PDA

View Full Version : Men, aren't they funny...



papaver
04-11-2009, 12:33 PM
This afternoon I went for a 50 km ride. Because it had been raining all day and the roads were muddy I decided to take my hybrid bike. After 10 kms or so I saw a cyclist on his racing bike riding in front of me. It didn't take me long before I cought up with him. And boy wasn't he amused. :D

He started to increase his speed, and every time he looked behind him he saw me smiling at him. :D Twenty minutes later his head looked like a purple bowlingbal. I decided to make a left turn, because I didn't wanted him to get a heart attach... Tsssssss...

I've noticed before that especially men in their fifties don't take it too well when women can easily follow their pace. And oh horror especially when she rides a plain hybrid... :D

BleeckerSt_Girl
04-11-2009, 12:46 PM
Maybe he thought you were stalking him!

tribogota
04-11-2009, 02:51 PM
and where I ride, if they pass on the hill, they say "hey baby good going"
"hey doll, you go", and any other series of expressions that show that THEY think they are admiring, but what they really think is that "women can't do this" that's why we need extra encouragement "go cutie" arrrg, it drives me up the wall, they don't say it to any men as they pass them...not even the one's who are struggling.

kermit
04-11-2009, 02:58 PM
and where I ride, if they pass on the hill, they say "hey baby good going"
"hey doll, you go", and any other series of expressions that show that THEY think they are admiring, but what they really think is that "women can't do this" that's why we need extra encouragement "go cutie" arrrg, it drives me up the wall, they don't say it to any men as they pass them...not even the one's who are struggling.
I don't get any of that, usually invited to jump in with the group. What is funny is next time you see that guy, he will be on a more expensive bike!

Mr. Bloom
04-11-2009, 03:06 PM
I've noticed before that especially men in their fifties don't take it too well when women can easily follow their pace. And oh horror especially when she rides a plain hybrid... :D

...and then there are those who ride with Silver...they got over it a long time ago!:rolleyes:

papaver
04-12-2009, 12:15 AM
I don't get any of that, usually invited to jump in with the group. What is funny is next time you see that guy, he will be on a more expensive bike!

The younger guys always ask me to join them. That's how I met pro rider Gert Steegmans. :)

Miranda
04-12-2009, 03:07 AM
If you passed him, you could have asked if he would like you to pull him a while? But, somehow I don't think that would go over too well:rolleyes::p...

I think if the guy (or woman for that matter) has some sorta complex, then the whole getting passed thing hurts their ego. I think that's one of the greatest things about being forty is that I don't care. If you can out ride me, out 'whatever' me, then--good for you! I mean that sincerely. Not sarcastically. Everyone has different levels and goals. If it's workin for ya, that's all that matters at the end of the day, or ride. Anyone who would disrespect or judge me otherwise for that is not someone's opinion that's of real value to me anyway. So, still not a big deal.

Glad you rode the hybrid and found a way to get out. My broken bone is still healing in my foot and I'm going looney:(.

jodz1984
04-12-2009, 03:43 AM
i had a guy (left town a few days ago) that was funny about a women being better than him, he told me outright on my 2nd or 3rd ride that he doesn't like females beating him. then a few more rides later the bike shop owner started incouraging me to do some yellow sign sprints, anyway i started beating this guy, apparently the look of his face the first time i passed him and beat him was priceless. Anyway a few weeks later someone hands me a flyer about a grand final sprint between us before he leaves town. unfortuniatly it kept raining, but he however did go one time that i didn't and said that at the sign he was a certain speed, so next time i am at that area i will make sure i'll go faster than he did. I have also beat the bike shop owner in sprints as well, but he thought that was great and now is suggesting that i get into track cycling. :eek:

Mr. Bloom
04-12-2009, 05:16 AM
...he told me outright on my 2nd or 3rd ride that he doesn't like females beating him.

Men don't like ANYONE beating them...:rolleyes:it makes them face their mortality:rolleyes:

Sprint/Interval training is truly awesome.

redrhodie
04-12-2009, 05:44 AM
The younger guys always ask me to join them. That's how I met pro rider Gert Steegmans. :)

Did you do it?! Didn't he win a stage in the tdf?

I passed a guy on a mtb recently, and it totally irked him, so much so that he passed me while I was stopped at a red light (he went right into oncoming traffic, nearly getting hit). Of course I caught up to him after I got the green light. He kept looking back as I crept closer, but I stayed just behind him until he turned left. I once had a guy say something vulgar when I passed him. That's not common here, but it does happen.

Trek420
04-12-2009, 07:22 AM
What is funny is next time you see that guy, he will be on a more expensive bike!

