Weather!!!

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ashman said:
Hi Jean

Yes we have some great weather here and we have some of the deadless poisonous creatures here, but hey they leave me alone and I leave them alone so all cool with me and as Ian is close neighbours to Queensland we share the same weather, if you ever get down this way you will always be welcome at my place and I will always have a bike for you to enjoy this neck of the woods...

Ashley

You never know... happy holidays, even if you don't have snow. If you want to cool off, you are welcomed here, but impossible to ride in snow unless you are crazy like Hobot (Steve). When I was 18 I rode to school during a whole winter and only ate at the cafeteria a couple of times when it was really bad, I could ride home and back during lunch hour because it was only 3 or 4 Km one way, I may still have parts of my brain frozen solid from those days when the mercury dipped way down to -25C and sometimes lower.

Santa must sweat like a pig where you are :wink:

Jean
 
Oh my Ludwig had me on edge of seat squealing and LOL at the rooster tailing zig zag and on the view of picking up a 'snow angel' : ) I'm still waiting for the 'other shoe to drop' on putting the side stand down but not showing letting go of bike ...
22. C below, I'd think tires would crack and you'd need diesel instead of oil to run.

I may be a south Fla native but know snow enough to recognize dry crystalline powder with some grit friction but still tiny ice with a wet layer grip threshold.
I've not had a Cdo running to try on snow. Its not so much play for me as forced practice for highway crisis saves and to practice 'slowly' other phases of handling that only work when out of full traction. Forced crisis, like a kidnap victim bonding with captors, has imprinted unhealthy addiction to riding loose. On SV 17" race only slick tires I could hardly get going enough to make head way unless starting off slight down hill. I had to stay in slightly spun state, I assume similar to claim max traction of 10% tire slippage. Any more = wipe out. One pain in the arse was to discover that even a slightly spun tire in max grip state, no matter what - will weather vane down hill once pure ballistic speed is lost, So no matter what the front will aways point up hill and not the way home. Had to 'burn' out to swing back down to get any where again. I did find a way to get over steering fast decreasing radius turn with rear spinning by tipping my butt to jerk bike over at same time flip to straight steering into turn, whips bike around so fast it literally spiraled me into the snow packed grass. Its similar to the rolling burn out stunters do w/o feet on the ground. I'd turned mirrors in and bike landed on me so nothing hurt but cold fingers and toes.

Blocking wind is the primary way to stay warm, next is covering, then heat sources. I've been caught out and know engine fins only help a few seconds.
Peel's huge screen made completely still air behind it. Id light cig's with bic lighter at any speed. If I stopped I got chilled as slight breeze hit, roll again, still air again. I rotated after market mirrors under bars and could aim them so in combo with the bar end shields not much wind got to hands. On rides below freezing I'd stick heat packs in palms of gloves and boot toes, ahhhh. I'd pack them in small plastic bottle w/o little air space and seal up to shut em down and get more hours of use later when exposed to oxygen. About 20'F is as cold as I would ride on purpose w/o more serious heating methods. New Peel's 600 watts is big part of her all weather comfort character plan.

Its often 20' or less in am's but then 50's by late morning till sun gets low and temps drop fast again. I carried extra layers on rack as never knew how late I'd be getting to or returning on motorcycles.

As I've regrown my neck my skinny body take cold a bunch better. Last 2 yr I could lose feeling in hands but core muscles still worked and they did not burn on warm up, yeah! Prior would lose grip and level control, dead numb paralysis : (
Nerves control most of circulation and bike postures can aggravate spinal cord to decay cold tolerance even more. This year I practice a bit by washing hands in unheated water and stick a hand out car window at 60 to see what I can take. I feel it but it just don't bite deep like it used to. This getting old is great for me and an 82 year old, very distant patient, recovered enough he rides a Yamaha V Star in Smokey Mt's, with a wind screen though.
 
All I can say is they must be lacking in barbed-wire fences in Finland. You'd find yourself in the emergency room before long after trying an open country ride like that around here. Looks fun, though.
 
In the video, the rider had just the right conditions, loose snow on hard ground, didn't look like there was a deep layer of snow under the loose powder. Here even on skis and snowshoes, I know I am standing on 3 to 6 feet of snow and in some regions much more than that. I can poke a stick and drive it down all the way to the ground. Even a light motorcycle would instantly dig in and not go anywhere. Snowmobiles don't run well unless the snow has been trampled down by many other snowmobiles, in deep deep snow, only certain snowmobiles can go anywhere, the old Bombardier Alpine with dual tracks could pretty well do it, but not the regular ones.

