J2
Junior Member
Offline
To discover, you must lose sight of the shore
Posts: 55
Raleigh, North Carolina
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It is all a learning experience, but more importantly, it is how much of that experience we retain. I have had five mishaps over 40+ years of riding ... walked away from all because I saw them coming in time to get the speed down and, in all cases but one, leave the bike. From my road rash, I learned to wear mesh with armor. From the situation you describe (been there, done that), I learned to lay way off the cager ahead of me. Here's one that few people notice: You are at a stop light. Cars (cagers) are lined up, bumper-to-bumper, waiting for the light to change. One car decides to enter traffic turning right on red (legal in a lot of states). The car behind him elects to follow out into traffic. You are on the bike behind the guy following the right turner. You pull ahead, but suddenly the follower decides he does not have enough space to get out into traffic and slams on brakes. At a stop light, everyone lines up close, never considering a safe interval. Therefore, you don't even have time to touch your brakes, and you eat some bumper. You aren't going fast, but the pavement is hard. Your pride is hurt, and your bike is scratched up (about those plastic turn signals). Lesson: At a stop light, whenever all the cars are ducks in a line, leave yourself some reaction space.
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