Author Topic: Central Illinois to Leland Michigan: 1300 trouble free miles on a 75 550k!  (Read 7160 times)

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Wykydtron

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So finally getting around to posting about my recent trip up to Leland Michigan from Champaign Illinois.  The main reason for going to Leland was to catch the boat out to North Manitou Island which is a 15k sq. acre wilderness that is part of Sleeping Bear Dunes National Lakeshore.  I backpacked/camped/hiked out there for a week.  The other reason was the last time I went up there, I drove and thought to myself, I HAVE to get a freakin bike up here.  The roads up near Leland(Traverse City area) are bikers heaven, specifically route 22 which hugs the coast of Lake Michigan and goes through a bunch of little towns situated around beautiful inland lakes, breathtaking.  Not to mention all the twisties!  I stayed almost entirely off interstate the entire ride up and was very glad I did.  It was great going through all the little towns and having old guys sitting out on their porches giving you a wave, or the random gas station attendant, biker,or guy pumping gas accross from you striking up 15+minute conversations about life in general.  I guess theres something about a little vintage Jap bike loaded down with a 65lb frame pack and ammo box saddle bags that says, this guy is going somplace and I wanna learn about his adventure!  So yeah, I met alot of cool people and burned a good hour or more all told just shootin the #$%*, but thats part of the whole thing and I enjoyed it.

So heres the route I took:  http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=112785698571017320969.00000112975d1ace69509&ll=42.488302,-83.562012&spn=7.046659,14.80957&z=6&om=1

I left on a Saturday morning and the plan was to make it to a campsite mabey 50 miles or so from my final destination, so as such I planned to get to bed at a good time that Friday night.  Well, out of nowhere my uncle and cousin I hadnt seen in ages drive up while my neighbor and I are out BSing.  Next thing you know, we have a few beers and light up the tiki torches and chat till about 2am.  So I get to bed about 3am, get up at 6am and start loading up the bike.  I was off by about 8:30am or so Saturday morning.  It ended up taking me 12 hours to make it up to a campsite!  I remeber after the first 100 miles I was thinking, man, I dont know if Im gonna make it all the way, but then another 100 miles into it my body got used to it, found all the ways to make myself as comfortable as possible, and I was good until the last 100 miles or so.  At about that point I realized that I had lost an hour when I changed time zones and it was time to go balls to the wall to make it to a campsite on time.  The ranger station closed at 9:00pm not to mention its alot easier to set a tent up when theres light.  So for a good 50 miles or so I was running 90+ on the only streatch of interstate I hit: 31 just north of Grand Haven.  I was sore, tired, and hungry and ready to get the hell off that bike!  But then, I hit route 22 and it just became so beautiful and I was having so much fun in the twisties that my pain and fatigue became an afterthought.  I quickly figured out that the suggested speed signs for the curves were WAAAAY conservative ;) ;D  Id go into a 40 at about 55, working the gears, then accelerate out of the turns often doing 75 or better.  That big-ass pack actually helped stabilize the bike(since I had saddle bags on) and helped it dig into those curves.  So anyway I make it to a campsite 15 minutes before the station closed, set up camp, and by then its 10 o clock and I havnt eaten supper.  I was half starved and ended up eating all the beef jerky I brought for the island.  So the next day I get up at 5am, load everything back up and ride the last 75 beautiful miles up to leland in time to get a good breakfast and jump on the boat.  Then I hauled ass to my campsite, way off on the west side of the island(the boat docks on the East) and do 15 miles with my 65 lb pack over some tough elevation and through some serious brush where I had to navigate by compass, only way to get to the premo camp site I found last time I was out there, 2 years ago.  Now remember this was all after the previous days marathon!  The island was more beautifull than I remember! 

To be continued....

Offline nickjtc

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Sorry to interject, but......Great!! Just goes to show that our old girls can still do the business with minimal fuss.
Nick J. Member #3247

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geezer

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I hope you took some pics!
We'd all love to make a trip like that.
Tell us more. Give juicy details!

