Like this faggot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9zNUPDmnz4
Like this faggot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q9zNUPDmnz4
Opinions are like arseholes: Everybody has got one, but that doesn't mean you got to air it in public all the time....
the boomers hold the majority of motorcyle licences and do the majority of road miles as you will see by the graph as
we moved from our teens to 40+
If you have mates that only ride 6 months of the year, get them out for a spin early, get in front and set a relaxed
pace on some not to challenging roads and let them settle back into the groove, plenty of stops and not a huge
day. Mates look after mates
Political Correctness, the chief weapon of whiney arse bastards
The 40+ age band is much wider than 10 years, so assuming it is 25 years (40-65), I divided by 2.5 to make to equivalent to a 10-year band.
The graph you posted is of the same data, so the first 3 age bands are 5 years, 30-39 is 10 and 40+ is more than 25.
So the graph shows 40+ as being much higher when it isn't.
TOP QUOTE: “The problem with socialism is that sooner or later you run out of other people’s money.”
I did a ride forever course yesterday. 6 riders with anything from 5 to 30 years experience. All have done advanced riding training. Me aside I would consider them all very competent riders. Every single one of us was taken outside our comfort zone. Every single one of us learned something new and came away with a renewed desire to ride better and arguably live longer! Confidence was higher because we had tried things in a controlled environment, with opportunities to get it wrong, analyse, remediate and try again. We were all equipped with additional tools to handle things when the shit hits the fan. At the start of the day not everyone was convinced of the value of being there. At the end of the day we all wanted to do it again and bring our riding friends. It was one day, one solitary day. Imagine how good we could get if we did two or three of these things a year and actually practiced stuff in between?
Look there will always be situations where it all goes wrong. There will always be tragedy, Injury and sadly, loss of life on our roads. That said, would you not consider it smart to do something that gives you an improved chance of avoiding strife or, if it finds you anyway, getting out of it?
Nobody sets out to crash, pretty sure the poor sods who died at the weekend didn’t. We do control our choices however and like the ACC ad says our next one could be a life saving one. Would you not prefer to be better equipped to make those choices?
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Life is not measured by how many breaths you take, but how many times you have your breath taken away
Regards Richard
Growing old is mandatory Growing up is purely optional
Retired teenager
Good job demystifying the statistics. I saw the original when I did a Ride Forever course last year and swallowed the whole "older riders are dying in increasing numbers" thing without much critique.
The actual statistic that would be more meaningful would be rider deaths per 1000 registered riders split by age class; I suspect the significant factor here is that there is a big bulge of ageing riders that make up high proportion of the riding population.
Exactly - twit. If he'd made it onto the road he might have done many stupid things - and got himself killed ,,,
Yes - clearly it is the older riders - especially the new ones or the returning ones. Yes, I know the age spread is more than 10 years ..
It's an indication that mid-life crisis can kill ...
"So if you meet me, have some sympathy, have some courtesy, have some taste ..."
Sorry, this is self serving nonsense. You can't just "divide by 2.5" to get a much lower number while leaving the graph label as 40+. If you want to make assumptions about where the 34 fatalities(2016) in the 40+ category sit in terms of 10 year age groups, fine, but don't just leave out more than half the deaths and then claim there's no obvious pattern. There is, older riders, are disproportionately responsible for fatal motorycycle accidents.
It is though, you can just knock 2.5 times off and still call it 40+
Whilst the stats need a bit of work, an extra band (40-49, 50-59, etc) or a ratio, this statement which I first referred the table to still rings true.
"the anecdotal evidence suggested it was middle-aged men who did not have the experience to handle large motorbikes who were involved in most accidents"
Key word, 'middle aged'. Middle ages also doesn't stop at 49.
i.e got their license in the 70's, had a family, stopped riding, kids left home, lots of money, buy litre bike without additional training, crash.
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