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Thread: This is for the not so newbies

  1. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by DEATH_INC. View Post
    I'm certainly not a natural either. I flipped the first bike I got on after about 50 feet. I still do real dumb noob things sometimes. I've been riding 30 years.
    Don't worry about it.
    I'm a bit puzzled...you have an instructor now? Or are you going to get one? I'm thinking that if you already have one, and you've fallen multiple times (no offense) I think you need to find a new one.
    I have one. Problem isn't the instructor, problem was my first lesson incorporated the BHS so that was a bit of pressure on my shoulders. If I was smarter I would have done lesson one day, BHS another. Second "lesson" was with a friend of sorts, didn't want to piss them off and felt really stressed hense me losing control, going down small grassy bank and bike landing on my leg. Do not underestimate how uncoordinated I am... answer is VERY!

  2. #17
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    Quote Originally Posted by bosslady View Post
    I have one. Problem isn't the instructor, problem was my first lesson incorporated the BHS so that was a bit of pressure on my shoulders. If I was smarter I would have done lesson one day, BHS another. Second "lesson" was with a friend of sorts, didn't want to piss them off and felt really stressed hense me losing control, going down small grassy bank and bike landing on my leg. Do not underestimate how uncoordinated I am... answer is VERY!
    Wow, sounds like a challenge. I know several people who would revel in your progress, along with you.

  3. #18
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    Unlikely natural

    Don't sweat it, very few, if any, just jump on a bike and go like they have done it forever- first time on a bike, the old man teaching me to ride on a 125 Stinger in the drive - him yelling at me to pull in the clutch as I rip up the drive and plant it in the garage door, throttle pinned...... lucky for me flat out in first on a 125 Stinger aint so fast!.

    Over 30yrs riding on allsorts and the odd mistake still occurs.
    Speed kills-just ask the rabbit......

  4. #19
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    I guess I was a bit of a natural getting onto bikes, but it still hasn't stopped me from continuing to learn and self-assess my riding to seek continual improvement.

    I've known plenty of riders who were not natural. Don't worry about the confidence as that will come with time. Try to think back to learning to drive (assuming you did that first). You would have been very nervous, but as you got more comfortable and some of the tasks became more automatic, your confidence grew. The same thing applies to riding.

    Once you start getting the basics down, the key is recognising there is always room for improvement and working on making your riding better. One I know was definitely not natural, and read all sorts of books that broke down the elements of riding. Read a section, go practise, read another section, practise some more, and so on. Find what works for you
    Quote Originally Posted by Jane Omorogbe from UK MSN on the KTM990SM
    It's barking mad and if it doesn't turn you into a complete loon within half an hour of cocking a leg over the lofty 875mm seat height, I'll eat my Arai.

  5. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by bosslady View Post
    Do not underestimate how uncoordinated I am... answer is VERY!
    I think that was already noted ... after you posted your shopping list ...
    When life throws you a curve ... Lean into it ...

  6. #21
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    Quote Originally Posted by Drew View Post
    Wow, sounds like a challenge. I know several people who would revel in your progress, along with you.
    Yup thats me, a challenge, all the boys say so lol

    Quote Originally Posted by Gremlin View Post
    I guess I was a bit of a natural getting onto bikes, but it still hasn't stopped me from continuing to learn and self-assess my riding to seek continual improvement.

    I've known plenty of riders who were not natural. Don't worry about the confidence as that will come with time. Try to think back to learning to drive (assuming you did that first). You would have been very nervous, but as you got more comfortable and some of the tasks became more automatic, your confidence grew. The same thing applies to riding.

    Once you start getting the basics down, the key is recognising there is always room for improvement and working on making your riding better. One I know was definitely not natural, and read all sorts of books that broke down the elements of riding. Read a section, go practise, read another section, practise some more, and so on. Find what works for you
    Learning to drive? Deary me... 16, second time out on the road, country road, 100ish k's, panicked, thought I'd turn into a road so person teaching me could take over as I was starting to freak, Probably would have helped if I'd slowed down and ahhh there was gravel = down a grassy ditch (notice the theme here?), hit fence post pretty hard, wrote off car. Gave up. Didn't get back into the drivers seat until 4-5 years later! Good story huh?

    Quote Originally Posted by FJRider View Post
    I think that was already noted ... after you posted your shopping list ...
    Hey come on, didn't you go back and read, it's all black minus the yellow helmet yo!

  7. #22
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    Quote Originally Posted by bosslady View Post
    ?...going down small grassy bank and bike landing on my leg.
    Practise makes perfect, but try sticking to flat sealed areas like car parks whilst learning as grass on a road bike is not ideal.
    "Sorry Officer, umm.... my yellow power band got stuck wide open"

  8. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by bosslady View Post
    Thanks everyone for your kind words. Just had another lesson tonight and mannnnnnnnn I feel SO much better. I explained to the instructor just to start with the basics again (this was my 2nd lesson) that I'm in no rush and if I have to have another lesson, then I will. I had a think about it last night and I think a lot of the problem is that I have a particular learning style, very visual and hands on and I have to repeat things over and over until I get it and without too much pressure or too much going on otherwise I get confused and panic. I still want another lesson but I think I've done enough to at least take it round the block, when my bloody gear arrives anyway! Still more to learn, I'm not up myself or a complacent person, like to think I'm a realist lol. Glad I'm getting better at looking where I'm going! all hope is not lost quite yet!
    Once you have completed a few lessons - go down to an empty carpark by yourself, armed with a pack of $10 warehouse marker cones (http://tinyurl.com/cqx6k3q) have a practice. No-one will be around to see you fall, or nearly fall or if you 'miss' a cone here and there etc. I spent a few hours a week doing that low speed practicing when I was learning - by myself. Great confidence builder.

