A lot of things taken for granted in Cycling go swiftly out the window when cobblestones are introduced to bicycle and rider. The notion that your wheels should both be pointed in the same direction at any given moment, for instance, or that that they should in some way be in alignment with the direction of travel of the rider/bicycle unit, such as it is. Not true, in fact. As it turns out, wheels can move wildly in any maner of directions and not greatly impact forward motion. Another misconception is this notion that one needs to have their handlebars reliably in hand while whisking through a corner or that the direction the handlebars are pointing should be in the direction of travel. Also untrue.
Riding cobbles is a matter of going full gas over the secteurs, no holds barred. The faster you go, the more your bike cascades over the tops of the stones; as the bike flails along, the rider links together recovery after recovery to stave off the imminent crash caused by any of the above conditions going catawampus. Riding the pavé is basically like a toddler learning to walk: always one step away from a face-plant.
For me, though, the biggest challenge is recuperation during those intense efforts. Over the years, I have gotten good at faking it and stealing a few deep breaths during short windows of opportunity, like when the pressure comes off the pedals briefly when cornering. On the cobbles, however, this matter is complicated somewhat by the bouncing wheels, jackhammering of the bars and saddle, and the certainty of an imminent crash.
Which leads me to conclude that while endurance, strength, and interval training will all form critical elements of my training for Keepers Tour 2013, I’m going to also make a point of learning how to take recovery breaths with a tightly clenched bunghole as I try to keep from shitting myself. That’s going to be a differentiator for sure.
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Here's my favourite cobbles video, you can see the tires skating across the tops of the cobbles, dancing around with no real control. The muscles are flopping about in a manner that looks like old people having sex. It's quite glorious.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3QSpuhIQg1A
In Vancouver we have different type of cobbles, just east of Crackton (the DTES) you can find patches where the blacktop has worn away to reveal how we used to build our roads - with wood. I should get a shot of it, there's not much of it left around any more as we erect condos as fast as we can.
@itburns
Chapeau! Excellent retrieval of old thread post! Made me laugh this morning.
@Dan_R
That's the thing: I never rode a single cobble until the day of the cyclosportif and I wonder if I had tried to maintain a little more speed in the corners if it would of helped? Probably not. Most likely just would have crashed really hard!
@TBONE
My God. Can we just stop the thread here. That video is everything.
@TBONE
Great vid! Although I would put it to some harder music, though.
But that is what actually hurt the worst for me near the end of the ride, my bouncing and tearing (albeit very small) biceps. Man, they hurt, like everything else, like hell for weeks.
@frank
What beautiful evidence! Thanx The Potato Man!
@itburns
Does this even make sense?
@TBONE
Wow. That's all I have to say. Just wow! I'm not sure my skinny, stick arms are up to the challenge (got %50 off my bicep tattoo cause they didn't have to use as much ink).
This article is an anomaly
It is impossible to corner on cobbles
Unless you invoke the help of pixies
@mxlmax
Trouble is, that's a dumb way to corner, especially if there are tyre grip issues. Paul Smart invented the knee out/body off the bike cornering style on a motor-bike to keep the bike more upright, helping with ground clearance and tyre grip, notably on a dog of a Triumph. Good reasons. Weirdly, cos it works, it caught on. Sure, bicycles have nowhere near the corner speeds but they don't have anywhere near the grip either, not to mention the conspicuous absence of a suspension.