KX Riders

General => In General... => Topic started by: BDI on January 09, 2008, 04:08:42 PM

Title: You can't ride here
Post by: BDI on January 09, 2008, 04:08:42 PM
This is an actual sign I found in the desert. these things are every where, look at the bike and rider.This should give you an idea how out of touch the A-holes are that are doing this.Look at the bike when was the last time you could buy a bike that looked like that? It's things like this that make me want to buy a barrett small .50 and climb to a mountian top and pick off hikers and mountain bikers. Not that I would ever do that I'm just saying.You know it would be one thing if I was trying to ride where people have been hiking and mountian biking for years but it is just the exact opposite.On the news they announced that there were all kinds of naturally accuring trails in the mountains around where I live that are prefect for hiking so they are going to close it to all other use.Yeah Right those are dirt bike trails RRRRRRRRRR....
Title: Re: You can't ride hear
Post by: FuriouSly on January 09, 2008, 06:04:45 PM
That means that you can't ride motorcycles that look like that....  nothing older than about 1980....  very nice of the BLM to make it easy for the faster/modern bikes to tear it up....   :evil:

Sly
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: Hillclimb#42 on January 10, 2008, 01:34:54 AM
Doesn't look like that particular sign is going to bother anyone anymore, unless the trail goes thru the shop...... :evil: :evil: :mrgreen:
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: bigbellybob on January 10, 2008, 03:57:07 AM
im not going to stop riding because of some stupid signs. riding is what i do in the pursuit of happiness and no one will take that from me. we need to assemble a group of out laws willing to die for the cause and we will all go riding where ever we wont.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: maddoggy on January 10, 2008, 04:25:30 AM
here in Wyoming where i live on the east side of the big horn mountain range, it is currently illegal to ride your bike or atv anywhere on the lowlands(prairie) and you can only ride on posted and mapped trails in the mountains if you purchase and display a ORV permit. so when i unload my bike at any area localy i'm breaking the law. not that i want to break the law, i just want to ride with my friends and have fun. we never tear anything up and do our best to respect the land and anyone who may live nearby. on the west side of the mountains there are several thousand acres of legal to ride on open riding area. i think that the exreme environmentalists are succeeding in their quest to eliminate any motorized fun in this country. don't get my wrong, protecting our earth isn't all bad but alot of times they are going after all the wrong people/things. bottom line is i just want to have fun, and that doesn't mean i want to go tear things up. BDI, be careful you don't tear up some of that desert sand, it takes billions of years for that overnight wind to erase your tracks. ya, right!!! :roll: :roll:    MADDOGGY
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: Johnniespeed on January 10, 2008, 08:06:29 AM
 Here in Michigan we have the Cycle Conservation Club, it is a group of trailriders that lobby the government to open new trails,maintain old trails and create new trails.
  It is my understanding that Michigan has the most legal miles of mapped trail routes in the USA. I'm not usually one for this type of organization, being a rebel type and all, but these guys are doing a most noble deed. Perhaps they are on a mission from God divinely inspired by the Blues Brothers.
  I hope all states can get organized to keep the treehuggers from shutting down all riding areas.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: serafin on January 14, 2008, 07:35:34 AM
That sign should be a picture of a 4 wheeler instead of a motorcycle!  What were once single track trails are now washed out roads due to the 4 wheeler crowd.  Where I grew up in Colorado we had some great single track trails in the mountains but every year during hunting season the mountains became a mess with the 4 wheelers now being used by the hunting crowd going cross country.  Now add in the new utility vehicle craze Rangers, Rhinos, Gators ect...these things are the size of a small car.  Things are only going to get worse.  Irresponsible riding by all groups is to blame.

