
tips for riding on gravel
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- Posts: 472
- Joined: Sat Jun 03, 2000 9:42 am
tips for riding on gravel / personal story / keep your momentum
I dated a woman a few years ago that had a new HD Sportster 1200. She
wouldn't so much as ride it across flat, unpaved, hard dirt without
reservations.
We went on a campout & stayed at an area with an unwashed river rock
parking area. I had to stop,park, have her dismount her bike and then ride
it for her the 20 yards to the tent. (and back out again the next day.)
On rides afterward, I had her try easing down a similar roads and
ultimately talked her into riding 1/4 mile to a different campsite - all in
hard gravel.
She did great. We went to/from that site several times. Her confidence
built up until one day she went too slow and bounced her front wheel off a
fist-sized rock in a slight rut. The front end tucked under and she went
down in a heap. **Thud**. I nursed both bike & rider back to health
(skinned knee, scuffed clutch lever and saddlebag) wondering if she'd ever
go off pavement ever again. Her version of the story grew in magnitude each
she told it. 5mph turned into 10, then 15 mph until one would think she'd
dropped the bike in turn 3 @ the San Jose Mile. Reality? She was riding the
brake(front) and going at a walking pace. All it took was a moment of
hesitation for a bump of the wheel to turn into an oops.
I finally had enough of her milking the story for all it was worth. While
on a two-up ride one afternoon, I purposefully rode to the end of a paved
county road and two more miles up a winding, twisting gravel road. The
GL1800 was shuddering and wiggling while I had actual fun horsing the
roughly 1300 pounds of bike, rider & passenger up that road. After the turn
around and trip back to asphalt, I calmly informed her that it was entirely
possible to safely ride a street bike on gravel as long as you progressed
quickly enough to be steady but not so fast as to lose control. She didn't
speak much for 1/2 an hour.
It was great.....
eddie

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- Posts: 570
- Joined: Tue Sep 22, 2009 7:52 pm
tips for riding on gravel / personal story / keep your momentum
--- In DSN_KLR650@yahoogroups.com, "eddie" wrote: She didn't > speak much for 1/2 an hour. > It was great.....> Was that long enough for her to build up the pressure to fart?
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- Posts: 230
- Joined: Mon Nov 13, 2006 7:29 am
tips for riding on gravel
Seems to me there are two approaches to riding gravel, or for that matter most loose surfaces. In nautical terms you can proceed in displacement fashion (through the medium) or planing fashion (over the surface). Bike behavior and the techniques required to navigate will be markedly different in either approach, and trying to use planing techniques at displacement speeds will not be effective.
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Kevin Powers
White Bear Lake, MN
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