and some of them drive here...
http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/mp/7326...on-wrong-side/
Thats a little too black and white for me. What he did say, and I don't have a copy in front of me, is that in all cases the rider failed to recognize and correctly identify the hazardous situation they were in. This has nothing to do with blame, or who was at fault. Hazard identification and taking the correct action is a black art when you have to do it in real time, some riders have the knack, most do not.
How do you teach wisdom?
Just another leather clad Tinkerbell.
The Wanker on the Fucking Harley is going for a ride!
This subject gets put through the wringer almost as often as a cop bashing thread.
I thought the author of the article had an appropriate name this time.
So according to some here a progressive training school would only be able to move onto the next level once the trainees have left hospital, Really??
No one would agree on how the training should be done anyway.
Why should bikers be forced to train anyway, its:
the road conditions
cagers
popo
GOVT
ACC
Group rides
HD riders
Scooters
Sport bike riders
Recreational riders
off road riders
commuter riders
but its not me though, aye.
Last edited by Spearfish; 2nd June 2010 at 12:28. Reason: shyt tie-pist
But who is to provide that training? AA ? I wouldn't let an AA trained rider within 50 foot of a bike. Riding schools. Most are OK for basic training , to pass the full license. Which is not a very exciting standard And about as much use as the AA after that. Mr Katman ? He claims to be the universal expert. I think that would totally destroy motorcycling. If only because no other motorcyclist would ever meet his (self proclaimed) standard of total personal perfection.
My observation is that most "motorcycle trainers" tend to follow the Ulysses model. Ride slowly in the middle of the lane and pretend to be a two wheeled car. The only ones I would have any faith in , or be willing to follow myself would be the Police riding trainers. And that won't ever happen.
I think there is too much faith placed in the complacent phrase "training". There is nothing really teaches roadcraft and survivability other than hours in the saddle. In all road contexts. Night, heavy traffic (how are you going to train riders to deal with heavy , Auckland type traffic, if they live in Westport? ) , open road . You can't go on a X hour course to get all that.
"Training" is a nice phrase, but real training takes years.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
In regards to the article, i think its awesome the cops are actively trying to reduce crashes by undertaking this sort of research
In regard to the motorcycle vs car, im more actively aware of what im doing on my bike than when im in my car, but thats just because when im in my car i have the false comfort of four walls. I beleive its me being actively aware of my surroundings that makes me a competent rider, as im not the most experienced and i have no false comforts.
Just my 2cents
Cant wait till training day on monday!
No its always us-we-me, I am the only thing in common with all these hazards and I have no (direct) control over any of the above list. The only thing I can and do asses the risks and take all steps necessary to eliminate or minimize the hazard so that it does not hurt me.
I am ultimately responsible for my own road safety.
Just another leather clad Tinkerbell.
The Wanker on the Fucking Harley is going for a ride!
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)
Bookmarks