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Скачать с ютуб Motorbike riding across Vietnam!︱Cross Training Adventure в хорошем качестве

Motorbike riding across Vietnam!︱Cross Training Adventure 6 лет назад


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Motorbike riding across Vietnam!︱Cross Training Adventure

http://www.vietnammotorbiketours.com I last visited Vietnam back in 1996 and all I can remember is bouncing around in buses over the worst roads I'd ever seen with motorbike riding across Vietnam. But for several years now I've heard that Vietnam has some of the best road riding tours on the planet, so when I got an invite to join Jason from Vietnam Motorbike Tours for a three days I jumped at it. The plan? A day's ride down scenic coastline then into the central highlands where, in Jason's words, the real Vietnam begins when motorbike riding across Vietnam. VMT website: http://www.vietnammotorbiketours.com Email: [email protected] Facebook:   / vietnammotorbiketoursvmt   Youtube:    / @vietnammotorbiketours   Title: Eminence - 2127 iTunes Download Link: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/album/hol... Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/1wlOBy... Video Link:    • Eminence & Alex Klingle - Altitude (f...   Our starting point with Vietnam Motorbike Tours? Nha Trang. On my last trip this was a quiet port town but it's now a tourist mecca resembling Miami and Surfers Paradise. Amazing food, great beaches, and the place lights up like a Christmas tree at night. It is interesting, and learning how to ride in Aisan traffic is actually a pile of fun after the tours guys gave us some instruction on how the chaos works for motorbike riding across Vietnam. But I'm keen to escape the tourist stuff and see the real Vietnam. We start with a run along the coastline. Incredible ocean views on this main highway that links Saigon in the south with Hanoi in the north. And the highway has changed so much in the last 20 years. It used to be a narrow pot holed road where you were constantly zig zagging around the rice harvests spread out to dry in the sun. Now it's a road riders paradise, snaking its way up through the mountains and only occasionally going straight and flat across the plains. So why is a dirt bike junkie like me riding road bikes on Vietnam Motorbike Tours? And not just any road bikes, but a Chinese built Harley Davidson look alike with only a 200cc engine? Last year I did a dirt bike tour of Cambodia, and the organiser, Jason Thatcher, uses his tours to fund low cost housing for Cambodian families living in extreme poverty. He also runs road bike tours in Vietnam to raise funds and I've become a volunteer worker for the charity and last time I was over there we popped out for a three day ride. The weird thing is I find road riding boring. I've always disliked Harley Davidsons and cruisers. And the idea of riding a Chinese 200cc version was frankly apalling. And yet this turned out to be an awesome three day ride. These coastal views are stunning, and the next two days will bein the central highlands, twisting up and down through the mountains while dodging water buffalo, chickens and all sorts of obstacles. And everyone I rode with on Vietnam Motorbike Tours agreed these Lifan brand cruisers are the ideal bike for the job. Incredibly comfortable, reliable and just enough power to have fun but also stay out of trouble on the unpredictable roads. A little bonus today, I get to do some dirt riding after all. On his days off, Jason regularly goes exploring to see if he can find interesting detours and places to visit. We explore this little side road to see if it might be worth including in his regular tours. Once we hit the dirt we realise it will be too gnarly for the tours but forge on anyway. This would be a lot of fun on a dirt bike but the low ground clearance and road tyres make this a hairy experience, at least for me. Jason rapidly disappears into the distance as he's bounced down all sorts of crazy tracks on these little cruisers. Eventually the track just ends at a farmer's field so we retrace our steps and head for a small local town to bed down for the night. One of the great things about getting off the tourist track is getting to see how the everyday Vietnamese people live. We will eat and stay at some fancy places over the next three days, but tonight it's basic and I'm loving it. Eating with the locals in an open air market, and of course sampling the local beer in one of their finest establishments. Hang around guys we head into the beautiful central highlands over the next two days. See you later, or as the Vietnamese say, hang gup lai.

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