Riding Skills

...Spring Offers from the Shop - Buy 'Survival Skills - Course Notes' and the new v2.0 edition of'Tarmac Tactics' CDROMs together for just £23 - saving over 10% on the usual price... ...Spring is getting closer - Survival Skills is now taking bookings for late March and for April... ...Looking for books about riding? Check out the SHOP and our recommended reads... ...Too far away from where we train? Take a look at the Survival Skills e-course! Next course starts April...  

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Survival Skills

CDROMs
just £12.99

Course Notes
If you want to know about
Advanced Riding Skills
start here.

 

Tarmac Tactics
The latest from Survival Skills -
Practical Survival Tactics
available now!

Getting Started
explains
Direct Access
and how to
Pass the Bike Test

Both packed full of
practical riding
knowledge, hints and tips, in an easy-to-read format

Available from the

SHOP
 


Visit the
Survival Skills

FORUM

on Visordown

chat online
to the Doctor and get
free help
and
advice
on your riding

 

 Survival Skills
WEBSITE
recommended by

"StreetBiker"
featured website
Dec/Jan 2002 edition

"a quick search in Google produced what I can only describe as one of the best UK based websites"
 

"Inroads"
journal of the
Institute of Road Safety Professionals
featured website
December 2001

"interesting to look at and informative to read"

 

 

 

Updates normally made bi-weekly on Fridays but occasionally I miss an update due to work - please check back. This site is designed to be viewed in Internet Explorer, Mozilla, Firebird or Netscape Navigator. If you have table display problems in Opera - apologies to all Opera users - it seems to be a browser problem.

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Learning from your Mistakes

The sad fact is, most people don't learn from their mistakes. Statistics show that riders who have had an accident in the previous three years are three times more likely than average to have another accident in the following year - insurance companies do not load the premiums of riders who crash for no reason!.

Before we go any further, take a few seconds to think about the last "big moment" that you had whilst out riding.

  • Did you see it coming, and were you able to react in time and take avoiding action? If you couldn't take evasive action, why not?
  • If you didn't see it coming, what were you looking at? Did you fail to spot the clues to what was about to happen or did you fail to anticipate the likely sequence of events and consequences of what you were seeing?

If a car or another bike overtook you and took you by surprise, was your rear observation good enough?

If a car pulled out suddenly in front of you and forced you to brake hard, perhaps your forward scanning wasn't good enough!

Assess your own riding critically and importantly, don't blame the bike or other road users for dangerous situations in which you find yourself. Many riders find it almost impossible to admit to making a mistake. Try to ride in a state of mind where every potential accident would be your fault for not seeing it coming. If you habitually say "it was the other guy's fault" or "there was nothing I could do", you are fooling yourself. It can be hard to admit fault but you if you don't you are ignoring the lessons that you could have learned from the incident. Another point - ask yourself - does it really matters that it was the other driver's fault when you are in a hospital bed?

Make every allowance for other drivers' problems and mistakes. A recent press campaign told drivers to "think bike when turning right". Their efforts might have been better directed at the riders - if a car is turning right, what are you doing overtaking it? Many riders in that situation might say "but he didn't signal". You should rather ask yourself "why didn't I anticipate he might turn?" Did you fail to spot the junction warning sign? Did you fail to spot the brake lights come on? Did you fail to see where his eyes were looking or the initial movement of the wheel? If you overtook a number of cars in a slow-moving queue, didn't the fact that the queue was slowing down suggest something?

Don't blame other drivers for your failures of observation. The clues are there if you look for them and use them.

Ask yourself why that car just pulled out in front of you - was it because you were travelling so fast that the driver misjudged your speed? Was it because he couldn't see out of his fogged up windows? If it's happened to you before why didn't you learn from the last occasion?

 

 

 

Index

 

Previous
 

 

Next
 

MIND - mental approach

Article Number

16


Note: these pages have been rearranged and you may not arrive at the right page following a keyword search from a search engine - use the index link above to search for the tip you are interested in.

However, the upside is that they shouldn't move around any more when I add a new article!


Copyright © 1999-2008 Kevin Williams

Survival Skills
CDROMs
£12.99

Course Notes
and
Tarmac Tactics
If you want to know about advanced riding skills, start here - two Survival Skills publications on CDROM - both packed full of practical riding knowledge, hints and tips, in an easy-to-read format
 

 

Getting Started
Explains Direct Access and how to pass the test

Guide to CBT
Tells you everything you need to know about your first day on two wheels

Get them
here!

 


 

Last Page update Thursday, March 20, 2008 

Survival Skills is an approved trainer and assessor
for
Buckinghamshire County Council

and "National Motorcycle Escort Group" Qualified

Copyright © 2008 Survival Skills & Kevin Williams

 Last Page update Thursday, March 20, 2008