He was lucky to get someone with a sence of morality. Something that
is becoming more rare by the minute.

On 8/30/10, Paul <[email protected]> wrote:
> *A friend of mine was relating a story this morning about a recent sale he
> made of his bike (Kawasaki Concours). After meeting a prospective buyer at a
> location, the buyer asked if he could take it for a quick ride. My friend
> determined  the guy was an experienced rider so he consented. The guy drove
> off and came back a few minutes later. Pulled into the parking lot,
> attempted to make a low speed tight turn, and dropped the bike!! Scratched
> up the fairing and did some other damage. My friend said the guy was very
> upset and completely embarrassed. Said he had been riding for something like
> 27 years and never laid a bike down. He immediately got on the phone with
> his credit union and bought the bike on the spot.*
> *
> *
> *True story. This just happened last week. The funny part is that my friend
> said the guy was only mildly interested before the accident. Probably
> wouldn't have bought the bike otherwise.*
> *
> *
> *Good lesson. If you let someone ride your bike when it's for sale, tell
> them in no uncertain terms: you damage it...you buy it!*
> *
> *
> *Paul
> *
> *
> *
> *
> *
>
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