Goodman4
Pressing on
I’ve been looking forward to my trip on the FJR this coming weekend to the Ozarks in NW Arkansas for the twisty roads, but also getting to ride with my nephew for the first time with him on a decent bike. We rode once In MO and AR with him on his street equipped dirt bike, but now that he has a Super Tenere it will be a new ball game. I’ve been sending him some riding safety info to read and I was enlightened again by “The Pace” and “The Pace 2.0” even though this is probably the 10th time I’ve read them.
What I’ve been thinking about is this – My riding has gotten more dangerous in some areas indirectly proportional to my improved skill. I know I am better able to handle a situation that may arise with my improved riding. But if a surprise happens on a corner there is a good chance I’ll be going faster than I used to when I wasn’t as confident. I don’t hang way off like I learned in Lee Parks Total Control training, but I still shift my weight and setup the corner and find I have to be going pretty fast to get the feel of the lean I’m desiring.
The comment that stuck out to me in the Pace article this time is that you shouldn’t hang off much because you’ll have to be going too fast to make it fun for you. That concept is what I’ve been fighting and it was good to put some expert advice with my internal debate. As we get faster bikes and improve our skills, we have to ride harder to get the feeling of pushing our limit and end up taking more chances than we used to. At least I do.
I got a goldwing over a year ago and I thought riding the wing would be like when I used to ride the VTX where it required me learning a totally different level of cornering. But the wing handles much like the FJR in my opinion and I don’t have to corner differently at all. I’m not a fast rider nor do I take huge risks by any means and many of you would blow me away on the twisties. But I feel that if I don’t push the rpm’s of the FJR above 4000, I’m not enjoying the bike. I still have to get some thrill from the rush of pushing the limit on the corners.
I don’t want to have to have a wreck to move my adrenalin meter down a notch, if you can relate to that. But I still want to have fun riding and part (maybe most) of the fun for me is the lean on the corners. Do any of you struggle with that? I guess I could just slow way down and ride to enjoy the scenery. I could go back to a cruiser and just putt through the mountains and enjoy that. That wouldn’t be all bad and sometimes I think I should start trying to retrain myself, but I’m not ready for that.
I’ve thought about doing more track days and even getting a track bike (I did one track day at Barber on the FJR) but I think I’d be more likely to get hurt doing that than the way I ride now on the street. And if the goal of riding is for enjoyment like The Pace says, I don’t want to raise my level up to where I’ve got to ride even faster to get the rush. My Lee Parks instructor said he won’t ride a bike on the street anymore because he can’t do it safely and enjoy it. I hate that. I love riding and want to keep loving it. I want to get a rush from riding at maybe 70% of my abilities and not push past that. I'm having trouble dialing that in, though.
Thoughts? How do you find your pace that balances fun and safety?
What I’ve been thinking about is this – My riding has gotten more dangerous in some areas indirectly proportional to my improved skill. I know I am better able to handle a situation that may arise with my improved riding. But if a surprise happens on a corner there is a good chance I’ll be going faster than I used to when I wasn’t as confident. I don’t hang way off like I learned in Lee Parks Total Control training, but I still shift my weight and setup the corner and find I have to be going pretty fast to get the feel of the lean I’m desiring.
The comment that stuck out to me in the Pace article this time is that you shouldn’t hang off much because you’ll have to be going too fast to make it fun for you. That concept is what I’ve been fighting and it was good to put some expert advice with my internal debate. As we get faster bikes and improve our skills, we have to ride harder to get the feeling of pushing our limit and end up taking more chances than we used to. At least I do.
I got a goldwing over a year ago and I thought riding the wing would be like when I used to ride the VTX where it required me learning a totally different level of cornering. But the wing handles much like the FJR in my opinion and I don’t have to corner differently at all. I’m not a fast rider nor do I take huge risks by any means and many of you would blow me away on the twisties. But I feel that if I don’t push the rpm’s of the FJR above 4000, I’m not enjoying the bike. I still have to get some thrill from the rush of pushing the limit on the corners.
I don’t want to have to have a wreck to move my adrenalin meter down a notch, if you can relate to that. But I still want to have fun riding and part (maybe most) of the fun for me is the lean on the corners. Do any of you struggle with that? I guess I could just slow way down and ride to enjoy the scenery. I could go back to a cruiser and just putt through the mountains and enjoy that. That wouldn’t be all bad and sometimes I think I should start trying to retrain myself, but I’m not ready for that.
I’ve thought about doing more track days and even getting a track bike (I did one track day at Barber on the FJR) but I think I’d be more likely to get hurt doing that than the way I ride now on the street. And if the goal of riding is for enjoyment like The Pace says, I don’t want to raise my level up to where I’ve got to ride even faster to get the rush. My Lee Parks instructor said he won’t ride a bike on the street anymore because he can’t do it safely and enjoy it. I hate that. I love riding and want to keep loving it. I want to get a rush from riding at maybe 70% of my abilities and not push past that. I'm having trouble dialing that in, though.
Thoughts? How do you find your pace that balances fun and safety?