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Somewhere up around 5,000 feet, I wove along a black asphalt ribbon among rock faces and steep slopes drenched in ancient pines. Hidden further up the road, and higher still at 6,000 feet above sea level and about 5,500 feet above the resort town of Palm Springs, was the alpine town of Idyllwild. I had never been there, but the route felt easy; the bike I was astride had no trouble sticking to the meandering road. Power was surging yet manageable; the chassis was tame yet felt agile. I wasn’t even halfway through the day’s ride, and I couldn’t wait to see how many different types of turns I could throw at this sunflower yellow Ducati Scrambler.
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More and more motorcycle companies are starting to realize what the riding community has known for decades: new and younger riders can’t jump on a 190-horsepower liter bike while their motorcycle license is still warm from the printer and not feel they’re about to earn a Darwin award. Big-bore sport bikes are intimidating and off-putting to most prospective riders — not to mention only about 2 percent of riders can actually get 100 percent out of those bikes (and that’s only on a track). Because of this widespread awakening, the entry-level market has seen a boom with an increasing number of beginner-friendly and fun bikes, the best of which still intrigue veteran riders.
Ducati is known for top-notch technology, blistering performance, high power and exclusivity. This becomes obvious when you see their poster child, the 1199 Panigale, a $25,000 track day stalwart. The Scrambler, Ducati’s newest bike, represents the Panigale’s antithesis: fun rather than intense, individualized rather than perfected, accessible rather than the stuff of dreams.
Ducati’s goal with the Scrambler is quite obviously luring a new generation of motorcycle riders. Everyone with a Ducati business card might cringe at the term, but this is their entry-level bike, tailored to a younger rider’s price range, needs and style. Accessibility starts at the price, which is just below $8,500. And while most bikes on the road today give the impression that they’ll turn into 30-foot robots and start exchanging haymakers at any moment, Ducati styled the 2015 Scrambler as if they hadn’t stopped making it in 1974.
The Scrambler proved to be more playful than a terrier with a tennis ball.