I picked up a nail on the rear wheel as I was leaving a gas station in Baja and about to cross the Central Desert. It was Sunday, my first day in Mexico and I spoke no Spanish and I was in a little village with 10 houses. Lucky for me a local came by just as I was acting out the motion of "flat tire" to a tire-repair shack at the side of the road. He motioned for me to follow him up some rutted unpaved backroads riding on a flat rear tire. Lucky for me I saw the old orange CB550 in the garden of the local "mechanic" and who it turned out local "drug dealer". 1hr later the tire was fixed and I was speeding across 125 miles of desert
. Clearly if I was skilled in roadside tire repair I could have done it myself but i wasnt. Still I wouldt let that stop you taking a trip. If you are going to take a trip on a 30+ year old bike then you have to expect some adventures along the way. Probably also applies to modern bikes as well.
Supplies I would NOT take (personally speaking)
- oil - pick up oil at any gas station in the world if you dont mind using 10W-40 car oil (as I do) - if you are going to put gas from a big open barrel (some "gas sations" in remote places in Mexico where simply barrels of gas) in your bike why not car oil ;-)
- oil filter - again any auto store has these and unless you are going over 1500-2000 miles why change it?
- brake fluid - rarely goes down over thousands of miles and if it does you have bigger troubles.
- tube patch kit - GOOD idea if you can change tires.
- 2-3 cans of SeaFoam - if you need to use this then your bike wasnt tuned up properly before hand. I guess one would be handy for emergency's.
I do agree with OldSchool about taking a good selection of tools (8mm, 10mm, 12mm, 14mm and 17mm, screwdriver, spark plugs) on a regular basis. These are the heaviest items to carry as spare cables dont weigh very much.
cheers
Andy