I've gone through far more two-wheelers in the last 15 years than cars in nearly 50. My first car, purchased when I was not yet 17, was a wrecked-and-rebuilt Ford Pinto that I bought with money from working summers in the NC tobacco fields. I drove it till I was 29. It broke down at convenient times, and I always new that if a girl went out with me, it wasn't because of the car.
Motorcycles came much later. My mom was risk-averse, and then I had kids that kept me from justifying the purchase. I started small, literally, with a used Chinese-made scooter. It was the one on which my wife and I got our motorcycle licenses. A few years later, my older daughter ran it from the gas pump into a wall of the service station. She was unhurt, but the scooter was finished. Time to move up.
In the next few years, I went through a Kawasaki, a Suzuki, a Honda scooter (which I still have), a Honda NC700, a Kawasaki Versys 650, a Honda Africa Twin, and a Yamaha X-Max scooter. The Yamaha scooter had a top speed of 84 m.p.h, which sounds like a lot, but my experience on Montana and South Dakota interstates made me leery of being topped out when big trucks were zooming by. Instead, I have now settled on a bike to stick with, a Honda NC750X.
My Honda NC750X in front of a favorite coffee shop, Rosie's in Epworth IA. |
I loved my Africa Twin, riding it on a 5000+ mile trip west for over 6 weeks. But I also dropped it a few times, always at slow speeds. I never felt quite stable on it. It was just a bit too tall for me. Still, riding it so much and so far helped me determine what I really needed in a bike:
- Low seat height. I'm 65 now and have some arthritis in my hip. On the NC750x, I can put both feet on the ground.
- Low center of gravity. I want stability. Falling hurts more when you get old. The NC750x has the gas tank under the seat. Where the gas tank is on most bikes is a storage compartment that will hold my helmet.
- Grip warmers and cruise-control. These were standard on my Africa Twin, and they made long trips possible. I get cramps in my hands, so I had the warmers and cruise-control added to the NC750X. They are working great.
- DCT. As I mentioned above, I have arthritis in my hip. The left hip. The side you normally change gears with. Honda makes the DCT, and it is available on the NC750X. DCT stands for Double-Clutch Transmission. In practice, it works like an automatic transmission, but a very smart one. It is virtually impossible to stall a Honda with a DCT.
- Panniers. I like to camp overnight, and I plan a couple of weeks out west again this summer. I have a soft waterproof bag I put over the back, and I added Shad panniers to the sides. It's more than enough storage, even without the frunk.
- Navigation. I have yet to find a built-in navigation system that I like as well as Google Maps. So I ordered a phone holder made for motorcycles.