Ah Letchworth is a treat. Great food and a nice ride. Enjoy.
Thanks! It's insanely spectacular so far, and I am amazed I've lived as long as I have between Toronto and Niagara without ever having heard of it. Meanwhile, it's actually closer to get to than many of the campgrounds north of Toronto. From Hamilton, anyway.Ah Letchworth is a treat. Great food and a nice ride. Enjoy.
There's a couple Girso's for sale in Alberta for pretty reasonable prices.
I know long distance transactions can be a nuisance and are a risk, but may be worth checking out.
You can find someone to transport the bike to Ontario. I did it through the website Shipsy and got door to door service for a reasonable price. The guy I dealt with moves bike purchases all the time, picking up from private sellers and dropping off at the purchasers house.
I received several quotes, some from shipping companies trying to fill LTL trailers which meant strapping the bike to a pallet and having a suitable place to deliver it to, and other quotes from guys who do vehicle transport with enclosed car hauler trailers etc. and go door to door including residential addresses. All of them are insured etc.What was the cost?
Called TFX International and the cost to ship from BC Interior to Toronto was $1250 + tax + fuel surcharge. Would probably end up around $1500 all in.
It was door-to-door, fully enclosed, full insurance, zero deductible, but still... Ouch.
I received several quotes
The difference between TMX and the other LTL companies and the truck & trailer guys was $800 - 1200, and that was just transport cost and didn't include crating nor drop charge. I would also have had to bring the bike to their warehouse for loading and have someone available to collect it from their warehouse on the other end. I was concerned with accumulating charges if the bike was dropped at their warehouse(s) for pick up and had to sit. Those rates can be pretty high.What was the price range? What did you ultimately end up going with? Understand this is from AB to ON, so not apples->apples.
Haven't shipped by land ever, always just ridden, but starting to see that it does save some a lot of time and wear from the superslab which does end up costing $$$ in the end.
We're also traveling with a couple of dogs (that my wife would only let me leave in the trailer over her dead body), so are pretty limited with options away from hiking trails and outdoor dining.Yeah ...I used to ride through the park, have an excellent old school meal - had lunch there with the kid....so good, and you get your park ticket cost back off the meal.
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and head to the glass museum at Corning...another terrific stop and also great food despite the look.
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marvelous stuff and there is a history of glass making which is fascinating.
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I've seen those, as well as a couple of 1200 SE models that have sold in BC since I've been looking.There's a couple Girso's for sale in Alberta for pretty reasonable prices.
I know long distance transactions can be a nuisance and are a risk, but may be worth checking out.
You can find someone to transport the bike to Ontario. I did it through the website Shipsy and got door to door service for a reasonable price. The guy I dealt with moves bike purchases all the time, picking up from private sellers and dropping off at the purchasers house.
What about air transport - Calgary to Toronto. Vancouver to Toronto ...have done both tho with Air Canada then
Bike'Air | WestJet Cargo Official Site
www.westjetcargo.com
Probably doesn't make sense for my current situation, but the thought of flying with my bike to Rome and taking off from there fills my brain with about a million trip ideas. So, so many things to do from there I'd need about a decade off...Air is limited to major city centres and you need to figure out additional transportation of the bike to and from the airport and additional hotel and living expenses if you're not local. I live 4 hours from Vancouver and 7 hours from Calgary.
With door-to-door shipping, the shipper comes to your house with the truck, loads it at your front door. You fly to your destination and the truck delivers it to your hotel or wherever you are staying. Shipping a motorcycle from Kamloops to Ottawa is logistically difficult by air. Much more so than flying yourself between those two cities.
Probably doesn't make sense for my current situation, but the thought of flying with my bike to Rome and taking off from there fills my brain with about a million trip ideas. So, so many things to do from there I'd need about a decade off...
Cargo flight schedules can be an issue, at least for the flights that ship motorcycles from my recent experience.What about air transport - Calgary to Toronto. Vancouver to Toronto ...have done both tho with Air Canada then
Bike'Air | WestJet Cargo Official Site
www.westjetcargo.com
Cargo flight schedules can be an issue, at least for the flights that ship motorcycles from my recent experience.
While I genuinely appreciate the offer, I'm unlikely to take you up on it. I have to confess, at the time, I was totally a Honda guy. My first bike was a Hawk GT, which was basically an RC30 frame and single-sided swingarm mated to a torquey but limited v-twin pinched from an Ascot. This, naturally, made me a huge fan of the RC30 (still my favourite bike of all time by a country mile), the RC45, and the RC51. I cheered hard for Colin Edwards against your guy Troy Bayliss (though Bayliss is a way easier person to cheer for), in 2000, 2001, and especially 2002, which was the most exciting season of racing I've ever followed. Add in that I am a massive Mick Doohan and Dani Pedrosa fan, despite them being polar opposites in almost every way.@Priller, do you remember the Ducati ST we were talking about earlier?
One just came up for sale at my local dealer:
Inventory Unit Detail UsedMotorcycles.ca
Inventory Unit Detail Kelowna Powersports Kelowna, BC (250) 754-6638www.usedmotorcycles.ca
It's got the 4-valve SBK engine in it. Might test-ride it when I get back to BC.
Will help you crate it and ship it to Toronto if you're interested!
While I genuinely appreciate the offer, I'm unlikely to take you up on it. I have to confess, at the time, I was totally a Honda guy. My first bike was a Hawk GT, which was basically an RC30 frame and single-sided swingarm mated to a torquey but limited v-twin pinched from an Ascot. This, naturally, made me a huge fan of the RC30 (still my favourite bike of all time by a country mile), the RC45, and the RC51. I cheered hard for Colin Edwards against your guy Troy Bayliss (though Bayliss is a way easier person to cheer for), in 2000, 2001, and especially 2002, which was the most exciting season of racing I've ever followed. Add in that I am a massive Mick Doohan and Dani Pedrosa fan, despite them being polar opposites in almost every way.
Pertinent to your other thread I haven't replied to yet, my track bike is an RC51 for that reason. I still have a soft spot for Honda, despite them thoroughly squandering the engineering magic that I think peaked around 1990 between the CBR900RR and RC30, leveled off through 2000 with the first VFR800, and has been in steady decline ever since.
All this to say, the Ducatis of the era leave me cold. Fantastic bikes, fantastic motors, and pushing the L-twin a lot further than most thought it could go. But they don't speak to me the way a bike with that single wing logo does...
I'm in like Flynn, though I'll have to demand Shannonville because I can channel all the races I watched Steve Crevier win there on an RC51 against guys like Frank Trombino...If I ever get a track bike, we'll have to do a Edwards/Bayliss-type showdown (or more likely just doing laps) at Calabogie one day!
(teach you to speak ill of the Desmos)
BTW, I cheered for Nicky Hayden in Honda Repsol colours against Rossi back in '06.
I'm in like Flynn, though I'll have to demand Shannonville because I can channel all the races I watched Steve Crevier win there on an RC51 against guys like Frank Trombino...