January 24, 2008

Motorcycle Travel Planning DVDs

The other day I blogged on D. Brent Miller's interview with a producer of the DVD Get Lost: Oregon.  Yesterday I got an email from Michael Murray with a link to his set of DVDs on motorcycling I haven't seen them, but it looks like he has a nice array of titles:

Mainhomepageimage01Learn valuable preparation tips as you plan your next motorcycle adventure in Alaska, Copper Canyon, Baja Mohab, The Trans-America Trail, New Zealand . . . Here's the link.

Michael worked with TransAm Trail founder Sam Corerro on that title, so it should be good!

Anybody got input on motorcycle travel DVDs they like? Let me know. I may do a Miss Adventuring episode on the topic.

January 22, 2008

Lost on a Motorcycle in Oregon

Getlostoregon You'll want to listen to this very entertaining Sojourn Chronicles  podcast, a conversation with Dru Martin -- producer of  the Get Lost: Oregon DVD -- about a group of adventure motorcyclists in Oregon back country. Dru also talks about the filming of his new DVD on Baja, Mexico.  It's an audio podcast with a short text intro. I know you'll enjoy it!

August 12, 2007

Don't be a Sicko: Wear your protective gear!

Sicko_2 If you've seen Michael Moore's film Sicko you will likely be more motivated than ever to wear your protective gear, whether you're motorcycling, bicycling, scuba diving, hang gliding -- whatever sport you're participating in. Sure, I have health insurance, but what I didn't know was that the movie is a horror story about people like me who do have insurance! Before I go into the protective gear lecture, let me just say that "Sicko" is a must see. Don't worry -- it's not just a Bush-bashing spree, but a Nixon- and Johnson- and Clinton-bashing fest as well. It's both horrifying and hilarious, (I mean, really, boating 911 heroes to Guantanamo Bay?) and like all of Moore's films, it's a motivator to get off our butts and get this country back into our hands. I really didn't have any idea that the USA is the only western country that does not have universal health care. How did it happen? Brainwashing? Complacency? Ignorance? Inattention? See it. It's an eye-opener and good counter-spin to the mainstream media, who hasn't reported, among other things, on the health insurance discrimination on motorcyclists. (More info and how to take action.)

War Made Easy While I'm on the topic of films, here's another one, a new film narrated by Sean Penn called War Made Easy subtitled "How Presidents & Pundits Keep Spinning Us to Death." Paired with Moore's "Sicko," you get a pretty clear picture of how much we are manipulated. As a journalist and world traveler, I thought I was pretty media literate and aware of just how much, but I realize that I need to pay more attention and also to take real action more often. (See end of this weblog entry for how to.) Our media is continually being absorbed by just a few corporations who are more interested in making money than keeping us informed -- but you know that.

So back to the lecture about protective gear and spinning wheels: Ever since I got knocked off my motorcycle in India way back in 2000 -- and lived to tell about it -- I've been lecturing people to invest in, and use, protective gear. Ladies Airglide PantI was wearing leather boots and jeans and a light leather jacket, partially unizipped, and summer gloves and a full face helmet. A dog ran out between me and the car in front of me and I ran smack in to it, took a head dive onto the road, then I remember hearing my helmet hit the ground four times as I did somersaults toward the ditch, where I lost consciousness.

Okay . . . so if I hadn't been wearing a helmet, I might have heard my head konk just once before my brains splushed out onto that hot asphalt headed down to Kanukamari, the pointy tip end of India, where the waters of the Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean, and Arabian Sea all meet. Some pilgrimage, huh? I woke because I was choking half to death from water that a well-meaning woman was pouring into my face, and stood up to find that I was okay, oops, except for that splursh splursh of blood ejecting in heartbeat pulse frequency from the rip in my jeans on my left knee. The Indian Christian missionaries who had been following me for miles -- also on their way to Kanukamari -- loaded me onto a pile of snow white cotton saris in the back of their van and took me to a nearby clinic where I was stitched up enough to ride the Enfield -- which had been  fixed at the shop next door for about the same price (a few dollars, as I remember) -- to a hospital where I got proper knee surgery (for just another few bucks.) Had I been wearing proper motorcycle pants, I would have been able to skip that experience.Sari ("Would you prefer general or local anesthesia," asked the doctor. I evaluated the situation. The nurses were fighting me as I attempted to remove my shirt to show the surgeon my gravel-filled shoulder wound -- men apparently weren't allowed to see shoulders -- and the janitor was clearly delighted at the sight of a real live naked knee, and it looked like he might also be part of the surgery team. "Local," I replied, gritting my teeth.)

Why wasn't I wearing protective gear? Because back then, in 2000, my only choice was leather, and I could barely stand to wear the gear I had on in the stifling humidity of Southern India. If Cordura or mesh gear was available, I didn't know about it. Today I wear a Olympia Moto Sports outfit in hot weather. For cold, it's the leather.

I'm also choosing my full-face helmet over my half helmet more and more often these days, even if it's hot, even if I'm only riding a few miles. Having chosen a life focused on adventure travel -- motorcycling, scuba diving, bicycling, trekking -- few people get to accuse me of being overly cautious in my life. But I do want to live to experience the next adventure.

See Sicko. See War Made Easy. Take action: Convince your congressperson to become a cosponsor of the United States National Health Insurance Act (H.R. 676  text) today. It doesn't matter if you're left, right, center, or where you fit in the financial-social strata, you're a human and chances are, even if you're not a motorcyclist who gets whacked by some cellphone-yakking, latte-sipping SUV driver you're gonna get hurt or sick, your mama's gonna get sick, your kid's gonna get sick, your friend's gonna get sick, and you're really gonna need better help than is available today. Yeah, it means higher taxes. You get what you pay for. So here you go:

If your congressperson isn't on the list, click here and tell him or her that you want to support the United States National Health Insurance Act.

End of lecture.

December 14, 2003

The stuntwoman behind Trinity's motorcycle chase scene in The Matrix

Who rode the motorcycle for Trinity in the Matrix? You probably thought it was some slim stuntman, but no, it was lovely Debbie Evans, one of Hollywood's top stuntwomen. For beginners, she was the 1976-80 women's world motorcycle trials champion. Her stunt career began when she was just 18 years old and she was called to do a motorcycle jump over a 30-foot ravine for the movie Death Sport. Since then she has been in over 200 movies and TV shows. Her career really launched when she tied for second overall in the CBS Stunt Competition as the only female competitor. Since then she has pioneered stuntwork for women, doing stunts that at one time only men were allowed to do (everything from cannon rolls to car hits). She has done just about every type of stunt imaginable, including setting the world long and high jump records for an airramp. Talk about your exciting careers! Read more about her here.

Miss Adventuring Podcast Episodes

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