Back In The Saddle

Back in the Saddle

I have been an avid cycling enthusiast for most of my life.  Sometimes being more into one aspect of the two wheeled world than another.  For example, in the mid to late 80s I was extremely into mountain biking, worked in a shop and rode everywhere on my 1988 Fat Chance Kicker Comp.  My life revolved very much around my bike.  I was a bike mechanic and loved working and riding on bikes.  When front shocks came onto the scene, college graduation forcing me into the real job world and personal time taking a downswing due to getting into a “serious” relationship, I found myself turning to the road.  Mountain biking had become a chore to do.  Centennial woods in Burlington became off limits to riding with more and more people doing it.  I couldn’t just hop on my bike and ride.  You’d think that being in Vermont that there is ample riding everywhere.  But most of the decent mountain biking requires packing up and driving somewhere.  But with my road bike, I could go right out the front door and have the best riding around!  Great roads, not too much traffic, climbing, descending, scenery . . . it was all there!  I’ve spent the last 10 to 15 years enjoying the Vermont roads. 

I didn’t forget mountain biking.  I even bought a hard tail around 2003 in hopes of getting back into it.  Rode once or twice at Catamount but it just didn’t click.  I didn’t seem to be very good at it either.  Must be this new-fangled front shock that was messing me up.  Fast forward to 2011.  Two kids and a full time job in Winooski(my least favorite place in the state to ride) made commuting my best opportunity to get miles in, but due to life and schedules(wife works night shift and kids have to be here or there , etc. . .) this also became a sporadic endeavor.  I had heard from a friend that there were some trails “up behind Costco” that weren’t too bad.  For whatever reason, I brought in my mt bike and rode up there.  Sunny Hollow was a trail system maintained by a group called the Fellowship of the Wheel.  I signed up within a few days to their organization and though I haven’t met any of them, I know they are good people by the work they have done for the off road cycling community.  My thanks go out to them.  After the first time there, I was so excited that I had riding available within distance of my office.  It was a perfect combination of beginner and intermediate trails that really got me excited to be in the woods again.  Why had I ever left?  Though I had been a pretty decent mt biker back in the 80s, I really wasn’t any more.  What had happened to me?  I was tentative and had to unclip and even had to walk up steep areas(unthinkable)!  After the first few weeks, I started to get my skills back.  The philosophy that if you don’t use it you will lose it never hit home so much as it had for me in regards to the skills from mountain biking.  I’m still not on my top game and I still ride my road bike, but getting back into mountain biking has really brought me back to my cycling roots. 

I am challenged every time I ride.  There is a great deal of concentration that goes into mountain biking that isn’t as evident in road riding.  Don’t get me wrong, you need to keep aware and be focused on your surroundings on the roads but you can get into a zone and move into cruise control.  Mt biking isn’t quite like that.  You must be focused simultaneously on the obstacles in front of you and the path ahead.  This requires a lot of mental strength and discipline.  I use my i-phone with www.mapmyride.com to document where I’ve been and sometimes my heart rate.  On one particular descent, it rang and after another 20 yards or so, this small distraction caught up with me and my front wheel caught some soft stuff towards the side of the trail and my bike went one way and I went another.   My first endo in years!  I was fine and it was all good but the ringer now stays off. 

The challenges from mountain biking are a direct reflection of one’s life mentally, physically and spiritually.  Due to an injury from twisting my ankle on a rock as I tried to bail on a particularly rocky uphill berm, I am taking this opportunity to write some of my cycling thoughts out.  If I can’t be out on the trail or road physically, I can still embrace the activity that I love with my mind and spirit through communication.  See you on the trail when I’m back in the saddle!

I only ride Treks

I only ride Treks

I only ride Treks

My daughter just turned 6 and recently learned to ride her bike.  We live on a fairly quiet circle (though it is really a rectangle as she points out regularly) which is 5 laps to a mile.  Well, I haven’t actually measured
it but that is what the neighborhood kids told me.  They seem knowledgeable.  My daughter insists on riding a lot now.  Once she decided that she was going to ride,
she just got on and went (I’ll spare the extensive drama leading up to that point).  We go out and circle the block  and chat and socialize and ride and basically go round and round.  Life is good.   However, I can’t wait until she and I are confident  enough to get out on the roads and trails of Vermont.  We have some of the best riding around here about half the year.

Talulla is as quirky as her name.  Last night she announced to one of the neighborhood kids riding with us that: “My first bike was a Trek.  My gear bike is a Trek.  I only ride Treks.  Lance Armstrong rides a Trek.  That is what I ride.”  This was  completely out of the blue and I had  to laugh.  I’m not sure how or where she got any of that but we did watch the Tour De France last year and there was obviously some  chatter about the 7 time TdF champion.  But how she turned into a bike snob at 6, I’ll  never know.  For the record, I have been a cycling fanatic since about her age and have and still do own many bikes but never a Trek.  Nor do I have any particular  affinity for them.  Hopefully, when we get her next bike (presumably a Trek since that is all she rides), we can find one for $10 at a garage sale like we did with the one she rides now!

Sheath On A Bike

This is dedicated to all those who love bikes and enjoy cycling in everyday life.  Whether it be commuting, racing, touring, riding for fun, family activity, on road/off road, staying healthy, etc. . . you will hear my thoughts, ramblings and random opionions on it.

I have for many years enjoyed the experiences of others and want to exercise good give and take by sharing mine.  We each have our own tools that we work with every day.  Our mind and body and spirit.   What we put into these we get out.  If one spends great focus, skill, energy, time and commitment on creating something, the benefits will have unlimited potential.  Like a black smith who puts his blood and sweat into the labor at the forge.  What is created is a direct reflection of those actions.

To make this blog work, I’m starting my labor learning how to make this wordpress blog work.  Every cycling journey begins with the first pedal stroke.  So let the spinning begin!