Manzanita, do me a favor and report back with how it went? Things you'd do differently, what went well, etc?
Trackdays are an awesome experience and I highly recommend doing them just for fun. I'm not a competitive person and the vibe at the these events is really positive. No one cares about your bike or how fast you are, everyone is just there to have fun. Oh, I guess there are the racers but they are in A group anyways...
Things I could have done...
1) I could have emailed the trackday provider to get the location of the outlets before arriving. Ditto with the motel, although actually they might not have been very helpful--I guess I could have called around to find a place that could actually confirm they had accessible outlets.
2) I did have a problem with tech inspection, actually. I never figured out how to disconnect the front headlight by pulling the fuse (where is the fusebox, btw...) because I figured I could just tape over the headlight, which I did, using the blue tape and then black duct tape... but at tech inspection the front headlight tape was burning hot, and they told me to disconnect it. Well they announced 5 minutes to start my group, and I decided to just cut the high beam wire behind the headlight--I had tried pulling the connector off the headlight, and it would not budge. I had today off and figured out how easy it is to remove the headlight cover (the four screws in front, duh), and I soldered the wire.
The suspension settings I posted in another thread are too stiff for street riding for me, but worked great on the track.
So have you done trackdays before on other bikes?
Some people get the impression that you need special tires, or that the bike prep is complicated. Track providers here aren't even requiring changing your coolant out (glycol coolants were previously not allowed because they're slippery). Disable or cover your lights, remove your mirrors, tape your wheel weights, be sure you have plenty of tread on your tires. That's it I think... and beginners groups here have lower gear requirements--they do not require motorcycle-specific boots (leather boots, even leather hiking boots, are allowed in C group). You do need a leather suit, but again, beginners group are okay with a zip-together leather jacket and pants. Ebay and craigslist are full of good deals on suits. I got my first zip-together suit for $120 I think, and bought my second suit for $220 on ebay. You do need to haul your bike but I pulled two bikes with a U-haul trailer and the trailer rental was $80, picked up friday and dropped off monday morning (today). The sketchy-est (sketchiest?) thing about the weekend for me was hauling two bikes with a 1998 subaru wagon that has 255k miles on it. I installed the trailer hitch for $200 (previously I had a pickup or got a ride in my friends pickup). But I see people hauling single bikes on small trailers with Honda Accords, or whatever...
The barrier for entry isn't really that high. And all these places have free coaches available to either follow you or lead you around. Do it!