Hi All
Should we as 'experianced' riders try to help those with less knowledge? I guess the simple answer is that we are either part of the solution or part of the problem.
Winds back the clock to another age - used to be an instructor for the Defensive Riders Association in Plymouth. We would often get the young bucks having their brand new 125 delivered to our centre and they would turn up with a flash helmet and trainers, no gloves - especially in the summer, shorts were not unknown. We would get them all out on the training ground to do some 'warm up' before riding, walk them around the course etc. Then have them line up at one end of the tarmac sheet and tell them to start running as fast as they could, when we sounded the hooter they were to dive full length on the tarmac and see who could slide the furthest. Most refused, which was a good intro to protective clothing and falling off a bike, some were up for it, these were a little harder to deal with.
The great thing I found about the DRA was that all bar one of the instructors rode a bike that the learners would aspire to, they were not being instructed by a BoF on a BMW. (It worked for me too as a one time student). Also Pete the Police man who did the advanced instruction would come down on his 250 superdream (no aspirations there) and ride the wheels off the rest of us on our 750 fours, 350LCs etc. We would listen to him and take on hboard what he was saying because he could ride the thing and not just pontificate from the back of a R100.
Spin it forwards a number of years and I started riding with Northampton IAM. There was me (RD500) a guy on a Suzuki 1000 and a whole load of broomhandles on BMs. There was stuff to learn, but being instructed by some plonker who had been riding 3 years and had just bought his nice new BM (a much better bike than the RD500 as it was just as fast - well it would do 70 and you were not allowed to do any more - and you could tour on it) did not work for me. Mr Suzuki and I got real fed up with the 'properness' of the whole thing. What really did for me was one of the guys coming up to me at an 'instruction' stop and saying that I seemed to be having troubles with reading the corners, and on the next streach to follow him. My mate (R80 rider) said afterwards that he was surprised that I did not bop the guy on the nose, Adrian knew what I (and Mr Suzuki) were doing - slowing down before the corners so we could have fun in them. Followed Mr 3 years for about a mile - nearly hitting him at one point as he decisded to brake mid corner - just as it was opening out - when a nice series of bends opened up in front of us - could see them some way off, how the ran etc. I dropped well back from Mr 3 years and had a nice run at them which did involve passing him at one point. He was not impressed. I did not bother going back.
Interestingly some weeks before this another copper and another Pete had come along - he was the local IAM examiner too - on his Honda Benly, we each took it in turn to be followed by him. His feed back was brilliant. He assessed each of us before we rode with him - whast we were riding, what we were like etc, and he observed that person. My mate on the R80 found that the feed back about his positioning etc really helped him and his bike to address some of the problems he had. Before we set off Pete asked me to let him keep up on the straights but to enjoy the corners. He picked a particulaly twisty section of road and we did have fun. Looking back to see if he was with me and seeing the big grin on his face as said Benl;y was in a lovely two wheel drift bouncing across the road as we swung through the bend was brilliant. He stopped me and made some suggestions about road position and braking. Never questioned the brake light coming on in the midst of a LRL set of bends - because he knew that the 16" front would pull back up nice with a slight feather of brake etc etc. We arrived in the next stop some time before the rest of the group and had a good chat about the ins and outs of "making progress". If he had been there even 1 week out of 4 I would have continued, as he was not I could not take the preaching.
Cut to the present - local copper runs training runs at the weekend. He has a few bikes to ccall on - depending on who he is riding with and where they are going. His favorite is a 1:1 or 2:1 all day session up through mid Wales and back again. I never got to go with him as this stupid ME has stopped me riding, but he was keen to get me back in the groove. Talking to him, I would have gone out and listened / enjoyed myself.
So are we part of the solution, or are we part of the problem? Is training about being safe, or about being a better rider? Is it about being sensible or having more fun?
Just some thoughts from someone who has had / possibly does have a "poor" attitude - and has fallen off too many times and is willing to admit that they are all due to a lack of skill (even sliding off on sheet ice).
R