OK - here is my take on the VMX scene as it currently stands.
Most guys do it for FUN, which, my friends, is a given.
I couldn't give a shit what age group there is or what capacity class there is so long as the racing is available. If we create additional divisions in the current range of actual classes the whole thing could well become unmanagable and see little support when commities are called for - who would want to run a race day with a twenty plus race event round x 3?
One of the reasons I usually sign off as I do (see below) is because, if most of us are honest, we are riding purely to entertain OURSELVES whether it is in the bush as I have done (until my re-emergence on the race track in 08 - lookout, lol) or hacking around on bikes we either remember with fondness from our youth, those we lusted after (eg MC490T et al) or ,as in many cases these days, bikes that were built and raced many years before we were born.
Most of us are familiar with racing so we are only too aware that when the gate drops a form of 'natural selection' takes place, for the most part by corner two! After a full lap the groups are well established and by the final lap most places are locked in. Now using this as an example a fifty year old fronts the line with his son (17) a few places down the gate and the board counts the five with the fall of the gate to follow...... Short of a miracle, and irrespective of the bike type or capacity, sonny Jim (funny that's his name, lol) hauls arse out of the box well ahead of most older guys whose reaction time is a little jaded. Likewise, the 36 year old next to me who still maintains awesome fitness and reaction, pulls away, showering me in roost. You see a pattern emerging here?
Lets just keep it simple and gradually fine tune race days with the emphasis on the FUN factor which will be the key to maintaining a high interest in this facet of MX. If we must have age divisions thrown into the cauldron of confusion regarding this thread why not simply work it out at the end of the day?
See you at the back of the pack