Not talking pro level, but the average guy. A guy who has been riding 5 yrs for instance. 




As i was saying is I've only gone to the track two times and its been in the last 2-3 weeks and the track seems to be a little more diifficult to me cuz you have to jump all the time and i am a little to scared to hit them at the right speed. They tell me at the track that i just need to get more track time cuz i have the skillz. On the other hand when i go out to the dez i am always in the top gears for the most part haulin ass of course I've ben playin in the desert for years off and on threw life.I seem to have a lot more fun trail riding but will be going to the track a lot more cuz i think it will make me a better rider.... and they have lights there too you can ride at night , its gettin a little warm in vegas right now. I think that a good MX rider would transition a little faster to off road conditions than a good off-road rider can transition to a track.
they called us crazy and didn't even wait for the race to end so we could make fun of them for quitting
they just told our friends that were there with us that we were nutz and loaded up and took off
these guys are good on moto-x track though, just my .02There was an article in Dirt Rider from a few years ago that addresses this subject. It was written by a guy that's raced both MX & desert. If I can find the rag when I get home I'll scan it and post it here. It's a good read-
From an off-road racers perspective I know most desert guys (me included) can't corner without getting off the bike and making a manual three-point turn. That's what I plan to work on, because that's my #1 weakness.
Most MX guys I've ridden with can handle the open desert, but they can't read the desert well enough to ride at speed and the dust freaks them out. I know one MX guy in particular who came out to a desert race and went home after watching the first line take off for the bomb run.

There was an article in Dirt Rider from a few years ago that addresses this subject. It was written by a guy that's raced both MX & desert. If I can find the rag when I get home I'll scan it and post it here. It's a good read-
From an off-road racers perspective I know most desert guys (me included) can't corner without getting off the bike and making a manual three-point turn. That's what I plan to work on, because that's my #1 weakness.
Most MX guys I've ridden with can handle the open desert, but they can't read the desert well enough to ride at speed and the dust freaks them out. I know one MX guy in particular who came out to a desert race and went home after watching the first line take off for the bomb run.


Is your avatar a real pic of yourself or do you have Jesus locked in your kitchen?
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Yes, believe it or not that is the real Chad. That's how long his hair was the last time I saw him. I could come in useful. He could go undercover into the green ranks...I've never riden in those conditions but I have seen some of those starts where the dust is so bad that you can't see anything. I have no idea how those guys keep their speed up. I have ridden in similar conditions with snow dust on a snowmobile and no way, no how would I continue at pace.![]()
I'd like to read that article NS!![]()
One thing that you dez racers don't consider that eastern riders must...trees, roots, water hazards, and weather. (yeah, I know about the wind) None of these come into play in normal off road desert riding or Socal MX.
Is your avatar a real pic of yourself or do you have Jesus locked in your kitchen?
![]()
Yes, believe it or not that is the real Chad. That's how long his hair was the last time I saw him. I could come in useful. He could go undercover into the green ranks...

no doubt the most insane racing.Race Desert!