Crusty, can you give us any hints and suggestions on your photos? What camera do you use? What settings? Do you alter them in photoshop or another program? Man, they are really nice. The colors are so vivid and definite. Any help would be appreciated.
I really do appreciate all the compliments, and they inspire me to get better. I should make my own thread, but that would imply I "officially" knew what I was doing...

I have done a lot of Googling, and reading around the 'net, but with ADD, me and reading don't get along so good, so I mostly just wing it. I really do want to get in a class, so I can learn the terms and techniques to get improve and actually KNOW what I'm doing (which helps when you try and repeat your success... lol).
I currently shoot with a Nikon D300s (
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond300s/).
My older shots are taken with my D80 (
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/NikonD80/)
The lens I used yesterday is nothing exciting, an 18-70 3.5-?. (I am also trying to get better at shooting my daughter's HS basketball team and dropped $2300 on a NIkkor 70-200 2.8; photography gear gets expensive as quick as HD stuff...lol)
I use the bracketed mode on my camera to shoot 3/5/7 consecutive shots (tripod is ideal, but I shoot most of mine handheld... the 7 frames a second on the D300s help with that!) at different exposures. Then you post process with software that combines them into a High Dynamic Range (HDR) image (
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High-dynamic-range_imaging). Most HDR software can also take a single shot and digitially modify it to create similar effects.
I use Photomatix Pro (
http://www.hdrsoft.com/) to do my HDR work. You can d/l the trial version, which will leave watermarks on your pics, but will elt you play with the software to get an idea how it works. (Just don't delete your original files, so when you upgrade to the paid version you can't go back and reprocess them without the watermark and end up having to use photoshop to get rid of them... don't ask me how I know... lol)
Then I finalize my processing using Adobe Lightroom 3 (
http://www.adobe.com/products/photoshoplightroom/) Not cheap, but if you are a student or teacher, you can get it for under $100... thanks Adobe!)
I really do enjoy learning as I go... and with a bike this great to shoot, it helps! (But I have learned that the shark nose fairing is challenging, with the shadows and reflections it creates.)
Hope that made some sense... lol