I love wine. I mean, I like beer and scotch and can’t resist ordering a Vesper whenever I pretend to be a gentleman spy, but I love wine. As a semi-professional drinker, the biggest worry I have is that should my as-yet undiagnosed problem with alcohol become a diagnosed problem with alcohol, I’d have to stop drinking wine. A full bodied, well balanced red – not too fruit forward but with a good nose of earth and a long finish – will get my heart racing every time.
And speaking of a good nose of earth, I restrict that strictly to wine; last week’s face-plant while training for cyclocross was taking it a step too far. It’s amazing how a stick positioned in just the right spot at just the right angle can move a much larger object laterally with some ease. Like the Greeks using timber rollers to haul the Trojan Horse to the walls of the city, so my front wheel slid off with surprising speed, sending me to the ground stunned and with a hint of terra firma lingering in my sinuses.
The first thing we think of when we think of having good bike handling skills is someone like Robbie McEwen or Peter Sagan dodging about in the bunch, chasing the best wheels and avoiding crashes in technical finales. Or Sven Nijs avoiding barriers the way I avoid awkward conversations about things like “feelings”. But good bike handling skills are usually much less obvious than that – and much more elemental to having confidence on the bike.
Good bike handling skills are fundamentally about weight distribution and understanding how shifting your weight on the bike will affect the way it reacts to the road. The difficulty with this is that learning how your weight affects the bike involves trial and error, and in this case “trial and error” means “crashing loads”. And for anyone who has crashed a road bike, we all know this involves an empirical study about what happens when a soft surface abraids against a hard rough surface. And also the possibility of motor vehicles and other terribly unpleasant things interacting with said soft surface.
A study in extremes tends to be the most effective tool when examining how subtle weight changes might influence how the rider and machine move together as one. The basic problem with riding on the road is that the surface is so uniform that the opportunity for meaningful study are rare and come with high risks and unpleasant consequences. Which is why riding off road is the secret to becoming a good bike handler and ultimately a better Cyclist. First and foremost, the consequences of being at the bottom of the learning curve are much reduced; speeds are lower and the surfaces are (generally) softer. There are also fewer cars. But mostly, the surface is so erratic that you are constantly forced to experiment with how distributing your weight can influence the way the unit moves together.
Here are a few principles I’ve use when it comes to improving my bike handling:
After a short while, these things become second nature and you don’t even have think about them. The next time you hit the road, you’ll be amazed at comfortable and confident you feel on your machine. And feeling comfortable and confident is the first step towards being Casually Deliberate and Looking Pro.
VLVV.
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@Haldy
I like your suggestion better than Frank's since I can do the velodrome thing a lot more easily than the off-roading.
@Chris
That's what I learned riding rigid mountain bikes back in the day; there's a reason the Cobbled Kings ride a big gear; it helps you float over the saddle. But that's just the back wheel - you have to learn how to unload the front wheel and not lean on the bars like a sack o' potatoes.
@sthilzy
@marko and @keeperjim both taught me those in different points of my life, both while skiing trees. If you are watching the trees, then you'll hit the trees. Watch the path of nice white powder between them.
This is true everywhere but in Whistler where you also want to watch the trees - or rather watch for the tiny orange tags that say "cliff".
@Nate
I have used this technique for 30 years - it was even more effective when nordic skiing where you have your arms and legs both swinging long objects about and economy of movement is crazy important and very hard to learn because it feels very effective to be swinging all that kit about like crazy. But 6 hours into a 8 or 10 hour ski, you go dead and your body just figures out how to expend the least amount of energy possible and still get you where you're going.
Same works for Cycling. Also, you can try a Softride beam; that will give you intimate exposure into who inefficient your pedal stroke is and how shifting your balance can fuck you up.
@il muro di manayunk
Amazing how that invincibility is gone, huh? I would simply never do that now.
@antihero
Favorite wine, that's all. And if you've ever been there and seen the state of the ground, you don't want to encounter it at speed. Think Ventoux but slightly smaller rocks. You can see them in the background of the lead photo, which I took in '06.
@Haldy
Yeah...there we are again with the high consequence crashing bit...
@Haldy
Stoked. Testing some wheels with 28's on 'em - amazed, actually, that the Veloforma takes a tire that big.
Who's in? Looks like it might be rainy...YES!
@ChrissyOne
I spent the V-V Cogal descending behind a guy who rode motorcycles and a guy who spent time riding a car fast on a track (@Jamie). Both were much much much much better at cornering than I am...got a brain dump from both and spent a year working on it and I'm much better but fuck me if I wouldn't love to spend time riding a motorcycle on a track!
@markb
...or don't disgrace yourself riding a circus trick and do as I suggested and preserve your dignity?
@RobSandy
I am not an elegant creature when I leave the ground. At that, I'm not an elegant creature on the ground, granted, but even much less so off it...
@Ron
This is the best typo in the history of the internet.
@Teocalli
I think the same thing about skiers.
I used to consider a "good" mountain bike ride as one in which I didn't crash. Maybe I need to rethink that.
@ron what is a MUP?