Tag Archives: Motorcycle rally

Bushfires won’t halt Walcha Motorcycle Weekend

Bushfires in eastern NSW will not stop the Walcha Motorcycle Weekend from going ahead from Friday (15 November 2019).

Walcha Tourism has issued the following statement in response to concerns from riders that the event would be cancelled because of the bushfires.

Please be assured WALCHA is still ON for this weekend. Please plan ahead for your trip using www.livetraffic.com.au and www.google.com/maps.

The weekend festival was hastily organised in recent days to replace the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles and national Harley Owners Group (HOG) rally which were axed at the last minute.

Bushfires

NSW Premier has declared a State of Emergency with dangerous fire conditions tomorrow (Tuesday 12 November 2019).

A Total Fire Ban is in place for the whole of the state and motorists are advised to delay all “non-essential travel”.

The official advice is:

Many roads remain closed due to bush fires. Be prepared for conditions to change quickly and roads to close suddenly.

If you need to travel, also make sure you’ve got water, food, supplies and a full tank of fuel. Make sure your mobile phone is fully charged before you set out.

If you’re already travelling when a bush fire starts, follow the directions of emergency services personnel.

Image: NSW Rural Fire Service

Most bushfires in the region are to the east of Walcha, although the situation could change later this week with higher temperatures and strong winds predicted.

walcha bushfires
Image: NSW Rural Fire Service

While bushfires are not considered a direct threat to the replacement event at the moment, riders are urged to check their route for any dangers.

You can check online here for bushfires in Queensland.

In NSW, check the RFS website, SES website, Fire Update Site, or download the ‘Fires Near Me’ app.

Walcha Motorcycle Weekend highlights

Among the highlights at the Walcha Motorcycle Weekend’ will be the chance for riders to hear Harley-Davidson’s LiveWire electric motorcycle and even go for a “demo ride” on their Jumpstart Experience.

demo ride online walcha
Harley offers non-licensed people a demo ride with their JumpStart

Harley-Davidson Australia spokesman Keith Waddell says they have been “working closely with Walcha Council to support their plans to host riders with music and food options over the weekend”.

The company will set up at the Walcha Showground and will run demo rides over the weekend.

There is a host of other entertainment across the three days, including stunt shows, a rodeo, guided rides, Harley demo rides, a Steampunk motorcycle gallery, markets, music, food stalls, a billy cart derby show and shine and more.

Click here for a full schedule of events.

Of course, one of the main attractions is simply getting there by riding Thunderbolts Way and/or the magnificent Oxley Highway.

However, at the moment the Oxley is closed after bushfires and awaiting inspection by Roads and Maritime Services to see if it is safe.

All accommodation in town is fully booked so Council has organised for camping at the Oxley Sportsground.

Local not-for-profit groups will provide basic catering onsite and clean-up services.

Walcha Royal Cafe owner Toni Keable says they will continue with the entertainment they had previously planned before the events were axed.

Oxley highway hillclimb
Toni and Brad Keable of the Royal Cafe, Walcha

“We had one rider who cancelled because he was concerned about bushfires, but they are a long way from us,” she says.

“People can be assured that this weekend will definitely go ahead.

“Everyone is positive and we’re not going to let this opportunity to showcase the town slip through our fingers.”

Be alert

Bushfires can spread rapidly and even outrun a vulnerable rider, so stay alert.

Riders are also in danger from smoke inhalation and low visibility and eye irritation from smoke.Bushfires Harley Softail

But rural fire services also say fires can be sparked by motorcycles and cars, especially the ultra-hot catalytic convertor, so don’t park on dry grass!

They say about 40% of all bushfires are accidentally started by humans dropping cigarette butts, campfires, discarding bottles, sparks from machinery, vehicles and motorcycles.

Most riders who accidentally spark these blazes are off-road and adventure bikes riding in the bush and on forestry tracks.Bushfires BMW R 1200 GS

Tips to avoid dehydration in a heatwave:

  1. Don’t drink too much alcohol the night before a ride. It has a diuretic effect which means it causes you to urinate more water than you take in which means you are losing fluid. And you can’t counteract that by drinking lots of water because most of it will go out in your urine. Obviously, don’t drink alcohol while you are riding!
  2. Start drinking water as soon as you wake and keep sipping water right up until you get on your bike. It takes about half an hour for water to reach your muscles. Guzzling water just before a ride is not good as it can make your stomach to cramp. The Royal Flying Doctor Service which has attended dehydrated riders in the Outback, recommends carrying 10 litres of water per day! Read their Outback riding tips here.
  3. Wear ventilated motorcycle clothing. Leathers may protect you better in a crash, but they create a “microclimate” which impairs your ability to lose heat. As a result you will produce more sweat to decrease your core temp. Instead, wear a flow-through jacket. There are heaps of options on the market. Make sure they have vents in the back so the air flows through. Also, loosen the sleeves so you get plenty of air on your wrists which have a lot of blood vessels close to the skin to effectively cool you down. However, be aware that a flow-through jacket cools you down because it is drying the sweat off your skin which can lead to dehydration. A set of Ventz up your sleeve will also keep you cool as air flows up your arms.However, don’t be fooled by your level of coolness as ventilation can also cause you to loose more water through evaporation. So you still need to keep drinking plenty of water.

