Amazing what DAILY riding will do to improve skills...
Posted: Mon May 28, 2007 12:13 pm
and confidence.
I changed jobs early this month and went from a <1 mile commute to a >30 mile commute (each way). Needless to say with gas at over $3/gallon, and the motorcycle getting 45 mpg (my Saturn VUE gets around 22 mpg), I'm riding the motorcycle to work. Did I mention that I leave for work at 3:30 am?
What is REALLY cool is that the first half of the trip is via windy two lane roads through parkland and fields. It is unusual to see even ONE car on that first leg. But I do see plenty of deer and other wildlife.
Love my PIAA 001s.
Anyhow, my former riding habit was most weekends for a couple hours maybe, after work for a while. Run some errands. But not daily or with any real regularity.
Well, let me tell you. The daily twisty riding has done amazing things for both confidence and skill level. There is this one right-left set of curves. One is a 90 degree elbow of a "curve" and the second is also 90 degrees but has a 'softer' bend for lack of a better term.
I've ridden that set since I began riding. Sometimes I would just ease through them, others I would really nail one and blow the other. Never consistent.
________________________________________________________
The Elbow is the scene of my first personal experience with Target Fixation...
"Hmmm, that's sand over there. It's wet sand. Don't go in that SAND I'M OFF THE ROAD IN THE SAND! [expletive expletive] Stop bike. "Don't drop it. Okay."
<sigh> "Did anyone see me? No one did... Wazzat?"
"Grrr. Oh, look! Another rider. Hi!" [stupid stupid stupid N00b!]
_________________________________________________________
Well I've been having a fun time with those two curves lately. And all my riding has just improved by leaps and bounds. So, I guess what I'm trying to say is that, riding for a couple hours every weekend is good. But riding for 30 or even 15 minutes every day will vastly improve your skills.
P
I changed jobs early this month and went from a <1 mile commute to a >30 mile commute (each way). Needless to say with gas at over $3/gallon, and the motorcycle getting 45 mpg (my Saturn VUE gets around 22 mpg), I'm riding the motorcycle to work. Did I mention that I leave for work at 3:30 am?
What is REALLY cool is that the first half of the trip is via windy two lane roads through parkland and fields. It is unusual to see even ONE car on that first leg. But I do see plenty of deer and other wildlife.
Love my PIAA 001s.
Anyhow, my former riding habit was most weekends for a couple hours maybe, after work for a while. Run some errands. But not daily or with any real regularity.
Well, let me tell you. The daily twisty riding has done amazing things for both confidence and skill level. There is this one right-left set of curves. One is a 90 degree elbow of a "curve" and the second is also 90 degrees but has a 'softer' bend for lack of a better term.
I've ridden that set since I began riding. Sometimes I would just ease through them, others I would really nail one and blow the other. Never consistent.
________________________________________________________
The Elbow is the scene of my first personal experience with Target Fixation...
"Hmmm, that's sand over there. It's wet sand. Don't go in that SAND I'M OFF THE ROAD IN THE SAND! [expletive expletive] Stop bike. "Don't drop it. Okay."
<sigh> "Did anyone see me? No one did... Wazzat?"
"Grrr. Oh, look! Another rider. Hi!" [stupid stupid stupid N00b!]
_________________________________________________________
Well I've been having a fun time with those two curves lately. And all my riding has just improved by leaps and bounds. So, I guess what I'm trying to say is that, riding for a couple hours every weekend is good. But riding for 30 or even 15 minutes every day will vastly improve your skills.
P