What's the draw with KLRs? I must be missing something.
Then again, I like super moto's so it must be the same idea of a go anywhere bike for the street.
Well, speaking for the California Gold Country contingent:
We have LOTS of dirt roads in the foothills and mountains out here. In the Gold Rush, and later in the Comstock Lode silver era, miners were all over these hills and mountains, and there remain many of the roads they initially blazed, as well as Forest Service Roads and logging roads. Lots of lakes, rivers and streams to go to, as well as sites of disappeared gold rush towns.
What the KLR is particularly good at is getting you to those roads (ones many of us got to on FJRs and wished we could explore), carrying enough gas to do that and still get in a long ways without need for a fill up (6.1 gal), and it does a great job of exploring those roads. It also makes a good platform for carrying enough stuff to do that and camp out in that country. It's not a motocross bike, so it's not particularly well suited to hill climbs and ripping up off road areas, but that's not what I want it for anyway. It's a really decent compromise between street capabilities and dirt capabilities if you use it in the way I've described -- kinda like a 2 wheeled Jeep.