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Your mileage may vary depending on your confidence levels.
On the other hand, we always had fun on a Yamaha 100 and if we go on holiday we hire a 125 (or even a moped) and really enjoy ourselves. Apart from the comfort issue, I can't say I've ever wished I was on a bigger bike when I'm on a smaller one (except coming down from the mountain, two-up on a moped - but that was worrying because it was an automatic and I was getting brake fade in the heat).
So it depends what you want to do. If I lived somewhere with fun roads outside my door, I'd get a 125 just for fun. But I've got a 650 Bandit and a 1250 Bandit and they are both fantastic in their own way - I've no more room in the garage for a 125 but I'd have one if I could fit it in.
I’m definitely the kind of person who will be cautious on the road. I don’t have the desire to go crazy fast and push the limits. I’ve got a family I want to come home to each evening who are the most important thing for me.
Some of you mentioned being tall enough to put your feet down at traffic. I’m 5’9” so not exactly short but not tall either. I haven’t ridden a motorbike before but I do drive.
@p90fool Where are you/your wife’s training school based?
@Simon_M we're in Mid Wales, but not training at the moment while we decide which route to take after redundancies etc.
Comfy street bike, amazing engine- triples are just brilliant.
Was my first big bike.
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Someone who has been taught to ride properly on a bike of any size, large or small, will be able to assess a corner and approach at the correct speed, take the correct line for that day/oncoming traffic/weather/view/how you're feeling yourself and negotiate it safely and skilfully. And they'll start from a premise of being safe whilst they develop their skill.
There's no such thing as "learning lines" if you've been trained to assess bends properly. It's not a racetrack without traffic coming the other way and with a marshal to tell you it's safe. Every time you take a specific bend on your favourite road, it will be different. Anyone who tells you you should be "learning lines" has a gap in their understanding and expertise.
Proper training doesn't focus on recovery techniques for when you get it wrong. It focuses on avoidance techniques for never getting into trouble in the first place.
https://www.ridinginthezone.com/countersteering-will-save-your-life/
You even say you don't teach recovery, you teach avoidance, that's not applicable in every situation! As I biker who does 25k per year in all weather, learning lines and recovery was invaluable.
You clearly have a different belief system to me.
For the second time in two posts, you're misquoting or mis-assuming.
I suspect some, if not all, the people suggesting that a learner can go straight to a bigger bike and avoid the 125cc stage - if it is appropriate for them - have ridden and owned fast sportsbikes before. I have. So the assumption in your first post is misplaced.
You're misquoting (or misunderstanding) me when you incorrectly quote me in your second post. I said "the focus" is on avoidance rather than recovery. Of course people make mistakes on bikes of any size. I teach countersteering and I teach that recovery if you're going too fast for a bend you misread on approach is usually to countersteer a bit harder and not to shut the throttle or try and brake - unless you can get the bike upright and travelling in a straight line. But it's not my focus. Assessing the bend correctly is my focus. It's the approach favoured by every police force I know, so I'm in good company.
I suspect I can teach a learner some skills that you learned by experience. Which is what a good instructor is paid for.
Anyway, I've got to go out and ride my bike, now. I've got an appointment with someone who wants a mock test before they take their RoSPA Advanced test next week. Back later...
BUT, it is a slippery slope, treating every bend as a challenge to "get right" often leads to a mentality where recovery from sphincter-clenching moments HAS to be learned, because it's a daily event.
Also "learning lines" is the nearest I've come to high speed crashes on the road, because you approach your favourite bends in a far more gung ho manner than ones you've never seen, often at speeds where even just a rabbit carcass could start a highside, let alone a parked tractor or diesel spill.
I'm not putting you in this category because I don't know you, but when I ran a shop all the guys (and they were always guys) who "needed" this helmet, that back protector, this body armour, those knee sliders all binned it sooner or later because they were PLANNING to.
To me, as someone who has ridden most days, winter and summer on a huge variety of bikes for 35 years, falling off is not an option I'm willing to countenance, but for some it's seen as part of motorcycling.
I even asked some of the ones buying all the armour (the ones who were strictly road riders who never did track days) if they planned to smash through the windscreen of their car and land in a bloody mess on the bonnet next time they went shopping, but they didn't see any correlation between the two types of single vehicle accident.
Wear good gear, stay warm and safe but don't treat stuffing your bike up a telegraph pole at double the speed limit as a valid part of motorcycling - it's just pure dickishness.
I got my bike licence 2 years ago, aged 39. I've been driving since I was 17 and was a driving instructor for a while. I like driving in as much as I enjoy the craft of being in control of the vehicle and enjoying a smooth journey. Occasionally that translates into driving swiftly to see if I can still keep things well in control, but I'm not really a speed demon.
My mates bullied me into the bike thing. And my son wanted to get his licence so I arranged for us to have a taster session. I found it hard, he said it was easy. I took on the challenge and did my CBT which was hard but I was beginning to feel like it was achievable. I waited a few months, then booked a half day lesson on a proper bike. I loved it, despite dropping it twice due to poor balance when stopping. The instructor said I could book my tests ASAP so I did. I had another lesson, then hired a 125 for a morning. Then I did my MOD1 with a bit of instruction and practise on the morning. I went through with only a couple of minor faults, just nerves.
I didn't have any more practise until the day of MOD2. I passed that with zero riding faults.
In summary - if you have the right mentality to riding - learn to control the bike, forward planning and defensive attitude - and if you have plenty of road experience in a car or similar, then you can get through the test easily. And that can also serve you perfectly well to continue riding safely thereafter, where you can ramp up your skill and experience. I won't claim to be an expert, but I know how to look after myself on two wheels.
I believe anybody who has been driving for a good few years would be able to get through the bike test fairly quickly too.
My advice would be not to book an intensive course, the pressure will be too high. Just have a lesson one Saturday/Sunday, see how it goes. Take it from there.
FWIW, I have a defensive driving qualification and have driven vehicles on blue lights as well as been navigator/spotter for far more experienced drivers. I have also attended RTAs as a rescuer and been in an accident myself some years ago. I have quite an appreciation for the hazards of motoring but have no experience of riding a motorcycle.
I reckon a taster lesson one weekend would be a good idea then go from there.
Typically my experience of motorcyclists around here though is that they’re better on the roads than the cars! Although we do have a lot of tourists up here.