Kanichi Fujiwara

Last updated
Kanichi Fujiwara
藤原かんいち or 藤原 寛一
Born1961 (age 6162)
NationalityJapanese
Known for Long-distance motorcycle riding
SpouseHiroko Fujiwara [1]
Website kanichi.com

Kanichi Fujiwara is a Japanese long-distance motorcycle rider and writer.

Contents

Journeys

Yamaha Passol model used in 2004-2008 circumnavigation YAMAHA Passol-L.jpg
Yamaha Passol model used in 2004–2008 circumnavigation

Between May 1987 and August 1999 he journeyed several continents with a number of small motorcycles including a Honda Super Cub, 50 cc Honda Motra and Honda Gorilla utility minibikes, and a Honda Dio scooter. [2] His 1995 trip around Japan was documented in his 1997 book The Original Bike Bastard Starving Around Japan.

Between March 2004 and May 2008 he made a 50,552-kilometre (31,412 mi) journey circumnavigating the world on a Yamaha Passol electric scooter, [3] [4] on a route including Australia from Sydney to Perth, Thailand, India to Lisbon, South Africa to Kenya, and America from New York to San Francisco (44 countries). [3] [5] It may have been the first global circumnavigation by electric two-wheeler. [6] [7] Fujiwara visited and documented the sites of sacred trees in various countries to spread awareness of green transportation. [8] [9]

The scooter he used in the 2004–2008 circumnavigation, sponsored by Yamaha, [10] weighed 45 kilograms (99 lb), had a 30 km/h top speed, and an endurance of 20 km on a battery charge. [4] Even with six batteries giving a 100 km range, [4] his partner had to shuttle charged batteries to him in order to cross Australia's Nullarbor Plain. [6]

Between April 2009 and November 2013, he rode 100,000 kilometers across Japan's major highways on a 50 cc Honda Cub, sponsored by motorcycle apparel supplier Rough & Road, and supported by serializing his journeys in the Japanese magazine Tandem Style and on his own blog. [11] [12] [13]

Online journalism

In addition to various blogs covering his motorcycle travels, Fujiwara is also a food critic. His "Tabigohan" column covers road food at roadside stations and other Japanese venues for BBB-Bike, [14] an online publication of large Japanese auction house BDS. [15] [16]

Bibliography

Notes and references

Notes

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References