Quit our jobs, sold our home, gone riding...

Discussion in 'Ride Reports - Epic Rides' started by lightcycle, Aug 1, 2012.

  1. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    LOL! That's awesome.

    You're selling The Land of Oz pretty hard there!

    We were just talking about this the other day, planning out our list of "Places To Go Next". Australia is ranked higher on my list than Neda's, so you'll have to work a bit harder to convince her.

    Has the country recovered from the fires?
    LostExplorers and gpfan like this.
  2. Phrog

    Phrog Terra Australis

    Joined:
    May 24, 2009
    Oddometer:
    586
    Location:
    34°03’16.37”S 150°41’44.74”E
    Gene, tell Neda spiders are just butterflies with two extra legs & no wings, & snakes are just lizards without legs.
    We also have koalas (drop bears when they mate with Tasmanian devils) kangaroos, wallabies & lots of cuddly marsupials.
    The most dangerous creature in Australia at the moment is our parasitic politicians.

    The majority of the fires on the east coast are under control thanks to the rain (floods) we are getting at the moment.
    asi00007, bonneville53 and mikegc like this.
  3. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    That's good to hear. It looked like such a horrific situation.

    Actually, neither of us are beach people. We're both mountain people. Twisty roads in the summer, snowboarding in the winter! :clap

    Our good friend lives in Melbourne and we've been invited to the MotoGP race in Phillip Island in October, but Neda is thinking this might be too soon after all the fires. Might be better to visit the year after, when all the brush and animals (and spiders) have recovered?
    gpfan likes this.
  4. Phrog

    Phrog Terra Australis

    Joined:
    May 24, 2009
    Oddometer:
    586
    Location:
    34°03’16.37”S 150°41’44.74”E
    I heard that mountain men like mountain women, or is that the other way round? Anyway what we call mountains Canadians call hills, still fun to ride though. :ricky
    Our "mountains" are called the great dividing range. They start just outside of Melbourne in the south & travel north all the way up to Cape York Peninsula, just below New Guinea, about 3,500km long.
    Snowboarding is best during July / August in a small area called " The snowy mountains" go figure.

    MotoGP race at Phillip Island, DO IT. Perfect time of year for riding & you won't be disappointed with the location.

    The fires were bad but Australia is a big country, still a lot to see that is unburnt, plus those places that were burnt are screaming out for visitors. It's what keeps those country towns alive. They'll offer you Aussie hospitality that you won't believe. :kumbaya:dukegirl:beer

    Plenty of wildlife carers down here, Neda could help some of them out by nursing a koala & feeding it with a baby bottle, she would like that.
    The spiders are fine, they live in our homes with us. Their furry, cute & fun to pat or pet. :thumb
    roadcapDen likes this.
  5. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    Inscription in the stone

    [​IMG]
    Kashima-Jingu Shrine
    Gmb1975, SirLancelot, gpfan and 5 others like this.
  6. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    I think that just tipped the scales.

    See you in October! :D
    gpfan, Spicciani2 and Phrog like this.
  7. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    Before we hit the shrine, we walk around the manicured gardens

    [​IMG]
    Cherry blossom season is regretfully short. It takes one week for the flowers to bloom and then another week for them to fall from the branches

    A light wind is already taking some of the petals off the trees and scattering them on the ground. The short sakura season is such a spiritual time for the Japanese, it symbolizes the ephemeral nature of life - brief and fleeting. During WWII, Kamikazi pilots painted sakura flowers on the side of their planes, the falling petals mirroring their own suicidal dives - the young pilot's lives just as brief and fleeting.
    Gmb1975, DaleE, Smidty and 12 others like this.
  8. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    Walking underneath the torii gates and up towards the temple

    [​IMG]
    Yutoku Inari Shrine across a narrow river
    DaleE, gfh, Smidty and 10 others like this.
  9. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    Quackers

    [​IMG]
    The Inari deities are associated with foxes, whose statues guard the shrine
  10. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    We love Japan!

    [​IMG]
    Tourists come from all over Japan (and the world) to see the shrine
    Gmb1975, B10Dave, Pete S and 8 others like this.
  11. danh600

    danh600 Long timer

    Joined:
    Jan 23, 2011
    Oddometer:
    1,902
    Location:
    South Florida
    So orderly, even tree stumps grow in a pretty design.
    B10Dave likes this.
  12. roadcapDen

    roadcapDen Ass, Grass or Gas, no free rides.

