Well, yeah there could be an issue with your eyes - depending on your age....as the lens begins to fog over a bit. Ask your eye doc. to have a look if it's been awhile.
Most folks know that I ride before sunrise - pretty much every ride for years now. Several times a week. Coming home is in the daylight - going out is in the dark.
My foremost thoughts for night riding in the boonies:
Slow down. (
savor the ride....the smells, air temp., engine noises, etc.)
Ride known routes. (surprises when blinded by on-coming cars
not good. I
know where the road is,
even if I can't see it for a few seconds.)
Ride in tire tracks. ( road kill is usually in the
center of the lane - esp. important while being blinded by cars)
Think about the weather in the past 12 hours (is the road frozen, branches down from high winds?)
Catalog in your head where you've found issues (deer, wet leaves, gravel, sand - need to know before you get there!)
Also, I know good areas to let following cars pass me in the dark - and will wave them through. They appreciate it and will remember you if you're sharing similar ride times.
Adjust the aim of your headlight. Both Burgman lights were aimed too low. I adjusted the R light higher still, to spot the road edge.
Buy scoot's with
twin full-time low beam headlights if possible. (great lighting on the Forza and Burgman - both with two light DRL's.)
Failing that - check the wattage of the scooter before buying. The 60/55W light on my Piaggio 150i is amazing - compared to my 35/35W LIKE200i.
Stig