Well, this topic has heated up and so it should. Cagers and riders alike all share the same roads and both need to be equally competent and equally aware of the other if we are all to survive on both urban and rural roads.
I note a comment by Pharbus earlier about my "high horse".
Pharbus wrote:
QUOTE:
78oldwing needs to get off of his high horse and stop thinking that he is any better than the rest of us. New comers or old hands - I am sure that most of us ride a bike for the same reasons.
True, I have been a rider (and a driver) for a long time. It is true also that I have not always been a responsible rider (or driver). Fortunately, I survived a few incidents and gained an artificial knee and some limited wisdom in the process.
New drivers or riders share a couple of things. A lack of skill, a lack of experience, and an intangible that for lack of a better term, I will call wisdom. It is a package that cannot be separated.
Sure, there is a learning curve, and a steep one at that, when you first ride a bike of any size. Whether you have been a responsible driver for decades or not, riding a bike in traffic is a different beast.
In my opinion, training courses are probably the best means to get us up to an acceptable skill level to take to the roads. Experience, however, can't be taught. It can only come with miles/kms in the saddle. As for wisdom, well wisdom is just something that comes with time and both of the above.
I don't ride a "high horse". I just ride with the knowledge that comes from many years of close calls, a month in the hospital, memories of friends lost, and tens of thousands of miles/kms of mostly having fun on my bikes.
I recognize that my skills drop off over the winter and over the years so I take a refresher course every few years (you meet a lot of great folks who are just starting to ride) and I assist at an annual "Ride Captain" course for group riders.
While I don't ride a high horse, the ride is pretty good from where I sit. I hope to be lucky enough to live to ride a long time. (BTW, at just under 5'8" tall, all horses look pretty tall to me)
A graduated license program would be a positive thing for new riders of any age. In the U.K. they have provisions for older riders to take a short-cut to an unlimited license, but the requirement for formal training and testing remains.
I completely support some form of graduated licensing for motorcyclists across the nation. Riding or driving is not anyone's constitutional right - it is a privilege that carries a responsibility to others. Make the costs a tax deduction. Reduce insurance rates for licensed riders who take refresher training/safety programs. Anyone who can't pass a reasonable training and testing program really shouldn't be on the roads where they would present a danger to themselves and others.
That's my last word on the subject. Go ahead guys - tear into me.