What are you looking at for a bike?The $20K bike I'm looking at today will be hands down the most expensive bike I've ever bought, and $20K was the limit I told myself I wouldn't ever exceed. I've wanted one of these bikes for about 3 years now, but was sitting on my hands waiting for the prices to get to that level so that I could stick to that budget, so I've got that going at least. I knew when I bought the Vulcan for $8 or $9K or whatever it was in 2019 it was only a stepping stone, and that was before I even came to the conclusion it's never worked quite right ergonomically for me.
The new ride will be financed of course, but without any other car payments or anything right now (yay for an 13 old daily driver Volt and having been able to pay off our 2017 rather quickly), it's not going to be a big deal.
YOLO.
Yamaha star venture. Not my thing but a cool looking bike.What are you looking at for a bike?
What are you looking at for a bike?
Tents: Get a two man and you can have some room for a bit of your stuff inside too. A 1 man tent is barely big enough to sleep in.
Top secretSee page 1.
Its not just a couch on wheels. It the whole living room.Yamaha star venture. Not my thing but a cool looking bike.
Top secret
A 2 man tent is the minimum size a man can comfortably use for moto camping.Tents: Get a two man and you can have some room for a bit of your stuff inside too. A 1 man tent is barely big enough to sleep in.
I run a TI BRS from ali, that's my beater stove that I use 99% of the time, saving the MSR for backup.I just looked on Aliexpress and see those style stoves are a dime a dozen (lots of options) at around $10, so one may find its way into my cart. My wife got me one of the backpacker Thermacell units for Christmas (I have one of the small handheld units now and I swear by those things), so the bigger butane cylinders are going to be in my future anyways, so one of these could be handy for motocamping. I do like the Biolite for it's fuel versatility, but it is certainly bigger than one of these.
I'm all for roughing it and such, but I won't sleep in such a way that the bugs can feast on me all night long, especially if it's hot as balls out and you're sleeping in your skivvies.
Did that once, heck no ever again. Thermacell is an option and great and all I guess in this situation until the pad loses effectiveness around 4-5 hours.
Have not swapped back to a tent after adopting hammock camping. Highly recommended, Hennesey and CRUA are great.Tents: Get a two man and you can have some room for a bit of your stuff inside too. A 1 man tent is barely big enough to sleep in.
The fortnine kid says it's all you need but I've camped in lots of places where there weren't sufficient or close enough trees. It also means you camp in the bush with the bugs instead of the clearing with a bit of breeze. That kid is often wrong.I would love to be able to sleep in a hammock for simplicity and such in some situations, however I am a 100% side sleeper so it's not really an option.
The fortnine kid says it's all you need but I've camped in lots of places where there weren't sufficient or close enough trees.
Also a lifetime side sleeper. I have a Hennesy Explorer Zip. Sleeping on my side works fine and is very comfy. It's also nice to always have a level sleeping platform, since most campsites are far from flat or level. However, turning over in the night is a PITA and requires waking up to re-shuffle the blanket/sleeping bag back to where it's supposed to be. The packed size is only very slightly smaller than my 2 person Nemo Aurora tent.I'd be perfectly good with cosy/tiny, I'd actully really enjoy it probably. It's just the requirement to sleep on your back I can't do....why, I don't know, but I just can't sleep on my back. I have tried laying and napping in a hammock before and of course ended up on my side the second I fell asleep and then I woke up an hour later...well...
View attachment 65526
I did some more reading after this thread was first posted and found out that there are "side sleeper" hammock variants, but it seems that they have a ton more bulk, and by the time you carry all that extra bulk with the platform bits etc I'm not sure you're much further ahead in any way vs a tent, except being off the ground I guess?
The good thing with his portly bike is it may be heavy enough to be one of the "trees". Hell, it is almost big enough to be both of the trees. (obviously said in jest, forces on a hammock rope are crazy)Also a lifetime side sleeper. I have a Hennesy Explorer Zip. Sleeping on my side works fine and is very comfy. It's also nice to always have a level sleeping platform, since most campsites are far from flat or level. However, turning over in the night is a PITA and requires waking up to re-shuffle the blanket/sleeping bag back to where it's supposed to be. The packed size is only very slightly smaller than my 2 person Nemo Aurora tent.
Also, as you've already stated, there are many places where a hammock just doesn't work. Wilderness campsites, sure no problem finding trees. Provincial park campground, not bloody likely you can find appropriate trees without trekking through the underbrush, and the parkies will freak out if you tie anything to a tree.
Hammocks are great in theory, but far from ideal for "normal" motorcycle camping. I've given up on mine unless I'm going somewhere that I know it will work.
The good thing with his portly bike is it may be heavy enough to be one of the "trees". Hell, it is almost big enough to be both of the trees.
Doesn't LazyBoy make an aftermarket seat with a pullout bed for Ventures?The good thing with his portly bike is it may be heavy enough to be one of the "trees". Hell, it is almost big enough to be both of the trees. (obviously said in jest, forces on a hammock rope are crazy)
Doesn't LazyBoy make an aftermarket seat with a pullout bed for Ventures?