this is for anyone who's considered Rider Training in any shape or form.
background first;i've been involved in Rider Training for about 17 years. got into it for two reasons - one was to put a bit back into biking as a kinda thank you, i suppose to all the "Elder Lemons" that guided and mentored me when i was young and foolish(er) than i am now
.The second reason is that i felt and noted from my work with MAG (Ireland) that unless we took responsibility for ourselves and our safety that some fool bureaucrat in an office with no idea about biking would do it for us
So, i got involved, took training myself, became a Trainer, took more training etc. etc. (full c.v. available upon request
)now i have some idea about training, the options out there and the validity of same.
why am i posting this?
Well.... it seems to me that after all is said and done - theres a hell of a lot more said than done

.the title of this thread Straight questions / straight answers is because i am of the opinion (yes, like bums - we've all got one) that there is a lot of waffle talked about training.
the aim of this and i hope any future posts i make about training is to demystify the topic.
ask me a straight blunt question and i will try to give an answer equally straight and probably blunt too.

my only motivation is to enable people to see the point of taking training, what it actually entales, the benefits of it and to show that it's not all dayglo and headlamps on, pipe and slippers, pedantic pontificating, holier than thou self righteous boll....
...whaddya mean i got issues?!

bottom line coming up;
my own riding has got better as i get older.
~ i get more ride out of less bike.
~ i got more stamina, more focus, more confidence, more competence, and a clearer realistic self assessment of my ride. a yardstick by which to gauge how well i'm doing on any given day.
NO one out there rides "perfectly" (whatever that means - definitions vary!)100% of the time. but after taking training i know when i am riding well and when i'm not.
This in itself is the best safety device / protective gear i've ever had.
it's between my ears, i never forget to put it on and it dont wear out (so far
) and doesn't get sold on when i change bikes.here it finally comes....
The Bottom Line.
This Advanced Stuff Really Works!
and ANYone can do it. you dont have to be a riding god, on the latest and greatest flavour of the month bike.
you DO have to be capable of paying attention, accepting criticism and learning new ways of doing the same old stuff.
oh - and if you are doing it right....it's Fun too!

many say they've "done training" - but it's only of value if you take it to the logical conclusion and do a test at the end, otherwise its like saying "yeah, i went to university.....never did the exams and got the degree...but i went to Uni"...
what is the point?
no matter if it's Ro.S.P.A. (my own direction) or I.A.M. or (for the Irish among us
) an Insurance company Skills Assessment or a Bikesafe assessment.whatever it is - if i can get you interested or assist (and a thread on here costs nothing
if i can help with practical onroad training - let me know offline - but the main point of this post is not an advert for training, but a thread to get the topic into the open and get it discussed, with i hope, blunt replies to straight questions - no bull, no waffle and no judgements.
~~
Og / Marc.
RoSPA DIP.
RoSPA Gold.
(Star Rider Scheme) Senior Local Training Officer Fingal County Council, Dublin.
Founder member / former Head of Training I.R.T.A.
Rep for Ireland on the E.U. funded "Initial Rider Training Project".
MAG Irl. Training Rep. / National Executive member.


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