
To be totally clear, it's not even the craziest thing this guy experiences all day during his ride through the Atlas Mountains of Morocco.
It's been a minute or two since we last checked in with EV motorbike explorer Marc Travels, who's currently in Morocco with his Energica Experia. And to be fair, while Eve II (which is what he's named this bike, as it's the second EV motorcycle he's owned, following in the footsteps of his Zero SR/F that was the first to be called Eve) has quirks, it's really no more or less quirky than any other bike, in the grand scheme of things. Just different.
But if you've ever wondered to yourself what it would be like to take an EV motorbike across a water crossing, you'll get to see one in this video. Granted, it's not a particularly deep one, and you'll also see other small-displacement combustion bikes going across the same place as well. As Marc takes the time to point out, the electronics on the Experia are up pretty high, and should (should) be weather-sealed. There's a decent amount of ground clearance as well, so even the motor doesn't really get more than a moderate splashing; it's mainly the wheels and tires that get the dust washed away.
The majority of this video, both before and after the water crossing, is spent traversing a variety of different roads and scenery around the Atlas Mountains as he pushes onward to find the hotel where he's booked a room for the night. The roads, mountains, and scenery are quite stunning; honestly, before we get to the point in the video where Marc mentions that it kind of reminds him of Spain, I was kind of thinking that myself. They're absolutely lovely, the roads where he's riding!
Adventure On All Roads and No Roads
There are a few more tourists in one area than he expected, but he eventually finds a really cool little place by the river to stop, park, and eat. The meal that he orders is a tagine set of some kind, and he explains that the average cost for one of these meals (which he's been eating a lot lately, he says) is around 120 Moroccan dirham. At today's conversion rates, that's about US $13, or around 11 Euro, and it looks like a stunningly nice spread for the money.
It might not be the same as basking in the sunshine yourself, but I kind of feel like the purpose of videos like these is to inspire you to get out and find your own sunshine when you can. Good food certainly doesn't hurt, either.
Where are you riding next, and will it involve any water crossings or tasty tagines? Let us know in the comments.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
Brazil's Bolsonaro to continue his sentence at home because of poor health - 2
Remote Work Survival manual: Helping Efficiency at Home - 3
When preventable infections turn deadly behind bars | The Excerpt - 4
Massachusetts court hears arguments in lawsuit alleging Meta designed apps to be addictive to kids - 5
Three arrested in Paris after attempted bomb attack outside Bank of America
'A completely new manufacturing frontier': Space Forge fires up 1st commercial semiconductor factory in space
Picking Your Next SUV: 4 Brands Offering Execution, Solace, and Wellbeing
Displaced Palestinian families suffer as heavy rains flood Gaza tent camps
Scientists dove hundreds of feet into the ocean and found creatures no human has ever seen. Our trash beat us there
A milestone for Artemis II: Astronauts enter the 'lunar sphere of influence'
SUVs Known for Their Looks As opposed to Their Capacity
The most effective method to Connect Successfully with Teachers in a Web based Setting
Day to day Temporary Positions That Compensate Fairly in the US
James Webb Space Telescope watches 'Jekyll and Hyde' galaxy shapeshift into a cosmic monster