    Joined:
    Jan 26, 2012
    Oddometer:
    2,338
    Location:
    GTA, ON, CDA
    And your Japanese inspired dinner looks delicious!
  13. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    While some may need shelter from the falling rain...

    [​IMG]
    others revel in the shower of petals
    Trainee_adv, rubline, garfey and 15 others like this.
  14. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]
    Inside the Yutoku Inari Shrine

    [​IMG]
    Walking around taking lots of pictures

    We don't often time our travels very well. Snow and ice chased us out of Alaska and we spent a year and a half following the rainy season through Latin America. But our timing through Japan is impeccable. Cherry blossom season is #1 on Neda's list of things to see and we've now reached the beginning of the season right at the southern end of Japan. Although sakuras may only bloom over two weeks, we're going to slowly follow the blossoming season as the warm weather travels north. We'll definitely get more than two weeks of cherry blossoms!
  15. terryna

    terryna Adventurer

    Joined:
    Mar 16, 2018
    Oddometer:
    44
    Location:
    Luxembourg
    superb[​IMG]
  16. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
    In Japan and in other asian cultures, this orange-reddish color, vermilion, is the colour of life

    The colour wards of evil spirits, bad luck and danger. It reminds me of the vermilion-laquered furniture of my family home in Malaysia.
    Gmb1975, gpfan, SmilinJoe and 10 others like this.
  17. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
    We walk around Yutoku Inari Shrine with petals in our hair. When we get back to our bikes, they too are covered in pale pink snow

    At least the rain has stopped as we climb back on our bikes. We've only got another hour's ride north to the city of Fukuoka, but as luck would have it, shortly after we leave Kashima, the sky opens up cold rain on our helmets.

    At least we've kept our rainsuits on as we brave through the elements.
  18. droonuk

    droonuk Been here awhile

    Joined:
    Feb 29, 2020
    Oddometer:
    173
    Location:
    Anaheim CA
    I'm just glad it isnt me who has to sweep up all those petals from my driveway ...
  19. lightcycle

    lightcycle Nomad

    Joined:
    Mar 19, 2006
    Oddometer:
    2,821
    Location:
    No Fixed Address (originally Toronto)
    As we reach the outskirts of Fukuoka and I spy the welcome orange-and-black sign of our favorite fast food place: Yoshinoya. I tap on the communicator and ask Neda if she wants to get out of the rain and get some warm Japanese food inside of us. It's a rhetorical question, of course...

    [​IMG]
    Ugh! So miserable...

    We burst into the restaurant like wet dogs dripping water all over the place. At least the place is empty because it's mid-day, right in between the lunch and dinner crowds, so we don't cause too much of a commotion as we slip off all of our wet layers and hang them on various chairs and tables around us to dry. We feel so un-Japanese, making such a mess. The staff, in response, are typically Japanese, very gracious and accommodating and trying not to make us feel self-conscious. Which makes us even more self-conscious...

    [​IMG]
    We feel we deserve an extra-special treat today, so we both order the extra-large bowl of Unagi (BBQ eel) rice!
    Aaaahhh! So yummy!

    Normally unagi is much more expensive where we're from, but here in Japan, they're surprisingly moderately priced so we don't feel so guilty getting the extra portions of eel.

    We savour our hot meal inside the warm and dry restaurant, watching and waiting for the rains to subside.

    Which it doesn't.
    Gmb1975, Trainee_adv, gpfan and 14 others like this.
  20. MoreCheese

    MoreCheese Now less Cheezy

    Joined:
    Jun 2, 2011
    Oddometer:
    440
    Location:
    Southern Wisconsin
    lightcycle / Gene,
    Thanks for the many updates to your ride.

    I'll not make a joke about the name of the city FukuOKa, your latest stop.

    I do have a question though. Is Japan ok to eat in with food allergies? Perhaps this is too specific to us. With me having a nut allergy, and my daughter not able to be near or eat gluten (wheat, barley, rye), I wonder if it would be safe for us when we need to eat. In the US we can look for GF (gluten free symbols) and read labels for nuts. Recently I was talking with another celiac (no gluten) and she loved traveling Japan and claimed to find many gluten free places to eat.

    Thanks again. Ride safe.