Thank God my two friend who are RNs were on the ride with him and could help him out until they got to the hospital.
Still, what a way to blow $6,000.

like most, probably too much bike, not enough experiencefuninaz wrote:Okay, so what is your point? To make us laugh? It's not funny! To say you 'Told us so!' In reality this can happen to anyone at anytime riding anything. Newbies are more prone to accidents, I agree. But anyone can have an accident. Just because you are no longer a newbie doesn't mean you are incapable of a mishap.
P.S. You don't mention how he/she went down. I could have easily happened on a 250cc.
Show me a 250 that can pull the wheel up from too much throttle in second gear, stock, and I'll show you a 250 I wouldn't recommend to a beginner.funinaz wrote:Okay, so what is your point? To make us laugh? It's not funny! To say you 'Told us so!' In reality this can happen to anyone at anytime riding anything. Newbies are more prone to accidents, I agree. But anyone can have an accident. Just because you are no longer a newbie doesn't mean you are incapable of a mishap.
P.S. You don't mention how he/she went down. I could have easily happened on a 250cc.
I think you missed the point. It's not "if you ride, you will die," it's "if you start on a race-replica bikes that guys who have been riding since they have been walking need practice to master, you're going to die."funinaz wrote:While I don't disagree with any comment about the appropriatness of a 'larger' bike for a beginner, I'm starting to get real tired of all of the negative comments and frightening stories people have a tendancy to make and share.
Stories about bad accidents, comments such as "...your gonna die.." and such really do a lot to ones psyche as well as perpetuate the "motorcycles are bad" mentality.
I'm not sure that such scare tactics are appropriate to warn unknowning riders, if that is truly the point.
I believe that motorcyles represent a higher level of risk than most other modes of transportation. I also believe that the rider must knowingly accept and fully understand that risk. It would seem that some do not, hence the accidents that are told here in these forums.
Let's try to be encouraging to those of us who are new to riding, have heeded the advice posted in these forums, and are mature enough to ride smartly and safely. For those other riders, we can only continue to steer them towards the Stickies and provide good, positive advice, not scare tactics. And if they choose not to heed the advice, them we ignore them as they made the choice not us. We are afterall, a community to help each other out, not someone's parent.
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