X3 good advice worth listening to. It is never too embarasing to be noticed, bright clothes, headlights, horn hooting. I do not give a flying sh@t if they think I am an "O Ring" as long as they say LOOK at that "O Ring".MontyCarlo wrote:Glad you're OK man. But I'm going to harsh on you *a little*, mainly so you'll learn from this.
You're a new rider, and you made a total n00b assumption. You assumed that the guy in the cage saw you. Not only that, you assumed it in the worst possible situation, i.e. cage preparing to turn left into your right of way where you KNEW that his visibility of you might have been blocked.
NEVER assume that the cage sees you. YOU ARE TOTALLY INVISIBLE. You have to be proactive, and always prepared that the cage doesn't see you and will pull in front of you.
When you're approaching any intersection with cages preparing to go left, slow WAY the heck down, cover that brake, be prepared for the worst. Same goes for vehicles preparing to turn right into your lane.
I know I sound like a broken record, but YOU ARE TOTALLY INVISIBLE.
That said, hope you heal up quickly and your bike gets fixed soon.
And DO go see a doctor.
Cheers.
I also got my Biker Friendly sticker...the other day....luckly..I have not had the same problem as you...(knock on wood).camthepyro wrote:Exactly. It was interesting, after the accident the guy who hit me (he was trying a newer model f-150) said he was thinking about getting a bike soon, and that he was always careful to watch out for bikers. And I find it kind of ironic, that I got my "BIKER FRIENDLY" stickers in the mail on the same day I get in a motorcycle accident, lol.
TMW
Privacy Policy - Forum
Privacy Policy - Terms
and Conditions
Follow us on X / Twitter - Facebook - YouTube - Pinterest - Instagram - News RSS Feed |