Same boat, it's not expiring, I guess they will announce that at some point. I msg'd learning curves and they said no details yet.
You need to be a little careful with this. Some people greatly overestimate their ability, or just figure that they'll learn something. If you end up in a class with one or two people who are frequently dropping their bikes, it can be a long day.Or just taking an advanced rider training course. Did the www.motorcyclemasters.ca course last year and it was not only money well spent, but freakin' awesome.
You need to be a little careful with this. Some people greatly overestimate their ability, or just figure that they'll learn something. If you end up in a class with one or two people who are frequently dropping their bikes, it can be a long day.
Did any dump it on the other side while righting it? That is always the funniest/saddest part.MCM did a great job managing that - the courses and instruction were setup in such a fashion that anyone struggling didn't hold back others who weren't as there was multiple "lanes" for many of the basic challenges, and then the course that allowed people to practice what they learned after the fact was "free flow" more or less so if someone was having trouble in one area of it others could just freely flow to alternate areas.
There was at least 1 person who was dropping (or going very, very slow) frequently in the class I was in (and a few others dropping occasionally) and I don't really remember it causing any issues. One of the very first things they taught the group was how to pickup their bikes easily using the "sit on your seat and creep it up" method so anyone who did drop their bike was usually back up and going again inside 30 seconds anyways.
Did any dump it on the other side while righting it? That is always the funniest/saddest part.