That's it! Keep riding, keep passing guys. It's good for you, good for the enviornment and it's good for the economy. :p :)

'cause dude, if you've been "girl'd" it's got to be your bike.

OakLeaf
04-12-2009, 09:08 AM
When I did that to a roadie while riding my hybrid, I don't think it was my fat tires, saddlebags, backpack, or Pilates mat that really got to him. I think it was my bunny-shaped squeeze horn. :D

papaver
04-12-2009, 09:26 AM
Did you do it?! Didn't he win a stage in the tdf?

I passed a guy on a mtb recently, and it totally irked him, so much so that he passed me while I was stopped at a red light (he went right into oncoming traffic, nearly getting hit). Of course I caught up to him after I got the green light. He kept looking back as I crept closer, but I stayed just behind him until he turned left. I once had a guy say something vulgar when I passed him. That's not common here, but it does happen.

Yes, he won the last race of the tour de france last year. :)

tandemrider48
04-12-2009, 11:22 AM
My husband and I ride a tandem. If you think you heard it all, try being the stoker...........and a woman...

Just last week, as we passed a "Lance wannabe" the guy on the bike would have told my husband "you have a good woman there".....

Juiceflight
04-13-2009, 09:40 PM
One of my male riding buds refers to it as "getting chicked" :D

Flybye
04-14-2009, 06:11 AM
As a female, I can honestly say that I don't like to get passed either - by a man or another woman. :D Luckily, I've never been passed by a child!

7rider
04-14-2009, 07:13 AM
As a female, I can honestly say that I don't like to get passed either - by a man or another woman. :D Luckily, I've never been passed by a child!

+1.
However....I've learned to accept it, as it happens so often! :rolleyes: (well...except the kid part)

smilingcat
04-14-2009, 07:19 AM
my ultimate dream!! :D:D:D

ride a beach cruiser with a fat tire and pass a "train" (group of men doing the rotation).

My favorite past time used to be playing cat and mouse. Men just have to pass but don't have enough to keep on going so I have to pass. So I used to speed up as the guy would pass. He would look back and see that I'm not too far behind. No drafting. just far enough back. He then would have to speed up. I speed up to match his speed. We continue to do this until one of us blows up. :D :D I've had it back fire on me a few times. :p I'm just a meany at times.

One memorable experience was a climbing up Jamboree from Santiago Canyon side in Orange County. I just blew by the boys in my big gear 52x13, I think it was, and they were struggling in the lower gears. I did it just right so just as I crested, I ran out of gas but the faces on the guys were just so worth it. too precious. :D:D

Another memorable ride was climbing up El Toro from Irvine Blvd?? in Orange county. Some bozo guy said "This is where we separate the men from the boys" FINE YOU *&^* I'm a girl and I'm gonna kick your A##@. I waited for them at the top of the hill pretending to enjoy the view. Guys were arguing :D :D something to the effect of you made us look really stupid!! yeah you were...

ahh the glory days the good ol days. I can still gloat after 20 years. :D

ASammy1
04-14-2009, 07:40 AM
I'm a total hill slug and very jealous of all your stories! One day... One day...

channlluv
04-14-2009, 09:10 AM
Oh, Andrea, I was just thinking the very same thing! Ha!

I've been passed by a white-haired man on a flat stretch...oof. He was on a road bike, though, and I was on my mtb. And finishing my last lap. He was probably really fresh. Yeah, that's it.

:P

Oh, to be a hill climber like you ladies. Powerful. Woohoo!

Roxy

katluvr
04-14-2009, 09:16 AM
+1.
However....I've learned to accept it, as it happens so often! :rolleyes: (well...except the kid part)

I get VERY excited when I pass ANYONE...as I am usually passed--And sometimes by hybrids or moutain bikes, older "folks", you name it!

I always hate when climbing a hill and I get passed and they say "looking good" , "good job". The may be words of encouragement...but I just feel that they are patronizing. When I pass people struggling on a hill...I often apologize. Not sure why!

Righteousbabe
04-14-2009, 10:37 AM
Papaver...thanks for bringing a smile to my face with your story! I always laugh about this same thing with my fiance ...and he even gets a kick out of watching it happen. I will be riding in front of him, and pass a male rider, and then he watches that rider struggle to pass me. And sometimes when I am having a really bad day...I will let them get ahead and then pass them like they are sitting still. I know that sounds childish, but I can't understand why, if a woman is riding her pace and she passes a man, that he has to pass her back. I get passed all the time...but I don't rush to pass that person back just to prove myself.

Last year I had a man even admit to me what he was doing. I was riding around White Rock Lake here in Dallas on my heavy steel touring bike...panniers and all. I passed an older guy, and he raced up along side of me and said "I cannot let a girl on a decked out touring bike pass me." I chuckled, and said "at least you admit what you are doing...most other guys do not." And then I left him.

