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Looks like it's time to give up the ride - thoughts fm others who've faced this?

A number of things (not all bad) over the last few months, have made my wife and I both approach the subject of "for us...... is it time to put the Spyder up for sale?" Over the past 9 years, and 61,000 road miles, we have enjoyed traveling and seeing areas of the west coast we probably wouldn't have gone to, and wouldn't have met as many interesting people as we did, who wanted to hear all about our "travelling style".

Aside from the Spyder rides and trips however, we have always had a lingering to "take the backroads up into the mountains and see where they go". We did this for many years with a number of different Jeeps; in Missouri, California, and yes, in Washington, before the Spyder; some may do this with their Spyders... but we won't.

So now, just recently, my wife found (and I agreed) a 2015 Jeep Wrangler Sahara Unlimited, (fully loaded) with only 45,000 miles on it. She wanted it, and she traded her smaller Jeep Compass for it, and negotiated a deal the dealer couldn't believe he agreed to (with us almost walking out a few times) but she won!

Since then, we have put 3,000 miles on it and been "backroading and exploring every possible road up" we can find and enjoying it very much again. Dashcam documenting every excursion too!

All this is why we have started thinking about selling the Spyder. We recognize it isn't worth much at this point, but being happy with our actions for however much time we have left is more important right now.

Any thoughts from people who have faced decisions like this??
 
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You answered your question
Since then we have put 3,000 miles on it and been "backroading and exploring every possible road up" we can find, and enjoying it very much again. Dashcam documenting every excursion too !
The Spyder is a distraction. Time to let someone else enjoy it ... and they will. The right buyer will find you.
 
Well Ray, I am facing the same decision you are. Although my Spyder is long gone, I have moved on to a Goldwing trike. in August 2022 I "did" the west coast. Just under 5,000 miles solo. From Arizona to Roche Harbor on San Juan Island, Wa. and lots of places in between. Although I have done many extended trips, this one wore me out. I was ready to be home 3 days before getting here. I did some day trips last season (winter here) but didn't really find it as enjoyable as I used to. The Trike has been in storage since last May. I did wash it last week and will polish it tomorrow. But I just don't have the appetite to get it on the road. My riding buddies have all quit riding or died.

I've gone a different direction than you. I bought a Mustang Convertible this last summer and am enjoying it a lot. There are lots of car shows here in the desert and I have been entering a couple of them a week. Also cruising to lunch destinations previously done on cycles. Finding the convertible less stressful and ready for fun regardless of weather. I do think the trike will be on the market very soon. Sometimes It's time to change gears in life. Wishing you the best in whatever you decide..... Jim
 
Ray we've had a long distance & yet never met friendship, and I understand where you are coming from. I wish you and Marci all the best in this transition ...... I'm getting up there in years also and my abilities are diminishing.... this may be my last down-hill ski season .... I hope not but I'm not a betting man ...... So if you think it's time to give it up then that's what you should do..... Stay on this Forum and just tell us about your new adventures :thumbup::thumbup::thumbup: .....PS as usual give my best to Marci .....Mike :ohyea:
 
Been riding 2 wheel and 3 wheel motorcycles since I was about 12 years old. Still love to ride, but not able to stand 500 miles a day anymore. I will just keep the Spyder and ride closer to home. Plenty within 100 miles or so that I may not have seen yet. People that knew me thought I had lost my mind when I gave the Harley trike to my son and bought the Spyder, but that was none of their business. Just like what you decide to do is none of my business. Do whatever you want to and what makes you and your wife happy. What anybody else thinks should not even be a consideration.
 
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I am at the mindset, if I have the room to store it, and it's not costing me anything, and its mine and not the banks, keep it if I am going to ride it sometime in the year. If you're not going to ride it at all, then dump it and give someone else a chance to enjoy it, and don't look back, because you'll want another one. Good luck and take the money you get from your bike and get a winch for your new ride, you never know where you may end up. :2thumbs:
 
jhb, just guessing that some of us are in the same proverbial m/c boat as you, just wondering what comes next. At 90, the wife and still make those journeys and our 20 RTL, and enjoy it, however we have the same thoughts and discussion. I lust after a Miata convertible, but the big problem, no room for travel. So we continue to discuss.
 
jhb, just guessing that some of us are in the same proverbial m/c boat as you, just wondering what comes next. At 90, the wife and still make those journeys and our 20 RTL, and enjoy it, however we have the same thoughts and discussion. I lust after a Miata convertible, but the big problem, no room for travel. So we continue to discuss.

