I would be the last person in the world qualified to offer advice, but I'd like to share my experience when I began riding. I got my learner's licence and then went shopping for a bike. I knew no one with a bike, nor had I become involved with WIMA at that stage. I went into WMCC and a salesman (who shall remain nameless, but hasn't worked there for a long time now) convinced me the RG150 was perfect. I put a deposit on it without even so much as sitting on it - he never offered to wheel it out from the crush of bikes it was trapped in and I was too embarrassed to ask - and of course I had only just learned the basics so was too scared to take it for a test ride. They delivered it and then I found I could only just touch the ground with tiptoes! I was petrified, but really wanted to learn to ride, so I would wheel it out to the gate (I thought you were a wussy if you got on while it was on the side stand!), swing my leg over and putter off around the block. I fell off the very first time and the bike sat in the garage for weeks after that, until I met Alan Kirk. He came into work and saw the photo of my bike on the wall by my desk. He said "nice bike, is it yours?" and we got talking. I confessed I was scared of riding it, so he and a friend would come out to my place every weekend and take me out for riding lessons. He said I had two choices, learn to handle the bike or have an expensive garage ornament! My confidence was slowly increasing so he told me to join WIMA. That was the second stroke of luck, they were all so helpful (Lynne and Andrew Templeton had a lot to do with the Wellington branch at that time) and gave me some options, such as selling the RG and buying a GN, or going back to WMCC to see if the bike could be adjusted to suit my height (or lack of!). I did that and initially spoke to Steve Dundon, who told me that there were some people who just shouldn't be riding! Nice one! I later spoke to Garry Gill who said he would get the bike lowered for a small fee and the difference that made was incredible. All of a sudden I could ride and I was starting to enjoy it!
I had that bike for four years and really felt comfortable on it. It wasn't too powerful for me and I really honed my riding skills on it. I moved up to a 650 but it wasn't the power that scared me, it was the height and weight difference, which is why I am now on the Goose.
It's highly likely this girl doesn't really know what she wants to move up to when she is legally able to, but perhaps she just likes the big sportsbikes. She may ride one and not like it, or she may turn out to be a very good and safe rider on a very powerful bike. At 17 she probably has a lot of confidence (not a bad thing) and the more she is told she can't or shouldn't do something, the more attractive it becomes.
Madboy has made some very good points there, just because she wants a bigger bike, it doesn't mean she wants to ride like a racer. She may just like the power, the handling, the look - all sorts of things attract us to different bikes and just because we may never have the skills to ride it to its limit, should we never buy more powerful bikes? I have a Nikon F5 camera, it's a real professional model that has many features I've never used in the seven years I've had it - but I bought it because it was one of the most rugged cameras on the market and it has never let me down. Sure, a cheaper camera may do all I need, but the F5 can cope with dusty rally roads without jamming - perhaps this girl wants the motorcycle equivalent?
Yes, I am pedantic about spelling and grammar so get used to it!
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