Beating the Heat while looking Fear in the Face
If you’ve seen our four-part series Chasing Light, you’ll be familiar with the custom red and white air-cooled BMW G/S featured heavily in these Journals. Originally, multi-talented REV’IT! ambassador Gregor Halenda invited fellow bike builder and photographer Matias Corea along for the Chasing Light adventure. Matias is the man behind Myth Motors, and as such he’s the man behind that eye-catching custom R80G/S.
Luckily, among his many talents, Gregor is also a skilled off-road riding teacher, taking on the challenge of reviving Matias’ confidence after he physically recovered from his injury. A perfect getaway, and another amazing adventure, out in the desert heat on the ragged and rugged border between California and Arizona.
Man vs. Sand
Broken but not Deterred
Not one to be deterred, he healed up and suggested we do a private lesson. I teach adventure riding technique and this was the perfect excuse to head someplace warm and build back that confidence he misplaced along the way.
After considering Mexico, California, and Arizona, we settled on Yuma, AZ as a place that would offer the greatest variety of landscape to prepare Matias for his upcoming trip to Africa. REV'IT! sent us prototype Cayenne 2 outfits to test in the sizzling temperatures of the vast, empty landscape. Rugged, sparse, and unforgiving with morning temperatures in the low 40s (close to 0 degrees Celsius) and daytime highs near 100F (38C), Yuma was exactly what we wanted.
We set off in the morning chill wearing mid layers and shed them as we pulled off the highway to the unmarked 4-wheel-drive road. Dry and dusty, the double track snaked through rocky cactus-covered hills and deep gravel filled arroyos. Our goal: find balance and saguaro cactus.
Core Skills
Finding traction and flow
Bringing it all together
The trail started easy enough but offered up a number of extremely steep climbs littered with small and large rocks, gravel, sand, steps, and gave absolutely no time to pause and think about any of it. Over the intercom I heard the doubt, “Gregor, no, I don’t think I can do this!” Two days earlier, he might have been right, but on this day Matias kept his eye on the prize, his balance neutral and his rear tire from spinning.