Riding blind - a geezer's tale
Posted: Wed Sep 15, 2010 2:40 pm
Well, not so much a geezer - I'm only 54. But some things don't work like 24.....
Eyesight is one. Especially night vision.
You go where you look, right? What if you look, but don't see? I worked a bit too late one night last week. It was all the way dark when I left. I was riding my Trophy. Trophy's the heaviest and most powerful of my bikes - it's the most demanding to ride well, but the most rewarding, too. My daily commute is of course a route I know very well. But I was really having trouble - not able to really see, which made me less confident, which started breeding muscular tension (as well as being tired), which ..... you can see where this is going. Trophy's a bike that has to be maneuvered with total committment. "Playing it safe" (pulling your punches) with leaning, body positioning, etc, actually is more dangerous. If you're loose and relaxed, the Trophy's a blast. Tighten up, and it feels like a top heavy pig, just waiting for a chance to bite you back.
I think there's a couple things going on here. While I have no trouble seeing lights, seeing into the dark areas and shadows is harder now - less and less detail is picked up by my eyes. Second, without general illumination, my eyes just don't want to focus on anything. No focus means less visual references for the processer in the brain, which means that semiautonomous "go where you look" feedback loop ain't working so well. Third, a day on the computer screen probably aggravates the whole thing. (Duhh..... ya think???!!
)
Compromises of aging. A few years ago I wrote that I was OK with night riding if on a familiar route. Now? Not so much.
Hell, by the time I'm 94 I might have to cut out night riding altogether!!
Thoughts, anyone? (not necessarily confined to folk on the "adult" side of 50
)

You go where you look, right? What if you look, but don't see? I worked a bit too late one night last week. It was all the way dark when I left. I was riding my Trophy. Trophy's the heaviest and most powerful of my bikes - it's the most demanding to ride well, but the most rewarding, too. My daily commute is of course a route I know very well. But I was really having trouble - not able to really see, which made me less confident, which started breeding muscular tension (as well as being tired), which ..... you can see where this is going. Trophy's a bike that has to be maneuvered with total committment. "Playing it safe" (pulling your punches) with leaning, body positioning, etc, actually is more dangerous. If you're loose and relaxed, the Trophy's a blast. Tighten up, and it feels like a top heavy pig, just waiting for a chance to bite you back.
I think there's a couple things going on here. While I have no trouble seeing lights, seeing into the dark areas and shadows is harder now - less and less detail is picked up by my eyes. Second, without general illumination, my eyes just don't want to focus on anything. No focus means less visual references for the processer in the brain, which means that semiautonomous "go where you look" feedback loop ain't working so well. Third, a day on the computer screen probably aggravates the whole thing. (Duhh..... ya think???!!

Compromises of aging. A few years ago I wrote that I was OK with night riding if on a familiar route. Now? Not so much.
Hell, by the time I'm 94 I might have to cut out night riding altogether!!

Thoughts, anyone? (not necessarily confined to folk on the "adult" side of 50
