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DJ Rally celebrates 50-year milestone

Classic motorcycle enthusiasts are in for a treat as the DJ Rally celebrates its 50-year milestone in 2020.

The famous Durban to Johannesburg motorcycle race, run on public roads, may have been stopped by the authorities in 1936, but the spirit of this arduous event continues in the form of a commemorative regularity run for classic motorcycles between these two cities.

The 2020 DJ Run will mark the 50th anniversary of this regularity trial which was staged for the first time in 1970.

The 2020 event is open to riders on any motorcycle or sidecar combination made on or before December 1936 in line with the timing of the discontinuation of this amazing race, due to road safety concerns.

A total of 20 races for solo motorcycles were staged between 1913 and 1936, with no races taking place between 1915 and 1918 due to World War One.

Motorcycles with sidecars were permitted to enter in 1921 and 1922.

ALSO READ: Classic motorcycles put to the test at DJ Rally

Next year’s commemorative event will reverse the usual direction of the rally by starting in Johannesburg and finishing in Durban, as was the case with the first race in 1913.

The 2013 DJ Rally, which marked a century since the first race was held, also went from Johannesburg to Durban.

This international event is organised on behalf of the Vintage and Veteran Club of South Africa by a team from a number of other clubs in Gauteng with Larina MacGregor as the clerk of the course for the third consecutive year.

The 2020 event will start at the historic Heidelberg Motor Museum on the morning of March 13, with documentation and scrutineering taking place the previous day.

MacGregor, who is hoping for a number of overseas riders to take part in this special DJ Rally, said that the Heidelberg Museum is an ideal venue for the start in terms of its location and the security it offers.

The first rider will depart from Heidelberg at 9am and then follow a pre-determined route, which will follow the original race route where possible, to an overnight stop in Newcastle.

The second day start for the first rider will be at 5.30am and the route will take riders to the finish at Shongweni Equestrian Estate, just outside Hillcrest in KwaZulu-Natal, arriving in the afternoon.

Prize-giving will take place at a special breakfast on the Sunday morning.

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Entries for this not-to-be-missed race are now open and close on January 24.

For more information send an email to MacGregor at larina.macgregor@gmail.com or call 084 949 0937.

Alternatively, visit www.pomc.co.za, www.classicmotorcycleclub.co.za, www.vintageandveteranclub.co.za, www.thedjrun.co.za, www.vmc.co.za, www.cvmv.co.za or www.ncmc.org.za for further information.

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