Serafin
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: k5abuser on January 14, 2008, 03:05:57 PM
be careful of putting down others in our sport . i ride 2 and four wheels . you never know who is reading this and could use it against our sport . they get rid of one motor veh. and yours just might be next . then all we have is bench racing . not that i don't like bench racing i am just not ready to have been that fast .
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: BDI on January 14, 2008, 03:10:39 PM
They have those signes with four wheelers on them too I just have not found one laying around.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: Plowboy on January 15, 2008, 10:07:06 AM
They have those signes with four wheelers on them too I just have not found one laying around.

 We have similar signs around here that TVA puts up. Of course when the opportunity presents itself, it seems like all of them end up "laying" around.

 I guess what irritates me about TVA's attitude is that they are a tax-payer funded outfit that came through the region decades ago and pretty much stole alot of the land they now control, shut people out of it, but sell tracts of it to commercial and industrial interests for a profit. :x
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: BDI on January 15, 2008, 11:01:15 AM
Same thing with the blm here you cant ride there because you will stir up dust and give the turtles emphysema but if you have enough money you can grade off acres of land and kill every bush,lizard,squirl and turn the turtles under. I think It's just a don't have fun law drumed up by people that don't understand what we do or why.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: CR480R on January 15, 2008, 02:30:21 PM
You should have some "No Hiking" signs made to replace them with... Thats probably what I would do if I didnt remove the sign post completely...
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: Plowboy on January 16, 2008, 01:16:52 AM
 (from one 3WW member to another)
 Hey CR480R,

 Would you believe that there are still two "no riding" signs in my hometown area that still specifically refer to "3-wheelers"......I guess I've been the only person in the last 10-15 years excluded from riding there...LOL
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: alan on January 16, 2008, 02:35:34 AM
The only signs like that one around hear have so many bullet holes in them, that you no longer see what they said! d**n Texans, You know how they are! :lol: :lol: :lol:
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: TheGDog on February 20, 2008, 09:02:17 PM
That sign should be a picture of a 4 wheeler instead of a motorcycle!  What were once single track trails are now washed out roads due to the 4 wheeler crowd.  Where I grew up in Colorado we had some great single track trails in the mountains but every year during hunting season the mountains became a mess with the 4 wheelers now being used by the hunting crowd going cross country.  Now add in the new utility vehicle craze Rangers, Rhinos, Gators ect...these things are the size of a small car.  Things are only going to get worse.  Irresponsible riding by all groups is to blame.

Serafin

Preach On Brother.... ATV's are seriously injuring OUR reputations and the environment.  They ruin what were once neat.. fun trails.

And if I ruffle the feathers of some of these panzies that just don't have the strength or skill to ride a 2-wheeler anymore, or are too scared to learn... tough.    The ATV's have their own special place in the world... it's called the SAND DUNES.

I plan on eventually getting the wifey into the sport... and after deliberation... I've concluded that I will not "start her out" on a 4-wheeler for fear of her never desiring to "graduate" and mature to riding a two-wheeler.  Keyword here... mature.

Don't get me wrong... I know there are idiots all around in both camps.... the ones that don't respect when trails are closed off for awhile to let the vegetation strengthen back up to prevent erosion.  But for the most part this seems to most normally be an issue with hillclimbs... and any areas that the ATV's can readily get too.

Please note these are my own personal observations and are mostly based on what I've seen in Hungry Valley SVRA, and out in Stoddard Valley in Victorville over the past like 18 years.


P.S. - I've often thought that if I were to hit the Mega-whatever Lotto Jackpot someday... I'd buy a huge lot somewhere between LA and Orange County... post up a huge Waiver/Disclaimer that basically states Enter at Own Risk and maybe even setup a Trust Fund & Donations fund to help with keeping it running.

Can you imagine how much harder kids would be working at their school-work and after school jobs so their parents would let them buy a dirt bike and go riding! And to continue to go riding takes keepin' pops happy with school-work so he'd reward his kid with drivin' him out to the place.  Sure beats loitering and trying to act like a wannabe thug.

