I don't do the former, but I always do the latter. It used to irritate the hell out of my wife when we were at some stately home garden (gardening is her passion) and I'd be spotting where it would be great to ride (and not listening to her).a better explanation of where I'm coming from might be if I asked you how often do you just get on your bike in normal clothes and ride it with the dropper post fully dropped going nowhere in particular?
also, if you walk to the shop for a paper do you spot every single kerb drop, wall hop, transition to pop off, smooth area to manual/wheelie and wish you had grabbed the bike instead of walked.
tooling about works tho
I still do tool about on mine all the time but Ebikes are shit compared to normal bikes in that respect
And after this many years, you'd be shocked how many solutions he's come up with to that dilemma ..I'd genuinely rather grab absolutely any bike than ever walk even just ten feet.
And after this many years, you'd be shocked how many solutions he's come up with to that dilemma ..
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I'm pretty sure most of us would find it a sh1t ride.That is the sort of bike those French people in the video needed to ride home on.
P.S. Is that what Gary refers to as a 'bog standard bike'?
I'm pretty sure most of us would find it a sh1t ride.
It is also why they never put their left hand on the table when eating.Hmm. That’s pretty cool. I’d say I’d like a bar with it. Might as well have a drink while you’re there.
Also, unfortunately in Afghanistan and other countries like it they only have toilet paper in the more wealthy homes. Yes seriously. That’s why you never touch someone with your left hand there......
It will get better in time, keep up with the physio exercises.About 3 months ago I asked in one of these forums, what other mtn cyclists were wearing for hand protection. I asked because I had just broken a knuckle in my right (dominant) hand doing some work around the home (nothing at all related to cycling - I was doing something with an electric drill...) and the hospital workers had put my hand, fingers and arm in a cast. That stayed on for about 4 weeks, and when it came off I was immediately aware that things would not be normal right then and there - I couldn't bend my fingers, for example make a fist, nor even straighten them out. The emergency room doctor had told me that I would have a cast on for 4 to 6 weeks; upon removal of it, I would need a few months of rehab/physiotherapy to regain normal use of my fingers/hand - I had put that statement out of my memory at the time, because I knew I was different and would heal much faster than others before me (haven't we all had thoughts like that at one time or another...?).
In any case, while I had my cast on, I had asked that question about hand protection, thinking that the accident I had that had broken my knuckle was a wake-up call for me (I'm 64 yrs old) that I will have to be more careful when I start taking my Levo out onto the trails again. And I am even more clear in my thinking now that I will definitely avoid those bike routes which caused me to hesitate before, even though I'll be wearing MX gloves (the ones with hard knuckle protection on the outside of the glove), knee pads and elbow pads. I won't be getting a full-face helmet as I know I'll never be doing jumps, I'll be avoiding rock gardens (the really challenging ones in any case), and reducing my speed (or walking down when I'm fearful of maintaining adequate rolling speeds).
Thanks for bringing up this topic, it's something that has struck a nerve I suppose, in those of us who were fearless in our youth, and are not that youthful anymore (and possilby more fearful of consequences - haha).
By the way, my cast came off November 12, 2020, and I can now finally make a fist (almost) and lay my hand flat, on a flat surface (almost). Grip strength is about 50% in my right, compared to my left (non-dominant) hand. That's with rehab exercises each and every day. I can grip the handlebar, but not tightly with my right hand. I am still very satisfied with my progress, mostly due to the fact I can head out on my Levo again (when the weather allows it - it is winter after all, here in western Canada), although I restrict myself to public roads and such for now. Discretion is the better part of valor.
I disagree with this statement.Sorry, I don’t get the whole armour up for safety and feel braver approach.....
You won’t suddenly get better at riding a bike with more protection on. It could be a hindrance.
I’ll only ever ride with a helmet. And knee pads. As anything else won’t really stop serious injury imo. (Apart from a back protector) for 90% of the riding 99% of us on here do....
Level up skills and practice. That will increase confidence. And reduce nerves.
Tuition or riding with better riders will always help.
I’m no expert on a mtb. In fact I’m probably just a game newbie. But have ridden race bikes (engine kind) to a decent level, and yes it’s great to feel protected in any dangerous sport, but don’t take it as a false sense of security. Cos it’ll bite eventually when you run out of talent
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