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Have bike, will ride; young women bikers blaze new trail (Lifestyle Feature)
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By Mayabhushan Nagvenkar
Vagator (Goa), Feb 21
Seattle-based techie
Rashmi Tambe wears her passion on the sleeve of her rugged jacket, along
with the dust, grime and road-grit gathered over thousands of miles she
has clocked on her motorcycle across continents.
Tambe, one of
the several thousand bikers who have descended on the coastal village of
Vagator, 25 km from the state capital, for the two-day India Bike Week,
is one of those slowly but surely swelling flock of young Indian women
who are leisure-biking across the country and the world with only their
tough pants and tougher will for company.
Tambe is one of the
star speakers at the event, which will also feature rock shows, BBQs,
modified bikes, a cross-country riding expedition and all the grunge
elements which make up a biker event.
Her resume is of rock-hard
pedigree. "A friend and I travelled 3,000 miles from Seattle to Alaska.
I've also biked solo over 5,000 miles across the expanse of North
America and 5,000 miles through both central and western Europe. I think
I should be the first Indian woman to do that," told IANS.
Tambe
also edits the Global Women Who Ride project that attempts to track
down a woman biker in every country that she rides through during her
journeys.
"The thing is there are not too many women bikers as
role models. The project aims to create resource about women bikers
across the world and to fill that gap. I interview a woman motorcyclist
in every country I travel through," she said.
Tambe is not the
only Indian woman biker whose passion has ridden on wheels. For Coorg's
Sangeetha Jairam, bike-love appears to be a case of a genetic
hand-me-down. Her father biked all the way from India to London on his
BMW R/25 more than two decades ago.
Sangeetha, a yoga instructor,
only took her passion a few notches higher. Her bike travels have
slipped in and out of the Silk Route through Kazakhstan, Azerbaijan,
Kyrgyzstan, Southeast Asia and the Himalayas, to name just a few. So
hooked she is to biking that she calls the activity her "friend,
philosopher and guide".
"My first journey was in Bhutan. At the
time there were no mobile phones, ATMs and the like. The whole trip was
about meeting people and making do," she recalled while speaking to
IANS.
"You can learn anywhere, anytime. Every time you travel and
meet people and other motorcyclists, you always come away with a new
experience," she said, adding that she was setting her sights on her
dream bike, a Ducati Multistrada, in the near future.
But while
Sangeetha had a father who goaded her into biking, for Delhi's Sonia
Jain, owning a bike was taboo and she had to plead with her friends for a
ride on a motorcycle.
"My friends let me drive near the house,
but only in first and second gear, but my parents would never buy me a
motorcycle then," Jain said. Her first biking break came in 2009, when
Jain auditioned for the India Bike Rally, a 4,500 km event spread across
21 days.
"That was my first long distance riding experience.
After that, there was no turning back. I exactly knew what I would be
doing for the rest of my life," Jain said.
The India Bike Week began Friday.
(Mayabhushan Nagvenkar can be contacted at [email protected])