Those of you fortunate enough to live outside of my Gestapo-like state of California... be warned... as human beings continue to NOT keep their numbers in check... eventually... I gaurantee you... you will see the same problems start to crop up in your neck of the woods.  So take steps now by paying attention to whom you elect for various positions.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: BDI on February 21, 2008, 05:04:59 AM
You know I don't like stoping other people from doing what they enjoy because I don't like being told no myself. I made this trail a couple of years ago that went up this mountain side to a real cool overlook of the Las vegas vally. It twisted it's way through big lava rocks and desert plants of all kinds it was very tight and technical you could say it was pretty and garden like. From a distance you could not even see it was there it was the kind of trail that some hikers would love to take over for themselves. The last time I went there all the big lava rocks had been roled down the hill lots of the plants have been ironed out and there is no longer anything technical about it, its just a big ugly quad trail strait up the mountain side now. I guess its my fault for making a trail there in the first place.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: Danger4u2 on February 21, 2008, 06:40:36 AM
Off Road is Latin for erosion. Anyone that says different is lying to their self. Draper Lake Riding Area here in Okla.City was closed because it was located on the water shed that went into the lake. The silt was filling up the lake and displacing the water.  I witnessed this erosion from mostly dirt bikes from 1973 till when it was closed in 1999 or 2000.  Do quads cause erosion?  Yes, big time, because of the fixed rear axel and 4 wide wheels.  But don't count out bikes.  Before quads came out we had trails that, over the years became V shaped ravines that you could no longer ride because your feet and pegs would be torn off.  We would just switch off to the side 20 feet and start the process over.  Out in western Okla. near the Tallgrass Prairie Preserve you can still see where the wagon trains heading for Calif. went through, now that's erosion.
The Pansy issue:  Man that hurts my feelings (as violins play in the back ground) I ride a quad.  My quad is full on MX quad.  I must be a pansy because I can only hold on to it for 2-3 hours riding hard before I'm wore out.  I can ride my K5 hard and I'm good for half a day.  What I'm getting at is you have to be tougher to MX a quad than to MX a dirt bike.  I came to this conclusion from saddle time on both.  I can see both sides of the coin.  Some riding areas the quad guys ruin it some areas the bike crowd causes problems.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: BDI on February 21, 2008, 09:08:10 AM
Erosion is not really an issue around hear it's giving the turtles respirtory problems that they use as a lame ass excuse to keep us from riding. I have no problem with quad riders I hate to see anyones right to ride taken away even if it's some clown on a unicycle. I can't win for loosing is all, either some tree huggers would have found my trail and had it shut down to every thing but hikers or some a-holes on quads would come and desroy it. I wish I had a big desert where only me and my freinds could play but then that would make me a hiker.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: TheGDog on February 21, 2008, 11:09:18 AM
Look... Quads are fun as heck.............  IN THE DUNES!   

In the Dunes... you would have to be either a straight out 'tard... or riding ABSURDLY above your skill level in order to have a bad fall on a Quad.  I've ridden them *HARD* at PISMO... and in that environment I fully agree they are one of the optimum tools for the job.   And in that environment... I can justify an abundant population of them running around. What are they gonna hurt, right?  The sand is already sand.. so no biggie.

Somebody mentioned how dirtbike trails after a while turn into deep V's.  Yes... indeed... this is true.  My point there is...How long did it take for that to occur on a strictly dirtbike trail... vs... how long does it take ANYWHERE a quad rides before a "trail" is turned into a sort of mini fireroad.  ATV's wipe out flat a much much larger path of destruction... and they do so in record time!

Regarding that pansy comment.  Alright... perhaps that was a lil harsh, and I apologize.  By pansy I meant that typically you see people riding them that are afraid of riding 2-wheelers... or lack the skill-set to ride a 2-wheeler fast... or they consider themselves too old to "risk" riding a 2-wheeler for fear of a bad crash.  And what makes me really just not see the point in it.... is that it's just not possible to ride a quad as fast as a 2-wheeled dirtbike... except for possibly in the Dunes... and even then I don't believe that to be true, personally.  And OMG... have you seen the mayhem when Quads crash?  Those d**n things have WWWAAAYYYY more potential to take-out a bystander or two.  The flip-flop nature of an un-mounted dirt-bike *usually* would have it coming to rest much quicker than a Quad travelling at equal speed.