This year I am turning it up a notch. I have a sweet Specialized S Works Roubaix...all black. I am adding a fuzzy pink saddle bag and a Hello Kitty bike bell. That way when I pass them, they can think "I cannot let a girl with a fuzzy pink saddle bag and a Hello Kitty bike bell pass me." It may just sting a little more :D

grey
04-14-2009, 04:00 PM
When I did that to a roadie while riding my hybrid, I don't think it was my fat tires, saddlebags, backpack, or Pilates mat that really got to him. I think it was my bunny-shaped squeeze horn. :D

Too funny! :p

There is always someone who gets grumpy when passed.

Grog
04-14-2009, 04:11 PM
I don't understand the whole passing frenzy. Sometimes I pass people. Sometimes I get passed. Most of the time I try to say hello, whether passed or passing, unless I'm out of breath. :)

My dear partner and his father are both amazing cyclists. My dear partner, age 33, is particularly fit and a very, very strong cyclist; his father, pushing 65, still kicks my @$$ any day and is in great shape. They both have this issue about passing. They also get upset if they are in a conversational ride (together) and someone passes them without saying hello. But the worst is about passing.

When I ride with my husband, it almost becomes a problem: we are closing in on someone ahead of us who is obviously slower, but my husband slows down (causing me to break - which I don't appreciate, as I need all the momentum I can get to save energy when I ride with him) and just won't pass, even if we're riding 5-10 km/h faster than whoever is ahead. I think it's because he doesn't want to make anyone feel bad about being passed. Usually I get tired pretty quick and go ahead, passing whoever-is-ahead (saying hello) with my husband on my wheel. A few hundred meters later he'll take his position ahead of me again (phew!). As if guys being passed felt better being "chicked" than being passed by a fit man with a little woman on his wheel.

I don't put anywhere near as much thought into the psychology of cycling as they do!

redrhodie
04-14-2009, 05:07 PM
I don't understand the whole passing frenzy. Sometimes I pass people. Sometimes I get passed. Most of the time I try to say hello, whether passed or passing, unless I'm out of breath. :)

My dear partner and his father are both amazing cyclists. My dear partner, age 33, is particularly fit and a very, very strong cyclist; his father, pushing 65, still kicks my @$$ any day and is in great shape. They both have this issue about passing. They also get upset if they are in a conversational ride (together) and someone passes them without saying hello. But the worst is about passing.

When I ride with my husband, it almost becomes a problem: we are closing in on someone ahead of us who is obviously slower, but my husband slows down (causing me to break - which I don't appreciate, as I need all the momentum I can get to save energy when I ride with him) and just won't pass, even if we're riding 5-10 km/h faster than whoever is ahead. I think it's because he doesn't want to make anyone feel bad about being passed. Usually I get tired pretty quick and go ahead, passing whoever-is-ahead (saying hello) with my husband on my wheel. A few hundred meters later he'll take his position ahead of me again (phew!). As if guys being passed felt better being "chicked" than being passed by a fit man with a little woman on his wheel.

I don't put anywhere near as much thought into the psychology of cycling as they do!

My dbf is the same! He won't pass anyone ever. I thought it was just him...

shootingstar
04-14-2009, 05:27 PM
In reading this whole thread over last few days, I mulled over my dearie who has never competed in any bike race, but has done some cross-country touring rides on his own and has done some group rides, where I know he was near the front of the group ride.

What he is now compared to what he was like as a cyclist when I first met him..over 17 yrs. ago., has changed. But even then, and even now, all along he has no hesitation to tell me of situations and stories where some fred-like cyclist passed him (keep in mind, he probably looks fredlike to many roadies :)) or any woman passing him. To him, the greatest thing was simply to see people on bikes, regardless of their age, size or shape.

I'm wondering if also because he was never boy wonder athlete as a kid/teen, and the fact that he had a string of childhood illnesses plus his lifelong problems on tinnitus, sleep disorder, etc., makes him and other men (with similar health histories), who just know being on a bike, is a gift itself, makes them less upset when "passed" by another cyclist.

If a guy doesn't get upset on the bike, then perhaps he's just competitive or competent, in another sphere of his life.

It does bother me abit to get passed, but I also know for myself, one has to build up momentum to make it up a hill, etc. What I do dislike is that suddenly cyclist passes me very closely and I had no idea they were even around behind me because they did not warn me at all. I've had some close calls.

madscot13
04-14-2009, 06:17 PM
oh I get passed all of the time, but at least the men around here have the decency to keep it to a "good morning!" And if I so happen to pass another biker of the opposite sex or if I keep pace with a biker going at a good knot than they usually give me a kudos- after catching up.