(http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d129/kensullyks/bikes/CAM00321_zps1audofix.jpg) (http://s34.photobucket.com/user/kensullyks/media/bikes/CAM00321_zps1audofix.jpg.html)
Finally got her on it and she did great, only one little, gently, lay down not even a scuff
I don't care how much a bike weighs, when you are on your tiptoes holding it up when it starts to fall there's no stopping it!
Get her something with a lower seat, my $0.02. Also looks like she needs more gear :thumb:
the gear is on order along with a lowering link, she actually surprised me by getting on it and saying I want to ride now, we jus put the dirt bikes away a few minutes before she hoped on the bike, cant really tell in the pic but its all dirt around us minus the pavement from the road coming down there. I let her do a few turns and a couple small laps and told her she needs the right gear for anymore practice so she went and ordered a few things
You are not doing yourself or HER any favors by LETTING her ride without proper gear and a bike that fits her.
Man.....get her on a bike with a lower seat and if you love her get some safety gear on her.
Calm down guys, i know it wasn't smart to let her try when i did, but she isn't riding amymore till her gear comes in. As far as a seat im just going to get a lowering link that'll lower it about 2 inches, hus thegear and link on order statment above. She has experience on a 100cc dirtbike this is her first time on a street bike. Anywho away from any arguements or bantering when all the gear comes in I'll be adjustimg the bike to fit her so she can flat foot it, any recommendations? I have the bike set for me and its fairly stiff, should i go back to factory settings or leave it alone?
I came in here muttering 'where pics :dunno_black:' and,....oh,...applause :star: :rstar: :star:
I think it's great she wants to ride. I vote see how she feels about the settings and figure it out from there. Glad you didn't post a pic of her riding on the freeway or OMG with traffic close by. :icon_razz:
(http://stream1.gifsoup.com/view1/3887436/dean-omg-o.gif)
the horror,...
Quote from: cbrfxr67 on July 01, 2014, 07:13:25 AM
I came in here muttering 'where pics :dunno_black:' and,....oh,...applause :star: :rstar: :star:
I think it's great she wants to ride. I vote see how she feels about the settings and figure it out from there. Glad you didn't post a pic of her riding on the freeway or OMG with traffic close by. :icon_razz:
no freeway till she goes through town and no town till she can maneuver the little course that I setup.
The area where I do my "training" is a dead end road with a small island to loop around and has 2 stop signs, I'll take a couple snapshots later so you can see, I set up a few cones and that's where we do our training.
As much as I don't condone no gear, I have to say you are doing it right.
Hell, my first experience on a motorcycle as a teenager was gym shoes, jeans, a T-shirt, no gloves, sunglasses, and a backwards ballcap. It was a Honda CB500, it was in my uncles sizeable back yard under direct supervision, and I wasn't allowed past second gear. I wouldn't have done that again being who I am now, but we all start somewhere and slow, on grass, and in a controlled environment is a lot better than most peoples experiences.
If you don't have gear I'd suggest waiting, but if you aren't waiting do it slow and somewhere safe. She has boots, pants, and a helmet, for jogging pace riding I'd say that's more than enough. See if you have like a BDU jacket and some utility gloves just for protection from abrasions and elements in a fall.
Hell, the MSF class didn't need full gear, they just said boots, pants, long sleeves, gloves, and they supply a helmet.
I wore jeans, my Bates work boots, a BDU jacket, and some mountain biking gloves. And that was around 20mph in a parking lot.
I didn't even think of the bdu gear. I'm in the army reserves so i have some gear she could've used, but it was a spur of the moment ordeal. I was out riding my rm125 and she showed up to watch. I ride my gs there while my cousin drove his truck with the bikes so didn't have that gear there. Normally i won't let someone ride without the right gear if they want me to teach, but my wife was very persuasive, I'm ashamed the other me took over, and she did a few laps. Now she REALLY wants to get into riding so she is getting a jacket, gloves and some riding shoes, or should i say I'm getting it for her lol, and we'll start the actual training. I let he ride that day cause she has ridden a100cc dirt bike but now that she really wants to ride it's all or none. Sucks though cause now she wants me to change my military theme i was planning on
There is no excuse for what I'm about to do
I rode for 15 years with short pants and a tee shirt in hot weather and wore jeans and a leather jacket with slip on boots in cooler weather and a lot more underneath on cold winter days. Wore an open face helmet summers and a full face winters for the cold.
