Bangkok Post

EASY RIDING BIG-BIKE TOUR BUSINESS BOOMING

- By Ian Lloyd Neubauer in Hanoi

The large European motorbike purrs with pleasure as the road — a concoction of gravel and broken asphalt peppered with potholes — curls up the face of a 1,500-metre-high mountain pass in Dong Van, a remote frontier district in northern Vietnam. Whatever nature throws at it — mud, rain, river crossings and even snow and ice — is child’s play for the BMW 800GS, which has suspension that can be adapted for different terrains.

This German-made high-tech road machine would have been unthinkabl­e in past decades, when the only way for intrepid travellers to explore the back roads of Vietnam, Cambodia and other parts of Southeast Asia was on 250cc trail bikes from Japan.

The small-capacity engines of such bikes are not suited to fast riding on highways, and their narrow and thinly padded seats are not kind to backsides on long journeys. Luggage was always a problem: Riders carried bags on their backs or strapped them precarious­ly to cargo racks.

Finding spare parts outside big cities caused major headaches when the old trail bikes broke down. I once lost five days in the flyblown Cambodian town of Stung Treng waiting for a new tyre to arrive by riverboat from Phnom Penh.

Many of these trail bikes are still on active duty. But a new breed of adventure motorcycle­s is attracting affluent older riders from developed countries, tempted by engines ranging from 400cc to 1,300cc and features designed for long-distance touring such as large fuel tanks, durable luggage panniers and anti-lock braking systems.

The ADV, or “adventure” sector is the fastest-growing niche in an otherwise static global motorcycle sales market, and will grow by 10% per year over the next three years, according to a 2019 report by Technavio, a UK-based research company. One of the major market drivers is the growing popularity of long-distance touring, especially in Asia, which “will occupy far more market share in following years”, the report noted.

Riders in the segment are typically male profession­als aged between 44 and 59 with money to spend. They own large-capacity bikes at home, invest thousands of dollars in riding gear, and are happy to pay US$500 to $1,000 a day for fully supported tours in exotic destinatio­ns.

“Tourists who ride 250cc motorcycle­s in Asia, they’re generally younger people who are willing to compromise with smaller bikes,” said Rozle Verhovc, owner of Clutch Moto Tours, a Slovenia-based company that offers BMW, Ducati and Harley-Davidson tours and rentals in Europe and will expand to Asia from 2020.

“What I do is more upmarket tourism — people who travel specifical­ly to ride. I have a pool of BMW riders in Europe and am now preparing a series of different Asian escapes for them. The first one will be in Vietnam.”

To that end, Verhovc has partnered with Tuan Nguyen of MotoTours Asia, a Hanoi-based company that has offered guided adventures through the hilltribe areas of northern Vietnam since 2005. Until recently, Nguyen used Japanese trail bikes and 350cc Indian-made Royal Enfield Bullet road bikes. But in February he became the first touring company owner in Southeast Asia to invest in a fleet of slick BMW adventure bikes, ranging in capacity from 650cc to 1,200cc.

The fleet upgrade allowed Nguyen to double his rates with no impact on rider numbers. But it came at a hefty price. In Germany, BMW adventure motorcycle­s cost $13,000 to $16,000. In Vietnam, the same motorcycle­s cost $30,000 to $35,000, in part because of 80% import and sales taxes. The only Hanoi dealership selling BMW bikes offered Nguyen a single-digit fleet discount, but none of the service, support or marketing that tour leaders rely on to maintain their fleets and expand their clientele.

“If you live in Bangkok and you own a yacht, you’re not going to moor it in Bangkok. You’re going to moor it at a marina in Phuket. The motorcycle hotel works in the same way” KEVIN MERRELL

DART Motors

Kevin Merrell, an American businessma­n, encountere­d similar hurdles when he started a high-end, fly-and-ride touring business in Chiang Mai, in Thailand’s mountainou­s north. “There were a lot of great-looking showrooms around, but few of the staff knew what they were talking about,” he said. “And most of the workshops I saw were below the global industry standard.”

In 2017, Merrell solved the problem by starting a dealership of his own. His company, DART Motors in Chiang Mai, sells high-end Ducati sport bikes and ADVs designed in Italy. It also has a 31-strong fleet of 800cc Ducati Desert Sled Scramblers reserved for three- to 15-day guided tours and trips to the annual MotoGP race weekend in October in Buri Ram.

Merrell has also developed a novel third income stream: the Chiang Mai Hotel for Motorcycle­s. This air-conditione­d warehouse 10 minutes from the airport offers riders based in cities like Bangkok and Singapore a place to store expensive bikes and fly in for weekend rides.

“If you live in Bangkok and you own a yacht, you’re not going to moor it in Bangkok. You’re going to moor it at a marina in Phuket,” Merrell said. “The motorcycle hotel works in the same way.”

In India, an iconic motorcycle touring destinatio­n that boasts many of the highest motorable mountain passes in the world, the ADV market is maturing. European brands such as Ducati, Triumph, Benelli, KTM and BMW are fighting tooth and nail for market share.

But in volume terms, the market is dominated by the Himalayan, a homegrown ADV manufactur­ed by Royal Enfield in Chennai. With a 410cc engine, the Himalayan lacks the grunt of larger imported ADVs but costs a fraction of the price, and can cross the mountain range it was named after without missing a beat. I know because I did it with one.

“If I were to buy a Triumph Tiger 800cc, it would cost me a huge amount of money — around $20,000 — but a Himalayan with ABS brakes and fuel injectors costs only $3,500,” said Shahwar Hussain of Chain Reaction India, who specialise­s in off-road tours in the little-known northeast.

Previously Hussain offered his customers Royal Enfield Bullet 350cc road bikes and locally built 250cc trail bikes. But when the Himalayan was launched in 2016, he upgraded his fleet and never looked back.

“I rode with Shahwar [in] Northeast India … on old Enfield Bullets in 2016,” said Peter Marshall, a train driver from Australia. “The roads were really bad — the worst I’d seen in my life — and the bike wasn’t really suited to the terrain. But I had so much fun I went back this year with my son and did it again using the Enfield Himalayan. The difference between the two bikes was like night and day.”

 ??  ?? MotoTours Asia offers riding in style in northern Vietnam on a fleet of BMW adventure bikes with engines ranging from 650cc to 1,200cc.
MotoTours Asia offers riding in style in northern Vietnam on a fleet of BMW adventure bikes with engines ranging from 650cc to 1,200cc.

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