Pack lighter and go for it! At 90, why not?:2thumbs:
 
Thank Mickey, just saying, there is less room in a Miata than the 47 gallons on a 20 RTL especially the convertible. Maybe we'll figure something out. But as you say, "at 90" one begins to look at life a bit differently.
 
In the same boat myself. My '08GS has sat with all it bugs on for the past 6 weeks. I can only manage a 3hr ride these days before becoming very tired (I'm 84 with med problems). I took an overnighter into the Adirondacks in the summer and practically fell off the Spyder when I got home.
I can drive my Mazda CX5 all day for days in a row with no undue problems.
Would also like a Miata convertible but I can't get it and the CX5 into my garage and will not leave a vehicle in the driveway (that's just me).
I'm sure I will put it up for sale in the Spring. It's not worth a lot but has only cost me tires and rear brake pads in the 12 yrs I have had it. Surprisingly reliable.

I'll see how I feel in the winter, which is approaching fast up here.
 
I 100% understand where you are coming from. I am not up there yet, but have been giving second thoughts about my 2 wheeler. The biggest problem is that my current one is the best bike that I have had out of the 18 that I have owned in the past 17 years. It fits me in every way. But after a couple of close calls that were not due to my driving or attentivness, it really got me thinking about giving up the 2 wheeled life, or at least going with a cheaper version, if it will be ridden only 2000 miles or so a year. This is coming from someone who averages 10k miles a year. Either way, good luck.
 
I am at the mindset, if I have the room to store it, and it's not costing me anything, and its mine and not the banks, keep it if I am going to ride it sometime in the year. :2thumbs:

I agree with this. I can't imagine not wanting to take it to the store, or wherever, a few times a year.
 
Thank Mickey, just saying, there is less room in a Miata than the 47 gallons on a 20 RTL especially the convertible. Maybe we'll figure something out. But as you say, "at 90" one begins to look at life a bit differently.

We too have considered the Miata and like you the storage capacity had us wondering what to do. Our thought? The same small trailers that you pull behind a motorcycle. Why wouldn't they work just great behind the Miata?
 
Ray we've had a long distance & yet never met friendship, and I understand where you are coming from. I wish you and Marci all the best in this transition ...... I'm getting up there in years also and my abilities are diminishing.... this may be my last down-hill ski season .... I hope not but I'm not a betting man ...... So if you think it's time to give it up then that's what you should do..... Stay on this Forum and just tell us about your new adventures :thumbup::thumbup::thumbup: .....PS as usual give my best to Marci .....Mike :ohyea:

As always....thanks Mike. Marci says Hi too. She will never forget you and all the help you have given us over the years. We WILL send input to S.L. in the future too ! :thumbup::ohyea::thumbup:
 
I read your post teninospyder and thought...
Yup. I sure get that. I will most probably be there at some stage in the future.
I think its the next chapter for you 2.

I have a tiny Jimny 4WD that the wife and I enjoy very much, especially getting out into the hills and back roads here in rural NZ. Its awesome, especially when its overly cold, hot and/or wet.
Comfort all the way with some room for kit if you want it.

So I can understand where you are coming from.
You have enjoyed the Spyder and now the Jeep is calling you. Which is fine.
Keep your memories and turn the page. Time to explore some more.
 
A number of things (not all bad) over the last few months, have made my wife and I both approach the subject of "for us...... is it time to put the Spyder up for sale?" Over the past 9 years, and 61,000 road miles, we have enjoyed traveling and seeing areas of the west coast we probably wouldn't have gone to, and wouldn't have met as many interesting people as we did, who wanted to hear all about our "travelling style".

Aside from the Spyder rides and trips however, we have always had a lingering to "take the backroads up into the mountains and see where they go". We did this for many years with a number of different Jeeps; in Missouri, California, and yes, in Washington, before the Spyder; some may do this with their Spyders... but we won't.

