It doesn't happen very
often but even while traveling on a freeway you can suddenly be
confronted with an animal in your path. Certainly it happens
with some frequency in the country, and on city streets you must
be ever concerned about usually domesticated types.
Those of us who ride
in the country tend to confront five types of animals with some
regularity: deer, dogs, cattle, birds and horses in roughly that
order of frequency. On surface streets there are usually just two
varieties: dogs and children (both an animal and wildlife
in my book.) Dogs on a freeway are usually road kill before
you get to them.
If you see an animal
in your path, given plenty of warning, the obvious best move is
to slow down and give it as wide a clearance as possible.
However, in the case of an animal that 'was in front of me out of
nowhere' situations, you have an immediate decision to make ...
to swerve and try to avoid it, or to panic stop.
That is a false choice
to make! If you think that you can figure out where a deer
is going to be in the next 5 seconds, you are dead wrong!
But more than that, if you think that you can, in a panic, swerve
your motorcycle and retain control of it - not run into oncoming
traffic, or the side of the mountain, or off the road, or oversteer
it into a crash after avoiding the animal, or swerve right into
the animal which has jumped into your new path, then you are probably
also of the opinion that it can't happen to you in any event.
If you hit a cement truck
at 5 mph you will probably walk away from it. If you hit ANYTHING
while traveling at 50 mph or faster, you probably will not.
The difference is your speed. Swerving does
not reduce your speed. What it will do is
give away some control.
Your best move is almost
always to try a CONTROLLED panic stop. Do not lose control
of your bike. Minimize the speed of impact. If you are
good, and practiced, you might not hit anything at all. Even
if luck is against you you will probably still walk away from it.
I can hear it now: "Even
if it's a child?" Absolutely! If that child decides
to make a dash for his/her life and chooses (like you) the wrong
direction to run in, then you will hit that child with a greater
(faster) impact swerving to avoid him/her than if you try to stop
the bike.
Of course you aren't
doing 50 mph or greater on city streets, right? You are covering
your front brake while riding on city streets, right?
Play the odds in your
head before you get into the situation. Condition yourself
- bias yourself - panic stops are not a bad thing.
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