I will soon be riding with a gal who never has before. She's not too keen on it but willing to try. Obviously, I would like her to get the most out of the experience in hopes that we can ride regularly. In terms of backseat comfort and a sense of security, how important is a backrest? What other advice do you have to make the experience a positive one besides riding on back roads, in low traffic at moderate speeds?
Any advice on how to handle stressing the importance of ATGATT while trying to downplay the risk of an accident?
PS She is tall with long legs and nursing a knee injury.
Thanks in advance.
Hey, at least she's willing to try. that's pbly the hardest part...
Anyway.
1. the gear is like the guys said.... just in case, like seatbelts and airbags.
2. bumpy helmets is ok...
3. practice S M O O O O O T H..... takes off, starts and shifting...
4. Tell her to pretend she's a sack of potatoes.... just sit there and you'll do the driving.. ( or a bag of rice or whatever... :eh-smiley: )....
that the bike leans around corners like a bicycle, the laws of physics work very well to hold you up.
6. Also.... when getting on and off... have a routine:
You get on the bike, start it, then stand up and hold the bike up.
THEN she can step up onto the left passenger peg, hold onto your shoulder, then step over the seat with her right leg, stand up on both pegs, THEN sit down on the passenger seat. Same thing to get off. She can practice before you start, it'll help. Trust me on that....
Most ladies do things very well if you explain precisely what to do.... we... um.... tend to overthink things, so just explain stuff simply in steps. She'll be fine.
Have fun... And yes, a backrest helps. Even on a Harley! :rofl: :rofl: :rofl:
Mary