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Moto Provencale are proud to offer Ural
and Royal Enfield sidecar outfits for hire in the sunny south
of France. You can just hire a bike by
the day or take advantage of our full
holiday packages. All of our bikes can be fitted with
Garmin GPS units
- after all you will be far too busy watching the scenery
to want to bother with maps..

If you haven't ridden a sidecar
before then we will give you a full orientation course - if
you allow for a gentle introduction over the first day that
will cover a first lesson, a chat over your routes and and
a test ride out to the cafe (well you are in France...).
Sidecars are the perfect vehicles
for holidays in the south of France - lots of luggage space,
a comfortable seat for the passenger and a bike just made
for pootling around the hills and villages of Provence.

The Ural
Tourist is the backbone of the fleet, with its 'sit up
high' feel you get a great view of the world. Its voluminous
trunk and luggage rack allows you to pack for a week with
comfort and still have room for a picnic and beach towels.
The Retro is
the newest bike on the fleet, with looks reminiscent of a
'50s BMW it always attracts a crowd, and being a little lower
on the road it hugs the corners wonderfully, giving new riders
a feel of real security. The Royal
Enfields are kitted with Charnwood Meteor sidecars, an
elegant little sidecar which sets off the styling of the Enfield
well. All the bikes have good storage and are capable of carrying
a rider and up to two passengers.

The Ural Ranger - perfect for your
very own "Great Escape"
Sidecars are growing ever
more popular as our roads get busier and the speed limits
and 'traffic calming' gets more aggressive. People like
you are discovering that you can have a great time on a motorcycle
without having to look like Valentino Rossi or get a sore
bum and aching wrists. Add the sheeer luxury of being
able to store you rhelmets and gear when you arrive somehere
to the pleasure of sitting back and enjoying the scenery as
you ride and you have what we are all about. On our
links page you will
see that there is an ever growing sidecar movement - why not
dip your toe in the water ?

Isn't she lovely? The Royal Enfield
Bullet with Meteor sidecar on
top of Les Baux - just 15 minutes from our office

Yes
its (mostly) a Ural, but not one of ours...
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What
a crazy thing to do to a perfectly good motorcycle…
Why would you design a vehicle which
depends on leaning into a corner to turn…and then
lock it to a large dead-weight that not only stopped it
from doing what comes naturally but – with all the
extra weight on one side – threatens to tip everything
over each time you take a bend?
Well, after a few minutes of “ground school”
and a quick trip around the block with David Griffiths of
Moto Provencale in St Remy it all started to make sense.
What I never realised is that you use the brakes and throttle
to take you around the bends, taking advantage of the lop-sided
design of the unit. As the bike and the sidecar can brake
and accelerate as different units big handfuls of gas make
the bike surge ahead faster than the sidecar causing the
bike to turn ‘around’ the chair, effectively
seeing the unit bite into the tarmac and rush around right-hand
corners like a Porsche 911 on steroids (OK, maybe not steroids),
whilst grabbing the front brake slows the bike but not the
sidecar, gently taking us to the left (sidedcars sit on
the right hand side in France). The footbrake operates the
rear and sidecar brakes and David recommends adjusting the
sidecar side a little more than the rear to ease us round
right handers as we slow down. Braking in a straight line
is easy – just squeeze everything!
All of a sudden a whole new motorcycling vista comes into
view. The satisfaction of piloting a sidecar around the
twists and turns of Provence with ever-growing confidence
kept a silly grin on my face for the whole week and a long
time after I came home. David warned us that sidecars can
become addictive as you learn that you can pack a few extra
books / clothes / water bottles / tools / beach towels into
the ample trunk of the sidecar and also leave all your biking
gear safely locked away when you stop off to view the villages
and sights of the area. That and the sheer pleasure of cruising
along with the bike burbling away beneath you makes the
countryside come alive; the French have a word for this
feeling of travelling for the sake of the journey not the
arrival – “ballader” a word that we began
to use more and more through the week.
The bikes on offer are wonderful too – but not for
the shy and retiring; we spent many happy hours chatting
(often without any common language) to bikers and non-bikers
alike. We took the Ural Retro for the first few days, a
Russian copy of a 1940s BMW, but making use of modern
japanese carburation, electronics and brakes to give a solid
and reliable ride – but oh she’s pretty! The
lustrous black paint with white BM-style coachlining meant
that little boys of all ages stopped and gawped. Ladies
out on bikes gazed enviously at the big leather seat of
the sidecar and almost cried when we got our bags out of
the trunk and tucked away our hats and jackets. The memory
of one sportsbike rider prizing his unwilling biker-chick
out of the sidecar made us laugh for hours (and smile inside
with more than a little sympathy).
We also tried the Ural Ranger, a three-wheel Hummer with
powered sidecar wheel and a high-up 4x4 SUV feel –
very easy to drive and making us feel immensely confident
on our one trip through traffic in Marseille old port. The
little Royal Enfield Bullet with its beautiful Meteor sidecar
was universally admired as a ‘ladies bike’,
which I’m sure it accepted as the compliment it was
meant to be. A fascinating story is that the original Meteor
sidecar was reputed to be made from the under-wing fuel
tank of a war-time Mosquito fighter bomber. The modern equivalent
is made of fibre-glass but has a feel of quality with its
leather trim and cast mounting for the little windscreen
which reminded us of a racing bugatti.
Combining all of this with a holiday package covering airport
transfers, hotels, GPS units on all the bikes (now there’s
a real ‘ancient and modern’), a free French
mobile phone – a great boon – and use of Solex
scooters for our ‘days off’ around the beautiful
old town of St Remy gave us a holiday with everything we
could want. The staff of Moto Provencale always went that
little step further to make sure we had a great time, including
my wifes favourite touch – a smart shower room in
their modern offices for use on our last day to allow us
to ride out and still be fresh for the long flight home
even after checking out of the hotel. These guys are relatively
new to the hospitality business but seem to view it all
from a buyers point of view, in Davids words ‘giving
you everything that we would want from a holiday’.
Go. Enjoy!
Sidecar
Magazine (c) 2004
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