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riding school

Go with Humber - they have a new fleet of the Honda CBR 125s, super easy to ride. They have 3 locations in the GTA. The instructors are very patient and the course is tax deductible - beacuse its counted as a post secondary course - you get a tax reciept from it.

I've taken different courses from different schools over the years - I'm partial to Humber.
 
A friend recommended Learning Curves to me and I was really glad they did. I had zero standard/manual experience prior to the course. I passed but still needed to work on shifting gears and low speed turns. After the course though, practice on your own (parking lots and residential streets) to build confidence.
 
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Did my first day of RTI training and I am spent! I can't really speak for the other courses, but RTI so far is definitely worth it! We got 1 instructor per 5 people, and they paid attention and commented on each one of us. We got about 7 hours on a bike today...who knew that would be thoroughly exhausting? I'm dreading the other 7 hours tomorrow...but in a good way. :p

I've never ridden a bike before today, and now I know how! Tomorrow comes the hard stuff though (emergency situations, etc). FUN! and in the rain!
 
Did my first day of RTI training and I am spent! I can't really speak for the other courses, but RTI so far is definitely worth it! We got 1 instructor per 5 people, and they paid attention and commented on each one of us. We got about 7 hours on a bike today...who knew that would be thoroughly exhausting? I'm dreading the other 7 hours tomorrow...but in a good way. :p

I've never ridden a bike before today, and now I know how! Tomorrow comes the hard stuff though (emergency situations, etc). FUN! and in the rain!

learning and testing in the rain is great, it pushes you to be a better rider. I know RTI doesn't just teach you to ride but they try to make the process fun.
 
learning and testing in the rain is great, it pushes you to be a better rider. I know RTI doesn't just teach you to ride but they try to make the process fun.

It rained for last last half of day 1/ first half of day 2 for my course, and I'm thankful for it, it really does teach you more than when completely dry. I also bought my bike at the very end of last season and ride through most of the winter, kept me from being a hooligan and really made me focus on the slow maneuvers and controls for the bike. Wouldn't recommend it but a great way to learn real quick! Lol

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