Group Riding in MSTA
Let's have a wide-ranging discussion on how we do group riding in MSTA- let members discuss their philosophies, preferences and how they handle riding groups, especially at events. I'd like to see what the problems are and what we can do to make things better, both for regular members and newcomers. I've been working on ways to improve the riding experience for my personal riding group for the past two seasons and we have accomplished a lot. Over the course of this thread, I'll explain our style, rules and how everything evolved. What we came up with will certainly NOT please everyone. It will be presented to encourage others to express what works for them.
To kick things off, here's how I became interested in Sport-Touring Group Riding.
Background
When I began sport-touring in 2001, I had just bought a used Honda ST1100. I spent many days that spring, riding by myself, exploring its limits and figuring out how I wanted to ride. It didn't take long to figure out that I didn't want to ride by myself all the time. 2001 was also the year I made a new best friend, Tim Zimmer. Along with Allan Skinner, another recruit from Dayton Motorcycle club, we began doing a lot of riding together and discovered the Mail Pouch Fly-By and MSTA, which quickly became our home for sport-touring style riding. Tom Bartels and Daryl Cassada were early influences from the club, and I quickly picked up a crude GPS unit.
In a couple of years, Tim and I had better GPS units that we could load complex routes into and we started learning navigation inside and out. I liked the challenge of navigating, and wound up leading the rides. I have never been a road racer or ridden a track day, so never got in the habit of maximizing my speed on twisty roads. The thing that really turned me on was the fun of counter-steering and leaning in the corners. For me it was more fun to follow the contour of the road than straighten it out to go faster. Thanks to my younger days of riding endurance runs, I could quickly get into a zone riding the ST and carve corners for hours at a time.
One of the big changes when I started riding in MSTA events was wearing full gear. I've never liked being hot, so have always had a love-hate relationship with riding gear- love it when on the bike and moving at speed, but hate it in town and especially when stopped. That's why I want to suit up in the morning, jump on the bike & get moving. On hot days especially, it's uncomfortable to stop so I avoid it as much as possible. I want to do the ride, finish and get the gear off, so I hate delays. That's just one challenge.
A bigger challenge is limiting group size and composition to avoid the "herding cats" and "slowest common denominator" problems, which are the bane of most group riding, which I'll refer to as "Social Group Riding". In a way, all group riding is social, so we'll talk about that in the next post before we start discussing alternatives...
Comments welcome!
Norm Kern