Got a bit more safety conscience the last 15 years and wore a full face or flip face helmet year around and armored riding jackets, mesh ones in the summer and heavier ones in the winter and jeans year around. I did go back to an open face helmet with build in shield a couple years ago. My head will only turn half as far as it once did and I still have excellent perriferal (sp?) vision so an open face gives me a better view to the side than a full face does now.
So ride Mrs kensully ride, I wouldn't think of telling you what to wear, I didn't wait for anything once I started.
Yeah, I'll admit that I don't do it as good as I could.
Despite being riding jacket, riding gloves, and full face helmet 100% of the time, I have never actually used motorcycle specific boots or pants.
I usually just wear my work boots (Bates GX-8 with a safety toe) and my jeans, and if I'm doing expressway I double it up with some paintball pants. They aren't armored, but they have padded knees and are made out of stuff that is really abrasion resistant since they are made for sliding and diving while playing paintball. I want a pair of overpants, but A) don't have the cash right now and B) have extra paintball pants laying around.
Add armor and they are essentially riding pants, so I figured it's close enough to make me feel a little better about taking a fall in the mean time. If I'm feeling a little more unsafe I actually have soft-shell kneepads I can wear under the pants. Again, these are designed for paintball and thus made for sliding...
As the guy who came down overly harshly I am sorry. It sounded worse in print than if you just "say it"
I buy and sell motorcycles. I sell a lot of the 50 and 80cc bikes for kids to start out on. At least once each month some dad will come in and want to sell a bike he just bought. Junior fell off/hit a tree/curb or whatever and won't go near the motorcycle now. Or Mom has said that it has to go. Most of the time the problem is that Junior did not have 'proper training', was not supervised, bike was to big for him, or was not wearing any kind of safety gear.
If all those items are covered I really do think that you will have a better experience with motorcycles forever.
Guess I just see the problems to often.
To true on words in print compared to verbal, but you do have a valid point on the protection though. I was trying to pull up some pix of my kids their first time riding a50cc quad, they had everything but the bubble wrap lol. I adjusted the throttle with a makeshift governor so they may have topped out@10 mph. Now they jump on my cuz 70cc bike and tear it up, the trails not the bike, man they are growing do fast lol
There is no excuse for what I'm about to do
this- 'Junior fell off/hit a tree/curb or whatever'
My pops had a honda 70cc and he was teaching me to ride. Went down the street: 'hell yea! look at me i'm awes-,....' dumped it in the culdesac,......knee looked like a big bloody sponge of pebbles & dirt.
But back then we just picked it up and kept riding, with the blood drying into a badge of crusty black honor. haha I still have the scar on my knee 30 something years later,...
those aint scars them be life marks lol, what my dad always said
Quote from: kensully on July 03, 2014, 08:19:07 AM
those aint scars them be life marks lol, what my dad always said
:thumb:
and since it relates to the topic,...this broad's got some life marks,..and,...yea
(http://www.motohouston.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=79760&d=1404396100)
She looks like a crack whore recovering from a bad night. That's the best photo you could find?
Two items. . .
1.) Thank god my wife doesn't ride. :icon_rolleyes: (she does enough damage in a 6900 pound SUV)
2.) cbrfxr67; the gif master. :bowdown:
Wjen shes ready ken, teach her how to pick the bike up. If ne weighing 150lbs can upright a goldwing, as small as she is she could upright a gs easily
Think that bike needs to come down more than 2" for her.. seriously. get the seat shaved a little. and get her geared up.. I've seen the results of even a low speed crash without proper gear. it shocks me how little training you guys get in the US for a bike, here in the UK the test is a lot more stricter you can't ride a full power bike until your over 24yo.. well unless you done your test before jan 2013.. the law changed drastically then. and the test consists of road and yard work.. when i done my full test, there was a kid there, he was Scottish like me, but lived in Houston for a good chunk of his life as his old man was in oil. he had a SV650 at the age of 15-16 over there but when he came back here at 18 he learnt the law here wouldn't let him ride his SV here, i asked him what the US test consisted off and i was stunned and shocked at the lack of training given before he was unleashed on the road with the SV as a kid, suffice to say he failed his test miserably a couple of times, yet he was deemed fine to ride over in Texas... scary!
