I ride all year. Used to ride to work in anything but freezing rain. I would take off on summer vacations and visit my son in NY state, go by Laconia, then stop in to see Friends in Maine. Some years I ran up between 10,000 and 15,000 miles in a few weeks. Before I retired, I was getting 5 weeks vacation time a year, and used most of it for seeing places I had not seen before. Lot older now, still ride, but it hurts more. I don't do any over-night runs now, unless I have to. Try to keep it less than 150 or 200 miles at a time. If I do ride any of the charity rides, I hang back and ride last or very close to last, just in sight of the rest of the group, and if they won't tell me where we are ending up, I just ride for a while and then go home or go some place else and eat. Most of the people I used to ride with are pushing up daisies or in too bad shape to ride at all. I mostly take off alone once or twice a week and just ride 50 to 75 miles. Might stop off and eat at some local Mom & Pop restaurants I know about in the small towns. I use the Spyder to go to the bank, pick up small parts, or hardware in town, and other local trips that don't require the truck. Used to average 40,000 to 50,000 miles a year, but almost 74 years old now, and old injuries hurt a lot worse. Most years I might ride 4,000 to 5,000 miles a year. I work mostly for myself or work with other family members now, so I can ride when I want to. Now I try to avoid the really foggy mornings, the cold rain, and days it don't get much above 40 degrees. I also try to avoid the same type of weather in the truck too. I still have the riding gear for it, but the fun has kind of lost the enjoyment part when the arthiritis is riding with me.