LATimes.com Q&A with Jay
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label books. Show all posts
Sunday, February 3, 2008
Avoid Getting Your Butt Kicked
Biker's Handbook: Becoming Part of the Motorcycle Culture
is a new book out from Jay Barbieri, the producer of "American Thunder." If you're a newby, might not be a bad idea to get clued in. Hopefully he mentions something about trying to avoid white socks and tennis shoes when you ride. Has nothing to do with safety - well, actually is does - but you just end up looking like someone who bought a Harley to ride to the bar when his wife's at a PTA meeting.
LATimes.com Q&A with Jay
LATimes.com Q&A with Jay
Tuesday, December 25, 2007
Reference: Touring Books
Good books with decent maps are hard to come by. They're either too long on copy and too short on route information, or just spend too much time on being a tourist guide book than on being a book for riders.I love to take a good ride book with me and bust it open each night to get ideas for the next day's ride. Hawk Hagebak has a great series of books titled Motorcycle Adventures that are geographically based, so if you know where you're going, you take along a book and have enough rides for an entire week. There are three in the collection, and all cover the south, primarily TN, NC, and GA. Hawk also maintains a site called Motohawk. A review in ca
se you're curious from CarolinaMCEvents.com and a sample ride in the Southern Appalachians.I found my copies of his books in a Harley shop in Chattanooga TN, and ended up using some of the rides from the North Georgia portion the next day. You can find used copies on Amazon for about $11.00 apiece.
Another handy guide is AMA's Ride Guide to America, edited by Greg Harrison. While it does cover a majority of the U.S., the Mid-west and plains states are missing, so keep in mind where you'd like to tour before buying. The book is divided into regions, so odds are by the time you're too old to ride you'll have a chance to use all of it. I found a reviews from webBikeWorld, as well as a very good price online from Overstock.
But - let's say you're from Arkansas and these books don't work for you. Here's a link to the Arkansas Parks & Tourism web site offering a free PDF riding guide for the state.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)