Next Stoplight: 3,000 Miles
Routine city riding is not the recommended
training regimen for motorcyclists planning to take on the
Great White North in the Alcan 5000.
Huddled with fellow rally participants in the
doorway of the "World Famous" Rancheria rest stop somewhere
along the Alaska Highway, we sip from our Camelbaks, stare
into the night, and wonder how much longer it is to
Whitehorse. Our bikes wait outside, like pack dogs itching to
press on, and we hardly notice the scruffy pooch sniffing our
gear - until he lifts a leg above one our helmets.
Welcome to the Alcan 5000
Previously open only to cars, this endurance
rally taunts any dual-sport rider crazy enough to log nine
straight 500+-mile days on some of the most unpredictable
roads in North America while keeping an eye trained on a
stopwatch.
And as the seconds wind down to my starting time
from the hotel parking lot in Seattle, Washington, I´m
thinking I must be crazy enough because I have no idea what
I´m getting into. No idea that my bike will fail me in a few
hours, no idea what it means to be "Hyderized," no idea I´ll
be standing, dog-tired, for most of my meals, and no clue how
the unspoiled North Country can really put the zap on your
head.
Looking back, I know this: I´m about to have the
adventure of a lifetime.
The 2002 summer event is a tidy, nine-day,
4,250-mile, precision-timed road trip from Seattle to Canada´s
Northwest Territories and back. I´d never been to Canada, but
the Alcan organizers have been at it since 1984, tearing
across Alaska and Canada summer and winter alike - always
varying the route. This is rallying as grand tour - on regular
roads, with long transit sections punctuated by shorter
time-speed-distance (TSD) stages where points are awarded for
arriving at checkpoints on time - and points are subtracted
for being too early or too late. Not a race exactly, but then
again, if you want dinner each night...
Suddenly, I´m off, pouring on the gas to impress
the onlookers with the bratty din from my new Remus exhaust
and speeding into the first turn. Damn it, the stoplight is
red.
Thirty seconds later I´m headed for points
unknown with only the rally route book and my GPS to guide
me.
The bike feels nimble against the tide of
Seattle´s rush hour traffic. Heads turn as numbered vehicles
whiz by drowsy commuters lurching toward jobs we´re lucky
enough to escape for the next 10 days.
I´m riding my BMW F650 GS, loaded with
modifications found while scouring the Internet between
writing ads at my desk job in San Francisco. I´ve added
Continental TKC-80 tires, an Ohlins rear shock, and Race Tech
cartridge emulators to the front forks. I´ve lowered the foot
pegs, raised the handlebars, and engaged a guy named Mr. Ed to
custom upholster the seat. I´ve added Touratech dual
headlights, a taller windscreen, heated grips and hand
protectors. For navigation, I mounted a Garmin GPS176 to the
handlebars and a map holder to the tankbag for the rally route
book. Most importantly, I´ve plastered the bike with
manufacturer´s stickers to complement the big rally number on
the windscreen.
We leave civilization behind with our first TSD.
Again, the idea is to be in the right place at the right time
at the right speed. Challenging enough for a car with the
driver watching the road and the navigator calling out turns,
times, and required speed. But we riders were about to learn
...
Read more in our September/October ´03
issue.
Text & Photography: Chris Lindau
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