What a sweet little bike. I really want one of my own now.

Saturday was going to be her first day on the bike, so after running a couple errands, I zipped up to her place on the mighty KLR to pick up her bike and ride it over to our chosen practice location, a nice big empty parking lot surrounded by chain link fencing and sporting only a couple of lamp posts widely spaced around the lot. Not a single concrete tire barrier to be found.
After some shuttling back and forth, we had both riders and both bikes at the lot. After a quick cigarette and a lift of the bike onto the centrestand, we started with the basics – sitting on the bike and going over where all the controls are, both with gloves on and without. Once she was familiar with just where everything was and what everything did, we moved onto taking the bike off the centrestand. Unfortunately the bike got away from her when it came down and pitched over onto it’s right side, landing her arm into the footpeg on my bike (thank god for armored jackets and full gear). The only damage was that the front brake lever now sported a nice curve in the end, and the back brake lever was slightly tweaked but still fully functional. Nothing broken (didn’t even get the paint scratched!)
After I picked the bike up off her, we continued on with learning clutch control, and just slowly walking the bike forward in first gear – this entails slowly letting the clutch lever out and feeling where it starts to bite. As the bike starts to roll forward, you pull the clutch back in. After traveling about 80 feet, slowly increasing the distance that she let the bike roll forward before pulling the clutch back in, I hopped on the bike and rode it back to the start point to start the exercise again.
After about an hour or so of doing this, she graduated up to getting the bike moving along in first gear and just riding around the parking lot, slowly getting comfortable on the bike and practicing throttle control and turning, as well as braking (this was the most difficult part of things for her, next to smooth starts, as not only can she only really get one foot comfortably on the ground, she had a tendency to get the bike turning to the left every time she reached for the front brake lever. This was corrected by putting just a little pressure on the left grip to keep the bars straight.

The rest of the day went very well after that, with her skills improving to the point where she was riding all over the parking lot, turning both left and right, practicing stopping and starting (stalling more than a few times, but we’ve all done that) and learning how to shift the bike up into second and third gears.
We were both very pleased with her progress on her first day.
