I've been to one big rally (Bozeman) and a few of smaller events (Yosemite, Los Banos, Tahoe). In each case, someone put in a lot of work to entertain a lot of people whom he barely knew, and my hat's off to all of the hosts.
I wonder, though, why we go to these events. Is it to meet and socialize with the other XSives, or to ride together, or what? I'm not a big fan of large group rides, so riding ten hours around camp in a group of thirty bikes is not what gets me there. The society of strangers who share this passion is my object; seeing mods done by wizards like Denny, drinking beer with the Deerslayer and Sid Skids, trading stories with great people like the Talbots, those are the things that have stuck with me. I know that a rally with no riding is just a picnic, but what do you guys think is the proper balance? It just seemed weird to pull in after 800 miles of riding to face three 400-mile days of riding in the vicinity, then 800 more to home. When I set up a spring rally, I think I'll have half-day rides with some discrete destinations, rather than rides for the sake of riding. Any thoughts?
I wonder, though, why we go to these events. Is it to meet and socialize with the other XSives, or to ride together, or what? I'm not a big fan of large group rides, so riding ten hours around camp in a group of thirty bikes is not what gets me there. The society of strangers who share this passion is my object; seeing mods done by wizards like Denny, drinking beer with the Deerslayer and Sid Skids, trading stories with great people like the Talbots, those are the things that have stuck with me. I know that a rally with no riding is just a picnic, but what do you guys think is the proper balance? It just seemed weird to pull in after 800 miles of riding to face three 400-mile days of riding in the vicinity, then 800 more to home. When I set up a spring rally, I think I'll have half-day rides with some discrete destinations, rather than rides for the sake of riding. Any thoughts?
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