West Fort Hood bikers to plan more motorcycle
mentorship rides
by Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
504th Military
Intelligence Brigade bikers, Spc. Vincent Duong
(left) of A Company, 163rd Military Intelligence
"Blue Watch" Battalion, and 2nd Lt. Lasan J. Han of
the 163rd's B Company, perform a walk-around
inspection of Han's sport bike before a Motorcycle
Mentorship Program ride from West Fort Hood, Texas
to Burnet, Texas, Thursday.
Photo Credit: Mr. Michael M. Novogradac (Hood)
Master Sgt. Andrew B.
Long, a 504th Military Intelligence Brigade
motorcycle mentor with 10 years of riding
experience, checks lighting using the Motorcycle
Safety Foundation's T-CLOCS inspection checklist,
covering everything from tires and wheels, controls,
lights and electrics, oils and other fluids, chassis
components and stands. Operational Test Command
bikers teamed up with the 504th's for a Motorcycle
Mentorship Program ride from West Fort Hood, Texas
to Burnet, Texas, Thursday.
Photo
Credit: Mr. Michael M. Novogradac
(Hood) Sgt. 1st
Class Joseph M. Mack, Operational
Test Command's Aviation Test
Directorate's NCOIC and motorcycle
mentor, explains the sport bike
route from West Fort Hood, Texas to
Burnet, Texas, before the start of a
joint Motorcycle Mentorship Program
ride Thursday with the 504th
Military Intelligence Brigade. Mack,
with nine years of riding under his
belt, led nine West Fort Hood sport
bike riders down the twisty Texas
Hill Country roads.
Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Spc.
Patrick A. Lewis (left), a signal
intelligence analyst with the 504th
Military Intelligence Battalion, who
has ridden a motorcycle only one
month, discusses riding tips with
Sgt. 1st Class Woody W. Woodward
(seated), a 504th intelligence
analyst, and Staff Sgt. John W.
Dennison, a 504th signal
intelligence NCO, during a
Motorcycle Mentorship Program ride
from West Fort Hood, Texas to
Burnet, Texas, Thursday.
Photo Credit:
Mr. Michael M.
Novogradac (Hood)
Motorcyclists of the Operational
Test Command and 504th Military
Intelligence Brigade walk to their
bikes for the trip back to West Fort
Hood, Texas from Burnet, Texas,
during a Motorcycle Mentorship
Program ride Thursday. Bikers from
both units want to ride together
more often, and to invite riders of
all West Fort Hood units to their
future rides.
WEST FORT HOOD,
Texas -- Thirty-one bikers from two units here traversed
twisty Hill Country roads on their way to Burnet, Texas
during a Motorcycle Mentorship Program ride Thursday.
Twenty-two motorcyclists with the
504th Military Intelligence Battalion and nine from
Operational Test Command joined forces to cover three
counties for about 50 miles each way.
Split into two groups, sport bikes
took a hillier and twisty route while the cruisers took
a laid back route more to their liking.
Riders ranged in experience from
one month in the iron horse saddle to more than 30
years.
"This is my first big group ride,"
said Spc. Patrick A. Lewis, a signal intelligence
analyst at the 504th with only about 200 miles under his
belt. "I've only done one other group ride, and it was
only with four people.
"I learned a lot today," Lewis
continued, "Like hand-and-arm signals; leg signals; when
and how to lean into the curve; when to roll on the
throttle as your coming out of the curve, and not to
worry if you fall a little behind."
Describing himself as a thrill
seeker, Lewis looks up to and wants to be more like his
older brother who's ridden for 20 years.
From Jasper, Texas, the 23
year-old said, "Whether you're riding in a group or not,
safety comes first."
One fairly senior officer joined
the ride with 14 of his battalion's 16 Soldier
motorcyclists.
Riding for 32 years and starting
on dirt bikes as a young man in southeast Texas, Lt.
Col. Jason T. Liddell, commander of the 163rd Military
Intelligence "Blue Watch" Battalion, has ridden on both
coasts of America, and even from Texas to Vancouver in
the Canadian province of British Columbia.
Liddell has also ridden in Italy,
Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands.
"I get pure enjoyment of letting
Soldiers know that safety on motorcycles is important,"
he said. "It is training like any other training. It's
been planned, resourced, and coordinated -- and I get to
see Soldiers train on something that keeps them safe in
their personal life."
Liddell added that MMP rides offer
him time to sense his command informally. "I can talk to
my noncommissioned officers. I can talk to my junior
Soldiers. I can get a sensing of who I think may be at
more danger at being a rider and impart that to my
subordinate leaders, and they can include that in
monthly, weekly, and four-day weekend safety sessions."
504th's senior motorcycle mentor,
Sgt. 1st Class Rachel L. Phillips, has been an avid
sport bike rider for 13 years, and has even taken stunt
riding courses to improve her skills.
She is the only female motorcycle
rider in her brigade, and has been a motorcycle mentor
for eight years.
"Mentors watch more junior, less
experienced riders while on the road," Phillips said.
"You never want to put one mentor with more than two
individuals who need assessments. We want to help less
experienced riders improve their general riding skills,
so you'll have a better rider in the long run."
Currently with child, Phillips
took part in the ride as the "trail vehicle," behind the
sport bikes. She said the trail vehicle is necessary in
case of an emergency.
"In my trail vehicle, I've got a
Combat Life Saver bag in the back; I've got some cones
and some safety triangles, and some basic tools, so if
there is a mechanical issue on a motorcycle, the trail
vehicle has the ability to immediately stop and get that
individual out of that situation."
Phillips said the best thing a
motorcycle rider can do is take advice from the more
experienced riders.
"Not everybody likes to listen,"
she said. "I'm always one of those people who feel I
learn a lot more by listening than I do by talking. So,
bragging and taking chances is a way to end your life.
You can have a lot of fun on a motorcycle without going
through the danger of hurting yourself."
Statistics show all Army
installations worldwide having nearly 33,500 motorcycles
registered.
The National Highway Safety
Administration, says there are over 4 million registered
motorcycles in America, or just two percent of all
registered vehicles.
While about five percent of all
roadway fatalities involve motorcycles each year, 80
percent of those crashes result in injury or death. For
automobiles, those figures lower to only 20 percent.
Across America during 2013,
NHTSA's motorcycle fact sheet says 4,668 motorcyclists
were killed -- 26 times more frequently than passenger
car occupant deaths.