April 08, 2008

Uh Oh! I Dropped My Bike!: How to Get it Back Up Again

Pickupyourbike Women Riders Now has updated their article Oh No! I Dropped My Bike!: How to lift a downed motorcycle. The article gives you detailed, step-by-step instructions on picking up your bike -- watch a 118 pound, 5-foot 3-inch woman pick up a 2000 BMW GS 1150. A great confidence builder! I know that this technique, along with a little "wrenching" knowledge, will free a lot of trapped female souls. Fly away!

Photo: Carol Youorski, aka "Skert," of PinkRibbonRides.com. 

January 21, 2008

The Miss Adventuring Podcast has Launched

Lisa Alpine Tune in now to listen to the first show with Lisa Alpine, who makes her living as a travel writer and dance workshop leader.

It all began on her 18th birthday when she boarded a plane to Paris and started working her way around the world. Lisa describes how she created a career of travel writing and leading dance workshops, how she makes money, how inspiration and intuition guide her life, and the joys and challenges of family, love, and relationships in a career that has taken her off the beaten path. Most of all, get her tips for creating your own path and business from what you love to do, whatever that may be. Lisa is all about encouragement!

You'll also hear the multi-talented D. Brent Miller on the podcast. He's the Ohio-based publisher of Sojourn Chronicles, as well as an audio engineer and professional sidekick.

 What is the Miss Adventuring Podcast?
The Miss Adventuring Show on BlogTalkRadio The Miss Adventuring podcast is a weekly MP3 audio program where you'll hear from guests who share tips for those of us who want to create our own fabulously misadventurous life. When you click "Listen Now" the program will either stream or download to your computer depending on how you've set your system to handle MP3 files (iTunes, Windows Media Player, Realplayer, QuickTime).

I hope you enjoy the show, and I'd love to hear from you if you'd like to comment on the format, the guest, or if you have questions or suggestions, or even want to send me your stories of how a misadventure changed your life for the better. Don't forget, subscribe to the Miss Adventuring mailing list if you haven't already.

Thanks for tuning in!

Carla King
Miss Adventuring

December 28, 2007

D. Brent Miller and Carla King: A Conversation on Sojourn Chronicles

D_brent_millerToday D. Brent and I talked on his Sojourn Chronicles show "Conversations" about my 2007 and 1998 motorcycle trips to China and my upcoming book Under the Radar, plus my new Miss Adventuring Internet radio show to launch in January. Here are the links.

Sojourn Chronicles Conversations (December 2007, China and Miss Adventuring)

Sojourn Chronicles Conversations (April 2007, American Borders)

The Miss Adventuring Show (Coming January 3rd, 12:30 pm)

October 12, 2007

Northern China on a Sidecar Motorcycle

Ck Tomorrow I set out for China with a huge duffel bag full of warm and rainproof motorcycling clothes for an October ride through the northeast of the country. I'll be landing in Beijing at 2:30 in the afternoon to be greeted by none other than Teresa Howes, the woman I stayed with a decade ago in Beijing, who has just coincidentally (are there any coincidences?) moved back to China and has offered her guest room and companionship for my ride. On Monday morning we'll go meet Jim Bryant who, a decade ago, lent me his Chang Jiang and who will this time lend me a new CJ sidecar bike with a clean, reliable BMW engine. He gave up the Subway Sandwich franchise business and is now in the motorcycle business full time. 

By the way, if you're serious about CJ's join the CJ750 Sidecar Community and prepare to  be informed. Jim is the go-to guy for everything about CJ's and also manages the Internet Sidecar Owners Klub, which is a great discussion group for all kinds of sidecar motorcycles, travel, technical, advice, etc.

On Monday, Teresa, Jim, and I (and maybe a few more) plan to head out toward Datong and turn inland toward Wu-Tai Shan, one of China's four sacred mountains, and other destinations, subject to change, as usual. I'll chronicle the trip in words and photos on this weblog. You can also sign up to get my newsletter.

It's hard to believe that it's been an entire 10 years since my first visit to China. In 1997 the group, led by Rich Dunagan (who now lives back in the USA), took me on a ride from Beijing to the Great Wall where we camped overnight under a full moon. I was hooked, and in Spring of 1998 I returned, intending to ride from Beijing to Burma . . . what a joke! The maps were wrong, the roads were bad, and I was slower than slow, stopping every hour or so to see this, taste that, go for a walk, get a tune up (or major repairs!). In four months I only made it to Xining back through Xi'an (terra cotta warriors) to Beijing. The China Road dispatches are still the most popular on my site. This trip I'll check out what's changed, what's the same, and finish a print book titled Flying Under the Radar about both trips to be published spring/summer 2008.

In the meantime, check this weblog the next few weeks for updates, or better yet, put http://carlaking.typepad.com in your RSS newsfeed reader (like Bloglines) and get automatic updates as soon as they're published. I look forward to your comments.

Carla




February 04, 2007

American Borders Motorcycle Travelogue available this week

I know I've been quiet lately but I have a good excuse...really! I finally finished the print version of the American Borders travelogue, and it's launching this month with a few events, starting with a reading in San Francisco, then a motorcycle show in Chicago, then the SF Writer's Conference, then a motorcycle show in Atlanta. My 2007 schedule is on the website. Below is the official press release, I hope you'll come say hi at one of the events, buy a book, or order the book online at http://www.MotorcycleMisadventures.com, or just click here.

Continue reading "American Borders Motorcycle Travelogue available this week" »

December 19, 2003

The Fear Factor: Ted Simon decides to ride into Columbia

Ted Simon took a round-the-world motorcycle trip in 1973. Twenty seven years later, at 69 years of age, he began his second round-the-world motorcycle trip, documented on his website The Return of Jupiter's Travels. The author of two classic travel books Jupiter's Travels and Riding High, Simon finds himself constantly facing his fears, and he writes about it with honesty, humor, and self-compassion. This dispatch about Columbia is a moment that most travelers on a round-the-world trip can relate to. Here's his story.

Continue reading "The Fear Factor: Ted Simon decides to ride into Columbia " »

December 18, 2003

The Fear Factor

When people hear about my trips the #1 most frequent question is, "Aren't you scared?"

"Well...yeah," I reply. "But it's the kind of fear that you get when you go away to college, or get married...or divorced, or interview for a new job. You know you have to do it, want to do it, and will be better for it."

The Fear Factor will be a discussion and a collection of stories of travelers who overcame their fear, whether it was a fear of going on the trip in the first place, or a fear of passing through a certain country, or a fear of getting back on a bike after a crash.

If you have a story that relates to travel and fear, share it in the Comments section below, or send me an email. I look forward to hearing about your experiences!

Miss Adventuring Podcast Episodes

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