Barabus
Well-known member
Cook's Corner is a SoCal mecca for many bikes. 100's of of motorcycles and many rare bikes can be seen there regularly. It is a short and easy ride form my house. I sometimes go there to get lunch, as was the case last Friday. My wife's 2007 Ninja 650r needed to charge up the battery and air out a little. The little ninja is easy thru corners in comparison to the FJR. Running live oak road on the FJR is work whereas the 30 tight corners over 5-6 miles is a breeze on the ninja.
After a very good gyro for lunch, I returned via Santiago. Santiago canyon road is a easy canyon road- more scenic than technical. I was running a delayed apex line into a left sweeper. I notice one bike past me with no issue. His buddy was soon to follow and a new rider, which I was about to discover. The buddy was on a new large Harley with crash bars. He was just drifting over the double yellow as I was hitting my delayed apex into the left track of my lane. As he drifted, I watched the terror on his face (even target fixated on it a little) and pressed hard on my right bar. The ninja jumped right into the bike lane and the novice sailed by well into my lane. I counter steered too hard for the little bike and upset its suspension a little. Crap, that cruiser looked as big as a car as it drifted into my lane. Should be easy to miss an oncoming bike, right? Not so, the slow drift of this big bike really forced my hand. I could not go left as he might have recovered. If he would have gone any further into my lane I would have had to make a hard choice. We were never closer than 3-4 feet, but our combined speed was about 100-120mph. It felt a lot closer than it actually was.
In any event, be careful out there as fresh novice bikers seem to be everywhere. I should have turned around and mentioned MSF training to him in a friendly, polite way. Easier said then done, of course. I hope he slowed down and made it home.
After a very good gyro for lunch, I returned via Santiago. Santiago canyon road is a easy canyon road- more scenic than technical. I was running a delayed apex line into a left sweeper. I notice one bike past me with no issue. His buddy was soon to follow and a new rider, which I was about to discover. The buddy was on a new large Harley with crash bars. He was just drifting over the double yellow as I was hitting my delayed apex into the left track of my lane. As he drifted, I watched the terror on his face (even target fixated on it a little) and pressed hard on my right bar. The ninja jumped right into the bike lane and the novice sailed by well into my lane. I counter steered too hard for the little bike and upset its suspension a little. Crap, that cruiser looked as big as a car as it drifted into my lane. Should be easy to miss an oncoming bike, right? Not so, the slow drift of this big bike really forced my hand. I could not go left as he might have recovered. If he would have gone any further into my lane I would have had to make a hard choice. We were never closer than 3-4 feet, but our combined speed was about 100-120mph. It felt a lot closer than it actually was.
In any event, be careful out there as fresh novice bikers seem to be everywhere. I should have turned around and mentioned MSF training to him in a friendly, polite way. Easier said then done, of course. I hope he slowed down and made it home.