My son rides one, though when he rides with others there are very few others his age.Has anyone ever seen a millennial on a Harley?
My son rides one, though when he rides with others there are very few others his age.Has anyone ever seen a millennial on a Harley?
BTW @PHOENIX PHIL this is what Harley riding looks like in Minnesota this time of year;
You have to look at her beautiful eyes to see the big smile on @Just GinaView attachment 582299View attachment 582300
Plenty, what’s the point you’re trying to make?Has anyone ever seen a millennial on a Harley?
No real point. It is just that when I was growing up the typical Harley rider looked like James Dean. Today most seem to look like retired biker dentists or accountants.Plenty, what’s the point you’re trying to make?
It could be argued that they still look like James dean given his current state…No real point. It is just that when I was growing up the typical Harley rider looked like James Dean. Today most seem to look like retired biker dentists or accountants.
People who don’t have enough sense to realize they belong on a gold wing!No real point. It is just that when I was growing up the typical Harley rider looked like James Dean. Today most seem to look like retired biker dentists or accountants.
Trust me. Do-overs are a regular topic of conversation among Boomers.People who don’t have enough sense to realize they belong on a gold wing!
One thing about complaining about millennials, you guys raised us!
That’s right we’re Frankensteins monsterPeople who don’t have enough sense to realize they belong on a gold wing!
One thing about complaining about millennials, you guys raised us!
As was the generation before that, and the generation before that and, well you get the point.Trust me. Do-overs are a regular topic of conversation among Boomers.
I bought my first motorcycle when I was 9. 100cc Honda Enduro type that was way to big for me. But traded it for a Suzuki 2 stroke two cylinder steet bike by age 12. That thing would top out at 85 MPH in 6th gear. But do 90 red lined in 5thNo real point. It is just that when I was growing up the typical Harley rider looked like James Dean. Today most seem to look like retired biker dentists or accountants.
A little dated, but the trend is pretty clear.
7. A graying market.
The median age of the typical motorcycle owner is 47, up from 32 in 1990 and 40 in 2009. And although its sales are slipping, Harley maintains a 55.1% share of the 35 and older male rider demographic. However, more troubling for the industry is the decline in riders under 18, which has fallen from 8% in 1990 to 2%, and those between 18 and 24 from 16% of the total down to 6%. Where will the new bike buyers come from if the industry is not attracting these younger people?
It was like Easter! Risen from the deadView attachment 582301
I'm hoping it's only a time out. I enjoyed the thread though rarely posted there as I don't have the global geopolitical knowledge base to formulate a coherent opinion. I did read most threads, though learned there was a name or two that I would only gloss over.
I like classic cars also, but I got hooked on easier to store things, like double rifles. Could have bought another airplane, but the doubles, oh boy! better than Raquel Welch in my opinion, which I highly respect!I'm a millennial, and I did ride Harleys for years...
I came to my senses and moved from motorcycles to classic cars. Spend twice as much money to be just as unsafe and take up 5x more room in the garage.
No real point. It is just that when I was growing up the typical Harley rider looked like James Dean. Today most seem to look like retired biker dentists or accountants.
A little dated, but the trend is pretty clear.
7. A graying market.
The median age of the typical motorcycle owner is 47, up from 32 in 1990 and 40 in 2009. And although its sales are slipping, Harley maintains a 55.1% share of the 35 and older male rider demographic. However, more troubling for the industry is the decline in riders under 18, which has fallen from 8% in 1990 to 2%, and those between 18 and 24 from 16% of the total down to 6%. Where will the new bike buyers come from if the industry is not attracting these younger people?