    Ventz motorcycle jacket vents - pain heatwave dust storm
    BUY Ventz motorcycle jacket vents NOW

  4. Don’t be tempted to remove your jacket in the heat! Exposed skin may feel cooler, but that’s because the sweat is evaporating quicker, but that is just making you more dehydrated. And while your skin feels cool, you’ll be tricked into staying in the sun longer which leads to sunburn. That also leads to dehydration because your body needs water to repair and renew damaged skin.
  5. Get a Camelbak or other brand of water-dispensing unit so you can continue to take small sips of water while you are riding. I’ve seen riders on GoldWings and other big tourers with cup holders so they can take slurps from a water bottle. That’s obviously not as safe as the hands-free Camelback option, but anything is better than nothing. Some people don’t like Camelbaks because the water gets hot, but the temperature of the water doesn’t affect dehydration.Camelbak reduces dehydration heatwave dust storm
  6. Stop more often than usual and hang out in the shade or in an air-conditioned cafe. Since you are drinking lots of fluids, you will probably need to stop anyway!
  7. While you’re stopped, have a coffee, but take it easy. No need to swear off your favourite caramel latte, but avoid excess coffee. That also goes for caffeinated drinks such as Red Bull. High levels of caffeine have a diuretic effect just like alcohol.
  8. While having a coffee break, avoid having too many sweet cakes, donuts and muffins. Sugar can dehydrate you if it gets to very high levels in your blood. This can happen if you are a diabetic, take certain medications or have an infection or some organ diseases. Sugar causes your kidneys to produce more urine to eliminate the sugar, leading to dehydration. Likewise, don’t drink too many sugary drinks. Best to stick to plain water, real fruit juices with no added sugar or drinks such as Gatorade that replace salts and minerals lost in sweat.
  9. We’ve talked a lot about urine and it’s important that you monitor the colour. It should be a straw colour. If it’s too dark, you are dehydrated.
  10. Sweat also depletes your body of sodium and if it becomes too low, it can cause many of the same symptoms as dehydration. The average diet probably has enough sodium, but it’s good to have a little bit of salt on your meals or drink sports drinks that have a sodium supplement. However, beware of sports drinks with caffeine and sugar.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Walcha Motorcycle Weekend revs up

The Walcha Motorcycle Weekend revs up from tomorrow (15-17 November 2019) to replace the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles and national Harley Owners Group (HOG) rally which were axed at the last minute.

Among the many highlights will be the chance for riders to hear Harley-Davidson’s LiveWire electric motorcycle and even go for a “demo ride” on their Jumpstart Experience.

demo ride online walcha
Harley offers non-licensed people a demo ride with their JumpStart

Harley-Davidson Australia spokesman Keith Waddell says they have been “working closely with Walcha Council to support their plans to host riders with music and food options over the weekend”.

The company will set up at the Walcha Showground and will run demo rides over the weekend.

Meanwhile, he says the liquidators of the two axed events are “working through the required processes on asset and refund retrieval for all involved”.

“As this process may take some time, Harley-Davidson will refund the $99 HOG ticket cost directly to members,” he says.

“All HOG ticket holders have been contacted directly to arrange those refunds.”

The liquidators have not yet provided any details on refunds for Freak Show ticket holders.

Walcha Motorcycle Weekend program

There is a host of other entertainment across the three days, including stunt shows, a rodeo, guided rides, Harley demo rides, a Steampunk motorcycle gallery, markets, music, food stalls, a billy cart derby show and shine and more.

Click here for details.

Of course, one of the main attractions is simply getting there by riding Thunderbolts Way and/or the magnificent Oxley Highway.

All accommodation in town is fully booked so Council has organised for camping at the Oxley Sportsground.

There will be some conditions due to current water restrictions.

Local not-for-profit groups will provide basic catering onsite and clean-up services.

Walcha Royal Cafe owner Toni Keable says they will continue with the entertainment they had previously planned before the events were axed.

Oxley highway hillclimb
Toni and Brad Keable of the Royal Cafe, Walcha

“People can be assured that this weekend will definitely go ahead,” she says.

“Everyone is positive and we’re not going to let this opportunity to showcase the town slip through our fingers.”Walcha

Liquidation

The original twin events were organised by Inside Line Events International which was behind the aborted TT events planned for either the Oxley Highway or the Sunshine Coast.