Another scenario I see very often is that one Quad is purchased to provide something to ride for the whole family to take turns on.  My guess is, this scenario... economics are fueling the husband to figure the only way he's gonna get his wife's buy-in for the pricey purchase would be to explain that it'll be something they all can share "as a family".  In my opinion.... "that jus' ain't right".  The riders of lower-level skill-sets need a more beginner vehicle to be learning on... not "the best bang for the back that dad could afford".  This is an accident just waiting to happen... you know... like a 12 year-old kid mounted on a top-of-the-line racing Quad.  His physical size and strength limitations prevent him from operating that vehicle safely at the speeds it's capable of reaching.  Not to mention the less-than-savvy split-second decision making process most youngsters tend to exhibit when faced with an on-coming rider on a trail. 

And that brings up another good point... have you ever come whippin' around a turn in a trail only to be met with an oncoming kid aboard his Dad's ATV?  The only way to avoid a crash is for both to accomplish stopping... or the bike to veer OFF the trail temporarily.  By proxy... the ATV just made the trail even wider than the mere width of his ride.. BOOM!
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: DEZADX on February 21, 2008, 02:47:49 PM
Excellent post there G-Dog.   Many o' time, up in the stoddard area, have I seen certain groups pile out of an overloaded suburban just off the freeways edge, unload one atv, and watch everyone take turns trying to impress us all with their newly bought riding skills.  Helmets optional, of course.  Just because the salesman tells you anybody can ride it, doesn't mean you can too.  There are morons in all classes of off-road recreation, some classes just have more members bringing ignorance to our attention.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: Danger4u2 on February 22, 2008, 02:21:31 AM
G-Dog, I agree with all you have said with the exception of the pansy part. I will admit I've seen allot of pansy but none on dirtbikes.  Motorcycles cause erosion but quads do 3 times the damage.  The track I made on city property by the river, it was kind of a no mans land, had severe erosion.  I made the track through the fields and woods on my quad.  Then I go at it with the bike.  I make short cuts and loops that only the bikes can fit through.  The quad part, lots of erosion, the bike part 75% less erosion.  And after 3 seasons of building this track and 1 season of getting to ride the completed track,  guess what killed all the fun.  Irresponsible parents buying inexperienced kids a couple of quads.  One of them broke his neck and now they are suing the city.  Why is it people do something stupid, get hurt and then it's someone else's fault?  Arrest and impound of you vehicle if you get caught riding in the area.  In Okla. we have had a rash of kids getting killed on quads, most on private property.  The Government is going to legislate age and cc restrictions for riding quads on state land.  I will also agree with you on the amount of damage an out of control quad can do over a dirtbike.  Crash a bike and it doesn't go to far, if you crash a quad and it stays on the wheels no telling how far it will go and what it may crash into.  Here's a short video of me worming out (oilfield term for doing something stupid) on my old quad back in 2003.  This is why all quads should have a tether kill switch.  Have fun watching this at my expense. Lucky for me it went right and drove up onto the rocks and died.  To the left was a 15 foot cliff into the river.  Just click the picture to play the video.
P.S. Your typical day at work is great.