    As I like you have a very similar learning style. If your really worried - ie drop the bike on yourself and your lying thinking err now what... take a good trusted friend with you!

    When your in a group teaching situation it can be quite hard to have the confidence to push yourself enough. I'm sure you know what I mean!

    Good luck - your on the right track
    "Speed has never killed anyone. Suddenly becoming stationary - that's what gets you."
    Jeremy Clarkson.

    Kawasaki 200mph Club

  9. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by bosslady View Post
    Seems like everyone you talk to when you tell them you're learning was a natural, got on a bike for the first time and off they went, like they were born to ride, fearless. Well is there anyone who's now a confident rider that was never any of these things? Anyone who's scared? maybe wanted to crap their daks? I never went into it thinking I was all that and a bag of chips, thought I might struggle and gosh darn was I right! I don't even know how to drive a manual so not a great start lol. Want to have hopefully a couple more lessons with an instructor before I go out on the road and despite dropping my bike multiple times (have the bruises and achey legs to show for it!) I sure as heck don't want to give up! Tell me I'm not a lost cause!
    The first time that I rode a motorbike, it was my mates FXR 150. I remember the feeling being overwhelming when trying to coordinate throttle, clutch, brakes and gears...so very different to a car! I felt like such an uncoordinated moron. Fast forward a year or so and I bought my first bike, a ZXR250 and I distinctly remember that the first night I got it, before having had any real experience riding a motorbike, I decided to take it out for a ride at night in the country side. Well bugger me did I feel out of my depth, trying to get the hang of picking lines (made even harder with the ZXR's barely sufficient head light) and trying to get the bike through corners. The joke is, that I was riding at 100% of my ability at the time to keep it going and yet I was riding under the speed limit and at speeds that I would comfortably do now in the wet on slick tyres while riding one handed and eating a mince pie.

    the point...it's like anything. take time, have patience and it will start to flow.
    Nail your colours to the mast that all may look upon them and know who you are.
    It takes a big man to cry...and an even bigger man to laugh at that man.

  10. #25
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    Quote Originally Posted by BigAl View Post
    Practise makes perfect, but try sticking to flat sealed areas like car parks whilst learning as grass on a road bike is not ideal.
    Practice doesn't make perfect, especially if you keep practising wrong... least that's what someone told me... hmm who was that, not a biker anyway! p.s. it was on the road just took an umm.. detour shall we say..

    Quote Originally Posted by Disco Dan View Post
    Once you have completed a few lessons - go down to an empty carpark by yourself, armed with a pack of $10 warehouse marker cones (http://tinyurl.com/cqx6k3q) have a practice. No-one will be around to see you fall, or nearly fall or if you 'miss' a cone here and there etc. I spent a few hours a week doing that low speed practicing when I was learning - by myself. Great confidence builder.

    As I like you have a very similar learning style. If your really worried - ie drop the bike on yourself and your lying thinking err now what... take a good trusted friend with you!

    When your in a group teaching situation it can be quite hard to have the confidence to push yourself enough. I'm sure you know what I mean!

    Good luck - your on the right track
    Yup, know what you mean, which is exactly why I opted for 1 on 1 lessons, impossible for me any other way. I'd just leave and go cry in my car probably!

  11. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by tigertim20 View Post
    Tell ya what lady, people might THINK they were a natural, But I bet that in most cases there were experience riders watching from afar, thinking 'what the FUCK is this moron doing?'
    This is pretty much it all in a nutshell, some people have natural talent yes but they were all learners at one point, its more that by the time they realise they should have been terrified of their own riding, they've been doing it long enough to have some actual competency at it

  12. #27
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    Your better off thinking your not a natural and being scared than believing your wonderful at this stage. You'll probably live longer.

    Me, I started this 34 years ago. I'm not a natural and last got scared thinking about riding a bike 19 days ago.
    Grow older but never grow up

  13. #28
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    Quote Originally Posted by Oakie View Post
    Your better off thinking your not a natural and being scared than believing your wonderful at this stage. You'll probably live longer.

    Me, I started this 34 years ago. I'm not a natural and last got scared thinking about riding a bike 19 days ago.
    Good to know! What brought that on though?

  14. #29
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    Sounds like you are already doing the right thing anyway without our advice. Almost if not all of what you need to know will become natural or second nature with practice and instruction. More like a habit really! And with a good instructor, i guess it will all be good habits.
    Only a Rat can win a Rat Race!

  15. #30
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    The first time I got on a bike was just over a year ago for the BHS. I went for lessons with my wonderful instructor, then got to know my block very well, only doing left hand turns as crossing traffic (not much) was terrifying. More lessons, slowly building confidence, my block moved a road or two and included some right hand turns. Went out practising 20mins each evening. Slowly increased my distance from home. I now ride to work as much as I can and am loving it I also did an 8 hour course too. Persevere and you should be rewarded with the joy of riding

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