Freak Show Festival organiser David Rollins sent us this formal statement:

The organisers of the Freak Show Festival of motorcycles regret to inform that the event has been forced into voluntary liquidation due to difficulties maintaining ongoing support from sponsors

The organisers are personally and financially devastated by this outcome, having poured considerable money into the event as well as time.

A liquidator has been appointed. All ticketing and trade enquires should be addressed to Wexted Pty Ltd, Level 12, 28 O’Connell Street, Sydney NSW 2000. E: [email protected]

He says there is “not much I can add to it for legal reasons”.

More than 1000 tickets had been sold and they claimed they were expecting about 5000 to attend.

Freak show

The Freak Show Festival was to include a flat track, a dirt hill climb, custom motorcycles, the Globe of Death, wheelies, stoppies and burnouts, a ride-in cinema playing motorcycle-themed movies, live music and food and beverages.

It was scheduled for one weekend after the Australian Motorcycle Festival (formerly the Sydney Moto Expo) in Wollongong from November 8-10.

The show and rally were also sponsored by NSW Tourism Department who expected it to deliver more than $1.7 million in visitor expenditure to the region.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Walcha puts on special show for visitors

The NSW country town of Walcha is putting on a special show for those who are still planning to ride there despite the last-minute axing of the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles and national Harley Owners Group (HOG) rally.

Organisers for the axed events have gone into liquidation and refunds are not yet guaranteed for those who have paid for tickets and accommodation for the November 15-17 event.

However, we have spoken to MBW readers, a couple of HOG groups and other riders who say still intend to ride to Walcha for the weekend, even if just to ride the magnificent Oxley Highway.

Phoenix Rising

So the town has ensured there is something to them to do when they get there. They are calling their impromptu event “The Rising of the Phoenix”.

Walcha Royal Cafe owner Toni Keable says they had already organised entertainment for the weekend so that would simply to go ahead.

Oxley highway hillclimb
Toni and Brad Keable of the Royal Cafe, Walcha

On top of that, a host of other events across the weekend have now been planned, she says.

“We’ve had a meeting of council, the Mayor and the business houses in the town to confirm that the event will go ahead as ‘The Rising of the Phoenix’,” Toni says.

“People can be assured that this weekend will definitely go ahead.

“The overall feeling in town was disappointment that such a thing (cancellation) could happen this close to the event.

“But we’ve put all that behind us now and we’re just happy to have this many fabulous motorcyclists rolling into Walcha.

“Everyone is positive and we’re not going to let this opportunity to showcase the town slip through our fingers.”Walcha

Walcha weekend program

The town is preparing a special website to list the events. Click here for details.

Events and times are not listed yet, but click again in a few days and they are expected to be updated.

They include live music, a show and shine, a rodeo, markets, billy cart derby, art exhibition and more.

We have heard Harley-Davidson Australia will still attend with their truck, demo fleet, stalls and Jump Start, however it has not yet been confirmed.

Liquidation

The original twin events were organised by Inside Line Events International which was behind the aborted TT events planned for either the Oxley Highway or the Sunshine Coast.

Freak Show Festival organiser David Rollins sent us this formal statement:

The organisers of the Freak Show Festival of motorcycles regret to inform that the event has been forced into voluntary liquidation due to difficulties maintaining ongoing support from sponsors

The organisers are personally and financially devastated by this outcome, having poured considerable money into the event as well as time.

A liquidator has been appointed. All ticketing and trade enquires should be addressed to Wexted Pty Ltd, Level 12, 28 O’Connell Street, Sydney NSW 2000. E: [email protected]

He says there is “not much I can add to it for legal reasons”.

More than 1000 tickets had been sold and they claimed they were expecting about 5000 to attend.

HOG rally also cancelled

National HOG rally to return in 2019
HOG rally axed

The associated HOG Rally has also been cancelled.

Harley-Davidson Australia issued this statement:

Harley-Davidson Australia has been informed that Inside Line Events, event organizer for the “Freakshow of Motorcycling”, is in voluntary liquidation and will cancel the rally. The event was scheduled for November 15-17, 2019 in Walcha, NSW.

As a key sponsor of the event, Harley-Davidson Australia is extremely disappointed with this outcome. We are committed to delivering the very best experience for our H.O.G members and we’re focused on delivering an alternative event in 2020,” Keith Waddell, Marketing Manager for Harley-Davidson Australia, commented.

We are working with the event organizer on the refund process.

H-D will be looking to arrange an alternative in the coming year.

The loss of the HOG national rally will be difficult for members to take as the last was held in 2015 at Tamworth.

It was followed by open Harley Days rallies at Wollongong in 2016 and 2017 which did not impress HOG members unhappy with the open format.

There was no 2018 national rally.

