So let's explain the why for this purchase.
Back in 2019, a friend of mind and I did a large chunk of the Blue Ridge Parkway on Honda Groms. It was an amazing trip and sold me on the idea of motorcycle touring, but it also left us both sore for weeks. We needed bigger bikes.
And right before Covid hit, I was shopping. At the time I was focused on big touring bikes, as my forum thread on cheap sport tourers explained.
Then came Covid, and with it my budget to buy a bike disappeared, as did my ability to travel.
Fast forward two years, and my friend buys a Harley Pan America and declares adventure touring to be way more fun anyway--far fewer cars to hit you, and far cooler places to explore. So I wanted something that would be able to keep up with the Harley, but without the $20,000 price tag. Bonus points for light and simple, as I grew up on dirt bikes and don't really want to take an 800-pound motorcycle off road, or try to fix it in the woods. At the same time, I wanted to be able to go on the highway when necessary, tackle the Blue Ridge Parkway again, and do some street riding with my wife on the back.
I also wanted ABS and fuel injection. Call me a wuss or whatever, but I hate keeping carbureted vehicles that are driven infrequently running, and I think ABS is an amazing safety feature especially on a bike. That's coming from a person that grew up on dirt bikes and has no problems with threshold braking in race cars, but things happen fast on two wheels.
This bike seemed to check all the boxes: cheap, light, ABS, sort of cool looking, and just the right size. This is a single cylinder that makes 53 horsepower. I'm excited to give adventure touring a try. And yes, I'll document my expenses along the way. I've always been curious how expensive this corner of the hobby really is.
Will I fall in love with it and start saving up for a better bike? Or will this just be a fun story about the time I bought a BMW for a summer adventure? Let's find out!