When you’re a kid, riding with your hands off the bars is something done for thrills, for style, and to impress chicks. As an older, wiser Velominatus, it can be a handy maneuvre to aid removing or donning extra clothing, taking a feed from your pockets, and to impress women (because that’s how adults refer to chicks). Get it right and it’s the most Pro of moves; get it wrong, and there’s little chance the nurse picking the gravel from your face will be impressed.
Surprisingly, many Cyclists are inadequately equipped in this fine, yet fairly basic and useful art. If memory serves correctly, it was one of the first things I learned to do on a bike, right after balancing and pedalling, and just before wobbling and face-planting. Anyone could ride along with one hand on the bars, waving at the girls or flipping the bird at the guys, but if you could sit bolt upright and give the ‘up yours’ sign then you were a true badass. Making sure you could haul your bad ass out of there before being dragged off the bike and beaten to a pulp helped develop sprinting skills which would come in handy later in your cycling odyssey.
Another, more practical use of riding no hands was to remove the long sleeved flannelette shirt (aka the ‘flanno‘) so fashionable in the day and deftly tie it around one’s waist, hopefully without getting it caught in the rear wheel and necessitating another trip to the casualty ward to be embarrassed in front of that same nurse yet again. Getting the six buttons undone and the sleeves tied together in a double knot in under ten seconds was the stuff of legend, and only Mick Johnson could do it that quickly, surprisingly so as his IQ was roughly the same number as the time it took him to complete the task (or write his name). How he never went on to bag a Pro contract still baffles me.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/brettok@velominati.com/signage/”/]
While we can see clearly from the photos that the modern Pro is just that, professional, and would never use their arms or hands for anything but the cultivation of a clean image for the sport, riding no hands can still be a useful skill for the rest of us. Having to stop the whole bunch so you can peel off your arm warmers, hat or vest is not only inconvenient, it’s asking for a mini-pump beating. To avoid such ignominy, here are a few basic tips to help with getting your gear off (or on).
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
@Harmimator
Its "Shane" , but whos counting ?
@brett
Heheh - I wish. Not really, though: I was way too much of a long-haired hippie at the time, I'm afraid
@RedRanger
Ah yes - Samson! Very nice taste...
A lot of people rolled their own in those days - and it was funny how they would usually be either a 'Samson'- or a 'Drum'-person - you would hardly ever see anyone cross over (I would on occasion cadge a smoke off a Samson-rolling friend, but it would always taste ever so slightly different... Good, but unfamiliar)
For the record: I've been a very happy non-smoker for almost ten years now - never going back, I hope
@The Pressure
Mea Culpa - and my apologies, sir, for having conjured up that appalling image. But yes, in those days I really thought that smoking - whenever and wherever - granted me a certain street-cred, I suppose. Pathetic... Still, there's something wickedly cool about those photo's of TdF racers lighting up 'en route', I think? Merckx have mercy on my soul.
@all
A tad off topic, perhaps - but in case any of you out there are having trouble kicking the smoking habit, and are at present mucking about with nicotine plasters, plastic inhalers, nasal sprays and all kinds of other expensive substitute crap, two words: Allen Carr. Seriously. (And no, I have no vested interest and am not in any way associated with any institution(s) built on the legacy of the late, great AC)
I must confess I am not sure I am yet in the "change kit whilst riding" category, but I live in hope....one day!
In my youth, my fully rigid Raleigh Strata Mtb was so easy to ride no-hands: it was long and had raked forks. My Ragley Blue Pig with Revalations is impossible to ride no-hands for more than a few pedal strokes. My commuter frankenbike is OK and my #1 is a touch wobbly unless contstantly peddaling-it's a cyclocross bike with discs and road tyres.
Best bike for no-hands: a 'dutch bike' I had when I lived in Germany- I could ride several kms into town, freewheeling, pedalling, whatever. Just so easy. I swapped it for an old BMX though which I painted silver.
Good God it's quiet here today. Clearly all of the US is either hungover, shopping, shooting stuff in the woods or hopefully on a bike ride.
@Mike_P
Yes, but everyone knows that you produce more V when riding off a hangover.
@DexterSellers
I now have another reason to look forward to my rebuild coming back from the respray to test out this theory on the actual bike I had back then as I was considerably more skilled at hands off back then so will be able find out if it's me or the bike..............