Freak show

The Freak Show Festival was to include a flat track, a dirt hill climb, custom motorcycles, the Globe of Death, wheelies, stoppies and burnouts, a ride-in cinema playing motorcycle-themed movies, live music and food and beverages.

It was scheduled for one weekend after the Australian Motorcycle Festival (formerly the Sydney Moto Expo) in Wollongong from November 8-10.

The show and rally were also sponsored by NSW Tourism Department who expected it to deliver more than $1.7 million in visitor expenditure to the region.

Walcha Mayor Eric Noakes had said the town was “100% behind the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles”.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Freak Show and HOG rally cancelled

The organisers of the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles to run alongside the national Harley Owners Group (HOG) rally in Walcha, NSW, have gone into liquidation and the events cancelled.

We are yet to learn if refunds are guaranteed for those who have paid for tickets and accommodation for the event scheduled from November 15-17, 2019.

The event was being organised by Inside Line Events International who was behind the aborted TT events planned for either the Oxley Highway or the Sunshine Coast.

Freak Show Festival organiser David Rollins sent us this formal statement:

The organisers of the Freak Show Festival of motorcycles regret to inform that the event has been forced into voluntary liquidation due to difficulties maintaining ongoing support from sponsors

The organisers are personally and financially devastated by this outcome, having poured considerable money into the event as well as time.

A liquidator has been appointed. All ticketing and trade enquires should be addressed to Wexted Pty Ltd, Level 12, 28 O’Connell Street, Sydney NSW 2000. E: [email protected]

He says there is “not much I can add to it for legal reasons”.

More than 1000 tickets had been sold and they claimed they were expecting about 5000 to attend.

HOG rally also cancelled

National HOG rally to return in 2019
HOG rally axed

The associated HOG Rally has also been cancelled.

Harley-Davidson Australia issued this statement:

Harley-Davidson Australia has been informed that Inside Line Events, event organizer for the “Freakshow of Motorcycling”, is in voluntary liquidation and will cancel the rally. The event was scheduled for November 15-17, 2019 in Walcha, NSW.

As a key sponsor of the event, Harley-Davidson Australia is extremely disappointed with this outcome. We are committed to delivering the very best experience for our H.O.G members and we’re focused on delivering an alternative event in 2020,” Keith Waddell, Marketing Manager for Harley-Davidson Australia, commented.

We are working with the event organizer on the refund process.

H-D will be looking to arrange an alternative in the coming year.

The loss of the HOG national rally will be difficult for members to take as the last was held in 2015 at Tamworth.

It was followed by open Harley Days rallies at Wollongong in 2016 and 2017 which did not impress HOG members unhappy with the open format.

There was no 2018 national rally.

Freak show

The Freak Show Festival was to include a flat track, a dirt hill climb, custom motorcycles, the Globe of Death, wheelies, stoppies and burnouts, a ride-in cinema playing motorcycle-themed movies, live music and food and beverages.

It was scheduled for one weekend after the Australian Motorcycle Festival (formerly the Sydney Moto Expo) in Wollongong from November 8-10.

The show and rally were also sponsored by NSW Tourism Department who expected it to deliver more than $1.7 million in visitor expenditure to the region.

Walcha Mayor Eric Noakes had said the town was “100% behind the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles”.

Protestors line up at Walcha Royal Cafe business on the Oxley Highway
Riders in Walcha at the Royal Cafe

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Jessica kickstarts affordable rally

She dropped her bike before she had even paid for it, then rode it across two continents; now Jessica Zahra is sharing her adventure riding passion through her Open Roads Rally next month.

The 29-year-old long-distance adventure rider and Royal Enfield ambassador from Melbourne has launched the affordable rally from 18 to 20 October 2019 in Gippsland, Victoria. Tickets cost from just $7.42 for kids to $74.94 for the three days.Open Roads Rally Jessica Zahra

She expects up to 350 participants to try their skills on three tracks ranging from beginners to intermediate.

Riders navigate via a digital road book to find checkpoints. Other activities include an enduro course, barrel racing, presentations and live music.

“I started my journey around the world when I was 24,” Jessica says.

“My first bike was a Honda 125. I owned this bike for two months while I learned to ride.

“Then I flew to Europe and bought a BMW 650GS Funduro. It was a bargain, but I had no idea what I was buying. I didn’t realise how heavy it was.

“I dropped it outside the shop – before I had even paid for it!”

Jessica encounters dramaOpen Roads Rally Jessica Zahra

Her Funduro took her to almost every country in Europe over two years, then to Morocco and down the continent of Africa.

“Then my personal life was turned upside down,” she says.

A family member passed away and my relationship went south. Grief was hard on the road alone. So, I turned home.

On my way to the airport, I slipped on an oil spill at 100km/h and fractured my back.

“I picked myself up, fixed my bike and carried on. It’s important to always cry after, not before, you fix the problem. One of the many lessons I learned the hard way during those years.”

