My first lap around the sun is over.
It has been one year since I grabbed handlebars and started exploring
the roads of this planet. They were paved and dusty, wide and barely manageable,
sometimes straight but mostly curvy. They were friendly and dangerous, too.
But all the time colorful and interesting.
On the odometer of my only companion, trusty BMW F650,
is the number 45,000. Kilometers to be precise. I used two sets of chains
and tires for the trip from Slovenia to New York, over Connecticut, Massachusetts,
Rhode Island, Maine, Nova Scotia, Newfoundland, Labrador, Quebec, Ontario,
New Brunswick, and back to the USA across Vermont, New Hampshire, New
Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Virginia, West Virginia,
Maryland, Delaware, D.C., North and South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee,
Alabama, Georgia and Florida. I also made a short loop that crossed Missouri,
Kansas to my favorite part of the USA: Utah, Arizona, Colorado, New Mexico,
Nevada, Montana, and Wyoming.
New York brought the first flat tire (and the only one
so far). Maine was so nasty wet that even my computer could not put up
with it. And crashed. I lost 11 articles and over 70 days of diary notes.
Had to be rewritten under a wet tent.
Did not need to go further than Massachusetts to find
my first spoiled food experience. The decision to visit Canada was not
originally part of my plan. I actually decided at a gas station to head
to Nova Scotia. I met an old BMW rider who was sorry I was about to miss
the country of "the friendliest people in the world". So I decided
to check it out.
In less than a day I was on the ferry heading toward
the land where I found what I was looking for. Though I have been to many
places and lands in my travels, Newfoundland and Labrador are the jewels.
I won a whole city of friends in one afternoon and spent the night cooking
for the whole town. Before I left I became a honorary citizen of New Foundland.
It was in Canada as well, and for the first time as well
that I had a moose try to compete with me. A little speed race we had
on one of the nicely paved Canadian highways. He was in the left lane.
I had the right. Luckily, I stopped before he could run me over while
trying to pass me.
Later in the Carolinas, I had the great pleasure of traveling
the Blue Ridge Parkway. It gave me a lot of pleasure to see the incredible
colors of fall. Unforgettable scenery to be remembered for the rest of
my life.
I made it to Florida on a pumpkin day. Halloween they
call it. There were no kids or sweets. Just one horrible hurricane. Before
I made it to my base in Orlando, I ran out of gasoline. I parked on the
side of the interstate and started to walk to the nearest gas station.
Due to the heavy winds, I was able to squeeze only 296 km instead of 450
out of one gas tank. I was getting soaked to the bone when somebody stopped
the car and picked me up. It was a woman willing to help to the "walking
pony tail" as she recalled why she stopped. Americans seldom stop for
the stranger on the road. If you think that God sent her there, you are
right. She was a missionary... And I was a devil at the Halloween party in
Orlando that evening. A lucky devil.
What Florida lacks in curves and twisty roads it makes
up for with sky. Big, blue, with a lot of skydivers over it. And why I
should miss it out? I found a jump site in Deland and I fell completely,
madly in love with the place. After three months, 60 jumps, and a B-license
under my belt (not to mention a new Performance Design parachute packed
in with a Cypress equipped Vector) I no doubt became the first person
traveling around the world with a parachute on a motorcycle.
It wasn't all jumping and riding, though. I had to get
my bike to South America, which required some planning. I contacted numerous
shipping companies to get my BMW to Caracas. Hellmann International said
it would take three days. I wasn't sure if I could wait that long. OK
I thought, I can do 3 days of waiting.
Almost a month latter no one at Hellmann could tell me
how long it would take for my bike to arrive. In a meantime I decided
to waste my time in the most productive way possible. I was talking 10
hours of Spanish lessons every day. While waiting for the bike to arrive
I was, naturally, walking. More suffering to come. I got hit by the bus.
Sure, on a pedestrian crossing. On a green light. Fortunately I was able
to walk away. Good or bad luck again?
More things went wrong in Venezuela. The customs process
for bringing some sponsored goods, like a GPS unit from Tom Wade, and
other items into the country, proved to be a nightmare. Luckily, DHL in
Caracas, managed to understand and reacted properly in a governmental
bureaucratic mess.
After 25 days of waiting I got my bike. Finally. I was
all set to head for the world's largest rain forest. I couldn't wait.
Truth be told, my jungle experience was terrible. So bad it makes me sick
to even think about it again. It started well. I got to pilot a Cessna
over some of the densest jungle of the Amazonian basin. From the co pilot's
seat, to be precise. After shocking my mother with tales of skydiving
I spared her from the story of my flying lessons.
I wanted to see jungle alone, without a tour operator
and hordes of tourists. I needed a guide, I was told. Unfortunately, my
Venezuelan tourist guide turned out to be the biggest nightmare of my
trip so far. After he failed to seduce me he started to drug me. Every
time I drank anything, I got sick. Violently ill. To make the situation
worst I was target for determined insects, laying eggs under the skin.
Local Indians helped me out of this hell, and back to the edge of civilization
where I recovered for a week. It wasn't long before
I could sit on the bike again. And I can't tell you how happy I was to
lose my tourist guide.
Venezuela brought a second crash (obviously I have to
do it every six months) which I suffered when I was riding from the jungle
to a drop zone. Despite the fact I was not injured, I was so mad I had
to forget about jumping that day. Silly me.
In May, I went to Los Roques. I had been wishing for
ages to spend a birthday on a lonely island in the middle of nowhere.
But doing nothing in paradise was not for me. So I took a sailing lesson
and earned my scuba diving license.
My traveling anniversary brought up an idea to extend
my journey into the new millennium. The world is simply too beautiful
to see it in a hurry. I am looking forward to more adventures with my
red Funduro "boyfriend".
Beside the general sponsor BMW Slovenia- Tehnounion Avto
and over 25 others, the last six months brought some new names on the list
of helping hands: Skydive Deland, Performance Design, Relative Workshop,
PD Source, Airteck, Cycoproducte, Givi, Sky System, 1800 Batteries, Tom
Wade, Cood&Groovy Fridge Co., Michigan Suites, M&G Accessories
and many others.
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