(09-03-17, 09:11 PM)Frosties link Wrote: [quote author=fazersharp link=topic=22062.msg254982#msg254982 date=1489083447]
[quote author=gicut58 link=topic=22062.msg254976#msg254976 date=1489081069]
58 and passed my test last summer, I haven't started yet!! :rollin :rollin So spring chicken Samsfazer your question "when is it time to give up" should of been coming from the other end "When is it to late to start " and the answer to both is Never.
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:agree Biking keeps you young Sam ffs.
Also 50 here. Been riding since 14 16 and no plans to stop. About the only time I feel free is on the bike and still have my sights set on one of these.....the MV Augusta Brutale
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Oh! I remember the one you posted a picture of in here Tiger the one with the white wheels. was the bike pink if I recall rightly :rollin :rollin
(09-03-17, 09:25 PM)fatbloke62 link Wrote: Me, heart attack at 41 a stroke at 48 knee replacement two years ago 55 now, give up not as long as I can get my leg over the old girl 
That's it- the Valentino Rossi posters are coming off my bedroom wall, Fatbloke62 you're my new hero! :lol
Treat everything in life the way a dog would- if you can't eat it or foc it, forget it.
(10-03-17, 12:39 AM)tommyardin link Wrote: [quote author=Frosties link=topic=22062.msg255000#msg255000 date=1489090310]
[quote author=fazersharp link=topic=22062.msg254982#msg254982 date=1489083447]
[quote author=gicut58 link=topic=22062.msg254976#msg254976 date=1489081069]
58 and passed my test last summer, I haven't started yet!! :rollin :rollin So spring chicken Samsfazer your question "when is it time to give up" should of been coming from the other end "When is it to late to start " and the answer to both is Never.
[/quote]
:agree Biking keeps you young Sam ffs.
Also 50 here. Been riding since 14 16 and no plans to stop. About the only time I feel free is on the bike and still have my sights set on one of these.....the MV Augusta Brutale
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Oh! I remember the one you posted a picture of in here Tiger the one with the white wheels. was the bike pink if I recall rightly :rollin :rollin
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I'm still carrying those pink rattle cans around for when I see you out n about mate :lol
Those are my principles...if you don't like them I have others.
I've given up giving up because when I give up I realise that I miss what I have given up so I un-give up. So the answer is don't give up.
It's easier to get more money than it is a day of your life back.
I will keep riding as long as health and money allows, its my hobby
My dad stopped riding at 82 due to ill health, but misses it ( we shared our FZS1000 as I work abroad most of the year). Unfortunately, even though he has recovered enough to ride a lighter bike, his short term memory is now shot and he has to have someone with him when he is driving, otherwise he forgets where he is going or what he went out for.
Granted our bodies& faculties wear out/decline at different rates-sometimes we are just "lucky" in our genetic inheritance but most experts(hate that word!) agree that we have to maintain that feel good factor & have a reason to get up in the morning. A generation or two back most men were totally worn out by 60-indeed a lot never got to benefit from their pension. The idea that you get your mantelpiece clock as your retirement present & put your carpet slippers on no longer applies
since all us post-war types had the benefit of the NHS etc-if we are sensible we can live happily for longer.
When my mum died last year age 86 my sister asked me when i was going to stop riding bikes. I said that I would know when the time was right. Since that conversation I have invested in a further 2 bikes-the Tracer & a Honda C90 Cub. This week I have ridden both the Fazer & Tracer & the feel good factor has been amazing. Bikes have been part of my life since I was 14 & I will be 70 next year.
No my physical health is not too wonderful (cant run or walk uphill too long due to COPD) but the mental component of well being is just as important as eating,resting, gentle exercise etc. In any case I am sure my sons will tell me if I become a danger to myself/others but meantime remember age is just a number :lol
(10-03-17, 07:54 AM)Carlsv8 link Wrote: I've given up giving up because when I give up I realise that I miss what I have given up so I un-give up. So the answer is don't give up. Or give up giving up.
(10-03-17, 08:53 AM)Tmation link Wrote: his short term memory is now shot and he has to have someone with him when he is driving, otherwise he forgets where he is going or what he went out for. Its funny but sometimes that's the exact reason I do go out, - I don't know where I am going and I also have no reason to go there, im just riding.
(10-03-17, 10:11 AM)Dave48 link Wrote: No my physical health is not too wonderful (cant run or walk uphill too long due to COPD) but the mental component of well being is just as important as eating,resting, gentle exercise etc. I Actually riding is a form of exercise, mental and physical, I use all my strength just to hang on.
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
60 last August and just decided to get back on after a time out:
You will know when its time!!
but in your case thats a long way off.
