
Start was at about 03:30 am, planned to avoid Mumbai as well as Pune traffic before hitting the 4 lane runways leading to Rannebennur. The plan was to halt at the Kolhapur McDonald for brunch and then have grub as and when I got hungry. What I did not factor in was the biting cold which would seep in through the jacket, quilted liner, sweater and sweatshirt. While speeds were low it was still tolerable, and Mumbai Pune having heavy traffic and foggy conditions, average speeds for till pune for the first 2 ½ hrs was just 62 kph. It’s only once I cleared Pune and Katraj that speeds rose and so did the windchill aided savage cold. Crossing Kambhatki ghat, I realized that I’d have to forget about Mcfood and stop NOW. There was a row of teas stalls and I pulled over and had some biscuits with the lovely kadak chai that only roadside eateries make, partly to warm my stomach and partly to warm my hands.
That done it was time to hit the roads and let the CBR stretch it’s legs. Six laning is in progress on the Pune Satara stretch, so the authorities have no incentive to do proper repairs, hence the road is pretty bumpy, discouraging high speeds. However, after that the road is fast with light traffic and and stoppages were only for fuel, which the CBR develops a thirst for once it starts to cruise at 115+. By the time I reached Rannebennur, the average moving speed had climbed to well over 80 kph, in spite of having sat around 60 for the first 2 ½ hrs.

The GPS was referred to to get to the town of Honnali somewhere between Rannebennur and Shimoga, and the road was a fairly OK internal one, but after that the road degenerated into just aggregate dumped on whatever had been the old road. To top it all up, I was directed onto the wrong road (a good one for a change) and covered almost 20 fast km before the GPS and common sense both told me that I was going in the wrong direction. Shimoga came up after 3:30pm and I had a rice plate at a local eatery, the most expensive item being the soft drink. I also realized that the bike was handling pretty weird, and it was apparent that the rear tyre had lost all air. I stopped a few km out of Shimoga, to repair that and it turned out that the puncture repair guy had gone to Shimoga for the day – all I would get was air. The next guy had a look at the bike, another look at the lack of centre stand, and flatly refused to do anything apart from fill up air.
Well, air was good enough for me as I had mistakenly packed the pump with the other tools, it would be a PITA to remove, I had the rest of the puncture repair stuff at hand. I borrowed some water from a nearby eatery, traced the puncture (no foreign material, caused by a sharp rock), plugged it and was gone. That’s when the dream road started.
Spice and coffee estates, sometimes jungles, sometimes clumps of palm trees, occasionally fields, and running for some distance along the Tunga river, this set of absolutely gorgeous twisties continued for well over an hour after which I stopped to take some pics.



I shall not bore you with the tyre shot taken at this point, you can view it here:
http://motoroids.com...dpost__p__16937
It was a tough choice to ride rather than stop and go down to the river in places but I knew I was already running a bit late, and I did not really want to reach my destination at the crack of dawn, so I kept moving. The road stayed just as beautiful, but broken sections started to appear and there was a hideous 25 km section after Karkala where there was basically no road again. Anyways, by about 7:45 pm I was on the outskirts of Mangalore, and I knew I was on the home stretch. I was hungry, but have great respect for the food available in Kerala, so I kept moving. At that point a R15 shot ahead of me. New model, rider in a hurry. I had my "fast rabbit".
I stayed on his tail, and let him clear the road for me all the way to Kasargod, it made my riding a lot easier as he did all the tricky stuff, I just had to follow his lights and maintain distance. He did try but there is really no way an R15 is going to run away from a CBR. At Kasargod, he turned off into town and I carried on looking for an eatery, which I found shortly. It was a relief to see the road had a new black top, which though devoid of any lane markings, was at least completely pothole free. Also, I could now give the marriage party a projected ETA, and was relieved to discover that they had not really planned to sleep that night.
At midnight. I was at my destination, and after the usual gupshup, it was time to go to the hotel where I had been put up

<h2><a href="http://www.everytrail.com/view_trip.php?trip_id=1434541">Mumbai Mahe via Shimoga</a></h2> <object width="400" height="300" codebase="http://fpdownload.macromedia.com/get/flashplayer/current/swflash.cab"><param name="movie" value="http://www.everytrail.com/swf/widget.swf"/><param name="FlashVars" value="units=english&mode=0&key=ABQIAAAA_7wvFEi7gGngCZrOfos63hSN1xyBy-BzBD--25ZLXpVi3GfbehTQlZCXdpUFII2A5CGeExVTCyX1ow&tripId=1434541&startLat=11.702023968&startLon=75.534007&mapType=Terrain&"><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" src="http://www.everytrail.com/swf/widget.swf" quality="high" width="400" height="300" FlashVars="units=english&mode=0&key=ABQIAAAA_7wvFEi7gGngCZrOfos63hSN1xyBy-BzBD--25ZLXpVi3GfbehTQlZCXdpUFII2A5CGeExVTCyX1ow&tripId=1434541&startLat=11.702023968&startLon=75.534007&mapType=Terrain&" play="true" quality="high" pluginspage="http://www.adobe.com/go/getflashplayer"></embed></object><br/>EveryTrail - Find <a href="http://www.everytrail.com/best/hiking-california">trail maps for California</a> and beyond<script type="text/javascript" src="http://www.everytrail.com/trip/widgetimpression?trip_id=1434541"></script>





















