use any of your brakes while turning is asking for disaster be it on a smooth cement road or gravel.
True enough.
Braking in a turn is not a good thing to do. If coming in too hot in a curve on pavement, much better results come from hard countersteering.
The time I dropped my bike I was turning off pavement downhill into a curving flex base drive. Braking on the pavement before I made the turn into the gravel drive, letting my brakes off right as I made the curve but my tire caught gravel right as I was easing off both brakes and dropped the bike. I was only going about 5mph when the tire slipped and the bike was not leaned. Had it been pavement, it wouldnt have been a problem.
I wasnt thinking gravel at the time...I was thinking about BBQ...lol...quite a wake up call. It's probabley a good thing that I dropped it cause other than two dimples in my lower muffler ...no damage to my bike... but it really drove home the lesson about getting complacent on gravel. Every time I come to gravel now, I always get a heightened sence of alertness. With a front tire in loose gravel anything other than perfectly upright and straight raises the risks.
Oh, there was plenty of loose gravel in the hundreds of miles of that road, as well as freshly graded muck slicked with calcium chloride.
I know. You can see it at the edges and in spots across the road but the good thing about those types of roads is you can usually pick out a path that stays on the hard packed areas which is not too much a problem... unless the hard packed areas are wet like you said and turn to mud... then its a different animal. I ride a heavy cruiser and hate riding through mud. I avoid at all costs. I wish I had an old Wee Strom for those types of rides.
I think Dr. Bar pretty well summed it up when he said too much input can come back to bite you. I treat it kinda like Shane-o does.. I compare it to how you drive a car on ice. the less input the better. Accelerating, braking, or turning should be done with a minimalist approach. Slowly and gently.
...and one other thing Ive noticed on roads like in Skiers pic... When traveling at speed, I like to drop it into a higher gear to lower the rpms and reduce the torque and quickness from my back tire. Accelerating in a higher gear seams to reduce the ability of my back tire to accelerate too quickly and slide out from under me.... Easy does it, basically