Touring - Is this considered touring?

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View Full Version : Is this considered touring?


delver
06-04-09, 09:14 AM
Every once in a while I ride a bike 200 miles one way to visit a friend for a couple days, then ride back.
Generaly two nights camping each way over the boston mountains of Arkansas with minimal camping gear and a set of street clothes. Every time I try to stop at a different camping place, though thats getting harder.

Planning my next trip, I am wondering if this is just a trip by bike, or if taking a different route each time makes it touring. The whole point is really seeing my friends and thier kids, but I take the bike because I am car light and its fun, but feels different from a long journey just for the sake of taking the bike.

This trip I plan on mailing some clothing there and taking my road bike with touring gearing, trying for a one day trip but with my hammock just in case. My base wieght for camping gear, stove, hammock, tarp and bag is 12 lbs so I think I can do it(crossing some river valleys may kill the idea).
The first time I did it I carried 15 lbs of tea pot and cups as a wedding gift + regular load:cry: Its funny now, but not while I was climbing out of the Buffalo river valley.:D


Barrettscv
06-04-09, 09:16 AM
This sounds like credit-card touring made even better (with no credit card involved).

Roughstuff
06-04-09, 10:27 AM
Every once in a while I ride a bike 200 miles one way to visit a friend for a couple days, then ride back.
Generaly two nights camping each way over the boston mountains of Arkansas with minimal camping gear and a set of street clothes..........



Sounds like touring to me! Watch out...it tends to be habit forming. Before ya know it you'll be riding around the world.

roughstuff


nancy sv
06-04-09, 10:37 AM
Heck yeah - it's touring! It won't be long before you'll start thinking about going to visit your friends in LA, then New York, then Florida...

mr geeker
06-04-09, 10:40 AM
I'D call it touring.

neilfein
06-04-09, 10:43 AM
A tour - to me - is when you ride somewhere, stay overnight, then ride somewhere the next day. So yes, this is touring.

imi
06-04-09, 11:27 AM
Yeah, good definition... I have friends who live just 20 miles away in the country, but when I visit them I take my crash bag and bike tools, sleep in their garden (in the summer) and ride home the next day... It feels like more like touring :) definitely not commuting or just popping out to the shops... so 200 miles? definitely... p.s It must be great to have a friend who rides 400 miles to visit! good on you! :beer:

delver
06-04-09, 12:38 PM
Well, thanks. I figured that since it just feels a bit different than fighting headwinds for days, running out of water cause all the gas stations are closed down, trying to find a camp when there are miles of barbed wire on each side of the road, or losing 15 pounds while eating 8500 calories a day it may be different. I always seem to do long trips in the worst weather as well.

And thinking about it, there always seems to be a vista that is new, odd people to talk to in towns like Possum Trot, and the joy of cooking something to eat in the middle of nowhere.
And of course there are things like this to see.
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2468/3594842373_885d732028.jpg?v=0
I love Arkansas.

rhm
06-04-09, 12:41 PM
A tour - to me - is when you ride somewhere, stay overnight, then ride somewhere the next day. So yes, this is touring.

Yeah, I tend to use the term that way too.

Still, I'd rather talk about bike touring than "bike touring" if you see what I mean. Isn't there a Semantics forum where people talk about what words mean?

Neil_B
06-04-09, 09:50 PM
It's a tour to most of us here, aside from possibly a few 'elite' tourers.

Machka
06-04-09, 10:06 PM
A tour - to me - is when you ride somewhere, stay overnight, then ride somewhere the next day. So yes, this is touring.


+1

I'll add that I include hub-and-spoke style tours as touring too. :)

stevage
06-04-09, 11:29 PM
I don't quite like the "ride somewhere, stay the night, ride somewhere" definition. Sometimes friends and I go to the beach, and some of us ride down (70ks), some of us drive.

So, it's a tour if:
- There are two days of bike riding, between the time you left home and when you returned; AND
- The bike ride is the primary purpose of the outing, OR you ride two two days in a row.

(So yes, riding 3 days to visit a friend is a tour. Riding 1 day to the beach then back is not)

Machka
06-04-09, 11:39 PM
I don't quite like the "ride somewhere, stay the night, ride somewhere" definition. Sometimes friends and I go to the beach, and some of us ride down (70ks), some of us drive.

So, it's a tour if:
- There are two days of bike riding, between the time you left home and when you returned; AND
- The bike ride is the primary purpose of the outing, OR you ride two two days in a row.