Since then, Jessica has ridden through America, Australia, Nepal, India, Sri Lanka.

Open Roads tours

She is still riding around the world and documenting her experiences or her guided tours through her Open Roads business.

Her first documentary is due next month and she is hosting a 35-day, free tour of India in November that anyone can join.

Next year, Jessica returns to lead tours in a new area of Nepal, plus Colombia, Mongolia, Canada, Kenya, India and Vietnam.

“Somehow, in between all of this, I will start preparing to enter the rally racing circuit in Europe,” she says.

Jessica will pass on some of her travel tips at the OpenRoads Rally for men, women and kids.

She kickstarted the rally because she found there were no affordable, convenient events for intermediate riders in Australia.

Tickets are available through Eventbrite or Facebook.Open Roads Rally Jessica Zahra

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Women’s relay baton crosses Australia

More than 90 riders ushered the Women Riders World Relay (WRWR) into Queensland today, including the only woman who plans to ride the whole journey around the globe.

Brisbane grandmother Collette Tindal Edeling, 55, says she mortgaged her house to fund the “trip of a lifetime”.

She was there when the world-first all-female motorbike relay started at the northern-most tip of Scotland on 27 February 2019 and has now ridden 45,000km through 43 countries.

Women's relay baton crosses Australia
Collette (right) with granddaughter Harper and daughter-in-law Katrina

“I thought I could wait until I retire to ride around the world, or I could bite the bullet and just do it now,” she says.

“I like riding, so here I am.”

Aussie leg

The Australian leg of the relay began on Sunday 25 August 2019 in Perth and has now crossed the Nullarbor to Adelaide, Melbourne and up through NSW to Noosa over night.

Tomorrow the women head south and will finish the Aussie leg on Friday in Sydney.

The global relay is the idea of UK office manager Hayley Bell, 27, to alert the motorcycle industry to the growing number of female riders.

But even Hayley hasn’t ridden as far as Collette who intends passing the special WRWR baton across 80 countries over 343 days and an estimated 90,000km.Women's relay baton crosses Australia

“I sold my Kombi van and mortgaged my house to pay for this trip,” she says.

Collette bought a Yamaha MT-07 in Europe, had sponsored bikes in Asia and has bought a BMW F 700 GS for the coming North and South American legs.

However, she shipped her Harley-Davidson 48 from Brisbane to Perth to ride across Australia.Women's relay baton crosses Australia

“It’s only got a 7.9-litre tank, so I had to refuel six times across the Nullarbor,” she says.

“My favourite country so far was beautiful Bosnia where you can still see and smell the war.”

Probably her least favourite country has been Nepal where she had three low-speed crashes.

“The roads are bad and the drivers are worse,” she says.

In one crash, she hit her head and has temporarily lost her sense of smell and some hearing.

“The biggest riding contingent we’ve had so far was 192 women in Denmark,” she says.

She takes the baton to New Zealand next, then on to Canada, USA, South America, South Africa, the Mid-East and back to the UK.

WRWR Australian leg spokesperson Peta Pitcher of Brisbane says the Aussie leg has thankfully been “uneventful”.

Women's relay baton crosses Australia
Peta adresses the riders

“We’ve only had three small drops while stationary and the women have stayed together as a pack.”

One of the epic riders in Australia is Deb Smith who rode her Yamaha V-Star 1200 from Alice Springs to Perth for the start.Women's relay baton crosses Australia

“We’ve riding too hard and fast to see much and we’ve gone through the rain and the fog and now the heat,” she says.

The women started today’s ride in zero temperatures but hit the high 20s in Queensland where Peta says they did an impromptu roadside strip to cool off.

Some 612 women have registered to ride in Australia as well as 68 men who are not counted in the official relay numbers.

WRWR baton

WRWR baton
Jane with the baton in its case on her back

Amputee rider Jane Campbell is the first in Australia to carry the baton on her Harley-Davidson trike.

The “prized” baton has a tracker attached and the route is shown on the WRWR website.

The WRWR baton was hand crafted by Eugene Sanderson of the USA, who spent hours turning and carving it from a solid block of aged mahogany. It also has glow-in-the-dark paint and comes in a custom-moulded case.

The Baton has traveled tens of thousands of kilometres and was held by countless women before being returned to the USA for repairs.

A second, improved baton joined the WRWR in Myanmar last month.

Both Batons will be reunited at the end to create a double-sided scroll containing the signatures of all riders.

It will be displayed at the final event in the UK in February 2020.

