Right here. When we got married, my wife and I realized we just didn't want to be beholden to two cars. We sold her Taurus, and kept my Fit, which she now drives....A few years ago, while living in Atlanta, I sold my Dodge Ram to my boss when I quit working for him. (Good guy, I just needed to move on. He needed the truck; I no longer did.) So I was left with just my BMW R1150GS. I was two-wheels-only for a little over two years. And lemme tell you, Hotlanna traffic is wickity-whack. I sold that bike to afford to go back to college, where I met my wife...I mean she wasn't my wife then, but...nevermind.
Anyway, she had to listen to all my old glory-stories about riding my old motorcycles. So when we got married, she wanted one. We now have a Kawasaki Versys. (Another really great bike. No snob appeal, but no snop repair bills either.) Once we settled in Nashville, I discovered bicycles. I had gotten fat on motorcycles (and wife soup).
I started riding bicycles in order to lose weight, so that I could enjoy motorcycling more...again. But I found that they are really enriching in their own right. Then I started running, so that I could enjoy cycling more.
So today, my wife drives the little Honda on her 20-mile (one way) commute. About three days a week, I ride the Kawasaki to work. The other two days I ride my Kona. Saturday afternoons, the wife and I go for a nice relaxing moto-ride in the twisties (hell for a bicyclist is nirvana for a sporting moto-rider.) Sunday after Church, we go for a nice, relaxing cycle ride in one of the larger Nashville parks.
My Kona's okay; I really want a fixie. My wife loves her Electra Townie. Our endurance is up to the place where we can putt-putt around the park for twenty miles or so before we're ready for a stop. It's also high enough that we can go for about a hundred miles on the motorcycle before enough fatigue sets in that we need to stop.
Riding the motorcycle keeps my coordination and situational awareness very sharp, as everything happens faster. They're both a damn lot of fun. I think that the two sports reinforce each other in terms of skills. They even have similar catagories for machines. Cruisers. Sportbikes. Off-road. Commuter.
Long story short...we've got the wife enrolled in the MSF beginning rider class for her birthday later this month. We're gonna get her a starter moto, with the eventual aim of going car-free. Two motos, and four-six bikes. We'd like a road tandem. That would be as close as we could get to a motorcycle experience on a bicycle. Hope this helps. good luck. feel free to PM me with any questions. I also sold motorcycles for just shy of two years, so I might be able to give you some perspecctive that the salesguys might not. Be well!