Selected Product: | Obsessions Die Hard: Motorcycling the Pan American Highway's Jungle Gap Paperback Edition: 2nd Author: Ed Culberson Publisher: Whitehorse Press Release Date: 1996-09-01 ISBN-10: 188431306X ISBN-13: 9781884313066 List Price: $19.95 Average Customer Rating: | | Ghost Rider: Travels on the Healing Road ISBN-10: 1550225480 ISBN-13: 9781550225488 List Price:$19.95 Adventure Motorcycling Handbook, 5th: Worldwide Motorcycling Route & Planning Guide (Trailblazer) ISBN-10: 1873756801 ISBN-13: 9781873756805 List Price:$19.95 The Longest Ride: My Ten-Year 500,000 Mile Motorcycle Journey ISBN-10: 0760326320 ISBN-13: 9780760326329 List Price:$34.95 Two Wheels Through Terror: Diary of a South American Motorcycle Odyssey ISBN-10: 1884313493 ISBN-13: 9781884313493 List Price:$24.95 Odyssey to Ushuaia: A Motorcycling Adventure from New York to Tierra del Fuego ISBN-10: 1556524404 ISBN-13: 9781556524400 List Price:$18.95 |
To use our price comparison to get the cheapest price, please click on the "Find the Cheapest Price" button located above for Obsessions Die Hard: Motorcycling the Pan American Highway's Jungle Gap by Ed Culberson (ISBN-10: 188431306X, ISBN-13: 9781884313066). At this time we have not yet written a review for Obsessions Die Hard: Motorcycling the Pan American Highway's Jungle Gap by Ed Culberson (ISBN-10: 188431306X, ISBN-13: 9781884313066). Please continue to keep checking back to this page as we are constantly adding reviews. Summaries and Customer Reviews are supplied by Amazon.com This book chronicles Culberson's determination to fulfil his fascination with the Pan American Highway System, which runs the length of North and South America. Culberson wanted to ride his motorcycle along the Pan American Highway's entire route between Alaska and Argentina, but in eastern Panama and western Colombia's Darien region the road is broken by an 80-mile gap filled with jungles, rain forests, rivers, and swamps, forcing travellers to detour around it by boat or plane. The area is so inhospitable and unexplored that a myth about its impenetrability has evolved over the centuries, and a curse aimed at Darien trespassers shrouds the region. But the Darien Gap, known as "el tapon del Darien" -- the Stopper, didn't stop Culberson's dream. It turned it into an obsession. Great book! | Customer Rating: | | He is the Tom Sawer of Motorcycling!!! pulling and riding a bike thru the Jungle! What a man! Great Adventure | Only for the hard core | Customer Rating: | I'll read anything about motorcycle travel but I would skip this if that doesn't sound like you. Culberson writes like you might expect a military man to. Fairly dry, straightforward and lacking in stylistic prose. It's not really a bad thing since you probably don't care if what you want to hear is the story of motorcycle adventure.
Personally I ended up a bit disappointed in the actual way in which the trip was done - it almost felt like cheating to me. Being towed halfway through the 80 mile Gap and then going home to rest and repair the bike only to return the following year to complete towing the bike seems like saying you ran a marathon 26 one mile runs a day. He did do it though so hat's off to him. I think the time the book was written was the beginning of the whole "adventure traveler" thing so you'll read this now wondering why the hell he didn't take a bike 200lbs lighter. Oh well. | More about jungle survival than motorcycling | Customer Rating: | | For me the story really bogged down when he got into the jungle. Got tired of reading about winching the bike up the hill then winching it down the next one, getting caught in bushes, slipping and sliding, etc. If you are into extreme physical effort you might enjoy this. | A great book that makes you feel like you are with him! | Customer Rating: | | I think this is a story that an adventurist will find gripping, he showed that life is about taking risks and living it to the fullest! | For the die-hard motorcycling adventurer. | Customer Rating: | | This book definitely is not for the average reader, or traveler. It is an account of one man's life-long obsession to ride a motorcycle through the most impenetrable land mass on the face of the planet. If you have no interest in what endurance motorcycle riders call "adventure touring," skip Mr. Culberson's book. But if you ride, and sometimes ride hard and long, or off-road, and have wondered what it might be like to ride where no man has gone before, you will find this both a riveting adventure story and a practical guide to this exotic and dangerous sport. I myself am a motorcycle adventurer (though definitely not of Ed's stature), author, editor and former friend of Ed Culberson. Ed passed away recently, and the bike he made this monumental journey on, a BMW GS he named "Amigo," now sits in a place of honor in the museum at the BMW manufacturing plant in Greenville, South Carolina. His account of his two-wheeled adventures have inspired many other motorcyclists to follow their dreams, and a national award for the betterment of the sport of motorcycling has been renamed the Ed Culberson Memorial Award in his honor. |
|