0


I always knew I couldn't hold a candle to a fart from the likes of the guys on the interwebs. Unfortunately I met this cat named the ripper some years ago at a loudon track day. When he told me he was selling his woods 350 and knocking the stable down to just the 790 and that it was the droid I was looking for, I believed him. What I've since (re?) learned is that he is-of course-a better rider than I.
ADVs are still the killer app for New England MAINTAINED roads though. Potholes? No biggie. Inter slab? Got it. Shit pavement? Fine. Ran out of time and have to get back to the wife and kids ASAP. Sure.
All that said, I hated parking my ~200 lbs 200cc 2-stroke enduro in mud too. Just ride around that crap. Berms are where it is at anyway.
These stories are why I always run damn near the most aggressive tires that will fit on my bike. Tread life sucks, cornering grip on pavement is merely alright, and 98% of the time they are way overkill, but there's always that 2% where you get yourself into something unexpected that makes you really appreciate the extra traction. Of course I guess it also helps that I have a No-Mar in my garage.
As for lightweight ADV bikes, the 390 Adventure R and Enduro are coming soon...
2023 KTM 890 Adventure R
July 2018. Back when I had the Multistrada 1000, I ran dual sport tires for a while thinking I'd ride some easy town roads. Do I have much dirt experience? No. I had ridden past Old Stage Road in Barre MA many times, so i checked google maps and decided to take it west to MA-122, not very far, looked easy. It started paved, then broken pavement, houses thinned out til there were none, then all dirt and rocks, uphill in a narrow gully, I stalled and the bike gently laid down on the right side, siting at a 45* angle thanks to the hard cases and the gully sides. Easy enough to pick the bike up, put the side stand down, tied the front brake, and lifted. After that I walked up hill scouting a line til I arrived at a good place to stop and park, then rode the bike to that spot. Did that about three times til I got to the top. Then it was down toward 122, came to a big puddle in the trail, more like a small lake, I managed to go around it through the trees, then got to nice groomed roads ... that had fresh gravel, like riding on marbles, but made it without disasters. I could have walked all the way out if needed, but luck was with me if not common sense. The next day I ordered fresh road tires.
And don't believe everything you think.
Last edited by whynot; 01-20-25 at 10:40 AM.
And don't believe everything you think.
Well to be fair the first time I rode it was last year, and a lot can change on an unmaintained road in 6 years. But you definitely don't need a DR350 to get through there as of late last year. I've ridden it twice on my 890R in both directions, and assuming you're comfortable with a bit of rockiness and a bit of wetness, it's easily doable on any bike with decent tires.
I only put easy to shorter moderate roads in Tomato Trail. It's meant to be big-bike-noob friendly.
Link if you're interested (Tomato Trail Long is the one that goes through there):
https://advrider.com/f/threads/tomat...pster.1258683/
2023 KTM 890 Adventure R
^^ Thanks. I think my next trail bike will be a TW200.
And don't believe everything you think.
2023 KTM 890 Adventure R
For those looking for routes aka tracks in Mass and surrounding states, check out the Piccadilly Pineapple Adventure Trail map. Lots of fun routes all public accessible roads.
https://www.advrider.com/f/threads/p...trail.1673441/
Send cash... I need a track day
..
It's 2 minutes for any capable adult.
With Blord Blessure pills, no less.![]()
Go fast. Have fun. Repeat.