How Long Did It Take You To Learn How To Ride A Motorycle? | GTAMotorcycle.com

How Long Did It Take You To Learn How To Ride A Motorycle?

Pegassus

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I was 15 when I learnt and it took me only 30 minutes but I had one advantage: I already knew how to drive shift-stick vehicles all by myself in the backroads of Houston,Texas. My uncle taught me in a 1982 Kawasaki.

It amazed me that my brother-in-law, a kid of 13, learnt how to completely master a motorcycle without even knowing how to drive an automatic car and being clueless as to what a "clutch" or "gears" was. We started at 3:30pm and by 5:30pm he was already riding the motorcycle all by himself, making u-turns on the road, stopping, starting, slowing down, all of this without stalling the bike or crashing.

I also tried to teach my 9 and 11 year old nieces but their feet could not touch the brake/shift peg but I was riding behind them without interferring and they rode the motorcycle all over the place as long as I had placed the bike on 2nd gear for them, I know that they could have ridden it by themselves if they could only reach the pegs because I also taught them how to change gears and in theory they knew how to do it, this in just one afternoon.

This is why in Humber College I had not sympathy for full-grown adults who crashed the bikes several times during our M2 tests, c'mon are you kiding me, they have been practicing for days before they go to Humber haven't they?
 
I took my motorcycle training/license training 30 years ago at Centennial College and I have been learning to ride my motorcycle ever since. There is always something I can do better.
 
I took the Humber course, riding my beater GS450/400 up and down the street beforehand (I never dropped that bike once). I didn't learn how to drive a standard car until years later.

I took my motorcycle training/license training 30 years ago at Centennial College and I have been learning to ride my motorcycle ever since. There is always something I can do better.

A good mindset to have.
 
I used to drive all around the old neighborhood (Glen Agar) at night, on a 1972 Norton 850 Commando.
Shifting with the right foot; braking with the left. I think I was 15...
I could drive manual-transmission cars too.
Hey a motorhead's a motorhead, what can I say?
I just always knew. Never took a lesson.
Eventually aced the motorcycle license test on my SOHC Honda 750 four.
I put 40,000 miles on that thing - before they changed Canada to the metric system in 1978.
Lots of kilometres (and crashes) over the 35 years since those days...
But all limbs still attached.
 
you never stop learning.

Well if it's not mechanical I don't know what else I can learn, I rode in a 3rd-world country for 3 years that have more dangerous scenarios than Canada and rode in 2 canadian winters IN THE SNOW, gave up riding in the winter when I slid on 5 cm of snow and fell with a tractor trailer skidding and jacknifing trying to stop just 40-ft behind me.
 
You don't know what else you can learn???
I've been riding for 42 years.
Still learning.

Well if it's not mechanical I don't know what else I can learn, I rode in a 3rd-world country for 3 years that have more dangerous scenarios than Canada and rode in 2 canadian winters IN THE SNOW, gave up riding in the winter when I slid on 5 cm of snow and fell with a tractor trailer skidding and jacknifing trying to stop just 40-ft behind me.
 
Learn to ride, first day at centennial college parking lot, and still am. If you think you're done learning, you're lying to yourself, there is ALWAYS something.
 
gave up riding in the winter when I slid on 5 cm of snow and fell with a tractor trailer skidding and jacknifing trying to stop just 40-ft behind me.

You learned not to ride in the snow. That's a good start. LOL

Methinks your overconfidence will be your undoing.
 
You don't know what else you can learn???
I've been riding for 42 years.
Still learning.

Old man with an old bike.
Don't worry, I respect both. :D
 
Unless you're the master and undisputed champion of every Motorsport out there that involves a motorcycle, I hardly think you're in a position to say you've learned it all, and that sort of attitude lends itself to be cocky and inattentive, which is a dangerous combination on a vehicle where one little mistake can cost you your life.
 
I pretend that I know what I am doing but the reallity is this is my 3rd season learning :)
 
Riding 3 years and still learning.

If you mean how long did it take to actually feel mostly comfortable, I'd say about 10 hours of street riding. But even now I still feel like I'm going to die every time I'm on the 401. Worse if it's raining. I really don't trust my tires in the wet.
 
...This is why in Humber College I had not sympathy for full-grown adults who crashed the bikes several times during our M2 tests, c'mon are you kiding me, they have been practicing for days before they go to Humber haven't they?

Such arrogance, and as someone else has said, cockiness! Welcome to a world where everyone is not perfect. And where, thank God, we are all different! I certainly know how to ride my motorcycle. But, I am always learning and welcome constructive criticism/advice/suggestions,etc. from more experienced riders. I certainly haven't done or read research on this, but I have a feeling that there are some things that younger people simply learn or pick up faster/easier than older people. Younger people, I believe, don't worry or think about consequences. For example, I play indoor and outdoor soccer. I'm almost 50 and started playing about 4 years ago (having never played before). I'm sure if I had played as a child, I would not have been concerned about being hurt or breaking bones. But now, at my age, and with the responsibilities I have, I am more conscious of these things. Doesn't mean I don't enjoy playing, I'm just no 'Beckham', that's for sure :)

You need to humble yourself.
 
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You need to learn to spot a troll.

I think I just did. In what part of my post did you see I'm trolling? You don't believe that a 13-year-old learnt in 3 hours what you have not learnt in 5 years? Believe me, it did happen.
 
You need to humble yourself.

People rarely humble themselves, but are rather humbled by an outside source. In my case it was having a 'washed up former pro racer' casually look back over his shoulder at me while riding one handed, mid corner, when I thought that I was going as fast as, and leaned over as far as, I possibly could be.
 

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