Jean
 
Riding/driving in snow so deep only tips of marker poles keep ya on the path.
There are fields around me a mile or so across but in rolling land so you can't see anything but grass as if on ocean of green swells. Steve McQueen would feel at home. its neat sensation like on a boat in a lake to just turn and go any which way.

The hardest thing, short of mud on ice layer to ride was truck trap a few feet deep filled with polished hard pea gravel. As far as I know asking around for a few years, Ms Peel is the only wheeled craft to ever not get stuck floated hi centered. Bike got into a dog paddle posture head high tail low about 25-30 degree angle the whole way after the shock of racing out into it and pulled down to 3 mph in 2 bike lenghts, but no way to turn around. Got out after a couple minutes/50 yds before arrested.
 
In Nebraska we say "if you don't like the weather, wait an hour or two and it will change". Yesterday, 52. I rode both my Combat and Trident, just to warm them up a bit. As I write this, 10 degrees, blowing snow, with winds almost all day from 35-50 mph. Supposed to be in the 40s by Wednesday. I think riding in winter keeps me sane. I've been keeping my streak going since March of 1987. I've ridden a motorcycle every month out of the year in that time span. Yes, some rides have been utterly miserable, but it helps with the cabin fever. Believe it or not, January has been the most likely of the three "bad" months to get a ride in. December and February are usually when I wonder if the streak will come to an end. Keeps me going through the dark days of winter.
 
Central Illinois has been absolutely miserable for the last two or three weeks. 10" last week and single digits into the teens and 20's for highs. Had a couple days in the 30's, but it rained and is now freezing again with wind. I know it's too stinkin early for this kind of cold yet.
 
It has been a bit cold here too, at my house (3200 feet elevation), a cold front brought the early morning temperature down to 42º. With no central heat in the house, wifey and I are on exceptionally good terms, getting along well, to keep each other warm!

We got some snow too.... that cold front merged with a wet system, and dumped two feet of it on the summit of mauna kea (13,000 feet), directly above my headlight in pic. Winter sucks, dontcha think?

Weather!!!
 
Well I guess I'll report the weather here, Close to 80 today. First thing in the morning tied the wife on the back of the 75 and rode down the coast to Newport Beach then returned home and took the 72 out to the Orange County Vintage Bike meet. We had over 85 bikes show, Although it has been cold here the last few weeks today was like summer. http://www.vintagebikeoc.com/home/index.php :lol:
 
Here in Hong Kong Winter has really set in and yesterday I was obliged to don a T-shirt for my walk down to the beach for a swim. 21 degrees C, perfect riding weather, cool enough to wear protective gear without overheating. It should stay like this until about March then it gets very hot and humid. However before I receive too many poison-pen letters, I will probably be in Scotland for about a week in January, so no swimming there.
 
dave M said:
Here in Hong Kong Winter has really set in and yesterday I was obliged to don a T-shirt for my walk down to the beach for a swim. 21 degrees C, perfect riding weather, cool enough to wear protective gear without overheating. It should stay like this until about March then it gets very hot and humid. However before I receive too many poison-pen letters, I will probably be in Scotland for about a week in January, so no swimming there.

An evil man
 
It's 23F in VA and going down to the teens tonight. The Norton is back in the workshop in a heated space for the winter. Oh, to be in the land of poisonous toads.

Dave
69S
 
It's supposed to be like that in MN. My wife is from Moose Lake, why do you think she moved away?

Dave
69S
 
Pretty nice riding weather in Boulder County today. I rode my 850 to work and it was very pleasant. Hit 60 degrees this afternoon and even the ride home in the evening felt nice. Normally at this time of year it gets cold really fast when the sun goes down. Tonight it felt like a California winter evening, not Colorado! The roads are clear and dry too, not even any sand.

Might snow later in the week though. You have to take your winter riding days when you can here!

Debby
 
It was nine (9) degrees F here in North Alabama this morning..... hasn't been above 25 degrees at my house since Friday or Saturday.

This is a miserable beginning to my Christmas vacation. It's typically in the 60s here in December, maybe even the 70s, makes for a nice vacation full of motorcycle riding..... So far, all my motorcycle plans for this December are on hold.

I just don't know how much more of this global warming I can stand.

Rod
 
Rod R said:
I just don't know how much more of this global warming I can stand.

Did you notice they never hold world weather conferences in places where it is likely to get a bit nippy, hard to sell global warming in a major snowstorm isn't it :roll:

Jean
 
Global warming like most things is a concept dreamed up by academics, sold to stupid governments and paid for by the even more stupid taxpayer!

It registered just about 2 deg C here today, almost summer! :lol:

I did though go to the garage and sit on a couple of Nortons for a while, sad isn't it :lol:
 
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