Completing California’s Motorcycle Safety Program
After a Wobbly Start, Finally Getting Legal on Two WheelsI've wanted to learn to ride a motorcycle ever since I can remember. I can't quite explain why exactly I wanted to get on two wheels, but I'm pretty sure the urge is related to the very same urges that had me begging my grandfather to let me drive his ride-on lawnmower as a kid. I, like you (probably), just love things with engines and wheels. I won't discriminate just because it has two wheels or 22.
After nearly 28 years of talking about it, I've finally taken the first serious step to getting on two wheels legally—I took and passed the California Motorcycle Safety Program, waiving my requirement to take the DMV's ridden test and putting me inches from my motorcycle endorsement.
The course, done through the Total Control program in California after the Motorcycle Safety Foundation curriculum was replaced, costs about $260 and takes just three days to complete. The first day is a classroom session, the second is a riding and classroom session, and the third is a riding session and the test.
Although the class is designed for new riders, about half of my class had prior motorcycling experience. Some had been riding dirt bikes for years off-road and were looking to get legal and on the streets. Others were experienced motorcyclists looking for refreshers after a few years on the street or after bad accidents.
My motorcycle experience was on the more limited side. Although I took a new rider course on a Ducati Monster 696 a couple years back, my first real hands-on experience on a motorcycle was at the tender age of 16. My best friend, Sean, and I had grown bored of driving his mom's Jeep Liberty across their Westchester, New York lawn, so we decided to play with his dad's, toys instead. We parked the Jeep, wandered into the garage, and decided that his dad's beloved Harley-Davidson Sportster would do the trick. Sean popped it into neutral, and we walked the black Harley with its big sissy bar-mounted American and POW/MIA flags down the driveway to the street.
Sean, who I'm pretty sure came home from the hospital on the back of a Harley, decided he'd go first. Seemed fair—it was his life on the line if anything happened to the bike. He hopped on, turned the key, pulled the clutch in, toggled the ignition on, dropped the bike into first, and was off.
He was a natural—that asshole.