My attitude to wearing the proper gear is that it should be enshrined in law, and Insurance companies should refuse cover, and refuse to pay out if there is an accident and the rider is not in the correct gear.
Hey guys, been gone for a few but I'm back :thumb:
So I see the common comments on the riding gear and height of the bike, even though I let her ride that day, I do agree and now she has her set.
I came across a beat up Yamaha 250cc scooter and been having her ride that around a bit while I finish a few more things on the gs, lowering link and seat mods, I haven't let her back on the gs until I do the lowering of it and I've been so tied up at work :technical: that its jus been a slow process grr
"I came across a beat up Yamaha 250cc scooter"
where pics :dunno_black:
(http://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/08/21/y2upa9up.jpg)
There is no excuse for what I'm about to do
(http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iefI54TQ0bs/Uhre0-n2qdI/AAAAAAAAEAQ/RE6TJBvGrkE/s1600/Hell+Yeah+Dean.gif)
das my kind of ride! ++++
Quote from: cbrfxr67 on August 21, 2014, 08:52:36 AM
(http://3.bp.blogspot.com/-iefI54TQ0bs/Uhre0-n2qdI/AAAAAAAAEAQ/RE6TJBvGrkE/s1600/Hell+Yeah+Dean.gif)
das my kind of ride! ++++
lmao, figured this would be ok to teach ppl on since it wouldn't hurt it anymore ( cosmetically ) if it flops over.
had my 13 yr old on it and I was impressed on her natural skills of leaning and to look ahead of the turn without me instructing her.
it made me really proud of her.
I jus came across a lil " Harley " mini bike and been letting my other 2 kids ride that and they have been having a blast
Actually the whole flat footing thing is more phychological than really practical ...
How many times has it been that you go down inspite of being able to flat foot ???
Oh well, there is a small number of times being strong and able to flat foot gets me out of dumping it ... For that 1% of times ... OK yea need to flat foot.
Cool.
Buddha.
I grew up on bikes that I needed to use my dads step side to kick over, if ever it bogged on me I had to find a rock to stand on lol. but I was a knuckle head, my pops rule was if you could start it you could ride it, so @ 13 I was riding his husky 425 I think it was.
I jus got this little 49cc Harley looking minibike for FREE and nothing wrong with it O0 so been letting the kids put around on that
"I jus got this little 49cc Harley looking minibike for FREE and nothing wrong with it"
where pics :dunno_black: :dunno_white:
(http://img.tapatalk.com/d/14/08/27/e5umuje2.jpg)
There is no excuse for what I'm about to do
Ahh the 49cc chinabike engine. Things are quite dependable
IT SEEMS LIKE A FUN LIL RIDE, POPPED THE INNERTUBE :( SO KNOW ITS DOWN,sorry bout the caps am at work lol
Trying to remember the tire size. Tubes are easily obtained
even if you get her something she can reach the ground, she can still fall... lol
here's my wife and her Rebel 250, I feel like I'm on a kiddie tricycle when I ride it... yet she's fine on it and we're both the same height. :cookoo:
She dropped it while practicing for her M2 test and put a dent on the tank (graduated licensing in Ontario Canada, M1 for 30-60days, M2 after you pass the test, 1.5-5years depending when you pass the test, then full M license.) she was going very slow and attempted to turn on a very tight space. :(
[attachment deleted by admin]
Wow ren your wife is a tiny thing. I rode a rebelette at my msf too
Well I've got an 85 and an 87 Rebel that I'm parting out if something gets messed up.
;0)