First bike should always be a beater. You will drop it 15 times in your first year.
You will cry when this one starts to tip and you cannot stop it and the tank is dented.
Heavy bikes need competent skilled riders, not new riders.
You will cry when this one starts to tip and you cannot stop it and the tank is dented.
Heavy bikes need competent skilled riders, not new riders.
Werewolf1994 · 31-35, F
@Werewolf1994 Get a used Honda Shadow or Rebel to learn on. After 2 years, if you have ridden it a lot and have full confidence, then upgrade to the Harley.
1490wayb · 56-60, M
@PoohSmasher well said!!
1490wayb · 56-60, M
you WILL drop it...i rode for 15 years
View 2 more replies »
Werewolf1994 · 31-35, F
@1490wayb Im going to take the harley davidson msf course to learn on a harley
1490wayb · 56-60, M
@Werewolf1994 SMART!!
@Werewolf1994 Nobody can teach you how to balance the motorcycle when you come to a stop. That kind of skill comes from riding every day for years. Save the Harley as your last bike, replacement parts for it are really expensive. It would be embarrassing to ride a Harley around all scratched up and dented.
Musicman · 61-69, M
It looks awesome! 😎😎😎 My wife and I use to have a blue Honda Goldwing. 🙂
lovebcups · 61-69, M
The price ir right , ride for life :)
whowasthatmaskedman · 70-79, MVIP
Get the optional training wheels..😷
MarkPaul · 26-30, M
It's too expensive.










