When Aaron Pufal was unceremoniously fired by the billionaire family he'd served for over a decade, he did what any reasonable person would do: he bought a microphone, straddled his BMW GSA, and started tracking down the legends of adventure motorcycling.
What began as a scrappy podcast recorded in garages and cafés became something unexpected, a map of invisible connections linking fifty years of motorcycle storytelling. From Ted Simon's kitchen table in France to the rooftop of The 59 Club in East London, from Lyndon Poskitt's father's Yorkshire workshop to the hallowed forecourt of the Ace Café, Pufal discovered that the adventure motorcycle community is far smaller and more interconnected than anyone realised.
Chasing Legends captures three seasons of conversations with the riders, filmmakers, and authors who shaped modern adventure motorcycling:
But this isn't just a collection of interviews. It's a meditation on mentorship, mechanical failure, and what happens when you stop asking permission and start asking questions. It's about blood bikers racing through London nights with neonatal transfusions. About a Kansas technician holding 86.5 mph for 32 hours across America. About fathers teaching sons in workshops, and the tools we inherit, both literal and metaphorical.
Part memoir, part oral history, part navigation chart through adventure motorcycling's past and future, Chasing Legends reveals the stories behind the stories-the missed opportunities, the fumbled questions, the moments of connection that only happen when you show up with curiosity and a willingness to listen.
For anyone who's ever looked at a map and wondered what's there. For anyone who understands that the road isn't an escape; it's where life is lived most honestly.