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SpyderLovers- Why We Ride

Lamonster

SpyderLovers Founder
I don't know how many of you have been able to see the new movie Why We Ride but I hear it's a great flick and is much like the film that inspired me to ride called On Any Sunday. After seeing that movie I knew I had to own my own motorcycle and it wasn't long after that I purchased with the help of my father a 1969 Kaw. 90
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That was the beginning of a life long passion I have to this day. I've always loved anything with a motor in it and especially loved being in the wind. Fast forward through all my bikes and a long came a Spyder. At the time I had know idea that one day the Spyder would be such a big part of my life and that given the choice I would pick the Spyder over my bikes when it came time to go for a ride. Don't get me wrong, I still love motorcycles and always will but if I had to pick either or I'm here to say I would pick the Spyder.

I still have my M109R and my last bike was a F6B that a deer took out for me just last year. The bike was totaled and my wife and I suffered some pretty good roadrash and I can't help but wonder how much better we would have been if we had been on the Spyder instead of two wheels. That runs through my mind quite a bit now. That's not the only reason I now prefer the Spyder over a two wheeler but it is a big plus. Comfort wise it's hard to beat the RT and having owned many bikes over the years that I've traveled cross country on I can honestly say there is no bike that I've wanted to put so many miles on or felt so good after 900 to 1100 miles a day in the saddle. The mental stress that you have when the weather gets ugly on a bike is just not there on a Spyder and that makes for a more pleasurable ride. The weather protection is great on the RT and having a factory approved trailer package make it easy to access everything that you wanted to carry on a bike but couldn't. I can take off a month at a time and get everything I need in the Spyder and trailer and that's another big plus.

Physically I don't have a need to ride a Spyder and I know for many the Spyder has opened the doors for those who may not be so fortunate. Why I ride the Spyder is because it's unique, it's comfortable, it has lot's of storage, it draws a crowd everywhere you go, it's a great all weather ride with the added safety of the third wheel, but mostly I ride the Spyder because it's just a ton of fun to ride. It's not better or worst than a bike but it's different and I like different much like a four wheeler is different than a dirtbike. I've been riding Spyders since 2007 and lost track of how many miles I have on them now and how many times I've crossed the country on them but I know that I'm ready to kick off 2014 on the new RT-S and add at least another 30K next year to my Spyder adventures.

So the question to you is Why We SpyderLovers Ride :doorag:

Please post your reasons here for us all to read.:thumbup:


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Well stated

I'll sum up why as follows: I agree with you 100%. Nuff said, time to ride:bowdown:...
 
Thanks for posting how you feel about the sport. My first was similar to yours--a 1965 Yamaha 80--one lunger.

After that first motorcycle, the rest is history. Hard to explain--but there is just something about riding in the open air. Seeing the country from a cycle is so much better than from a cage. From that first 80cc cycle, it was then a quest for bigger and "better". 250, 305, 350, 400, 450, 650, 750, 800, 900, 1000, 1500, 2000, 998, and soon 1330. I have had the pleasure and privilege to ride and own over 40 assorted motorcycles since 1965. I never met one I did not like--although the 2000cc Kawi Vulcan was a handful for me (too heavy) in my later years.

When :spyder2: first came out (2008), I bought one because it was new and innovative. Never thought that I would lose my ability to ride on two. 2012 brought that to reality as I said farewell to my last two wheeler, the 900 Kawi Vulcan. :spyder2: still enables me to ryde and contuinue to enjoy the sport that has been my passion all my life. Currently, I have to walk with either a walking stick or walker, but that does not stop me from ryding the :spyder2:. I am also looking forward to what 2014 will bring. Here's to many more years for all of us.
 
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I can't add much more than that. I started with a Honda Super 90 back in 1969. Had a ball on that thing. Rode many types and sizes of motorcycles. I got out of riding for many years. When I wanted to get back in, Kris said no problem. But she wouldn't ride with me. She has a fear of two wheels. I didn't think it was fair for me to be back in the wind while she stayed behind. So I started looking. I did have a two wheeler, a Kaw 900 Vulcan. But I wanted her to enjoy the open road too. I test drove the Tri Glide, but didn't care for it. I looked at the Gold Wing trike. Nice, smooth, comfortable. But way out of my price range. One night I saw a 30 minute program on Speed Channel. It was Fred Rau riding an RT on the coast road in California. I knew I wanted to try that. I saw one at the local dealer. Stopped to look. Liked what I saw. Took Kris to see it. She liked what she saw. Two weeks later the 2010 RTS was in our garage. Took me some time to learn how to drive it. We had the first RTS in the area. I wasn't prepared for the star status. Then one day I asked Kris if she wanted to learn how to drive it. Two years later, we have two. We love to ride. To be out in the wind. We love to ride with friends. We love toy runs. We love charity runs. Most of all, we love to get out and just go. We've met a lot of nice folks and made new friends. And we found Spyderlovers.
 