Can you really see yourself sitting indoors or in a car when the spring/summer sun arrives? Guess I mean about now :lol
(09-03-17, 02:01 PM)samsfazer link Wrote: I am passing another significant birthday this year, but am wondering at what age would you consider giving up biking - or when does it become too difficult?
In this week's MCN, there a dealer that mentions an older customer who returned a Ninja H2R. So by that guideline, once you hit 70 stick to less than 300bhp.
Broken, bruised, forgotten, sore,
too fucked up to care any more.
cheers all.
Dave 48 I salute you and hope that I have your vigour and energy when I get to where you are now!
(11-03-17, 11:55 AM)samsfazer link Wrote: cheers all. Come on then tell us when you are getting your Fazer.
As you are getting back into it you had best start with a slow one and work up to the fastest one, below for you is the order of speed starting with the slowest Fazer.
BLUE
RED
SILVER
RED/SILVER/ BLACK SCHEME
AND BLACK THE FASTEST - best to get this one last - once you have got used to the other slower ones
I don't do rain or threat there of. dry rider only with no shame.
Ah the old tortoise and the hare.
Thing is, whilst a lot of the time I'm all aches and pains (I've smashed myself up pretty badly over the years), there are only two scenarios when I don't feel it all, both when I am completely focussed on what I am doing. Playing guitar is one, when the mood is right, and riding bikes is the other. I might suffer some extra aches when I stop either one, but while actually engaged in those activities, I don't have, or I'm not aware of, those aches at all. It's a bugger when I try to explain to others why I can't do this or that, but I'm fine riding all day on the Fazer :\
Not ready to give up either yet though, although I suppose the day will come.
61 next July and no intention of stopping, I might as well be dead if I couldn't take the bike out
I went to my best friend's funeral on Tuesday, he was only 68 and for the last 10 years or so he had a Ducati obsession but I never held it against him. He always used to say you don't give up motorcycling because you get old , you get old because you get old because you give up motorcycling.
11-03-17, 10:06 PM
(This post was last modified: 11-03-17, 10:11 PM by Millietant.)
My Dad was diagnosed with cancer just before his 72nd birthday - went straight out and bought himself a GSX 600 and joined my brother, myself and our mates onmany a Sunday ride, leaving some of our younger friends on race-reps in his dust.
He rode until he couldn't hold the bike up at a standstill (half a dozen standstill tip-overs was his limit) in 2006 and passed away in 2008 at 79 yrs old.
I also have a good friend who is 79, who still rides his mountain bike every week, does plenty of +50 mile a day rides and shows a clean pair of heels to lots of our riding friends in their 40's & 50's. He doesn't have a motorbike, but is more than capable of manhandling one even at his age.
Me, I'm 57 and expect to be riding for at least another 25 years - or, like my old man, until I can't physically cope with on (maybe a Can Am Spyder could give me a couple of more years of fun once I couldn't ride a proper bike.
(09-03-17, 03:06 PM)samsfazer link Wrote: I will be 50. I wanted to get a thou as a sort of b'day present, but that's on hold now, given the insurance premiums etc till at least June.
I was curious about the age as I wondered when do you give up?
50! 50!50! FFS man your just a Foccing Nipper, or a babe in arms.
I hit the magic 70 years young on the 10th of this month and just got the FZS 600 insurance renewed and the bike re-MOTed
I just upgraded Front and Rear suspension so I can slowly work at reducing them 3/4" chicken strips, have halved them in the last 4 or 5 ride outs.
I plan on riding until I can no longer throw my leg over the seat and I hoping to still be riding at 80 years young.
(11-03-17, 11:56 PM)tommyardin link Wrote: [quote author=samsfazer link=topic=22062.msg254950#msg254950 date=1489068382]
I will be 50. I wanted to get a thou as a sort of b'day present, but that's on hold now, given the insurance premiums etc till at least June.
I was curious about the age as I wondered when do you give up?
50! [size=1.45em]50![/size][size=2em]50! [/size][size=1em]FFS man your just a Foccing Nipper, or a babe in arms. [/size]
[size=1em]I hit the magic 70 years young on the 10th of this month and just got the FZS 600 insurance renewed and the bike re-MOTed[/size]
[size=1em]I just upgraded Front and Rear suspension so I can slowly work at reducing them 3/4" chicken strips, have halved them in the last 4 or 5 ride outs. [/size]
[size=1em]I plan on riding until I can no longer throw my leg over the seat and I hoping to still be riding at 80 years young. [/size]
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You tell 'em Tomski :thumbup :thumbup :thumbup
Those are my principles...if you don't like them I have others.
61 here and I'll never stop riding. It's what keeps me sane(ish). Just had a series of op's on wrists and knees and hips now hurting every time I get off the bike, but the pain and discomfort is still very much worth it. Determined not to go down in size; still riding Busa and Fazer 1000 on road and drag racing a brutal B-King
when in doubt go flat out
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