Monday, March 26, 2012

Enter to win great prizes from EagleRider!

Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE MicrosoftInternetExplorer4 Like us on Facebook (http://on.fb.me/yxRHfA) and enter to win a grand prize 3 day Los Angeles motorcycle tour  including 2 VIP passes to our 20th anniversary party!  Plus there will be daily winners selected to receive one of three prizes, a $20 EagleRider gift card, EagleRider t-shirt, or one day free motorcycle rental.

Thank you for the rave review, Josh!

Yelp_icon
"My experience at Eagle Rider was near perfect. I stopped in and spoke to Oscar, told him about the bike I was looking for. As soon as a HD Sportster came in, he gave me a call, and a great price on the bike! The crew at Eagle Rider did a great job getting me financed and I've even gone back to pick up a few accessories, which I found to be a great price also!
I highly recommend Eagle Rider, and will steer any of my friends there in the future!" - Josh

Friday, March 23, 2012

Thank you for sharing your feedback, Bill and Gus!

Yahoo
"I bought a 2006 Honda Goldwing and I am very pleased with it. The guys down at Eaglerider sales are true professionals at what they do, very nice doing business with you at Eagleriders sales." - Bill

"Rented a coulpe of Harley s on our last 2 visits to Florida, it s our must do now every time we vacation there. EagleRider is the bomb!" - Gus

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Thank you, Rene, for sharing this experience!

Yahoo
"Enjoyed the experience. Hollywood and Rock were great. Had no problem making the deal. They weren t pushy. Professional and great to work with. I got a better deal from them then I could have gotten from the HD dealer here in El Paso, TX. I would do business with them again any time. Thanks guys." - Rene

Tuesday, March 20, 2012

Thank you for the great review, Thor!

Yelp_icon
"I won a bid thru EBAY on a 2007 HD firefighter edition motorcycle. The motorcycle was shipped fron California to my residence in Florida . Was getting ready to go to bike week in Daytona 2012, stopped by HD for a trip check. There, we discovered 2 minor issues with bike. I contacted Chance at Eagle Rider Sales in Hawthorne, CA. He apologized  and Eagle Rider made it right. They stayed in contact with me, until issue was resolved. I drove bike to Daytona Beach and bike ran excellent. Would purchase a motorcycle from Eagle Rider Sales again in the future. Chance and ERS staff made it right, and satisfied this customer.   TM.. Navarre, FL."

Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Check out this article - Bike Week is in full swing!

Biker subculture ranges from horns to Bibles

Bikers glide down Main Street in Daytona Beach as Bikeweek 2012 enjoyed a full day of sun

Click HERE to read more.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

Roaring Into Sun and Sea on 2 Wheels

Abc
Lots of Northerners shake off the last of the cold weather with a trip south this time of year. We decided to head into the Florida sunshine on two wheels, on a motorcycle trip from Miami down through the Keys, where the flat lanes seem to skim you over the blue-and-aquamarine, coral-lined sea before you're vaulted skyward bound up a causeway and on to another island.

From the Keys, we turned west through the Everglades on the Tamiami Trail (Route 41), then up the Gulf Coast and back east to Miami via Alligator Alley (Interstate 75). With side trips, it was around 600 miles in four days, not a big challenge for the true wind-in-your-face aficionado.

If you're flying into Florida to start your trip — as this frost-encrusted Mainer did — there's a good selection of motorcycle rental shops to choose from. I chose EagleRider Miami, which put me on a BMW 1200 GS, a gutsy streetworthy rig with adequate bags for carry-ons, including my wife Betty's always-abundant array of togs.

Check your motorcycle insurance coverage, and if it doesn't cover rentals, do consider buying the protection. It added less than $30 a day to the overall sum of $584 that covered three 24-hour periods spanning four calendar days.

On our first leg, we slogged our way through local traffic in Miami and the surrounding area to connect with U.S. 1 about 50 miles south of the city. A wiser choice would have been to spend the extra few bucks and cruise toward the islands on Florida's Turnpike. If you're renting a motorcycle, you don't even need to fumble for cash at the tolls; photos of the bike license plate will be sent to the rental company, which in my case added toll charges to the bill.

The feel of escaping the mainland and entering the Keys on U.S. 1 is no less than exhilarating. The roadway, also called the Overseas Highway, runs 127 miles, connecting the island chain with a series of bridges and expansive, seemingly endless views of the ocean on either side.

Our first stop was Key Largo. With the help of a chamber of commerce information center, we found a seaside one-bedroom apartment there. Informal but graceful, the palm-shaded compound opened to a spacious dock overlooking Florida Bay and was a short walk to a selection of Mexican, sushi and other restaurants, including one that will be remembered for its pitchers of margaritas. And if you're not a privacy freak, sharing four to a unit can save a lot of bucks. In this case, $140 split between two couples wasn't bad.

U.S. 1 slows down in the towns dotting the islands, but it's a good idea to keep alert for cross-traffic that doesn't seem to notice bikes. These areas are replete with shops, restaurants, and places offering side trips for diving, boating, sport fishing, parasailing and bicycling.

