Reed's account for our passage from Yuan Yang, China to Luang Namtha, Laos , looks like a good read:
Post # 16
Dateline: Thursday, June 13, 2013, 10 a.m. (but posted 4 days late).
 
Welcome to the “Shangri-La Here We Come” blog.
Present location: Luangnamtha, Laos
Riding distance from Yuanyuang, China: 544 kms.
GPS track of ride from Yuanyuang, China to Luangnamtha, Laos.
Driving (moving time): 6:15
Moving average: 87 kph.
Highest elevation reached: 1689 meters
Total trip cumulative distance: 4248 kms.
Complete GPS track below:
Shangri-La GPS trip route from Chiang Mai to the Tibet border, return, at Luangnamtha.
Tomorrow’s destination: Chiang Mai, Thailand
Riding distance: 500 kms approximately.
Approximate riding time: 7.5 hours.
Phil Gibbins is taking a ton of photos, way more than me. He is posting them online on his RideAsia.net rider forum. But this url changes daily. To see the photos from our ride to Luangnamtha in Laos, you can view them at the following url:
http://www.rideasia.net/motorcycle-...karpo-6-740-meters-22-113-a-13.html#post30147
Hello Interested Parties,
In Yuanyuang, Phil and I decided to wrap up this tour. We had seen enough and experienced enough to know we discovered the best motorcycling terrain in Asia, at least the best doable motorcycling terrain that is feasible to reach within a reasonable amount of time from our home bases in Chiang Mai, Thailand. (Quite a few qualifications there.)
So we got on our bikes and rode, rode, rode, and rode some more, stopping only for a quick lunch, a piss or two, and a couple of petrol fill-ups. This portion of the route (the same portion we rode up on) was an excellent, high speed, limited access, dual carriage way with a perfect asphalt surface. Our speedos hovered between 120-130 kph and we blasted past every other vehicle on the highway. We even roared past a couple of police cars who didn’t seem to mind at all.
We hit the Chinese/Lao border by mid afternoon. Doing the paperwork in reverse, we had no trouble leaving The Middle Kingdom. The trouble seems always to be getting into these Asian countries; not getting out of them. For whatever reason they are only too happy to see us return from whence we came.
Entering Laos was a snap because this was the 2nd time we were entering Lao on this tour, and we had the drill down pat: immigration, customs, insurance. After a two-hour ride over a pleasant mountain road we checked into a pleasant guesthouse in Luangnamtha, a large town in the middle of Bokeo Province, and sat in the shade on a picnic bench sipping ice-cold Beer Laos. It feels so good to finally stop moving after so many hours on the throttle.
There are still so many roads, regions, towns and cities left to visit in Yunnan that it will keep Phil and myself busy for years. The topography of northern Yunnan Province is no less than the Himalaya Plateau itself, and the southern reaches of Yunnan are located in the Himalayan foothills, so anywhere you point your mc you will encounter outstanding riding. People who are familiar with the riding available in Northern Thailand, Northern Laos, and Northern Vietnam will have some idea of what this previous sentence suggests. Except in southern Yunnan, the mountain passes are higher, the valleys lower, the roads virtually empty, and the road conditions superb.
The Chinese locals were delightful; friendly, open, warm, and curious. They were eager to practice their budding English skills on us. Yunnan province gets lots of tourists from the rest of the motherland, and everyone here in Yunnan was out to have a good time and the three of us on our bikes were part of their good time. My expedition-equipped 4×4 was an equally big hit with the locals.
I found the food at every meal delicious. But after around two weeks of three meals a day of Chinese fare, I did get a hankering for Western food. Western food (in name only-not in taste or appearance) and fast food outlets like McDonalds, KFC, and Pizza Hut are available only in the larger cities and tourist areas.
Coffee is nearly impossible to find (next tour I am bringing my own coffee brewing equipment). Cold drinks are also unimportant to the Chinese as they believe cold liquids put inside your system are inherently unhealthy. (Next tour I am buying for the support truck a 12 volt cooler. Maybe an expresso machine as well.)
Lodging choices throughout this tour were extensive and we always stayed in a hotel or guesthouse loaded with local charm.
I would’ve liked to stay longer in Shangri-La to visit the surrounding region and Tibetan culture in greater depth. I would have liked to jump off my bike more often and wander around the truly authentic and untouched local villages we roared past. But this was impossible to do because of the distances and time involved. Next time.
The weather was delightful (except for a single day of light rain and drizzle). The roads for the most part were in excellent condition and excellently engineered. The highways we rode in China were the equal, if not superior to anything I’ve ridden in The States (from a motorcycling standpoint.)
Which brings us to the $50,000 question: which is the best type of motorcycle to ride on this tour?
Phil and I both thought the BMW F800GS’s were perfect. They were powerful enough for the highways, robust enough to handle the occasional crappy roads we encountered (not many, thankfully), handled great, were 100% reliable, had a large fuel capacity, and were comfortable enough to ride hour after hour, day after day.
Could a road bike do this tour? Like a Harley or a Ducati or a Kawasaki Verysy. Yes they can.
But around 5-10% of the roads would make a rider miserable if he was riding one of these bikes. However, those same bikes, on around 5-10% of the roads would be in all their glory, especially on some of the winding, rolling, high speed highways we motored on during the southern portions of our route.
What about a motorcycle like a Kawasaki KLR 250 or anything else in that class? Well that bike could easily handle each and every road we rode on this tour. They would be underpowered on the highways and that would negate a lot of the fun riding we had on this trip. And if you did not have a support vehicle like we had, you would be saddled down with luggage and gear and would be awefully cramped in the saddle. All the extra gear would slow you down even more so. But bottom line; a tour in Yunnan is doable on a 250 dual-purpose bike.
If a rider is skillful in handling a large capacity street bike in large Asian city where no traffic rules and regulations seem to be in play, and if a rider is skillful enough to be able to handle his street bike over the occasional ugly road sections that we hit, then he will do fine.
This is not a tour for anyone who is not used to Asian city riding techniques. This is not a tour for anyone who is not 100% comfortable riding a large capacity motorcycle on an ever-changing variety of roads.
However, I strongly recommend taking a dual-purpose mc on this tour. Any mc at least 650 cc or over would be ideal (non-fuel-injected models will have trouble with some of the altitudes we hit on the higher passes). Riding a dual-purpose motorcycle, a rider can fully enjoy 100% of the roads on this Shangri-La tour just like Phil, George and I did. In fact, George rode a 250cc dual-purpose bike for the northern part of this tour. We did have a couple of days of highway riding leaving and returning to Kunming, and George, on those sections, was not a happy camper. But he did it, no sweat.
Tomorrow is going to be the final post of this blog. Because tomorrow all Phil and I have to do is ride home safely and we will be back in our homes in Chiang Mai by suppertime. For all intents and purposes, this tour is now history.
That’s it for now. Bye bye.