Well, I didn't get to go last fall because it was too wet. Instead I drove down to Summit Racing and bought a helmet, then went indoor skydiving with my daughter.
I suppose it is the high time you retire to
electric scooters for adults. You don't want to leave your daughter, do you?
No, it isn't. If I want to go slowly on two wheels I have a very nice bicycle that I can ride. Considering you've posted that link twice is there any chance you're in the electric scooter business?
Still have your motorcycle endorsement on your driver’s license after all these years?
Sure do.
Ugh - sorry to read that. But to that point, it’s not necessarily the rider, but the cagers around us. With work keeping me too busy to fly and ride, I’m not practiced enough to avoid bad drivers, especially in my area. So while I keep my motorcycle endorsement, my bike sits and will likely be sold soon.
That's what got me when I crashed, someone decided I wasn't really there and turned left directly in front of me.
It takes a lot less time to shake off the rust on a motorcycle versus an airplane. I went over a year without riding and I felt comfortable again after about 5 minutes.
Unless you ride aggressively, the most important survival skill is avoiding the other guy, and I do that in the car every day.
Overall I'd agree, but it's also a different mental skill set. Flying is largely thinking ahead of the plane and seeing what's coming. With motorcycling, it's more commonly split-second changes and decisions that will kill you, like when someone turns right in front of you. I find that the physical control of the bike is only part of the equation. That part I usually get back to where I was quickly. The split-second decisions and mental alertness take longer.
I find I use the same traffic avoidance skills needed when motorcycling while driving. Someone did turn directly in front of me and I had no opportunity to avoid him. I was only going about 25 mph when I hit him, so nothing major happened, since I was wearing a full face helmet.
Many life insurance companies won't cover you if you die in a light plane accident (even as a passenger) but could care less if you ride a motorcycle. From my own experience, I've have quite a few personal friends and acquaintances die in light plane accidents and can only remember 1 (a fellow employee) that died on a motorcycle. I rode my motorcycle in California for 40 years without an accident and averaged about 8,000 miles a year. The friend that taught me to ride told me that if I die or get hurt on a motorcycle it was "my own damn fault!" This has helped me to be vigilant at all times.
To the OP: choose the bike with ABS as your skills at braking may be tested soon after you climb aboard the motorcycle. Have fun!
Thanks. Eagle Rider has revised their fleet for this year, and the two bikes I'm most interested are the BMW 700GS and the Triumph Bonneville. I think I'd like to try the Bonnie first. It's going to be a few months anyway, it's still chilly. We have more drivers than cars in our household, and both daughters want to get jobs this summer. I've been joking with my wife about getting another motorcycle, and she's be joking about divorcing me. I told her when I crashed the last one that I wouldn't get another one until after both daughters were grown, and that's a ways off. Hey, I had a motorcycle and a race car when we met, did she expect me to take up golf or something?
There are three other things I've got on my agenda for this year, in addition to renting the bike at least twice:
- Daughter #1 wants to go skydiving for her 18th birthday, so I've agreed to go along and be a meat bomb with her.
- I want to go get an intro lesson in a light sport trike.
- I'm going to go do a track night at Atlanta Motorsports Park or Road Atlanta.
I just want to see which of these, if any, I want to continue with. I'm pretty sure it won't be skydiving. I suspect I'll like riding a motorcycle rather a lot, but I'm not going to take that up for now. I also suspect that my track days are behind me, I raced SCCA for 14 seasons and I don't think lapping without racing is something I'll want to do. That plus I won't be nearly as sharp as I was and it won't be the same.
The triking looks pretty neat.