Centre pages, 4-5 page spread on the Timbuktu thing I did with my son. You can see the Tiger here and there in the photos, article was reasonably accurate.
I saw the article in Bike and spotted the Tiger, looked like an amazing, challenging experience. How did the Tiger hold up compared to the other bikes?
Oddly enough i know a guy off a BM site,not the GS one!!, who also went he did a much better write up for us,than what was in the mag,much less politicaly correct and far more interesting.
Quote from: "Chris Canning"Oddly enough i know a guy off a BM site,not the GS one!!, who also went he did a much better write up for us,than what was in the mag,much less politicaly correct and far more interesting.
Who was that then Chris, I know them all, and they know me because every time another BMW broke down I just patted the tank and said 'Triumph mate'.
Try this
http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/eastleighsc/tbt.htm (http://myweb.tiscali.co.uk/eastleighsc/tbt.htm)
There's also picture of your Tiger in there,somwhere.
Aah, young Jason. Good bloke and his didn't break down.
Well I have just read Jasons account of the trip. Very very funny but it wasn't anything like as dark as that for me and the kid, my pillion, we spent most of our time riding alone and we simply didn't run into as much hassle with officialdom. Acute accurate observation regarding lack of personal space granted and the grinding poverty. Take his point about the boat, my son slept on top of the luggage and I slept on the roof, there was nowhere else. Funny how things appear differently to different people, I enjoyed the 550 mile ride through the western sahara sandstorm more than any ride of my life, my son enjoyed the corrugated section on the way to Bamako hugely, something to do with constantly being thrown up off the pillion perch into the air and hanging on to my shoulders, and I was standing on the pegs. All round nice one by Jason, but it wasn't my ride being described, that's for sure.