I was at a woodworker’s seminar this summer and was talking to a young lady about the spyder. She seamed amazed that I was the one riding it. Somewhere in the conversion she asked “What are you doing on that thing”. The answer was simple. “I’m just an old man out having fun” :)
 
:agree::agree: I gotta agree with "chisel"(with a major addition to it) an old man and old lady, just having fun! i'll go one other thing that is unique to the open air concept and that is, we both enjoy the smell or scents of the areas we ride in. there's nothing like the smell of fresh balsam or douglas fir while riding in the Adirondacks, or the smell of campfires while driving by campgrounds. Nothing compares to fresh cut grass or hay as you pass the pastures and meadows in Vermont and the rest of New England. the smell of the ocean and salt water in NH and Maine rank right up there as well. I could go on and on, but you get the point!!!
 
I like to eat bugs, bees, & insects, small birds will also be welcomed!! I ride because it feels good and has felt good since 1968.
 
One word...FREEDOM.

Fire up the :spyder2:, hear the Two Bros Racing muffler sing that baritone note I love so much, and life's troubles instantly begin to melt away.
 
We started out in Pontiac, Michigan in 1973. I was working with Andy Anderson at Anderson's Motor Sales on his ad program (I was the ad manager at the local newspaper) and while waiting to see him sat on a couple of bikes in the showroom. Two week's later my wife and I rolled out of there with two Honda CB 360T's. Andy's part of the deal was to also teach us to ride so we wheeled round his back lot for a few hours to get a sense of comfort before having them delivered home.

We had a vacant lot next door to our home and that became our learning track for a few weeks before we ventured on the road. Once we felt street-ready we added fairings, side bags, CB's (23 channel back in those days) and a few other farkles. Penny even wrote an article for Touring Bike Magazine about the challenges of being a lady biker in the early 70's.

From there we moved on to matching Suzuki GS 1000's nicely dressed out. My next was the first Honda Aspencade delivered in Ohio in late 1981. Lot's of different iron from there including an AMF Harley that is best forgotten.... more Suzukis....some Yamahas, a Valkyrie Interstate for me, a triked Burgman for her..... and then..... Boom! Her first ride on a Can Am RT! It is hard to negotiate a price when your wife wants to get it out the door and ride.

Finally I joined the fun with a 2011 RT to go with her 2010 RT. Now we plan to put about 30,000 miles or so (we're over half way there) on the 2012's and perhaps by 2015 we'll be ready to change again.

We ride because we can and we hope we can for a long, long time to come.
 
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1966, i had a Jawa 175, hooked ever since. I ride a spyder ........... Because i am lucky enough to be able to afford one.

Cruzr Joe
 
We ride for the therapy of it. After all the aggravations of work and life, when we ride the stress just melts away.
 
Double Trouble, I was born and grew up in Pontiac, Andy's service manager, Paul, lived down the block from me, and got me started on a Cushman Pacemaker. That was when the shop was on Paddock, then they moved to Pike, just around the corner from the old shop, and then to Telegraph. I bought my first Spyder from Motor City, who took it over when Andy passed.
Anyway, all this started for me in 1954, and I've been on and around bikes ever since. Bikes, and now Spyders, have been good things for me.

john
 
:agree::agree: I gotta agree with "chisel"(with a major addition to it) an old man and old lady, just having fun! i'll go one other thing that is unique to the open air concept and that is, we both enjoy the smell or scents of the areas we ride in. there's nothing like the smell of fresh balsam or douglas fir while riding in the Adirondacks, or the smell of campfires while driving by campgrounds. Nothing compares to fresh cut grass or hay as you pass the pastures and meadows in Vermont and the rest of New England. the smell of the ocean and salt water in NH and Maine rank right up there as well. I could go on and on, but you get the point!!!

In addition, when I was looking to buy new, the Mrs. said she liked the white one and now, what I thought might be an impediment to our life, certainly has become just the opposite. Not sure who loves the smells, sights and comfort more...but all I can say is Ryde on and be safe. :shemademe_smilie::agree::cheers::thumbup:
 
I ride because it makes me happy. If I had a dollar for every time I've caught myself with a big ole grin on my face, just because I was in the wind, I wouldn't have bothered buying a lottery ticket this week! :clap::ohyea:
 
Ryde

I ride because it's fun. I had my first ride on the back of a Vincent black Shawdow in 1960 or so and have liked bikes
ever since. This first one I owned was a 1965 Honda 305 Dream. Some lady pulled out in front of me and I crashed it.
But that did not stop me from riding. The list below is what I have had since I started. I now have 2800+ miles on the Spyder and and liking it more and more.
 
With no physical limitation and being in my early 30s, I ride a spyder because it is different and lots of fun. I have been there, done the 2 wheels and bought the t-shirts. I still have my v-star classic sitting in the garage but I can't get myself to ride it. Riding the spyder makes me happy, I feel safer and I am always smiling under my helmet while I ride. What can I say.....the :spyder2:is the next level for me.
 
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