oldryder
Well-known member
I posted last year asking if I could reasonably expect my daughter to handle the FJR as we take an annual X-country cycle trip and she was finally old enough to rider her own bike.
Got a lot of good advice, most important turned out to be lowering kit.
Anyway I graduated her from 250 Ninja (great learner bike she rode last year) to an old GS750 and then my "big bikes" (ZRX1200 and also TL1000R). The TLR in particular is a relatively heavy bike.
She also got a couple sessions track time (advanced riding instruction) on an SV650. IMHO the track time was extremely valuable as it taught her to "look thru turns" and also acquainted her with just how sharply you can turn a bike with proper technique. both are excellent survival skills for street riding.
So now she can handle the FJR with no problem and it not at all intimidated. The lowered seat height helps a lot!
Got a lot of good advice, most important turned out to be lowering kit.
Anyway I graduated her from 250 Ninja (great learner bike she rode last year) to an old GS750 and then my "big bikes" (ZRX1200 and also TL1000R). The TLR in particular is a relatively heavy bike.
She also got a couple sessions track time (advanced riding instruction) on an SV650. IMHO the track time was extremely valuable as it taught her to "look thru turns" and also acquainted her with just how sharply you can turn a bike with proper technique. both are excellent survival skills for street riding.
So now she can handle the FJR with no problem and it not at all intimidated. The lowered seat height helps a lot!