For the non-motorized biking crowd, bike paths are laned off along the Overseas Highway. There's also a sumptuous selection of state parks offering swimming, snorkeling, canoeing and camping. The John Pennekamp Coral Reef State Park, combined with the Florida Keys National Marine Sanctuary, covers 178 nautical square miles and offers divers breathtaking sights of coral formations and tropical marine life.

Closer to Key West is Big Pine Key, noted for its tiny, endangered Key deer. There are ample warnings and much of the stretch across the island is fenced off, but riders should take note.

We found the turnoff from Big Pine that took us literally off the beaten path to No Name Key, noted for a roadside pub by the same name. The food and beer are fine, but the walls and ceilings dressed in a lush coating of dollar bills left by legions of patrons who've paraded through are the real attraction.

As the green mile markers across U.S. 1 complete their countdown from 127 to 0, you're in Key West. A ride into town for a look-see circuit is fine, but it's a good idea to find a hotel, B&B or other lodging and leave the two-wheelers parked before the sightseeing and partying begin. We lucked out with perhaps the last room on the island, around $300. But, again, we bunked four to a room.

The streets fill up at nighttime and the drinks flow at Sloppy Joe's, Hog's Breath Saloon and the other noted haunts and honky tonks. (The bouncers are glad to make sure your beer is in a plastic cup instead of a bottle if you decide to take to the streets.)

Amid it all, Key West is full of restaurants to suit all tastes. At the pierside Alonzo's, a fine dinner and drinks came to about $100 on the nose.

The town's attractions are many, but Key West can hardly be uttered without mentioning its most famous denizen, Ernest Hemingway. His coral rock home and a museum can be visited for an admission. The ever-photographed monument marking the southernmost point in the continental states is open and free. Any visitor will quickly see the selection of shops featuring art, sandals, cigars and you-name-it lining the streets.

Fortunately for bikers, there's little room for extra baggage so we continued our tour virtually souvenir-free. It was on to the Everglades, a wholly different world and kind of beauty just a few hours ride away.

From U.S. 1, on the mainland, it's a sharp left (west) to U.S. 41, the Tamiami Trail, and a delightful straightaway into the Everglades and Big Cypress National Preserve. This time, instead of riding over the sea we had the sense of riding over a sea of swamp grass, bounded at great lengths by canals off the edges of the highway

The starkness of the surroundings was refreshing after the heavy commercialization along the Keys. Miles go by before you see a store or gas station, so check your fuel gauge.

The road passes the entrance to Shark Valley Visitor Center where tram tours into the Everglades are available. Traffic was light, but no fewer than a dozen airboats towed by pickups that passed by attested to the busy day vendors had taking people into the subtropical wilderness — essentially a giant, shallow moving river.

The ride got more interesting, if eerie, as the sun set and we made way for Naples on the Gulf Coast. Signs appeared warning drivers to slow down for panther crossings.

From Naples, the vistas give way to miles of strip malls and shopping areas that service growing Gulf Coast communities. The final leg began with a turn back east toward I-75, or Alligator Alley, across Big Cypress National Preserve, leading back to Fort Lauderdale and Miami. The ride is, again, a motorcyclist's dream, but here there are no tourist amenities, just the necessities.

 

By GLENN ADAMS Associated Press

Courtesy of ABC News

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

EagleRider to sell motorcycle rental units to dealers

Dealernews

While business is up at EagleRider in Los Angeles, NuWire Investor reports the company is also selling some of its used motorcycles to dealers.

EagleRider president Chris McIntyre said the company has progressed from renting just four bike models in the early 1990s to 4,000 bike offerings in 110 locations across the U.S. and 14 corporate locations in Europe.

"What's happening in the rest of the world is happening in America. Gas is exploding in price," he said. "But our biggest growth and revenues are U.S.-based."

"We have tons of people coming that not only rent our bikes, but then ask to buy them because it's a great economical way to commute,” he says. ”[Consumers] still want to be in something cool, but they love the idea of getting 50 miles to the gallon and not being in a Toyota Prius," he said.

EagleRider has started to sell its bikes back to dealers to help fill demand for used motorcycles. While rentals account for 90 percent of EagleRider's revenue, sell-backs are helping. "We're in the very industry that was decimated [in 2008] by the economy," McIntyre said.

 

Courtesy of Dealernews.com

Monday, March 5, 2012

EagleRider Spolight. Road Style

Eagle Rider Orlando Motorcycle Sales & Rentals
Sales: 407-251-5335
Rentals: 407-438-4055
1233 West Sandlake Rd
Orlando, Fl 32809
Sales:
rock@eaglerider.com
hollywood@eaglerider.com
Rentals:
mco@eaglerider.com

Awesome bikes, even More AWESOME Prices !!!

Thank you to our happy customers for the rave reviews!

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" Bought my VStar at Eaglerider 6 months ago and I'm loving it. Lee has been extremely helpful after the sale in procuring for me the Owner's manual for that year (2007), apparently it was out of print and difficult to get, but he persevered. A success story." - Paul

 

Click here to see more reviews on Google!

Thursday, March 1, 2012