Offline nickjtc

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I kept a close eye on the chain slack and lubrication(used heavy weight gear lube) and probably adjusted the chain 6 or 7 times in the whole trip.

Hem, hem. Put a Scottoiler on and you'll be relieved of that chore on the next trip.
Nick J. Member #3247

2008 Triumph Tiger 1050
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"That which does not kill us reminds us to wear proper motorcycle clothing...."

Offline seaweb11

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20+ miles with a pack!!!!!!!!!!
I get to the mailbox quite often.

upperlake04

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Thanks for all that Wyk. I understand fully the attraction of occasionally getting out of the ratrace and spending time alone in the 'real' world. Good stuff :)   No bears on your island?

Offline Bob Wessner

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Wykydtron,

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and probably adjusted the chain 6 or 7 times in the whole trip.


Did you mean you lubed the chain this many times or actually had to adjust the tension? Seems like a lot of adjusting given the distance. :-\
We'll all be someone else's PO some day.

Offline cleveland

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Great post!

What is Scottoiler?

Offline andy750

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Great trip and photos and thanks for sharing!! Sounds like you had a great trip.....And you got the girl in the end you lucky b$%#@d! ;-)

cheers
Andy
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Offline nickjtc

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Nick J. Member #3247

2008 Triumph Tiger 1050
1977 Suzuki GS750

"That which does not kill us reminds us to wear proper motorcycle clothing...."

Offline nickjtc

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Putting this whole thread into perspective, with the discussion we have periodically on the feasibility of taking our bikes on long trips (with the side discussion of what to take with us)......

The winner of my Motogiro event this weekend has ridden his 1956 BSA 12 (that's a 250 incidentally) all over the place, including a cross US trip to Pennsylvania. It may not be fast but it gets him there.

So with a little prep we should all be up to this kind of trip, if the fancy so takes us. 8)
Nick J. Member #3247

2008 Triumph Tiger 1050
1977 Suzuki GS750

"That which does not kill us reminds us to wear proper motorcycle clothing...."

VitaminCB550

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Admirable my friend. I do some type of wilderness trip every year (5 day backpacking, 6 day canoing, etc) and it really brings you back to reality. It would be great to integrate my 750 into it. Where did you park it ( or did you ride it on those paths  ??? ???)

Offline Stormer

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GREAT trip my friend!
And yes, you are right, first 100 miles are the "hard" part of the journey.
After them, everything "break in".
Sory the bad english.

Offline OldSchool_IsCool

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Hey Wyk!

Finally got a chance to upload the pics I had taken.  Awesome trip report!  Sure I've heard a lot of it in person, but reading it really helps to relive those "spirited" conversations!!  ;D

In a couple of these pics, you can almost hear the 'ol gurls talking about the good times they had in the bath houses of Tokyo before they got on "the BIG ship!"  I'm still a little disappointed that there weren't a couple little 360's running around the garage the next morning  :D
« Last Edit: July 03, 2007, 06:45:31 PM by OldSchool_IsCool »
Can I have a motorcycle when I get old enough?
If you take care of it.
What do you have to do?
Lot’s of things. You’ve been watching me.
Will you show me all of them?
Sure.
Is it hard?
Not if you have the right attitudes. It’s having the right attitudes that’s hard.

Offline Deceptibong

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I really like the photos in this report.  Ive been to the same area for work (landed in Traverse City drove to Mancelona)

That summer I realized how pretty the little lakes around that area were.  I would love to get me and my bike out there for further exploration.

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just be a vagabond, living out of a backpack on a little Honda, cruisin all over the damn place....

Now this is what Im talking about.  Why cant they just lay me off already ;)
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Offline westondc

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I really like the photos in this report.  

I second that. i need a vacation like this!

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just be a vagabond, living out of a backpack on a little Honda, cruisin all over the damn place....

Ha this quote is so great, i'm putting it on profile.
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just be a vagabond, living out of a backpack on a little Honda, cruisin all over the damn place....
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