(So yes, riding 3 days to visit a friend is a tour. Riding 1 day to the beach then back is not)

If you're riding 1 day to the beach, staying overnight at the beach and riding back home, it is a tour. If you want to call it something, that's called an "overnight tour". That's what the definition describes.

uciflylow
06-05-09, 05:42 AM
That is a tour in my book! I do lots of "overnighters" as shake down rides to test new, or different equipment. Yesterday I rode my loaded bike all day in the rain and cool temps just to see if I was prepaired for difficult weather. I'm heading over into the Missouri Ozarks for a few weeks, just for fun!

mrpincher
06-05-09, 06:26 PM
The consensus here says yes. I tour in this fashion at least twice a month practically all year long. I spend one weekend home the next I ride, if at all possible. However, I remember Sheldon Brown calling it bike camping. He seemed to classify touring as biking long distance without a daily goal or firm plan. Please forgive me as I take liberty with his wording.

robow
06-05-09, 08:18 PM
Let's get real here, NO, this is not touring for the following reasons.

1. You're only traveling through Arkansas and not going solo across Malaysia

2. It's obvious with such a short gear list that you're not using both front AND rear panniers.

3. You will only be gone for a few days and not the minimum 6 months (or is that 6 years?)

4. You're probably not riding a LHT or Trek 520, so that disqualifies you immediately, and if by chance your bike is made from anything but steel, just get your non-Brooks riding butt right over to the roadie forum and stay clear of us true bike tourers.

Nuff said, as tongue stuck in cheek.

Neil_B
06-05-09, 10:31 PM
Let's get real here, NO, this is not touring for the following reasons.

1. You're only traveling through Arkansas and not going solo across Malaysia

2. It's obvious with such a short gear list that you're not using both front AND rear panniers.

3. You will only be gone for a few days and not the minimum 6 months (or is that 6 years?)

4. You're probably not riding a LHT or Trek 520, so that disqualifies you immediately, and if by chance your bike is made from anything but steel, just get your non-Brooks riding butt right over to the roadie forum and stay clear of us true bike tourers.

Nuff said, as tongue stuck in cheek.

There are other rules, such as the requirement you stealth camp, disrespect private property, etc, but your four are a good start.

neilfein
06-06-09, 09:05 AM
Don't forget, if you don't take a bazillion photos it's not a real tour. Because the thread you post about the tour (another requirement to make it a real tour) will be worthless without pictures.

(There will inevitable be someone who doesn't get that this - and the previous three posts - are sarcasm. Go figure...)

Neil_B
06-06-09, 09:16 AM
Don't forget, if you don't take a bazillion photos it's not a real tour. Because the thread you post about the tour (another requirement to make it a real tour) will be worthless without pictures.


Just make sure they are "real" pictures, not "snapshots."

robow
06-06-09, 10:14 AM
Ah yes, like a tree falling in a forest, if there are not enough "real" 35 mm photos of your loaded bike against some iconic background, then it didn't happen. :) See, I added a smiley so as to add clarity to my oh so subtle post.

delver
06-06-09, 11:58 AM
I guess that having all brand new uber expensive equipment helps as well. I think that Robow can attest that I tour on nothing but the latest and greatest:lol:
When we met I was on cracked old 27" gumwalls and a gaspipe frame with cheap avenir panniers. One of my favorite bikes actually.

and all I ever seem to take pictures of is my bike with a flat and whatever is around when I am fixing it.

Well, whatever it is I am leaving next week, and have decided to tackle mount Nebo and Petit Jean Mountain, since I just recomended them to someone else. Got to put the foot where the mouth is.

dewaday
06-06-09, 12:04 PM
Just make sure to remain over sensitive to the opinions of others because touring with a hair shirt is really fun :).

LeeG
06-06-09, 12:17 PM
yeah, it's touring if the miles per day divided by the weight of your gear multiplied by the square root of the cost of your trip plus 150% of the tire air pressure divided by tire size width is less than 100. I'm not sure what the other folks are doing.

robow
06-06-09, 08:40 PM
Yea, when I met up with Delver on the Katy Trail a couple years back, well let's put it this way, there are people who love to bike tour and then there are slob poseurs like me, and Delver is the real thing. Best of luck to you but I'm sure which ever one of your 60+ vintage steeds you select to ride, you'll be flying both up and down those mountain tops.

Randochap
06-06-09, 09:20 PM
Sure, it's a short tour. I even refer to a long day, ridden for no other purpose than sightseeing as a "day tour." (http://www.veloweb.ca/storypages/kootenay-return.html)

During the brevet season I'll ride longer distances, in shorter times, but these are with the official clock ticking, so not in the same low-key spirit as "tours."

Machka
06-06-09, 09:27 PM
sure, it's a short tour. I even refer to a long day, ridden for no other purpose than sightseeing as a "day tour." (http://www.veloweb.ca/storypages/kootenay-return.html)

during the brevet season i'll ride longer distances, in shorter times, but these are with the official clock ticking, so not in the same low-key spirit as "tours."

+1

delver
06-06-09, 10:01 PM
Yea, when I met up with Delver on the Katy Trail a couple years back, well let's put it this way, there are people who love to bike tour and then there are slob poseurs like me, and Delver is the real thing. Best of luck to you but I'm sure which ever one of your 60+ vintage steeds you select to ride, you'll be flying both up and down those mountain tops.


