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Country road Hazards. #4

Buffalo Bill

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This is cool, twisy ravine coming up, and the pavement looks good! 55MPH?
ravine-1.jpg

Oop! Can't see into the shadows you know! Bummer pavement!
ravine-2.jpg

Here's the next ravine, and I KNOW this pavement is good! 55 MPH again?
ravineB-1.jpg

SH_T! Nobody put this in the paper!
ravineB-3.jpg

I saw all this today, these are some of the best riding country roads in Berrien County Michigan.
Take care of yourself, and think for yourself.
Bill
 
That's a lot of work to provide us some nice thinking points. You know the more I fool with this forum the better rider I become both in equipment PMs and the mental game of riding. Thanks for your efforts with these posts. :)
 
Thats some good info there. And like they say a picture is worth a million words.
And as far as gravel in a corner it can be very deceptive. Expseially at intersections. A couple of times I have had the rear end slip out on me a little bit. But luckly I haven't gone down from it.
 
Good Posts!!!!!

Good Posts!!!!!

Good posts Bill. Your roads look a lot like our roads. I've had kids playing chicken with vehicles coming down the road out of their driveways, and some like to put sticks and pine cones in the road so cars can crunch them. Then, we have the tourist crowd from the Twin Cities that don't normally drive twisty lake roads doing 20-30 mph and braking on every curve, the speed demons with their pickups and 25' boats that are all over the road......
 
Excellent work Bill!

Those pictures really show how unpredictable road conditions can be. The photo of the gravel covered intersection from different directions is a good one. I have a lot of those around me. The gravel can be scary to stop on when you KNOW it is there.

Thanks for your effort on this. Good stuff to keep in mind while riding:clap:
 
This is cool, twisy ravine coming up, and the pavement looks good! 55MPH?
ravine-1.jpg


Bill


Naaaah, too many flags on that one. heheh I wouldnt be blasting through there. :D I may not be the brightest lantern in the forest, but I'm not that dim. LOL

Your idea for a thread is a great one. Pictures of what to look for and why, I think will help a lot of people's perspective. As often said, its what you dont see that will get you. You need to be aware of what you you're NOT seeing.

Earl
 
Last edited:
Thanks Bill.

Nice photos. I especilly notice that you get off bike, walk back, so that the bike is in the frame to provide a good reference.

.
 
I have posted this pic before. Around here from Mid August to Mid October you can top any rise and come up on one of these doing 10 mph or so.

LaborDay2008005.jpg
 
I should take some pics of the road out past my house that goes from fairly decent asphalt to gravel without warning or signage... First time I rode thru there I about crapped my pants. I was doing 45 when, fortunately, I saw the gravel section coming. It was early spring, so there were still thick, loose furrows of gravel in the center. Only two tire tracks, so if there was an oncoming vehicle, I'd have had to go into the fluffy stuff on the side. Good thing it went back to pavement after about a mile...
 
Is that a legal crop?

Is that a legal crop?

I have posted this pic before. Around here from Mid August to Mid October you can top any rise and come up on one of these doing 10 mph or so.

LaborDay2008005.jpg
Are those tobacco plants?
Bill
 
Correct, ALL of the Dark Fired Tobacco in the country is grown in West KY, Northwest Tennessee and some in North Carolina. Dark Fired is cured over a smokey fire and is used for Snuff and Chewing Tobacco, The smell of a fired Tobacco barn is one of the first signs of Fall here.
 
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