Doctor said stop riding




Been running down a continuing problem with pain in my spine. Been to chiropractors, orthopedic surgeons, neurologists, and physical therapists.

Was talking with my general practioner about something else, and we got onto the topic of my back. He was appalled at what I'd been going through, and how nobody seems to help and in fact they usually make it worse.

We talked about my back. Diagnosed possible ulnar tunnel, which is a completely different diagnosis than what the other guy was treating.

Things were going well.

Then he notices my pants. My alpinestar air-flo mesh pants. The jacket was back in the waiting room on a hanger, or he'd have noticed that too.

"Do you ride a motorcycle?"

"Yes, I do."

"I hate to say this but, you might want to consider not riding for a few weeks and see if your condition improves. Sometimes the vibration from the handlebars combined with a tight grip can exacerbate..."

His voice trailed off. He knew he was asking a lot of me. He knew I was not going to like his suggestion. I could see that he knew from the look in his eye.

First I thought, "2 weeks of prime riding season? Give it up? No way!"

Thought for a moment of saying, "Hell, I'm not riding a Harley. It's not like Iike it's vibrating that much..."

My mind flashed to that scene in "World's Fastest Indian" when, after his heart attack, Burt Munro sees his doctor, and the doctor says: "Looks like your motorcycle riding days are over."

And Burt says, "Like hell they are."

I pondered this for a moment, then recalled, "Well, you know, that might make sense if my symptoms began after motorcycle season started, but actually these symptoms started when there was ice on the roads, so I don't think it's the motorcycle."

He said, "Well, okay, if riding season hasn't changed your symptoms at all, then there's probably no reason to stop riding."

Later I told my wife about it. I said, "They can have my motorcycle when they pry it from my cold, dead fingers..."

Hell of an epitaph.

Born November 17, 1906


What a coincidence! Soichiro_Honda, founder of Honda Motor Company, Inc. was born November 17, 1906. How interesting.

I didn't know much about this guy, and certainly took no interest in his life until very recently. Because I like the motorcycles.

Daydreaming while riding

Riding home, eastbound, in rush hour traffic on the city streets. I thought I was paying attention. I noticed the BDC approaching from the right. I was alone in the right lane -- would she mistakenly assume the lane was clear and pull out in front of me? She stopped. Cars ahead were stopped for the light, traffic was bunching up. The step van on my left had already stopped, but there was room in my lane ahead of me and I toodled onward, not knowing that the step van obscured from my sight the car in front of it, crossing traffic, turning in front of me.

I didn't see him.

Thankfully, he saw me. He stopped. I continued.

I kicked myself and swore an oath to post this reminder to the group.

If he hadn't seen me, and he had plenty of reasons not to -- the step van between us, the fact that I had no cover in my lane -- if he hadn't seen me, I'd have T-boned him.

I could've kept this dumbass move to myself. E.g. I didn't tell my wife. But I decided to share in hopes that it helps someone else ride defensively.

Ride safe!

Big Rear Tire


Gotta be a Boss Hoss, with a V8 engine and a massive rear tire.

Custom Handlebars

Thinking about custom handlebars for my VF750C.

Found the following info at www.sideroadcycles.com













Honda Model Honda Description Year Bar Diameter Height Width Pullback Center Clamp Area Factory #
VF 750 C/C2 Magna 750 1994 - 2003 1" 5-1/2" 31" 10" 6-1/2" 2-3/4" x 5" 53100-MZ5-910

Lone Biker Of The Apocalypse

How can any motorcycle enthusiast not love the depiction of "The Lone Biker Of the Apocalypse" from the movie "Raising Arizona". It's a classic

Tires

As I walked to my bike in the parking garage after work, I noticed a CBR600 parked near me. I noticed the tire looked strange so I snapped a photo.



At first I thought "what a narrow strip of worn tire -- how odd that a sport bike rider doesn't do any leaning." But as I studied it more, I thought the strange "light colored stripe" in the middle was due to something else. Perhaps a dual compound tire with gummy rubber on the sides and hard rubber in the middle.

Then, for contrast, I snapped a photo of my own tire.


Mine's barely broken in, less than 500 miles on it, and doesn't show any contrast of light and dark.