So I find myself doing the M2
Exit course at the Georgian College in Barrie. I have paid the $400 odd for the
one-day course and test. It’s a fair amount of cash, I could have simply booked
the test with a MOT approved test center for much less, but I suspect that I
would not stand a chance in hell of passing. There is a plethora of little
unwritten rules that I don’t know, which would in all likelihood prevent my
success. In any event I am sure that the course will be fun. The first part of
the course is a Friday evening classroom session starting at 6 p.m. but thanks
to horrendous traffic, every bloke and his dog are heading up highway 400 to
the cottage, I arrive half an hour late. I mean how was I to anticipate that the
60 kilometers from Newmarket to the campus would take me 2 hours? Anyway by the
time I get there the evening had just got underway, and I only missed the introductions. The first half hour is in any event consumed with filling in a
bunch of forms, mostly waivers and such like. I assume the college legal
advisors have insisted these forms must be read out aloud as if we can’t read
them for ourselves. I get it, but it is a real pain in the proverbial, probably
more so for the instructor doing the reading.
Our instructors are Sheri and
Carolyn, hope that I have at least spelt their names correctly, at this point
Carolyn has not yet made an appearance so Sheri is doing all the talking. She
has a whole Kelly McGillis in Top Gun
thing going, which is sexy and nice, but I am neither Tom Cruise nor Val
Kilmer, so I reign in my imagination and concentrate on the lesson. I begin to
realize that I am a really crap rider and start to harbor some doubts as to
passing this test first time, there is just so much stuff that I know I don’t
do properly and I seem to have developed as many bad habits as your average
nunnery. Still Sheri is fairly confident that between her and Carolyn they will
get us into shape and ready for the testing on the Saturday afternoon. I am
less than sure, but more than willing to give it a go. For the benefit of my
non-Canadian readers, divers’ licenses here have three levels (I am only
talking about a normal car or motorcycle licenses, any other class I actually have
no idea). So an M1 is just a written test about rules of the road and road
signs and has a very limited life span, also limits the rider to certain
classes of roads, daytime riding, no passengers etc. M2 is what I have, I can
travel on any road, at any time of day, can have a passenger, but may only ride
with 0% of alcohol in my blood. I am not here because I want to quaff a beer
and ride, I am here because my M2 license expires after 5 years, so I have only
two more years to get the full M. I could have, and indeed had planned to do
this last year, but killing the Suzuki Boulevard in mid-season threw a spanner
in the works. I have not entirely let on in these chronicles quite how that
incident freaked me out.
M1 Exit course - ready to roll |
On Saturday, morning after a
night of disturbed dreams, I leave home at quarter to seven, which should get
me there in time, even with a stop for gas. It is thankfully cool today and
apparently forecast to remain cool for the whole day. I am not complaining; the
M1 Exit course I did at Georgian College a few years back, took place in the middle
of a heat wave. I totally enjoyed the
course and I think that’s when I became smitten with this particular activity, but
it certainly was a sweaty two days. I decide to attempt to put everything I was
taught last night into practice, maybe by the afternoon when I test, I’ll have
drilled this stuff into my thick head. I find that singing the actions out
helps me, ‘mirror check, look for hazards, check my speed, mirror check, flash
the brake lights, mirror check, look for hazards, curbside lane, left track’.
My head bobs up and down, side to side, maybe I’ll live longer, but I’ll surely
get repetitive strain injury in my shoulders. I’m not as successful with this
as I would like to be, and to my surprise keeping within the speed limits is a
harder trick to get right than I imagined it would be – well maybe I shouldn’t
be too surprised, I’ve never been exactly great at keeping to speed limits.
Traffic is as expected way
lighter than last night, folks are either at the cottage or not going at all,
still I manage to keep within the speed limit and to the right hand lane, left
tire track just as the book says. A few lane changes for practice, ‘check the
mirrors, indicate, check the mirrors, shoulder check, change lanes – keep in
the right tire track, cancel indicator, check the mirrors’. Actually that’s
exactly how I do this anyway, come to think about it. I fill up gas just before
reaching Barrie, my C type KLR has the silliest little tank with a maximum range
of 300 kilometers, assuming reasonably favorable conditions. I have discovered
to my embarrassment that heavy winds can cut this by as much as 60, but today I’m
sure that I’ll have plenty of gas to get through.
The Candidates |
We spend the morning riding on a
route through the campus doing the various maneuvers over and over that we will
be tested on - roadside stops, left-hand turns on red, on green, right-hand
turns on red and green, through intersections, lane changes and so on. I’m
liking doing this on the KLR a lot more than I would on any other bike, it’s
light and maneuverable and designed to be able to move at 1 km/h without
falling over. Soon it’s lunch time and I’m parched as well as hungry, everyone
else rides off, I assume to some or other Tim Horton’s, but I am very virtuous,
so have a packed lunch of boiled eggs, meatballs, homemade mayonnaise and some
cheese…and water, lots of water. It’s not really that hot, yet still one
dehydrates when dressed in jeans, motorcycle jacket, helmet gloves and boots.
