KiwiBiker is full of motorcyclists who believe that their greatest enemy on the road is car drivers.
When will we start to realise that it is ourselves that have the greatest potential to be our own worst enemy?
KiwiBiker is full of motorcyclists who believe that their greatest enemy on the road is car drivers.
When will we start to realise that it is ourselves that have the greatest potential to be our own worst enemy?
WE know that already.
welcome aboard the "know-how" boat katman.
When bikers ignore bikers:
Told you so. Unless there are corpses to point to, nobody is interested.
Originally Posted by skidmark
Originally Posted by Phil Vincent
It's bad enough when a motorcyclist's disregard for their own safety takes their own life but when that same disregard claims the lives of innocent others the actions are considerably more contemptible.
Whilst I cannot disagree, in such circumstances the person who would generally be the one to benefit the most from such learning is also one who is dead. In which case there is little value to be had from poring over scant and often misreported details of the accident in question. Speculation and ghoulishness are not good teachers, in my opinion.
But denial is, regrettably, alive and well in the motorcycling community. Apart from oneself and intersections, probably the next most dangerous thing to me as a motorcyclist is other motorcyclists. This is why I am extremely discerning about the nature of "group" rides in which I choose to participate.
The two extremes of this I have encountered are the Wellington Wednesday Night "Cruisy" Ride, and the annual Rusty Nuts Grand Challenge. No prizes for guessing which of these has the better safety record and is typified by a field of riders who are extremely respectful of other riders.
"Standing on your mother's corpse you told me that you'd wait forever." [Bryan Adams: Summer of 69]
There are two people on this site who are feverently anti "using the road as a racetrack".
Whilst I agree with them, I'd bet 80 cents each way that they were both "a bit of a hoon" in their day, before they got old or before they witnessed something that changed them forever.
The question is, would they have listened to the preaching before the epiphany or maturity that occured?
Enough seriousness, off to add some grass to the opiates, alcohol and amphetamines.
Whilst it is sad that it appears that a motorcyclist may have caused the death of another motorcyclists, let's not go jumping to any conclusions about it being a trend.
I'm only aware of it happening twice in recent times.
Compare that with motorcycle v car statistics.
And I to my motorcycle parked like the soul of the junkyard. Restored, a bicycle fleshed with power, and tore off. Up Highway 106 continually drunk on the wind in my mouth. Wringing the handlebar for speed, wild to be wreckage forever.
- James Dickey, Cherrylog Road.
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