The Rules – They were never expected to become this well known. Nor was the list ever going to get this long or be taken this seriously. The Rules were first suggested as a few basic guidelines just to keep some basic civility and decorum on the road. But we took it too far (as we do everything) and now The Rules somehow define the Velominati, the inverse of intention. I use the communal ‘we’ as all Velominati share some responsibility in this.
In the spirit of a new year and spring cleaning, we have ourselves a Rules overhaul, with some New Rules to get excited about. Rule #38, #47, #79 and #81, we forget what those were, but we are moving on. For the official stone tablet version, refer to The Rules page.
- Rule #38 – Don’t leapfrog. Don’t ride back into a group that just passed you and ruin their pace, the pace that you couldn’t keep or you wouldn’t have been passed in the first place, and especially if you’ve been passed by women. Deal with it. You’ve been chicked, get used to it. There are a lot of badass women cyclists and they are going to pass your ass. @Jen gave us this Rule, suggested from personal experience and “getting chicked” is in the lexicon.
- Rule #47 – Drink Tripels, don’t ride triples. Brett was rightly offended by someone on our facebook page suggesting “kicking back with a Corona”. Everyone should be offended by this, even people who come from the land of that other great amber embarrassment, Fosters. I’m told they export it only, there should be a Rule about that. Thirty years ago we were all excited in the USA about the massive oil cans of this exotic Fosters, except you couldn’t chill it cold enough to not taste it and there was even more of it to be gagged down. Enough! Quality beer is a recovery drink. It makes you a better cyclist. OK, that’s a stretch, a happier cyclist then.
- Rule #79 – Fight for your town lines. From our good mate @Rob; “I was out yesterday to start the serious training for the 200 on 100. Met up with a group that were strong but have no race experience. We passed through at least five town lines and one double-point town/county line (nearby is my all time favorite triple – state/county/town). There should be a Rule that says something like “Town lines must be contested or at least faked if you’re not into it”. Every time we went through without sprinting, it was like, what a waste – this is boring! And I’m not even saying I would have won any.” When @Rob speaks, I listen, especially when sprinting is the subject. And yes, he would have won most of those sprints. I miss those rides: mindlessly rolling along when from behind, someone opens up a huge handlebar throwing sprint for a town line that everyone else is too dumb to realize is right up the road. Trash talking ensues, it’s all a way to pass the k’s, amuse each other and hone your sprint. Or nervously clicking ergo shifters so people close by hear and think you are preparing for the big shift and sprint as the town line approaches, forcing someone to do something as the ergo-clicker does nothing but rides along with a dumb grin on his face.
- Rule #81 – Don’t talk it up. Cruel but fair, tempting as it is to talk about one’s most recent road rash to one’s cycling buddies but really, if you are still riding, how bad could it have been? And it was probably your own fault so better to keep quiet. @MarkyMark gave us this gem then he disappeared. MarkyMark come back, you’re famous now.
- Rule #88 – Don’t surge. A rule concerning the mechanics of group riding: when in a paceline, ride the tempo, before you tire, pull off, slow enough to drift to the back as the line ride through. It’s not rocket science, impress people by keeping the pace, not upping the speed when you get to the front. Thanks to John Perry, Sydney Cycling Club for Rule #88.
So there you have it, a slew of new Rules for you to meditate on, discuss amongst yourselves, and of course, Obey.
View Comments
@Dan_R
Some of us in the PNW still think Kurt Cobain is alive and well..........
@Chris
I can see the first thing on my Tasks List for Belgium is to be in charge of getting a taxi at the end of the evening
All these pictures of cold beer, no matter how cyclitically incorrect some of them may be, are making me thoroughly thirsty, which is not helping me get through to 8pm at work today..... a bit of sensitivity please, for those of us pretending to be earning an honest crust
That said, I have this little puppy waiting in the ferridge for me when I dismount from the ride home afterwards
fricking georgeous
@Marko
You misunderstand me, I was suggesting that I couldn't win because there was nothing to argue with. It's a pointless argument without beer, anyway, so let's continue it on the Keeper's Tour.
Dutch courage, possibly, but we'd still have been out there trying to ride in the snow, we just wouldn't have been giggling like kids.
@scaler911
Arg. For some reason all I'm seeing is a little red X.
@The Oracle
Never mind. Cured by F5.
@scaler911
I was going to pass a facetious comment about the shirt too, so thanks for getting in there first Scaler!
@scaler911
That, or the flannel is being worn ironically (just as the PBR is being drunk ironically), and is covering up full-colored tattoos of dragons and skulls and stuff.
@Dr C
Great, we have a volunteer for the position of Designated Responsible Adult! Will you also act in the capacity of Kebab Prevention Officer?
@Chris
be careful with snow and drink, I once tried to swim across a swimming pool full of snow in Canada many moons ago, in my boxers (actually there were several of us in serious competition, as always) - all good fun until we couldn't get out and nearly died of group hypothermia
@Dr C
That's just pathetic Doc, keep these stories to yerself in future
@Chris
Second on my list is finding a decent kebab shop late of an evening