Categories: Look ProTechnique

Look Pro: Get Your Gear Off

Eddy gets his gear off.

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.

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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).

  • Make sure you can actually ride no hands. Seems obvious, but you need to practice away from the dangers of cars, pedestrians and other riders to hone your no-handed balance first, before moving on to clothing removal/addition.
  • Preparation, anticipation. Pick the time and place where you will perform the procedure. Descents aren’t good. Ditto in the middle of the bunch, when a paceline is forming, or when doing a turn on the front at 45kmh. On a wide, flat piece of road, with the speed comfortable and good forward vision, drift to the back of the group and leave a safe gap of a bike length or two. Stay away from the gutter and traffic, watching for road obstacles or debris.
  • Get the job done in a flash. Now you’re sure everything’s clear, whip those arm warmers off quickly; grab the top of the right (or left if you prefer) warmer and roll it down the arm and over your hand. Keep hold of it and grab the top of the other warmer and repeat. This should result in one warmer perfectly inside the other; now fold them twice, flat, and stuff in a jersey pocket (which you would have made clear to accommodate them).
  • Don’t attempt too many items at once. Unless you’re totally badass and skilled, of course. Removing a cap from under the helmet can be a more difficult, and dangerous task. You want to get this one done real quick, but stuff it up and you may leave yourself without the most important piece of protection for the resulting crash; your helmet. First, unclip the buckle and remove your eyewear, with one hand still on the bars. Place eywear either in your helmet vents (Pro) or in your mouth (not so much, but easier). Now take the other hand off the bars, sit upright, lift the helmet off your head with one hand while whipping the cap off with the other. Replace the helmet immediately and stuff the cap in jersey pocket. Buckle helmet chin strap and replace eyewear in accordance with Rule #37.
  • Vested interests. Like Johnno and his flanno, this can be a triumph or total disaster. You need to be aware of the vest or jacket at all times throughout the procedure. Again, sit upright, hold the bottom of the zipper with one hand and quickly unzip with the other. Now use both hands to peel the vest apart and around to the back of your hips. Gather both pieces into one hand, bring to the front of the body and fold three or four times until you have a fairly neat square to stuff into the jersey pocket. Count your teeth. All there? Still riding? You got it.

 

Brett

Don't blame me

View Comments

  • Here's one for the group. Your thoughts about rollers? I've heard much said positive and negative re the benefits of training on these. I've never tried em...and a little reluctant to spend $$ on something I may not like. [This would make the VMH cranky, which could result in no sex during base building] All recommendations are welcomed.

    My question was absolutely NOT influenced by any videos of attractive blonde cyclists riding on rollers while cooking an omelet. Any implied motive is purely coincidental...

  • @gregorio

    Here's one for the group. Your thoughts about rollers? I've heard much said positive and negative re the benefits of training on these. I've never tried em...and a little reluctant to spend $$ on something I may not like. [This would make the VMH cranky, which could result in no sex during base building] All recommendations are welcomed.

    My question was absolutely NOT influenced by any videos of attractive blonde cyclists riding on rollers while cooking an omelet. Any implied motive is purely coincidental...

    I regularly train on rollers.  Nothing like it for helping your pedal stroke due to the need to keep each leg turning as evenly as possible. Because you're not attached to the device, as you would be on a turbo, you will quickly feel that you're getting a core workout as you need to concentrate on balance also. Combined, I think those two factors help me maintain a better position on the bike when I'm on the road...relaxed, stable top half, more even pedal stroke down below.

    Some come with resistance settings these days, but as you're actually riding your bike on them and are likely have anything up to 22 gears, unless you're on a single speed, I don't see the point in spending additional money on those models.

    For more intense interval sessions I'll be on the turbo.

    One tip if you do get some...try to be as relaxed as possible when you're training.  Just like a relaxed descender is a happy descender, the same applies to rollers as your tension gets transmitted straight through the frame and you'll feel more "jittery" the tenser you are.

    They take time to get used to, but not long at all; about half a dozen uses and you'll be happy. Others will have their own opinions, but for me they are part of my training regime I wouldn't want to do without.

  • @gregorio

    I'll echo Mike_P.  I just got a trainer after a couple of years on the rollers (KurtKinetic road fluid and Kreitler 2.25, respectively). While the two are similar, the rollers add a dimension that I wouldn't want to lose.  Pedal stroke, fine balance, feedback, focus. On the trainer, I imagine that bad habits can get ingrained unless one is careful.  Initial learning curve for the rollers is fairly short.  Out of the saddle, no hands, making a fried egg, a bit longer (can't do no hands myself, but I'm a bit of a palooka).  Like Mike, big bike-slinging hypoxic efforts are probably best on the trainer.  a fluid trainer and rollers are similarly relatively quiet.

    if I could only have one, it would be the rollers.

  • Rollers have been good for my base so far.  I spent the $$ on that over full-blown winter kit, and it is easier to just slog away without worrying about anything on those things.  I usually queue up some Netflix as well.

  • I'll be moving to Wisconsin in a few weeks. Coming from Arizona its gonna be a real shock to the system. In my effort to purge and take what I can fit in my truck I donated my trainer to a local highschool cycling team that runs on donations. They were stoked to get it.

  • Essential to be able to ride no hands. Open a troublesome food packet, remove your jacket when the temperature rises, stretch your back, get your hands out of the wind for a while when it turns out to be colder than you reckoned, get that wasp out of your helmet vent...

    I like to ride up hills no hands, forces a super smooth magnificent stroke. This is reasonably doable to about 7 or 8%, steeper than that you'd best be mighty strong or riding in no car land.

  • It does look mighty Pro when you get it right; arm warmers are easy, the gilet slightly less so but I haven't yet tried removing leg warmers on the move. I've tried it on the turbo (no rollers yet, but I really need to get some) and it's not easy. Not sure I'm willing to risk it on the road yet.

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Brett

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