11.000 km in one week: Part 2
[To recap: Having first traveled 8.000 km in the beginning of the week, I try to do another 3.000. This time on Bamsefar.
I've reached Switzerland on my way to Delft, The Netherlands.)
I get up at seven. Not because I like it, generally I don't. In fact, for me, it is much better to gain hours by staying up late
than getting up early. But I am fully awake, excited. I like to ride, and I like to ride for hours and hours.
If you like terminology with negative connotations, you would say that I am a loner. So be it. A day on the bike, a day without
interruptions, a day in solitude - that is a good day. And today I will ride through Germany and into the Low Countries. All alone.
But although it isn't raining, the clouds are low. Not as led gray as yesterday, but I want blue sky. Why do you think I moved
from Petro-dollar rich Norway (where the biggest problem is how to spend the money without driving up prices!) to Tuscany if
not for blue sky?
I go into the reception, find the key to my garage, and roll out Bamsefar. When I ride him around the daily errands, he drinks
about one liter of oil per 1.000 km we ride. But when riding more than 500 km in one go, and he doesn't even drink enough
for me to see a decrease in the glass. The day in January when I rode 1.682 km in one (very!) long day, he drank about 100
ml on the whole day. To me it seems as he uses most oil when I park him on teh side stand. At least, he makes a lot of
smoke in those cases.
After having stood on the main stand all night I let him rest on his side while I prepare for breakfast. Notice the rain
gear - I'm not confident.
It would be an outright lie to say that the coffee was the best I have ever tasted. Not revolting as in "Nescafé", and
not offending as in "American coffee", but still not something that will make the first two hours a pleasure. Not the
thing that will comfort me when my butt gets sore ( you know: "ai, ai, ai, my butt hurts, but that coffee this morning
was so pleasing I'll endure").
I am certain the bread was fresh (as in "not old"), but who wants bread for breakfast? I want a fresh
svoglia con
ricotta. That's what I want.
But it must be said that the dining room was very nice and estethically pleasing. The hotel has been extended
two times, and this is the old part. Very nice - I sat a while to savour the style and qualities of the place (and
to forget the coffee).
Time to go - I pull on the rain gear. Yesterday I was too late, and I hated it. You can clearly see the A2
higher up on the hill. Low clouds, it has rained (all night?), and I prepare for another wet day.
However - the moment I get away from the Alps, the sky opens up to my favorite colour: Blue. I stop several
times and slowly change from a rider with water-proof and well insulated gear, to one in proper summer
equipment. Ready for a fine day on the Autostrada (and Autobahn later).
I catch up with a Harley. He rides barely over the limit, and it strikes me that there might be a reason.
I decide to use him as a tug and check out if he is helpful.
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He is (sorry for the crappy images). On several occations he signals for me to slow down, point at a little
green box next to the road (camera!) and then speeds up again. I ride with him from Luzern to Basel.
Thank you
As I average about 100 km/h I need to stop every second hour for petrol. Even though Bamsefar
hasn't tasted synthetic oil in his 100.000 km long life, he still runs at about 17 to 18 km on a liter of
petrol. And that is with a 202 cm tall Viking at the helm (at significantly more than 100 km

), a
50 cm tall wind screen from Wunderlich, and side cases. I've passed into Germany and this is my
first stop there (not far from the border - the Swiss have some strange, non-compatible currency
so I don't know how to purchase things there).
Even though the coffee is German (I'll leave it to you fantasy to find words to describe a drink produced
by a German machine, in Germany, after the button labelled "cappuccino" has been pushed. In Hitch hikers
Guide to the galaxy it is described as "A drink not quite entirely unlike coffee".). I sit for several minutes
in the sun, enjoying the artifical lake and watching the fish.
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Then I need to get rid of yesterdays dinner, and I find a marvel of German engineering: A self-cleaning
toilet with a revolving seat. And trust me - it works!
A sad thing to see.
But then, some fun.
If you haven't been on the German Autobahn, there is a side of yourself you don't know. Look at the sign on
both sides of the road: End of the 120 km/h speed limit. Or, in other words, no speed limit. The question is: Do
you manage to refrain from checking the maximum speed of your vehicle at least once?
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If you manage to refrain, the film above shows you what it is like to ride a 2000 model BMW R1150GS at
185 km/h. After a few minutes the thrill is gone and I found that 140 km/h is my favorite cruising speed.
I don't know how much petrol Bamsefar uses with the throttle wide open for kilometer after kilometer, but
I expect it is quite a lot.
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The German Autobahn is very, very boring. After a few hours the only thing to do is to make the passing
of trucks as eventful as possible. Not very exiting (to say the least!) but what can a man do?
Finally I arrive in Nederland. I enter at Venlo in the south. But just as I have entered I feel the urge to visit
Enschede in the west. So I turn back into Germany, ride up on the Autobahn 31, and enther Nederland again at Enschede.
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Once upon a time, I used to live here. The film shows a neighborhood in the east part of Enschede, a pub
(De Toekomst), and little else. But for me, it was a place where I spent 18 exiting month. I draw to a halt
just in front of the door to the apartment where I used to live.
Oh well.
I motor on, and I recall the three most striking features of Nederland (and manages to capture them all in one
image). First there are bicycles everywhere. Not at all like it was 15 years ago when I lived there, but still
many more than what I am used to here in Italia.
Second, the bridge carries the train. WHen I lived there the Koploper (a train with a "bulb" up front just as
the Jumbo jet) was new and exiting. Now it looks old.
Third, the curved facades. I don't know what it is about the Dutch, but all building have curved facades.
I ride west from Enschede to Delft, where the Zumo directs me without hesitation to B&B Oosteinde.
Website
here. Excellent service, good price, and secure parking for
the bike (what more can you ask?).
It turns out that when I arrive, there is nobody around. The reason is that Italy was being beaten by Nederland during
some sport thing. And the Dutch are even more interested than the Italians. As I don't care I had the rear part fo the
piazza (Dierenplats) all for my self. Dutch food, about which I will have more to say later.
On my way back to the B&B I came across this outstanding beautiful car. Any info out there about it?
1062 km on a nice day.
Tomorrow I'll check out Delft, eat Dutch food, drink Belgian beer, and watch the leaning tower.
Thank you for your attention.
[TaSK]