Trust Me On The Leather... By: Unknown Ladies and Gentlemen .....wear Leather. If I could offer you only one tip for improving your life, leather would be it. |
Bullshit. I will dispense some real advice right now:
Enjoy the power and beauty of your ride; If you don't already; you can fully enjoy
it by doing block-long smokey burnouts in the parking lot at the local drive-in.
Trust me, in 20 years you'll look back at the photos of you and your pals on your bikes and recall in a way you can't grasp now how much fun you had and how fabulous you really looked hauling ass down the highway dressed in leather.
Leather is as sexy as you imagine.
Don't worry about what your Mom thinks; or worry, but know that worrying about what
other people think is as effective as trying to scratch your nose in a blinding hailstorm
at 80 m.p.h. with a full- face helmet and winter gloves on. The real troubles in
your life are apt to be Volvo stationwagons, driven by some dipstick talking into
his cell phone or doing her makeup; the kind that blindside you at 4 PM on some urban
roadway and then claim you crashed into THEM.
Do one thing everyday that scares other drivers... Lanesplit.
Sing into your helmet. Use mouthwash first.
Don't be reckless with other people's bikes, especially if you don't have insurance.
Don't put up with people who mess with yours.... in fact, beat them with a chain.
Ride Fast.
Don't waste your money on chrome, or fancy paintjobs; spend it on racing or partying.
Sometimes you're fast, sometimes you're slow.
Sometimes you're hungover. The ride is long, and in the end, a cold beer tastes pretty damn good.
Remember the good rides you've had, forget the cuts and bruises; try to wear out the sides of your tires before the middle.... if you succeed in doing this, tell me how.
Keep your oil changed, throw away old traffic citations.
Take chances.
Don't feel guilty if you ride faster than the posted limit ...the most interesting people I know didn't know at 22 how to ride conservatively, all the most interesting 40 year olds I know still don't.
Get plenty of saddle time.
Be kind to your passengers, you'll miss them if they fall off.
Maybe you'll crash, maybe you won't, maybe you'll have surgery, maybe you won't, maybe you'll ride a cruiser off a cliff doing 40, maybe you'll get a new motocrosser for your 75th birthday ...whatever you ride, don't congratulate yourself too much - your choices are 90% foreign,10% domestic, so are everyone else's.
Enjoy your bike, use it every way you can...don't be afraid of it, or what other people think of it, it's the greatest instrument of pleasure you'll ever own, not counting porn sites and a fast modem.
Wrench... even if you have nowhere to do it but in your hotel room.
Read the owner's manual, even tho' you won't remember any of it.
Do not read American motorcycle magazines, they will only make you wish you'd bought a British one instead.
Get to know your brake pads, you never know when they'll be gone for good.
Be nice to your tires; they are your link to the pavement and the things most likely to save your butt from a nasty highside.
Understand that mechanics comes and mechanics go, but for a precious talented few you should pay them well and buy them sixpacks.
Work hard to bridge the gaps in geography and lifestyle because the older your bike gets, the more you'll need the mechanic who worked on it when it was young and still not paid off.
Ride in New York City once, but leave before you get killed; ride in Northern California whenever possible, but leave a plausible excuse when calling in sick for work.
Do lurid wheelies.
Accept certain inalienable truths: prices will rise, traffic will get worse, you too will get old, and when you do you'll fantasize that when you were young, gasoline was cheap, the highway patrol couldn't catch you, and Harley owners weren't all yuppies.
Respect your rev-limiter.
Don't expect anyone else to see your bike unless it has really loud pipes.
Maybe your bike has a big gas tank, maybe a smaller one; but remember, either way you'll have to make bathroom stops.
Don't mess too much with your carburetors, or by the time your done, you'll be walking home.
Be careful whose advice you buy, and save your receipts.
Don't take advice from those who supply it for free, especially if they own a Britbike.
Motorcycle restoration is a form of self-torture. Doing it is a way of
pulling the past from the dustbin, degreasing it, painting over the rusty
parts and dumping way more money into it than it's worth.
But trust me on the leather...