I've had my license for about 5 (owned a bike for 3) months, and have put around 2500 miles on my '82 gs550L. I acquired a '93 Kawasaki Ninja a few weeks ago, and had about 200 miles on it, when I decided a scenic tour of north GA was in order.
The trip began Friday morning; I left from Marietta, going through Woodstock, Ellijay, McCaysville, Tennessee, to Blairsville and stayed the night... about 180 miles ridden, uneventful and beautiful. I wake up Saturday morning, ride to Murphy, NC, take the scenic route (Old 64) back down to Hiawassee, GA. My intention was to ride alternate 75 and then GA 348 (very curvy mtn roads), but I get about 12 miles down 17/75 and dumped the Ninja (12 miles from Helen, too - life flight country)... It was a real nice banked curve going up a mountain. I picked a line, leaned into it, kept the throttle steady... and kept leaning till I hit the ground at around 50mph. It rubbed a hole through my leathers, but I got up and ran (from traffic) from the crash. I knew I was riding aggressively, but I didn't think it was that aggressive. Fortunately for me, I don't have much more than a skinned knee and a few small bruises to show for it, but I was real lucky. Another biker died on the same curve about a week before me.
I'm not really sure what I did wrong - my 2 theories are 1) I should've gone 5-10 mph slower through the curve (50mph on a 20mph marked curve) or 2) should've picked my ass up off the seat and stuck it farther into the curve to shift the CG. I think either one of the 2 would have prevented the low-side, but slowing down before I started to lean was the smarter option. Live and learn.
I'm still riding my GS to work, but the Kaw needs a pickup coil and cover before it's ready to roll again. I hope to have it running again in a week or so, but in the meantime, I'd like to think I'm a slightly wiser rider - set your entry speed appropriately and pay attention to the "suggested speed" signs...
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