rivermobster
Well-known member
- May 5, 2021
- 1,955
- 1,672
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Morning and afternoon help a ton with this with shadows. Winter is nice as well as the sun is to the south.The problem is almost like being color blind but for sand.. I canāt seem to see where the drop offs or hell even the step ups are unless itās crazy obvious.
Iāve been asking around and apparently this isnāt that uncommon. My buddy has planes, boats, Offroad etc.. doesnāt drink 20:20 vision the whole 9. I was talking to him about it and he said āDave I just donāt do it.. I canāt see it, Iām not good at it. When I go I ride with one of the experts that is good at it, and I find Iām good for two or three years.ā lol.
Just around camp there was more than a few guys that said basically the same thing and responded with āthatās why I never lead.ā
RD
Morning and afternoon help a ton with this with shadows. Winter is nice as well as the sun is to the south.
Noon early/late in the season is super treacherous since it's just a big tan mirror. Yellow lenses help with this, but it's always a problem.
What are you running for eye wear? I run either my old sun clouds or Vaurnet skiing glasses.. MAKE A Ton of difference with a clear lens. At night I take them off, no lens switching. I lost a pair of 80s sunclouds....broke my heart....the rose tint is the best for the sand.
I was amazed at how much difference good glasses make. We run pumpers so that's our option. Haven't found a goggle worth a shit when it comes to seeing in the dirt, dust, sand. Oakleys were good, but the lenses got stupid expensive. Try GOOD polarized sunglasses and see if that helps.Kinda depends on the situation. Usually knuckles goggles with interchangeable lenses.
Sometimes just regular sunglasses
RD
I think itās probably best if I just follow someone or ride with someone..
RD
I usually run my polarized sunglasses during the day and clear goggles at nightI was amazed at how much difference good glasses make. We run pumpers so that's our option. Haven't found a goggle worth a shit when it comes to seeing in the dirt, dust, sand. Oakleys were good, but the lenses got stupid expensive. Try GOOD polarized sunglasses and see if that helps.
If there are no tracks it is really hard to see. Especially between 12-2p. Last year during the day I switched to a Amber colored shield for my helmet and that helped a lot. Up until last season I had no issues seeing with just a tinted shield.The problem is almost like being color blind but for sand.. I canāt seem to see where the drop offs or hell even the step ups are unless itās crazy obvious.
Iāve been asking around and apparently this isnāt that uncommon. My buddy has planes, boats, Offroad etc.. doesnāt drink 20:20 vision the whole 9. I was talking to him about it and he said āDave I just donāt do it.. I canāt see it, Iām not good at it. When I go I ride with one of the experts that is good at it, and I find Iām good for two or three years.ā lol.
Just around camp there was more than a few guys that said basically the same thing and responded with āthatās why I never lead.ā
RD