Women Riders World Relay baton

Australian relay itinerary

Day 1: 25 August 2019, Perth to Norseman 772km;

Day 2: 26 August, Norseman – Nullarbor RH, 905km;

Day 3: 27 August, Nullarbor RH – Port Augusta,764km;

Day 4: 28 August, Port Augusta – Adelaide – Mildura, 702km;

Day 5: 29 August, Mildura – Bendigo – Melbourne, 553km;

Day 6: 30 August, Melbourne – Wagga Wagga, 490km;

Day 7: 31 August, Wagga Wagga – Bathurst – Orange – Dubbo, 520km;

Day 8: 1 September, Dubbo – Tamworth – Glen Innes, 515km;

Day 9: 2 September, Glen Innes – Brisbane – Noosa, 502km;

Day 10: 3 September, Noosa – Gympie -Toowoomba -Byron Bay, 614km;

Day 11: 4 September, Byron Bay – Newcastle, 624km;

Day 12: 5 September, Newcastle to Batemans Bay, 456km;

Day 13: 6 September, Batemans Bay – Canberra  – Sydney, 442km.

Here are links to the various WRWR groups:

NSW /ACT WRWR 2019 

VIC WRWR 2019

Qld WRWR 2019

WA WRWR 2019

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Baton arrives in Women Riders World Relay

The baton in the Women Riders World Relay arrived for the Australian leg yesterday with about 58 women riding out of Perth.

Among them is 55-year-old Brisbane grandmother Collette Tindal (pictured above) who has so far ridden all the route, except for Indonesia.

Women Riders World Relay (WRWR) is a world-first all-female motorbike relay passing a baton across 80 countries over 343 days and an estimated 90,000km.

The relay is the idea of UK office manager and keen rider Hayley Bell, 27, to alert the motorcycle industry to the growing number of female riders.

It started at the northern-most tip of Scotland on 27 February 2019 and has now passed through 41 countries to reach Australia.  

Some 55 riders joined Collette yesterday and today they are riding all the way across the Nullarbor Plain.

Collette rides a Harley-Davidson 48 Special and intends to ride as many legs as possible.

She will take the baton to New Zealand next, then on to Canada.

“At this stage I am the only woman who has been riding since day 1 except Indonesia,” she says.

WRWR Australian leg spokesperson Peta Pitcher of Brisbane says the ride was initially started to raise awareness with manufacturers of the lack of good-quality, good-fitting women’s riding gear, “but it has become much more”.

WRWR baton
Peta with her Harley Blackline

“Each rider is sharing different experiences by being involved,” she says.

“It’s to challenge themselves on longer rides than they would normally do; it’s meeting a network of female riders they’d not previously connected into; and it’s about participating in an international riding event.

“For me, it’s to spend time with like-minded ladies and get some kms up on my Harley on routes I wouldn’t normally do on day trips or overnighters.”

Some 612 women have registered to ride in Australia as well as 68 men who will not being counted in the official relay numbers.

WRWR baton

WRWR baton
Jane with the baton in its case on her back

Amputee rider Jane Campbell is the first in Australia to carry the baton on her Harley-Davidson trike.

The “prized” baton has a tracker attached and the route is shown on the WRWR website.

The WRWR baton was hand crafted by Eugene Sanderson of the USA, who spent hours turning and carving it from a solid block of aged mahogany. It also has glow-in-the-dark paint and comes in a custom-moulded case.

The Baton has traveled through 43 countries, tens of thousands of kilometres and was held by countless women before being returned to the USA for repairs.

A second, improved baton joined the WRWR in Myanmar last month.

Both Batons will be reunited at the end to create a double-sided scroll containing the signatures of all riders.

It will be displayed at the final event in the UK in February 2020.

Women Riders World Relay baton

Australian relay itinerary

Day 1: 25 August 2019, Perth to Norseman 772km;

Day 2: 26 August, Norseman – Nullarbor RH, 905km;

Day 3: 27 August, Nullarbor RH – Port Augusta,764km;

Day 4: 28 August, Port Augusta – Adelaide – Mildura, 702km;

Day 5: 29 August, Mildura – Bendigo – Melbourne, 553km;

Day 6: 30 August, Melbourne – Wagga Wagga, 490km;

Day 7: 31 August, Wagga Wagga – Bathurst – Orange – Dubbo, 520km;

Day 8: 1 September, Dubbo – Tamworth – Glen Innes, 515km;

Day 9: 2 September, Glen Innes – Brisbane – Noosa, 502km;

Day 10: 3 September, Noosa – Gympie -Toowoomba -Byron Bay, 614km;

Day 11: 4 September, Byron Bay – Newcastle, 624km;

Day 12: 5 September, Newcastle to Batemans Bay, 456km;

Day 13: 6 September, Batemans Bay – Canberra  – Sydney, 442km.

Here are links to the various WRWR groups:

NSW /ACT WRWR 2019 

VIC WRWR 2019

Qld WRWR 2019

WA WRWR 2019

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Crowds expected for Freak Show of Motorcycles

More than 5000 are expected to attend the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles run alongside the return of the national Harley Owners Group (HOG) rally in Walcha, NSW, from November 15-17, 2019.

