This is an awesome idea. I basically learned on my own; I took the classes and practised on parking lots then near-empty streets for maybe a month before taking the bike out on an average road on an average day.Brackstone wrote:That's exactly what I'm talking about.
A Mentoring program would be great. That is something I know I would volunteer for.
With a bit more experience, I tried riding with a group, but didn't really enjoy it. Yes, they were helpful and gave lots of tips, but IMHO, a group ride isn't really conducive to helping one or two newbies. Plus, the more people there are in a group, the greater the chances of there being a coupla squids who'll teach bad habits and an even worse attitude.
I really learned a lot about riding by going on rides with this one guy (old scubadiving buddy) who I knew was also into bikes. I didn't just learn skills; I thought the more important lesson was attitude. One of the favorite gems I picked up from that dude was "it's better to learn how to go fast on a slow bike than to be slow on a fast bike" (dunno if those are exact quotes, but you get the drift). I learned to focus more on cornering skills than outright speed because "anyone with a working right wrist can go fast in a straight line".
Anyway, point is, I really appreciated the one-on-one mentoring, and hope to do that for an interested new biker one day.