Now I always dress like this when
riding, I’m big into protective gear, especially since my little mishap on the
Suzuki Boulevard. Normally the wind factor cools you down, but here doing these
circuits and bumps you don’t get enough speed up to keep cool. Speaking to the other riders on the course, my
attitude to protective gear is the exception rather than the norm. Well
whatever blows your skirt up, if riding with a piss-pot helmet, shorts, T-shirt
and sandals does it for you, that’s fine, but I tell you when the moment comes,
and it probably will, when your bacon meets the blacktop it’s way better to be
dressed for the fall than for the beach. I actually think that riding a
motorcycle at high speeds without proper protective gear is a bit of a Darwin Award
thing.
And this year's award goes to.... |
After lunch we gather around the
instructors and are divided into two groups, the Sheri group and Carolyn group,
I am in the latter, we are all bikes, whereas the other group has the spiders
as well as a few bikes. We are going for a group ride to get us used to what we
will be doing during the test, part of which is to wear a wire. Well sort of,
in reverse, we can hear the instructor through an earpiece attached to a radio,
but our microphones are disabled. Our group sets off through the streets of
Barrie with Carolyn’s voice in our heads, ‘When it is safe to do so, perform a
roadside stop’ or ‘At the intersection, turn right’, and so on. She is being
driven in a car following us. After a while she directs us to a parking lot
where we get scolded for not shoulder checking the blind spot enough and
insufficient head bobbing and weaving. This it seems is the key to passing or
failing on points – of course you will fail instantly on a few other knockout
things like; dropping your bike, causing an accident, going through a red
light, riding over a pedestrian and exceeding the speed limit by a generous
margin.
Final Lecture - Sheri |
Doing this group ride makes me a
little worried about my left-right/east-west dyslexia. This is a very weird
problem that I have always had, goodness knows why. If you say to me ‘turn
left’ I have to think first as to which side is left, and I don’t always get it
right, or do I mean left? Same with east and west, I have no problems with
north and south, up and down positive or negative. Here’s another funny thing,
I’m an accountant, and a pretty decent one at that (no false modesty here), yet
I also have to think if debits are written on the left or right of a T-account.
I am eternally grateful for the computerized format; debits are positive
credits are negative, my brain gets that, no problem, it’s a north-south way of
looking at things. I am also not into group rides, as anyone that follows this
blog may have noticed, the not-so-easy-rider is mostly a lone rider. I’m fine with two, maybe even three or four,
but beyond that I am not keen. Anyway, all goes well, I guess everyone is on
their best behavior and Carolyn herds us like a border collie, she knows what
to do and after a nice little ride we arrive back at the campus.
I’m lucky, I get to test first –
after just a short bio break I’m riding and Carolyn is in the car behind me instructing
me to do this, or that, turn left right or go straight, change lanes, take the
highway. It’s almost like a GPS. I try not to get flustered by all the FU’s I’m
making, wrong lane, dropped the brake light while waiting for the signal to
change, missed the shoulder check, forgot to bob the head to show I’m looking
for hazards. The right/left dyslexia only manifests once and I hear Carolyn
yell, ‘your other left’ when I indicate a right turn. Finally, we make it back to the campus and I
make a last FU, just for good measure, as we get to the entrance, failed to get
into the curbside lane quickly enough. I stop in the parking lot and after a
few nail biting moments Carolyn presents my result, I did better than I expected,
but worse than I hoped. I did crap, but I passed, 20 demit points, just 5 short
of failing. I graduate, not with honors, but I graduate. I hope that I may just
hang onto some of the good habits I have learnt and leave behind some of the
bad ones I have discovered are part of my riding repertoire.
The Graduate |
It’s just after three and I’m
done so I head home, but haven’t gone far when the thought strikes me that a
little celebratory ride is in order, I go home the long, scenic way, via Terra
Nova and a salad and a half pint of beer on the patio of the Terra Nova Public
House. I linger over a couple of coffees
to let the beer out of the system before riding home. Technically I have still
got an M2 license which, as mentioned, means zero alcohol in the blood. I take
a leisurely ride home; life can sometimes be sweet.
With you on the "All-The-Gear-All-The-Time" ATTGAT!
ReplyDeleteI have argued with others on this aspect - probably shouldn't bother, let Darwinism sort out the fools. Suggest this to non-ATTGATs: Run as fast as you can across this carpark and when going full tilt, hurl yourself at the blacktop! Most will agree that this would be stupid. Now ask them how fast they can run - 8 or 9 or 10 kmh is probably the max. Then, be amazed when they still don't get it!
Riding a bike is a technical lottery- try describing to someone, the art of cornering at speed - not the rules of the road stuff, the physical stuff - counter-steering, weight shifting, peg loading etc....and that's before we even discuss hanging off and dragging the knee.
Great Post - leave the beers until you get home - ride safe ride fast!
Martin
South Africa
Thanks for the comment - indeed ride safe and drink at home (and then don't ride.)
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed reading this. I will be booking my M2-exit soon and reading about your experience somehow puts me at ease with doing my test and knowing what to expect. Thank you for that
ReplyDeleteA great read thanks!
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