- Joined
- May 4, 2005
- Location
- Orinda, CA
- Moto(s)
- A funky red & white Italian named Gianni Cervo! Versys - two of 'em! And a Ducati for laughs.
- BARF perks
- AMA #: 281672
No, not high school, nor college, nor graduate school. No, instead planning a reunion of friends made during the 2006 Centopassi! Centopassi, you say? Yeah, Italian for "100 passes". It was an event Ducati put on to promote the original aircooled Multistrada. It was a 4 day time/speed/distance rally with a roadbook, checkpoints, and special tests, and in 2006 I signed up to ride in the competition class.
I'll save the details of the story for a later post, but for now I'll say that I spent those 4 days riding with the team from the UK, and having the greatest vacation I've ever had in my life, even with my life passing before my eyes several times per day. It's not hyperbole to say that riding that event changed my life. It also led to some lifelong friendships. I keep a bike in the UK because of that trip. I've ridden in Europe a bunch of times because of that trip, including several EuroBARF rallies.
Twenty years have passed, and my friend Dom is organizing several of us to go back with our old roadbooks and ride it again. The plan is to take the chunnel from the UK to France in late June, ride the Route du Napoleon down to Nice (the start), then spend 4 days hooning around southeastern France and northwestern Italy.
Then for me comes the bittersweet part. Since I'll be riding the bike I shipped to Europe in 2011, and since I imported it for personal use, I eventually have to bring it home, and I've decided 2026 is the year. So, after we complete the 4 day route, they'll be heading back to England, and I'll be taking my bike back to the shipper who's based in Heidelberg. As of now, I'm thinking to recreate a ride I did in 2011 where I rode the 10 highest paved passes in the Alps, plus as many more as I could bag in seven days (37 total). I won't push to ride so many passes, but there are some of them I really want to ride again. Stelvio, Passo di Gavia, the Dolomites, Grosglockner, and Staller Sattel are all on the list. Last time it took me a couple of days to get from Heidelberg to Grosglockner, and I expect it will take about as long in reverse. Last time I rode the legendary B500 in Germany, but rumor has it that it's been closed to motos since then. :-(
The purpose of this post is to create a thread documenting my prep. Stay tuned for more posts and pics. In the meantime, here's some Centopassi pics.









I'll save the details of the story for a later post, but for now I'll say that I spent those 4 days riding with the team from the UK, and having the greatest vacation I've ever had in my life, even with my life passing before my eyes several times per day. It's not hyperbole to say that riding that event changed my life. It also led to some lifelong friendships. I keep a bike in the UK because of that trip. I've ridden in Europe a bunch of times because of that trip, including several EuroBARF rallies.
Twenty years have passed, and my friend Dom is organizing several of us to go back with our old roadbooks and ride it again. The plan is to take the chunnel from the UK to France in late June, ride the Route du Napoleon down to Nice (the start), then spend 4 days hooning around southeastern France and northwestern Italy.
Then for me comes the bittersweet part. Since I'll be riding the bike I shipped to Europe in 2011, and since I imported it for personal use, I eventually have to bring it home, and I've decided 2026 is the year. So, after we complete the 4 day route, they'll be heading back to England, and I'll be taking my bike back to the shipper who's based in Heidelberg. As of now, I'm thinking to recreate a ride I did in 2011 where I rode the 10 highest paved passes in the Alps, plus as many more as I could bag in seven days (37 total). I won't push to ride so many passes, but there are some of them I really want to ride again. Stelvio, Passo di Gavia, the Dolomites, Grosglockner, and Staller Sattel are all on the list. Last time it took me a couple of days to get from Heidelberg to Grosglockner, and I expect it will take about as long in reverse. Last time I rode the legendary B500 in Germany, but rumor has it that it's been closed to motos since then. :-(
The purpose of this post is to create a thread documenting my prep. Stay tuned for more posts and pics. In the meantime, here's some Centopassi pics.





