Tickets for the event, being organised by Inside Line Events International, went on sale in April.

Freak Show Festival organiser David Rollins says more than 1000 entry tickets have been sold so far.

“To have had such a large number of entry tickets snapped up in the dead of winter, so many months out from the event, is remarkable,” David says.

“We are expecting around 5000 enthusiasts will roll into Walcha in November and reaching this milestone mid-July means we’re well on track to achieving those numbers.”

If these figures are accurate, the population of the small New England High Country town of Walcha will almost triple over the extended weekend.

Freak festival

Freak Show Festival features include a flat track, a dirt hill climb, custom motorcycles, the Globe of Death, wheelies, stoppies and burnouts, a ride-in cinema playing motorcycle-themed movies, live music and food and beverages.

Harley Owner’s Group will have guided rides and HOG members will lead off the Thunder Rally.

Punters will be invited to have a go at the flat track like Brisbane’s Dust Hustle event on a purpose-built track on vacant land next to the town’s racecourse.

“We have motorcyclists making the trip from all over NSW, and also as far afield as Perth, north Queensland, South Australia, and even New Zealand,” he says.

David Rollins on his Ducati Panigale - Getting an Aussie TT event over the line Walcha Freak Show motorcycles HOG rally
David Rollins

The NSW Tourism Department estimates the motorcycle event will deliver more than $1.7 million in visitor expenditure to the region.

“With the region being in the grip of such a prolonged drought, this event is just what Walcha needs,” David says.

Walcha welcome

Walcha Mayor Eric Noakes says the town is “100% behind the Freak Show Festival of Motorcycles”.

“We’re welcoming it with open arms,” he says.

Walcha was chosen for the event because it sits at the crossroads of some of the best motorcycling routes in NSW taking in the Oxley Highway, New England Highway, Waterfall Way and Thunderbolts Way.

The rally will be held in the Walcha racecourse and sale yards with various levels of camping right up to five-star “glamping”.

“All accommodation has been booked out in Walcha already, but there is still heaps in Armidale and Tamworth. Plus we will have on-site camping options from standard tents to Lawrence of Arabia style,” David says.

Shuttle buses to and from events, accommodation and the town centre will be provided.

Harley Owners Group spokesman Andrew Kidd says Walcha is a “reasonable size town with good facilities”.

“Much like the Sturgis Motorcycle Rally, the surrounding towns will be more than able to handle the volume of riders coming to the event,” he says.

“The local roads are renowned as some of the best riding roads in the country so come along and enjoy a great event and some fantastic roads.”

Protestors line up at Walcha Royal Cafe business on the Oxley Highway
Riders in Walcha at the Royal Cafe

The whole HOG

The last HOG national rally was last held in 2015 at Tamworth and followed by open Harley Days rallies at Wollongong in 2016 and 2017.

HOG members were unhappy with the open format so there was no 2018 national rally. Now it returns at the Walcha festival.

David says the one ticket will gain access to all areas and sites.

Check out more details at the event website, Facebook and Instagram.

David says they have major sponsorship support from Harley-Davidson Australia and the NSW Government’s major events agency, Destination NSW.

The event comes just one weekend after the Australian Motorcycle Festival (formerly the Sydney Moto Expo) in Wollongong from November 8-10.

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Aussie women signing up for world rally

Registrations have opened for the Australian leg of the Women Riders World Relay 2019 with 150 signing up in the first day.

Click here to check out the 13-day route from Perth across the bottom of Australia and up the east coast on the day 180 of the rally.

Aussie relay ambassador Christi Hartwig is expecting the Australia leg will have more participants than any other country with thousands already expressing interest.

Click here if you are interested in signing up.

Aussie women sign up for world rally
Christi Hartwig

The Women Riders World Relay is the idea of UK office manager and keen rider Hayley Bell, 27, to alert the motorcycle industry to the growing number of female riders.

Hayley Bell Women Riders World Relay
Hayley Bell

“Women Riders World Relay is an opportunity to celebrate female motorcyclists and gain worldwide recognition, as well as to raise awareness of the fastest-growing segment of the motorsport industry,” she says.

Women can register on the Facebook page here while the public can monitor their progress on this Facebook page.

Relay progressAussies ‘lead’ in global women’s relay

It started at John O’Groats, Scotland, on February 27, 2019, and will be relaying a baton from woman to woman and from country to country over the next 12 months. Womwen continue signing up for the rally along the way, but more than 14,000 women had registered by March.

The women have since ridden through the British Isles, Europe, the Mid-East and the Baton is currently in Pakistan, the 41st country on the global route.

Previously it traveled through Turkey and at that time it had traveled over 31,000km passing through 1279 registered Guardian’s hands.

The baton arrives in Perth from Indonesia on August 25 and should receive a warm and enthusiastic welcome from Aussie women, says Christi.

