Cayman Islands Motorcycle Riders Association

Cayman Islands Motorcycle Riders Association

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We are a positive, friendly group of riders. Males and Females ages range from the early 20's and up from all walks of life.

We ride a variety of motorcycles, all brands and types of Motorcycles including cruisers touring, sport bikes and scooters.

05/06/2026
07/05/2026

That's a fact

02/05/2026

There’s a motorcycle in this picture.
Most of you didn’t see it.
It’s just… easy to miss.
That’s the problem.
Not everyone is staring right at a rider.
You’re scanning traffic… moving… thinking about the next car, the next lane, the next exit.
And in that moment a motorcycle doesn’t stand out.
So it gets overlooked, not on purpose. Just… missed.
And that’s all it takes.
This is real traffic. Real spacing. Real conditions.
And still…
easy to miss.

Now add a phone into the mix.
Or one quick distraction.
That “easy to miss” becomes
“never saw them.”
Put it down. Slow it down. Look again.
Because next time…
it’s not a picture.

A SECOND LOOK SAVES LIVES.

22/02/2026

ATTENTION ALL MOTORCYCLE RIDERS!

IMPORTANT ROAD SAFETY INFORMATION

🚨 ENOUGH OF “SMIDSY.” IT’S TIME TO RAISE OUR GAME. 🚨

Sorry mate, I didn’t see you.”
“Nothing you can do about that.”
“It’s just the risk we take.”

No.
It’s not “just the risk.”
And there is something we can do.

Motorcyclists make up a disproportionate number of accident statistics.

That should concern every single one of us.

What concerns me even more?
Too many riders accept it as normal.
Too many aren’t prepared to look at their own riding habits.

Studies consistently show that ongoing and advanced training can reduce accident rates by up to 50–75%.

That’s not luck.
That’s not theory.
That’s skill, mindset, and professional awareness.

And experience alone? It’s not enough.

“I’ve been riding 20 years.”

But is that 20 years of development…
or the same year repeated 20 times?

Think like a pilot.

In aviation, smaller aircraft don’t assume bigger planes will see them. They plan for being less visible. They compensate. They train continuously. They refine their awareness.

On the road, we are the smaller aircraft.

Visibility is not a right.
It is a responsibility.

If you’re approaching a junction and a driver is waiting to emerge, ask yourself:

• Have I maximised my visibility?

• Am I masked by a van, lorry, or glare?

• Have I adjusted my road position to stand out?

• Has the driver actually acknowledged me?

• Do I have space and an escape plan?

• Is my speed right for the road, surface, camber and conditions?

When someone says, “I didn’t see you,”
sometimes it’s not malice.
It’s human limitation.

Professional riders don’t rely on being seen.
They ride as if they might not be.

🚧 And Let’s Be Honest…

A significant number of motorcycle crashes involve no other vehicle at all.

Single-vehicle incidents caused by:

• Inappropriate speed

• Poor bend negotiation

• Bad positioning

• Unsafe overtakes

• Riding too close

• Late decision-making

• Overconfidence

• Limited machine familiarity

That’s not “SMIDSY.”

That’s skill, judgement, and mindset.

🎓 Training Works — And We Know It

Across the Country the police-led initiative BikeSafe exists for a reason.

It bridges the gap between passing your test and going on to undertake advanced rider training.

Why?

Because advanced trained riders are involved in far fewer collisions.

Professional pilots train continuously.
Emergency services train continuously.
Advanced drivers train continuously.

Why should motorcyclists be different?

A licence is permission to ride.
It is not the end of development.

🧠 Advanced Riding Is a Mindset

Safer riding isn’t about surrendering your rights.

It’s about owning responsibility.

• Make yourself unmistakably visible.

• Think further ahead than everyone else.

• Understand how hazards develop.

• Know your machine’s limits.

• Adjust speed and position dynamically.

• Wear proper protective equipment — not as an afterthought, but as a layer of risk reduction.

Collision avoidance begins long before impact.

We can’t control other road users.

But we can control:

• Our preparation

• Our positioning

• Our speed

• Our visibility

• Our decision-making

• Our training

A thinking rider is a safer rider.

Not just for themselves.
For everyone sharing the road.

If this resonates with you, share it.
If it challenges you, reflect on it.
If it motivates you — invest in your development.

Let’s stop normalising preventable accidents.
Let’s raise standards.
Let’s ride like professionals. 🏍

22/02/2026

These techniques, borrowed from sports psychology, can help you regain your skills and confidence after you've been shaken by a motorcycle crash.

Read "The motorcycle yips: Techniques for coming back from a crash" on Common Tread: https://bit.ly/4qOJjXR

31/12/2025

Tonight is the one night of the year riders should not be on their bikes... Weather you drink or not!! Let's start 2026 without incident. HAPPY NEW YEARS & ALL the best for 2026🥳🥳

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#4 Dorcy Place/Dorcy Drive
George Town
KY1-1008