Hi all, posts seem a little slow lately so I thought I'd put this
out there. In several of the posts of the last few days, this one
included bring up an interesting topic going on in my life, no I
haven't had someone close to me in an accident, but that has been
partially what has been more then a passing thought lately, so I
thought it might be interesting to get other's thoughts and also see
how many other's are in the same position, a little back ground fisrt.
The fact that I turned 50 last weekend and still haven't grown up
yet maybe is part of it, but since I neither feel "it" or act "it"
whatever "it" is, but anyway for a lot of years, covering 3 and 4
cylinder kawasakis as well as motocross and enduro bikes, always made
faster I pushed the limits, rarely crossed them and escaped with only
bumps, bruses a little road rash and a torn up knee....in my opinion
very lucky. Street racing was common at that time around where I grew
up and like a lot of people on this list know a major mistake in the
woods can quickly turn nasty, especially before GPS and cell phones
came to be. I always approached riding a bike, any bike at any speed
with the respect it needs, practiced technique and it has over the
years served me well. Will I ever stop riding myself, probably not
before I pass on, hopefully not to "hog heaven", something with mud,
gravel and wisties please....

.
Anyway back to the topic, I have 2 kids, a boy 23, and a girl 20,
both who started on z50's at around 7 or so, he progressed to my
KDX200, and sort of lost enought interest that it went down his
priority list to where I can't remember the last time he rode it. She
stopped riding the 50 maybe when she was 12 or so. Always a natural
at any sport she tried. Several of them, mostly soccer as well as
school kept her occupied. By 17 she was playing in the provincial
senior ladies soccer league and although only 100 or so pounds held
her own, I mention the last part because in any sport she played she
was smart and tough as well as talented. Anyway University began 2
years ago and trying to get high enough marks to earn her way in Law
and the folding of the soccer team she was playing on lead to busy
school years and in the summer more free time, including probably on
the average a couple hours or sometimes day trip with me on first my
KZ and for the last couple seasons my KLR. Well now she is hooked, a
250 Ninja fits perfectly, at first I was excited, we've for several
years had probably as much as a best friend relationship as much as a
father daughter thing.
The father thing kicked in long enough long enough to insist no
training, no bike, full gear or no bike, thankfully se trusts my
knowledge on this so no problem there.
Anyway the question kicks in here, how many others are in the same
position as me, while I've always treated both of my kids the same
and I'm sure that I would have the same misgivings if it was him at
some level it seems different when it comes to what I consider as
being a potentiall dangerous situation for a 6', 180lb boy and a 5'4
maybe 110lb girl. I trust her abilities and she approaches stuff like
riding with a logical outlook that she got from me, but as we all
know ofter it's the other guy that gets you, or at the very best puts
in a bad situation that maybe your skills along aren't able to get
you out of.
Anyway for me I have a short reprive, she's off to Scotland to
University for the year, but we have located a couple 250 Ninjas that
it was suggested that I could perhaps look at while she was away.
While I already know that if a bike is what she wants I'll handle
it like all of her other adventures, insist that she is properly
prepared for what she is going to do, and in this case enjoy the
chance of experiencing a little bit of the adventure with her. But
anyway hearing others thoughts on this should be interesting,
informative and probably in a lot of cases entertaining....Hopefully
I haven't bored anyone too badly and have a great day....Greg
--- In
DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "Stuart Mumford"
wrote:
>
> > -----Original Message-----
> > Posted by: "Eric J Foster" TheHaymaker@... n1rzc
> > Date: Wed Aug 29, 2007 6:14 am ((PDT))
> >
> > While the driver of the car was wrong in pulling out, not to
mention
> > driving off, the rider of the bike, well, shame on him. Driving
> > defensively is how a biker stays alive, and doing 80 in a location
> > allowing the entry of other vehicles is not doing so.
> >
> > Think, people!
> >
> > E
> >
> > --
>
> Come on man, do you even know Highway 74 at all?
>
> I have ridden it dozens of times, most recently last week. A
modern, well
> sorted sportbike at 80 is totally prudent for that stretch of road.
>
> "Shame on him"? The guy was KILLED!
>
> I would think that on a motorcycle e-mail list the blame would be
focused on
> the DRUNK that pulled out into his path, not "shame on him".
>
> Should the rider have been more defensive? Sure. I believe the poor
guy was
> 20 years old, give him a break.
> Who amongst us didn't speed a bit when we were 20?
>
> "Shame on him"? no.
>
> Shame on you, pal!
>
>
> Thanks
> CA Stu
>