Mr M was in Dilbeek while I was in Sterrebeek:
Which was quite convenient as these two were diametrically opposite positions on the map... wait...
After a while, I picked up Mr M from Dilbeek, got his luggage from his car, gave him some leftover parts from the rebuild to leave in his car, and headed back to Sterrebeek.
This was his first encounter with his new to him C90CMV, and the smile tells a thousand words. Sadly, it's orientated like it is.
You can see the C90s in their final form. The CMV has a single seat in true JDM spec, meaning he could take a large roll bag on the pillion seat without taking it off while refueling. His rack is the one without the side loops, but we found that his Givi side bags were small enough to rest on the fixed part of the rear shocks. His Rickman top box was also filled, and the Castrol 10W-40 Race - Full Synthetic oil jug was on the front rack.
The Red had some throw-over bicycle bags that are not waterproofed. I decided that these will take all the tools we'll need to rebuild an engine and spare tubes + a 12V socket air compressor. The spine rack was always used to carry water, the front rack had the same type of oil, and the top box was quite empty with just my normal coat. I had a laptop bag/rucksack that went into the roll bag, while Mr M's shoes were in one of my side bags. I don't recall him ever using those shoes, much like I didn't use mine... better luck next time.
By the time we had something to eat and geared up, the rain started. Typical. It was a beautiful sunny morning.
We set off on Sunday, the 29th of October, well in the afternoon. We had these cheap Freedconn intercoms that we used to communicate throughout our trip. The first thing I heard from Mr M was, "How do you ride this thing?" My reply was, "All down."... other than that, he needed to get used to everything else. The luggage he carried was much heavier than mine and top heavy... in true fashion, the noobie was the one taking all the load while the experienced rider had it easy.
We had 250 km (156 miles) to Amsterdam, and the route seemed to be through a minefield:
What's 250 km on a C90? Right? Well... We had to stop 8.9 km in our trip as Mr M's socks were getting damp.
We stopped right here:
His overtrousers were lifting up his leg while he operated the gear lever. The shoes were low, and the socks were exposed to the rain. Now, by a miracle, when the Google car went by there, it was dry... We weren't there when the Google car was there.
By the time we crossed into Holland, the sky got dark. And even if it was quite late already, it wasn't as late as it looked. There was this humongous cloud above us that looked terrifying. We stopped on a bridge over the Scheldt, Mass, Meuse, or whatever the heck that river is to prepare for the storm. It was a thunderstorm, and it looked serious. So bad that I wish I weren't riding on a bridge.
We did cross the two bridges and hit the countryside. That's when the storm was directly above us, and there weren't many objects taller than us... here's how it looks on a dry day:
So, the tallest objects I could spot were our helmets. Now, I wasn't sure if the motorcycle gear counts as a hollow conductor, but I wasn't willing to find out.
The wind was also quite strong, and we were blown away on the lane. Loads of leaves flying about with the odd twigs. I was hoping to see only twigs and small branches instead of trees in the middle of the road. And the funny part of this ordeal was that since the road was going around fields, with all the 90° bends, we had the honour of being hit by the storm from all sides. It eventually overtook us, and we decided to ride slower so we didn't catch it up again. The progress was slow, and Mr M was still getting used to the bike.
After a few more hours of talking through the intercom about the storm and how we didn't get wet at all, we ended up in Rotterdam:
The Koningshavenbrug De Hef bridge was the first thing that made us stop our relentless push toward Amsterdam.
It was around 7 PM when we took these photos, which look much better when upright.
After both of us were excited that the SatNav had taken us on that red-lit bridge in the background and we had seen the tall buildings in the center of Rotterdam, we left the city. My excitement was noticed once more when I saw Gouda written on road signs... same excitement when I do groceries and buy Gouda.
We finally got to Amsterdam, and Mr M's intercom was running out of battery. He had to wait at a red light after I passed, and while I was waiting on the side of the road, I saw this sort of Chinese restaurant just there. It took us a staggering 2 seconds to decide we'd stop there for food.
The place is called Yuan's Hot Pot:
No reservation but, found a table. We got the intercoms in my top box as I have a 12V socket in there with a 2 x USB adaptor wired directly to the battery. We sat down, and the first question was, "Have you eaten here before?"... the sort of question one doesn't want to hear after a long day on the road. Now... it took the lady 5 minutes to explain how to order the food, 5 minutes too many for our hunger, and 5 minutes too few for our instant IQ levels. We went with her recommendations and we had a huge pot of soup + some raw meat to boil in the soup for 10 seconds before eating:
Mr M's chopstick experience was limited, and I could see the frustration. I was happy with the food, and the broth was edible from my point of view. So, I had as much of that as possible to warm up after the meat ran out. Mr M commented, "We would've been better off with a Shawarma."
During our stay at that Yuan's place, we searched for a place to sleep for the night. After some browsing the internet, we found the perfect place. We decided to go there and unpack the bikes before heading into Amsterdam Mitte. It was this super cute Tiny House:
And a street view image for clarification:
It took a while to find the place. We had the code, got the key, unpacked, and headed off to The Red District.
That's for the next episode.