I'm actually down to about twenty five bikes(regular riders, still have a bunch in the barn). Vintage is another word for old. Its a word that a rider on an old bike uses while lusting after a rig like Robows.
By the way robow, I did the katy later as part of a much longer tour, east to west riding on 26 inch tires, and never again. Its going to be 700c or 27 again from now on, like the first time.

Doing some Randonnuering I know the difference that you guys are talking about. Everyone just bounces into the store, gets thier chit signed and is on the road before I even get myself a drink and start hitting on the checkout girl. Once, I passed a sort of off the wall bike shop in the middle of nowhere just the kind of place I am not allowed into by friends or family. The guy whose wheel I was giving a hickey to refused to stop, and I damn near bailed on the ride there, but I was lost, and could not afford to lose the guy with a sense of direction. As it was, we called for sag when the big storm hit at 120 some miles. There is not much of a DNF in touring, at least not posted anywhere.:mad:

Machka
06-06-09, 10:24 PM
There is not much of a DNF in touring, at least not posted anywhere.:mad:

There have been a rider or two who have posted here who set out on a tour and at some point packed it in and took a bus or plane home and spent the rest of the time they had booked off sitting at home and wrestling with that decision.

But I think most don't DNF, they just alter their plans ... take a day off to rest, go here rather than there, or whatever.

delver
06-06-09, 11:32 PM
There have been a rider or two who have posted here who set out on a tour and at some point packed it in and took a bus or plane home and spent the rest of the time they had booked off sitting at home and wrestling with that decision.

But I think most don't DNF, they just alter their plans ... take a day off to rest, go here rather than there, or whatever.


Yeah, but I was just upset that my name was posted online with a DNF for the brevet. I possess little competitive spirit, but hate to give up on something. Seeing my name in that list really sucked. So I can imagine how it feels to cut off a tour. There are lots of reasons to do that, injury, family emergency, work calling you in...

BigBlueToe
06-07-09, 10:18 AM
Why worry about what to call it? Just do it if you like it. We have a really nice campground with a really nice hiker/biker site about 2 miles from my house. Sometimes I load up the bike and head over for a night, just to get outdoors and away from the phone/TV/computer/etc. Is that touring? Who cares?

delver
06-07-09, 11:06 AM
For everyone who answered thank you for you rresopnse. Is is a silly question based on a semantic nothing but this thread has helped me keep my mind ocupoied as I watched a loved one pass away over the last week.
I have very few qustions to ask, I am beyond the "can I tour on this bike" phase and have been for a while. So even if it was a goofy unimportant question that bored some into a meh who cares response(wich is still a response)I thank you.

And mayby thats what this whole forum thing is about, escaping just for a liittle while the things that are mundane and we wouold rather not be doing. IT is over now and agian I thank you all.

Machka
06-07-09, 01:38 PM
And mayby thats what this whole forum thing is about, escaping just for a liittle while the things that are mundane and we wouold rather not be doing. IT is over now and agian I thank you all.

That is often what the forum is about. :)

And I'm sorry to hear about your loss ... that's a tough thing to go through.

BigBlueToe
06-08-09, 08:01 AM
My "who cares" answer was meant as encouragement, not condemnation, in case anyone took it that way. "Is it touring?" is something to ponder when you are in a contemplative mood, but not worth any stress, in my opinion (not to imply that anyone was stressed.)

I think frivolous answers on internet forums are more common than frivolous questions, but they're both there and are part of the deal. I enjoy reading posts that are amusing as well as those that are informative. I strive to be both, though I know any attempt can fail.

I'm sorry to hear about your loss.

staehpj1
06-08-09, 08:52 AM
But I think most don't DNF, they just alter their plans ... take a day off to rest, go here rather than there, or whatever.
Probably true, but there are at least a few journals on crazyguyonabike from riders who bailed on a on a long tour for various reasons such as:

Running out of money
Just not physically or mentally being up to the task at that time
Having their gear stolen
Being injured

I personally know a few from each category except #4 and have heard stories about that one. The riders who aborted tours for reasons 1 and 2 still considered the tour a success. Reasons 3 and 4 are pretty heart breaking, especially if the tour was something that they planned as a big event like a onetime TA or the like.

delver
06-08-09, 05:38 PM
[QUOTE=BigBlueToe;9061662]My "who cares" answer was meant as encouragement, not condemnation, in case anyone took it that way. QUOTE]

Hey, took it that way, no problems. I was kind of admiting that it was a goofy thing to worry about.

Also sorry for the emotive post. It was one of those that if I did not have a no takeback rule I would delete. Grief is a funny thing. I can't even spell it, much less deal with it:o

On the topic of ending a tour early, I have had to bail a few days early because I was simply out of time... Even the self employed artists have to work:cry:

So anyway, now I am taking the trip to clear my head, give everyone else some decompression/down time, Just going through the bikes, deciding what to ride, what to take, picking a route, filling the fuel bottle and in general getting things in order. So yeah, tour or not, there it is.