I am a fan of training. My take on this, is that if you're starting something new, learn the building blocks and foundations properly so they become second nature, and the only way you know how. That way you start off on the right foot, and don't learn bad practices from the start.
I follow bikers that are truly, truly shit riders from time to time
, and when I stop them for a chat they tell me they've been riding for years !! And like wise, Sometimes I follow a really nice rider, good lines, good acceleration sense, good planning, and they tell me they've only been riding for two or three years. They've clearly been taught well
.
If you know nothing (and hey, there's nothing wrong with that - I've never been errrrr, skiing for example..) then good tuition from the very start is essential. Then, go out and build on that on your own, with the confidence that your basic skills are sound and correct.
I follow bikers that are truly, truly shit riders from time to time
, and when I stop them for a chat they tell me they've been riding for years !! And like wise, Sometimes I follow a really nice rider, good lines, good acceleration sense, good planning, and they tell me they've only been riding for two or three years. They've clearly been taught well If you know nothing (and hey, there's nothing wrong with that - I've never been errrrr, skiing for example..) then good tuition from the very start is essential. Then, go out and build on that on your own, with the confidence that your basic skills are sound and correct.

