Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's

Cycle News 2001 10 03

Cycle News is a weekly magazine that covers all aspects of motorcycling including Supercross, Motocross and MotoGP as well as new motorcycles

Issue link: https://magazine.cyclenews.com/i/128124

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 22 of 85

adventure - have experienced the Tequilas Ride firsthand and quickly spread the word to friends and associates (my ride included employees from Acerbis, FMF, and Dirt Rider magazine, and earlier clients include workers from Thor, Baja Designs and American Motorcyclist magazine). That, along with an interesting, helpful Web site, has helped to generate quite a buzz for Travel Extreme in the space of just the past year or so, establishing the Tequilas Ride as the hip adventure of the moment. Taking a cue from this humble Jackass (above), Acerbls' Paul Eddy and FMF's Bill Berroth (above right) make like beasts of burden on a particularly gnarly section of trail. terfiy from Guadalajara southeast to the state of Michuacan. The ride called the Monarch Tour - will run from December to March, and although I've not ridden the route, my previous travels through the area have me convinced that it's sure to be a winner. .;.GUE? .;.COMO? In addition to being the birthplace of the potent beverage from which the tour gets its name (it's also where mariachi music was born). Guadalajara is one of the most important Mexican cities, and it is the complete opposite to the ride's Pacific Coast destination of Puerto Vallarta, which is arguably the country's nicest resort town (I've seen them all, and in my estimation, none can match PV's combination of beauty, authenticity, convenience and character). The terrain and ecosystems between the tour's start and finish are equally diverse, including majestic mountain ranges over 7000 feet tall (like the Sierra Madre Occidental); lush canyons teeming with flora and fauna; fresh pine forests to rival those of the Pacific Northwest; slimy, sticky mud routes and deep stream crossings; dense jungles of tropical vegetation; and open grazing land that stretches as far as the eye can see. Riders experience weather conditions from chilly rain to humid heat, and visit towns over 500 years old, where residents speak the pre-Colonial native language of Nahuatl. In order to take advantage of the rain season and ensure temperatures between 50 and 80 degrees, Travel Extreme runs Tequilas Ride tours from June through November, which means that if you want to try the tour this year, you'll have to get a move on (it's worth considering, since a special price is being offered until November). In December, Loera and Arambula plan to launch another tour, which will follow the famous migration route of the Monarch but- With a tour like this, there are far too many rich experiences to be done justice in a few magazine pages, so I'm going to hope the accompanying photos speak a few thousand words, and limit my narration to a brief synopsis of the journey (though I've attempted to chronicle a few of the more personal highlights from my particular ride in the sidebar entitled "Mexico Moments"). After being picked up by Saul at Guadalajara's Miguel Hidalgo Airport, our group checked into our hotel and enjoyed an exquisite meal amid waterfalls and light-hung trees at the beautiful Santo Coyote restaurant. A day off awaited us before the ride, and we spent it checking out downtown Guadalajara and learning how tequila is made at the Herradura ("Horseshoe") distillery and hacienda. By that evening's mariachi-serenaded dinner, we had already bonded with the employees and friends of Travel Extreme, and it was with reluctance that we finally turned in to grab a few hours' repose before the first day in the saddle. That day took us from the outskirts of Guadalajara to the pristine mountain town of Tapalpa. The 110mile ride took most of the day, as the going is much more slow and technical than in Baja, but even with frequent photo stops, we arrived in plenty of time to visit an internet cafe and enjoy yet another mouth-watering meal in a quaint restaurant before bedding down for a restful slumber. That repose would turn out to be essential, for day two -. a 160-mile stint to the mining town of Talpa de As "11th any adventure. the essence Of the Tequilas Ride Is more a series of distinct moments than the entire experience. tlow do you know what those moments are? They're the snapshots that keep drifting back Into your mind long after you've returned to your normal Ufe. Following are several such moments. • Being Impressed by the gleaming. COlorful. identical bikes that are lined up and awaiting you at the day-one startIng point. and Immediately choosing number 2X In honor of Mexican beer Dos £quls • Cruising. seated. through an easy section. lost In an absentminded reverie that is suddenly Interrupted by the delighted scream of an unseen child In the roadside trees • Negotiating a rocky. narrow descent in single file. when a startled cow nearly takes out the rider ahead Of you as It leaps across the trail • Realizing that your left arm has begun to fatigue. not from excess riding. but because you've been waving so often to the grinning children who line the streets of every pueblo • loearnlng during a guided tour of the tlerradura distillery and hacienda that tequila Is not merely a party splrtt designed for expedient inebriation. but an art farm (they call it the wine of Jallsco) that Inspires great pride In its practitioners (the process - from agave-planting to teqUila-bottling - tal

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Cycle News - Archive Issues - 2000's - Cycle News 2001 10 03