“I have built a team to assist me, creating a route throughout Australia,” Christi says.

“I’m pleased it’s generating positive feedback. The women are excited, they want to ride!”

Christi last year became a moderator, team manager and tasker for the relay and is now the Ambassador for Australia.

“I’d like to unite, inspire and encourage female riders throughout Australia,” she says. 

Relay with purposeHayley Bell Women Riders World Relay

Hayley says she started the relay to show the motorcycles industry the female market that is “so blindly overlooked”.

“I’m tired of going into motorcycle stores and seeing four variations of pink leather jackets that look as though they have been thrown together as a half-arsed attempt after they have spent months creating fantastically designed men’s suits,” she says.

“I’m not preaching feminism, nor am I subjecting myself or our group to being labelled as ‘anti-man’.singing up for women's world rally

Australian relay itinerary

Day 1: 25 August 2019, Perth to Norseman 772km;

Day 2: 26 August, Norseman – Nullarbor RH, 905km;

Day 3: 27 August, Nullarbor RH – Port Augusta,764km;

Day 4: 28 August, Port Augusta – Adelaide – Mildura, 702km;

Day 5: 29 August, Mildura – Bendigo – Melbourne, 553km;

Day 6: 30 August, Melbourne – Wagga Wagga, 490km;

Day 7: 31 August, Wagga Wagga – Bathurst – Orange – Dubbo, 520km;

Day 8: 1 September, Dubbo – Tamworth – Glen Innes, 515km;

Day 9: 2 September, Glen Innes – Brisbane – Noosa, 502km;

Day 10: 3 September, Noosa – Gympie -Toowoomba -Byron Bay, 614km;

Day 11: 4 September, Byron Bay – Newcastle, 624km;

Day 12: 5 September, Newcastle to Batemans Bay, 456km;

Day 13: 6 September, Batemans Bay – Canberra  – Sydney, 442km.

Here are links to the various WRWR groups:

NSW /ACT WRWR 2019 

VIC WRWR 2019

Qld WRWR 2019

WA WRWR 2019

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com

Major motorcycle events set to compete

Riders will be spoilt for choice this November as two major motorcycle events compete in NSW and the Melbourne Moto Expo returns.

The events will be run over three consecutive weekends, stretching the motorcycle industry resources.

Meanwhile, other states are missing out altogether.

Competing events

Australian Motorcycle Festival events Moto Expo
Moto Expo

The biannual Moto Expo has been held in Sydney and Melbourne for the past few years and even included Brisbane in 2014.

This year the Sydney Moto Expo, which is owned by the Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries, will become the Australian Motorcycle Festival and move from Sydney to Wollongong from November 8-10. The Melbourne Moto Expo will also return to Melbourne Showgrounds on November 23-25.

These events are run by Troy Bayliss Events which the three-time World Superbike champ established after retiring 11 years ago.

Some motorcycle companies have complained about the expense of displaying at the biannual Moto Expos, resulting in some brands being absent.

Consequently, the organisers have now chosen to change the NSW event from a Moto Expo to the Australian Motorcycle Festival and move to Wollongong where Harley-Davidson Australia held two Harley Days festivals in 2016 and ’17.

Harley will now stage its annual Harley Owners’ Group rally in Walcha during the Freak Show of Motorcycles festival also in November (15-17, 2019).Walcha Freak Show motorcycles HOG rally

While NSW and Victoria get a wealth of shows and festivals, other states are missing out.

A Troy Bayliss Events spokesman says they continue to talk with manufacturers about a major motorcycle show returning to Brisbane.

“At this point we don’t have enough manufacturers willing to support more than one major exhibition each year,” he says.

“We would love to come back to Queensland soon.”

Inaugural festivals

Brisbane Moto Expo events
Stunt displays

The inaugural Australian Motorcycle Festival will be held at Wollongong’s Lang Park on November 8-10 and include Round 3 of the 2019 Australian Supercross Championship.

Instead of just motorcycle displays, the event will feature test rides, motorcycle demonstrations and stunt riding.

Similarly, the inaugural Freak Show of Motorcycles, which will be hosted in the same town as the HOG rally, will feature hillclimb, custom show, flat-track exhibition racing, stalls, music, outdoor cinema, trade show, globe of death, donuts and burnouts in a closed-off arena.

The Troy Bayliss Events spokesman says they are “glad we haven’t clashed on the same weekend as the HOG Rally”.

“We had actually discussed dates very early on to ensure we didn’t clash with HOG Rally, along with numerous other manufacturers so we did not clash with events such as Snowy Ride, ASBK and other events taking place in November and October,” he says.

“It’s great to see so many motorcycle events in Australia, hopefully more major motorcycle events are taken to the wider community to promote the motorcycle Industry in positives ways.”

Source: MotorbikeWriter.com