(http://i126.photobucket.com/albums/p102/DrtBik/th_Falloff400EX.jpg) (http://s126.photobucket.com/albums/p102/DrtBik/?action=view&current=Falloff400EX.flv)





Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: maddoggy on February 24, 2008, 08:42:52 AM
danger, that's some very funny video there. i can't count how many times i've done stupid things like that on my quad. i even ran over my own foot once and it ripped me right off the quad in short order. now for the serious part. i ride both a bike and a quad, i have an equal amount of fun on both of them. one of the things that pisses me off more than any other thing about recreation is seeing people out there tearing things up. don't get me wrong, there are some places that you could ride anywhere without harming anything at all, and in a place like that i would have no problem riding wherever i wanted. here in wyoming most places have beautiful mountains that are a blessing to have close-by, but there are alot of tree-hugger types here that are trying to choke down the motorsports enthusiests. when i see someone riding off trail, the picture that comes into my mind is a post or gate across the trailhead reading "ROAD OR TRAIL CLOSED" and most of the time the cause of the closure is a bunch of butt heads doing whatever they please in Gods Country. i do my absolute best to stay on trail, if the trail gets eroded or rutted out then use some of the taxes that americans pay, fill it in and start over. that's all i got to say about that.  MADDOGGY
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: TheGDog on February 24, 2008, 11:06:45 PM
Excellent post there G-Dog.   Many o' time, up in the stoddard area, have I seen certain groups pile out of an overloaded suburban just off the freeways edge, unload one atv, and watch everyone take turns trying to impress us all with their newly bought riding skills.  Helmets optional, of course.  Just because the salesman tells you anybody can ride it, doesn't mean you can too.  There are morons in all classes of off-road recreation, some classes just have more members bringing ignorance to our attention.

Isn't it extremely intriguing that the "certain groups" DEZADX is oh-so politely referring too... most often seem to be either Latinos... or 909-type White-Trash sportin' flat-billed "designer" trucker mesh-caps? 
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: js on February 29, 2008, 11:07:05 AM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lcpjH_F1I-c&feature=related
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: k5abuser on February 29, 2008, 01:53:57 PM
its allways a few that ruin it for the rest of us that try and respect the land we use for fun . so we can try and do more but the stupid people reproduce to fast . the tree huggers have bugged the state reps so much that they just give in and shut the land down to all just to shut the tree huggers up . well ill help you tree huggers out .  how about i save a tree and just wipe my azz with a spotted owl   !!!!
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: n2682 on February 29, 2008, 02:48:04 PM
 im only 25 guys so forgive me for my lack of experiance here but when i was a lil kid in the town of comstock.mi were i grew up i would see 50 bikes a day ride past my house there were some pritty serious trails by are house. and some gravel pits that were open to public riding well by the time i was 15 and had a 250 i wasnt allowed to ride in the pits and most of the trials were turned into house's so we built dirt bike tracks and rode were we could tell the cops eventually came over and said your not allowed to do this anymore so we were breakin what laws but the bad news kids sold drugs on the corners the cops would drive past them and give us a ticket i dont see what the big harm is with riding dirt bikes quads as long as u arnt detroying others property id like to know what you older guys think and why this has came about i got into alot of trouble as a kid for enjoying a legal hobby and i never could figure out what laws i broke if any that i was ticketed for even lost a bike i got brand new a month before? any input on why riding has came the evil thing to do
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: js on February 29, 2008, 04:41:56 PM
move west young man. once you hit the rockies its national forest and BLM land, millions of acres of riding. stay on the trails and have a spark arrestor and you'll never have a problem. buy a fishing lic. you'll be covered if you need search and rescue teams to come find you. If you dont buy a fishing lic you can be billed for the rescue. If you ever get the chance take a week trip to MOAB utah. its like riding on another planet. its a spring or fall riding area. too hot in the summer.
Title: Re: You can't ride here
Post by: maddoggy on March 01, 2008, 11:47:04 AM
i just have to say, if you're riding off-trail on national forest land and you get busted up, you deserve to lay there and suffer. don't be whining when nobody comes to get you. when people ride off-trail they just ruin the legal riding for the rest of us that try to obey the rules. off-trail riders leave behind tracks, and then some tree huggin' granola son-of-a-&#$@* will take a picture of the tracks and show some local government official. that government person is then obligated to do something about it. and there you have it---EVEN MORE RIDING RESTRICTIONS FOR EVERYONE!!!!!  MADDOGGY