Beau Geste ([info]gyrfalki) wrote in [info]motorcycles,
@ 2008-05-09 12:00:00
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Current mood: amused

It was one of those mornings...
To my dear elderly friends.

When you're too small to see over the steering wheel and must peer through it instead, it might be time to surrender your license.

When you can't see the broad-shouldered, antsy rider in your rear view mirror because of the plaid blanket and box of tissues on the parcel shelf, it might be time to stay home a little more.

When you have to cut across three lanes of peak hour traffic, in a fifty-metre stretch of gravel-scattered road causing two cars to lock up their brakes, because your myopic eyes couldn't read the two foot high signs and you nearly missed your turn off, it might be time to ask a friend to chauffeur you.

When you can't find your little tin of barley sugars in your glovebox, and I watch your head and shoulders disappear from the lovely frame of your rear windshield, I will presume you've had a heart attack and take evasive action. I know how good barley sugars are, I find myself distracted by the thought of sticky confectionery and entering other peoples' protective bubble all the time.

When it takes you a good hundred metres or so to change gears, either your car's on its way out, or you are. Really. It's second gear, it's the one right next to the gear you were just sitting in. Don't fear the leather-clad bouncer-looking-guy behind you, just change gears. Quickly.

When I shift down and rev the bike, I'm going to overtake you, and your last minute decision to change lanes - I know, once you reach a certain age, your reflexes move with all the grace and finesse of a glacier, but still - will only make me twist the throttle more, a rapidly accelerating leapfrogging because you scare me. Your driving skills make my testicles withdraw deep into my body in primal fear. Throwing your hands in the air as I watch in the rear-view mirror, as if it was me doing 30km/h in a 60 zone, will only make me swear that little bit more inside my helmet.

There will be times when a baby of a motorcycle will cross into the incoming lane to weave through the wrong side of a speed-reducing chicane in an effort to get around you, and it's because you're driving like it's 1910 and trying not to lose your straw boater. The fact that I can whip out and around you in a twenty metre stretch of road without breaking the speed limit might be an indicator of your inability to put any modicum of force on the accelerator pedal.

When you finally muster the energy to flex your flaccid arms and toot your horn at me, be thankful I have my helmet on, and my visor down, even though I've already pulled into my own driveway, gotten off my bike, and checked the letterbox by the time you potter around the corner. Out of respect and sympathy for your encroaching dementia, I won't flip you the finger, and I won't lift my visor to bellow easily lip-readable profanities at you. I will just smile, and wave, and not think about following you and undoing all the lug nuts on your rear wheels.

Stay home. Think about your grandkids. Sip weak, milky tea and settle into your slippers, and please, please do not venture out on the roads.


Yours sincerely,

The Frustrated Rider Who Nearly Booted Your Mirror Off.




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[info]lihan161051
2008-05-09 03:03 am UTC (link)
Somewhat similar experience here, although in my case it was a ditzy 40-50-ish chainsmoking woman hauling antiques in the back of an amazingly battered Japanese quarter-ton pickup, whose preferred method of changing lanes was to abruptly slam over into the next lane with no turn signal at all, evidently without even looking at any rearview mirrors at all, who almost killed me with one lane change that required me to panic brake and come very close to getting rear-ended, and then, a block later, did the same thing further behind me requiring me to pin it and jump out ahead of her. I don't think I've ever seen anyone as panic-startled as she was when I made eye contact for a fraction of a second as I was escaping her second twitch-change .. she literally had no idea I was there until that moment.

But at least I know where her antique shop is.

The amazing thing about motorcycles is how agile they are and how quickly they can get one out of trouble with enough skill at one's command. The not so amazing and kind of depressing thing about them is how often that kind of evasive action is required ..

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[info]gyrfalki
2008-05-09 03:15 am UTC (link)
It was just... one of those mornings.

We're the most agile, nimble things on the road - and also the most vulnerable. You'd think we were invisible some days though.

When I was first learning to ride, the instructor bellowed 'always expect the worst from drivers around you, because it's what they'll do, every time'. I thought he was kidding, at the time. Two years later, I just laugh at it, knowing precisely how right he was.

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[info]darkwolfie
2008-05-09 06:00 am UTC (link)
I tell my ridin'-wife the same thing. I've seen the worst things drivers do while on my bike...and once I see one of those Q-tips in front of me, I immediately pull back another dozen yards or so from my normal spacing.

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[info]xiansbikeblog
2008-05-09 06:26 am UTC (link)
This should be on the "best of" list on craigslist. let me know if you ever post it on there so i can vote. :)


nicely done and the sentiment is echoed here. Except, not in those silly metres you Aussies use.

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[info]gyrfalki
2008-05-09 08:37 am UTC (link)
*cough*

Last time I checked? Only three countries have refused to officially switch to SI - namely the good ol' US, Liberia, and some other country whose name now escapes me. Welcome to the 21st century!

Of course my brain still sticks with inches and feet when I'm in the workshop, and I was born long after Australia went metric. Need something a little more defined than 'about yay big', or 'one and a bit fingernails'...

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[info]gsx1400
2008-05-09 08:14 am UTC (link)
Sounds a bit like what I was thinking recently, following an elderly gentleman and his wife, driving their Mercedes up a curvy valley road, doing about 20mph less than I was wishing to travel. Instead of following the road, he would simply drive a straight line, carelessly using the ENTIRE road, not just his lane. Which was very unnerving for me, as I was looking to get past him and put nothing but distance between him and me as quickly as possible. Only after using my horn and high beam in his rear-view mirror did he wake up and realize that there was someone else on the road with him.

It's at those moments that I am very happy that I have over 100 horsepower and close to 100 foot-pounds of torque at my disposal ... a quick flick of the wrist is all I need to get far away from rolling chicanes.

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[info]gyrfalki
2008-05-09 08:39 am UTC (link)
I'm not a revhead by nature, but stick me behind someone doing 10 clicks, or ten miles, under the speed limit, and my right hand gets twitchy.

Part of me wants to congratulate them on getting out of the house, I just wish they'd follow some basic road rules. Like sticking to the one lane eh?

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[info]gsx1400
2008-05-09 12:46 pm UTC (link)
I was thinking to myself while following them ... "If you don't like driving up twisty canyon roads, then WTF are you doing HERE?"

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[info]vanilla_christ
2008-05-09 01:51 pm UTC (link)
it might be time to surrender your license

Cold...dead...hands!

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[info]gyrfalki
2008-05-09 09:51 pm UTC (link)
Agreed.

As long as they're off the steering wheel though and they're not still pretending to potter along the roads in peak hour.

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[info]vanilla_christ
2008-05-09 10:17 pm UTC (link)
Take your HANDS off my Lincoln Continental, you damn... dirty... APES!

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[info]prometheandrone
2008-05-09 04:20 pm UTC (link)
hahaha *thumbs up*

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