Categories: The Rules

New Rules

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.

Gianni

Gianni has left the building.

View Comments

  • I was chicked repeatedly by the VMH yesterday, which wasn't very fair, since I was pulling about 45 kg worth of ancient trailer and my two daughters on the ride.

    (Although it was fun having the girls chanting "Go Dad Go!" on every climb).

  • Currently finding this Yorkshire Square Ale rather irresistable (no match for Grimbergen Dubbel, but it's frustratingly unobtainable) - I particularly enjoy talking to the Square Black Sheep on the bottle of the fourth one of the evening (I don't believe the 5% figure, it's quite potent after 90Ks)

  • @frank

    The Rule numbers have not changed, mobile site or otherwise. The fact is, we take considerable pains to ensure they don't.
    Rules may be added, removed (that's why there are gaps), or combined but they never change their numbers.
    Let it go.

    Will do.

  • love Rule 88, just had a work friend buy himself a bike, beginning to teach him the craft, (has involved him crashing into the back of me) but it's the surging that gets me the most, i need to get him in a big group so that it makes sense.

    @Dr C The Black Sheep Brewery is 30 miles away from me and man i love that stuff, my favorite is the Riggwelter, Black Soup of an Ale. Packs a huge punch on the flavour and after a chaingang

  • @scaler911

    I lost some respect for Guinness after seeing it being sold as part of an "Irish Beer Variety Pack" at Costco yesterday.

  • @Dr C

    What is the accepted technique for avoiding riding into town alone, subsequent upon being brought to the front with 2km to go before the high rolling hills section of the ride, and subsequent despatchment via the tradesman's entrance? - seems to happen to me all the time - I think they might hate me

    a healthy application of Rule #5 has helped me in the past

    of course, you can always Jens it, and simply pull off the front and ride into down 'lone-wolf' then give fair warning to the townspeople of the crazy bike riders who are chasing you

  • Re: Rule 79; On the Cogal Saturday, the group kept sprinting for the lines; we had them all, city and county, plus the one from Vancouver/Portland which was a City/County/State. And I didn't know where any of them were.

    On the way out, it was a nearly suicidal endeavor, sprinting off into the 55kmph headwind. On the way back, though, we had it at our backs and we felt like proper Pros, spinning out our top gear rolling along the river and and BANG! There they'd go. FUCK! Then I'd wind up after them, not having any clue where the line was. Absolutely fantastic fun.

    Rule 88 was hard to do on the way out, in that headwind, because all you could do was ride full gas and hope it was close to the same pace.

  • Ok, here is a question I have been pondering for years, and soul searching. Is there a Rule for bike colors? Absolutes to avoid or is anything game?

  • @The Oracle

    @scaler911
    I lost some respect for Guinness after seeing it being sold as part of an "Irish Beer Variety Pack" at Costco yesterday.

    True that. But the only Guinness I'll drink is the stuff in Ireland. It's not pasteurized, hasn't been bounced around in a ship, heated and cooled a bunch of times. Since I traveled there, I haven't had one stateside.

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