So now, just recently, my wife found (and I agreed) a 2015 Jeep Wrangler Sahara Unlimited, (fully loaded) with only 45,000 miles on it. She wanted it, and she traded her smaller Jeep Compass for it, and negotiated a deal the dealer couldn't believe he agreed to (with us almost walking out a few times) but she won!

Since then, we have put 3,000 miles on it and been "backroading and exploring every possible road up" we can find and enjoying it very much again. Dashcam documenting every excursion too!

All this is why we have started thinking about selling the Spyder. We recognize it isn't worth much at this point, but being happy with our actions for however much time we have left is more important right now.

Any thoughts from people who have faced decisions like this??

Linda and I recently went through the same dilemma. I had to give up two wheeling a couple years ago because I could no longer hold up 800# on both unsteady legs. We traded off the two wheeler for a Mule. We have over a hundred miles of dirt roads right next to our area so can drive and drive and drive on the dirt. This last season, we barely put a thousand miles on our new F3's. Having them in the garage, the monthly insurance and yearly personal property taxes still were due. No payments on the bikes though, we bought them with cash. We still were able to and did enjoy riding when we did...but financially, it was not a good move for us. :bowdown:

We put both of the F3's up for sale and both sold within three weeks of each other to a couple very nice people from NC. We put the ad up in February, but no bites all summer long. End of season, they both sold. We took part of the proceeds from one F3 and bought a new 2024 Altima for under $10K plus our trade in (2017 outback). Went for a nice ride the other day...just like the good ol days...and enjoyed it a lot. Only drawback, we did not have the wind therapy that we got from the F3's.

With your new Jeep, you too can enjoy what you did...only from another vehicle. We miss the F3's...but will eventually get over it. Just renewed my drivers license today...kept the motorcycle endorsement. ???

Hope we have been some help. :bowdown:
 
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We too have considered the Miata and like you the storage capacity had us wondering what to do. Our thought? The same small trailers that you pull behind a motorcycle. Why wouldn't they work just great behind the Miata?

There are sure a lot of us that have been, are, or will be shortly at this crossroads in life. FYI: There is a couple in my community that has a Miata and they pull an Aluma Motorcycle trailer with it. It is a fantastically cute set-up. I looked at Miata's' but also had a space problem. Not with luggage, but with me....... Too many cheeseburgers!!!!!

Ray, I'm glad to hear you intend to continue your forum activity if you do move on from the Spyder. This is a great family. I really feel there are many friendships developed from a lot of us who have never met. All the best, Jim
 
We too have considered the Miata and like you the storage capacity had us wondering what to do. Our thought? The same small trailers that you pull behind a motorcycle. Why wouldn't they work just great behind the Miata?

The smaller trailers pull great behind the Miata. Mine will have a hidden hitch installed as soon as the warranty runs out.

Travel is great for one person, cramped for two, if you are packing for a week.

Leaving out this afternoon for a 1,500 mile round trip in mine.
 
Hi all. I to am get up in age (84 now) and have considered selling the trike. We had a Miata years ago and loved it. We even joined a Miata club and traveled all over the Western part of this Great country. A couple of soft bags fit the trunk just fine. I am seriously thinking of doing that again. You really need to enjoy this life, "It only comes around once".
 
The Wrangler sounds like great fun, and if it satisfies the urge that you used to fulfill with the Spyder then all is good. I'm 80 and no longer make the long trips and no longer ride across half the country to go to a motorcycle rally, but I am not yet ready to give up riding by any means. I also own a new Mini Cooper convertible, which is a hoot to drive but it does not replace having a motorcycle. I really believe the adage "You don't stop riding because you got old, you got old because you stopped riding". I know that if and when I ever give up riding totally, I will have to face the reality of being a really old man. But not today, and not yet. I ride my Spyder and feel 40 instead of 80 even if the longest ride I now make is about 2 hours to a nice spot for lunch. And to keep myself able to think of myself as a real biker, I just bought a new Royal Enfield Hunter 350. This little single cylinder motorcycle is the real thing even if it tops out at about 70 mph or so (I haven't gone that fast with it yet). Maybe it was a foolish waste of money, but I want to put off that entry into the long dark night as long as I possibly can. So my advice to you is to enjoy the Wrangler, but consider picking up a small bike or scooter just for zipping around town or a quick ride out into the country. It can do wonders to keep you feeling young.
 
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