now and couldn't name a single street in it apart from my own, but I know Portrush, Omagh and Cookstown like a local.
You can nearly guarantee a satnav will be outdated by the time the latest map update is available.
- Cousin Jack
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Re: Silk and Siberia
I mostly use a sat nav in a different way. It tells me exactly where I am, and I can use the map on the sat nav to identify the next major towns thst might make it onto roadsigns. My main problems in the back roads of Europe has been knowing where I am.
Works for me, just as long as the signs arent in weird script. I doubt it would work in Asia or the Middle East.
Works for me, just as long as the signs arent in weird script. I doubt it would work in Asia or the Middle East.
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Re: Silk and Siberia
That's actually how I used the sat nav back from Sussex earlier today.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Sat Jun 03, 2023 7:53 pm I mostly use a sat nav in a different way. It tells me exactly where I am, and I can use the map on the sat nav to identify the next major towns thst might make it onto roadsigns. My main problems in the back roads of Europe has been knowing where I am.
Works for me, just as long as the signs arent in weird script. I doubt it would work in Asia or the Middle East.
When I had a kip, SWMBO took over and followed Waze religiously... took about 90 minutes to do what should have been a 60 min drive back across London. I have no idea why the sat-nag was routing us into the jams but by the time I woke up we were stuck in heavy traffic.
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- Count Steer
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Re: Silk and Siberia
My first 'sat nav' was a hand held thing that simply gave you coordinates/map reference because all I needed to know in extremis was where I was on the map. It was not for cars and bikes but was (not really an exaggeration) a bit of a life saver in thick fog on a sticky up bit of the Pyrenees. Maps are but it really helps if you know where you are on one.Cousin Jack wrote: ↑Sat Jun 03, 2023 7:53 pm I mostly use a sat nav in a different way. It tells me exactly where I am, and I can use the map on the sat nav to identify the next major towns thst might make it onto roadsigns. My main problems in the back roads of Europe has been knowing where I am.
Works for me, just as long as the signs arent in weird script. I doubt it would work in Asia or the Middle East.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
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Re: Silk and Siberia
My first experiences with GPS (on a boat) were the same...literally lat/long and programmable locations. Took it about 10 mins to find its feet too This was back before the yanks turned down the encryption, so it only worked to +/- 50m or so.
Similarly useful in a proper sudden pea souper out in the Channel!
Similarly useful in a proper sudden pea souper out in the Channel!
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Re: Silk and Siberia
I was a latecomer to GPS. I used maps for the first 4 or 5 forrays into Europe on the bike. No problemo, until one day I was heading through the Black Forest en route to Austria. I was early, so started exploring tiny roads and enjoyed a couple of hours just bimbling about. Then I realised that tempus had fugit, and I was long way from the hotel in Austria. Even worse was the fact I had no idea where I was within about 50 miles, and the last 17 signposts had been for obscure villages in Germany. My only map tthat covered the area was a map of Europe, and that didnt help much.
To cut a long story short I tried to keep heading in a direction that I though would pick up a main road, and then had to ride across Switzerland on their Mways, through Zurich in rush hour, to get to the hotel in time for dinner. Next trip I had a sat nav!
To cut a long story short I tried to keep heading in a direction that I though would pick up a main road, and then had to ride across Switzerland on their Mways, through Zurich in rush hour, to get to the hotel in time for dinner. Next trip I had a sat nav!
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- Horse
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Re: Silk and Siberia
Luxury!Mr. Dazzle wrote: ↑Sun Jun 04, 2023 7:23 pm Similarly useful in a proper sudden pea souper out in the Channel!
A group of us sailed from Lymington to Cherbourg, before heading off to Alderney.
We set of at 8pm. Dead calm, so motoring rather than sail. At 3am, into fog. We could the engines of ships going through the channel. At one point wven felt its wake. Scary, very.
None of this GPS stuff. We had a compass and an AM radio with a swivelling antenna to get bearings.
We emerged from the fog at 8am, a mile off the Eastern end of the Cherbourg harbour wall.
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Re: Silk and Siberia
I have a rough idea of where many bigger towns are in France, Spain, Germany, Croatia, Bosnia and Austria, I still have no idea where anywhere is in relation to anywhere else in Czechia. All except Brno is East of Prague.
Ridden there and back every year since 2009 (except 2020) and am still no wiser.
Ridden there and back every year since 2009 (except 2020) and am still no wiser.
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