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indigoiis
07-22-2012, 10:58 AM
Two years after snapping my ankle in Big River, I went out today with the Mister to Arcadia. It was awesome! Used flat pedals with claws instead of clipless and felt very confident except on a few parts (like, I couldn't go off the table rock and was a bit intimidated going through stone walls.) I am so psyched! I'm still a chicken, though. I need to keep doing this.:p

indysteel
07-22-2012, 11:24 AM
Awesome!!! I'm glad you got back on the horse so to speak!!!

SpinDiva
07-22-2012, 12:05 PM
Dont you think the adrenaline rush of fear is what makes mountain biking so fun? (I'm a chicken too. I'll prolly use flat pedals forever.)

Catrin
07-22-2012, 12:54 PM
That is great news, awesome you were able to get out there! I also don't believe for a moment that you are a chicken! I am, but you are not :cool:

Spin Diva, I think you have something there! Now if I could just stop going from one injury to another, it is a bit disheartening - but at least the current one wasn't from the mtb :)

tealtreak
07-22-2012, 01:18 PM
Congratulations!!!! Great feeling (:

Wahine
07-22-2012, 05:26 PM
Good news! Congrats on getting back out there.

Artista
07-22-2012, 07:57 PM
Good going, Indigoiis! I was also extremely cautious when I started mtb'ing again this season after breaking my ankle last fall. Now I'm riding better than ever. Be patient with yourself while you're just getting back into it. You can tackle a little at a time until you regain your skills and confidence. Both will come back pretty quickly.

OakLeaf
07-23-2012, 04:03 AM
Yay indigo!

Aggie_Ama
07-23-2012, 10:11 AM
Awesome! Getting back on after an injury is so hard. You're not a chicken if you went back out, a chicken would never ride again. :)

indigoiis
07-25-2012, 10:15 AM
Thanks y'all. I've had no problems on the road bike, but the thought of clipping in on the trail again gave me great anxiety. Then I came on here and of course read about people going back to flat pedals. I was like, "hey, I have some bear traps I use to ride that mountainbike on the road in winter. And it's OKAY to have them on the bike out in the woods?" Suddenly I became very excited to think I could "get away" with flats in the woods. And lo and behold, it was that that made me confident enough to blow down gravel road, dirt trail, over stump and log (but still not across bridges.)

I am excited about this! :D

missjean
07-28-2012, 05:34 AM
Good for you! It always takes a while to get back into the swing of things after an injury, but it sounds like you a well on you way. :)

indigoiis
08-10-2012, 11:49 AM
I went out this morning in the fields out back. I have about two acres of fallow with a trail circling it and one up through the middle that goes snaking back and forth (a man and his riding mower and a hot summer day...). No hills, no real obstacles. Just basically deer cover.

I managed to enjoy it for the most part though it was not very challenging. It was like going to Space Mountain only to ride the tram. I am a couple of miles from Big River and if I had more time I could go up there, but midweek with school and everything, the backyard must do.

On that "Beginner's Ride" a couple of weeks ago, I was discouraged when we all went out and... bye went the beginners. The poor sweeper was stuck with screechy me plodding along doing the occasional crashing into bushes and nail-biting hesitations at stone wall intersections. I am sure it was no fun for him. Last week I could not go as my nephew is in town, and this Monday upcoming I can't go because I have to fly to NC to go be a dutiful daughter and rescue my mother from another sibling's drama.

So the backyard it was.
I wonder if I will ever get over my slowness.

A friend asked me if I could be on their Greenway Challenge team to do the mountain bike portion. I was kind of surprised, because I had told her only a week ago that I had just gotten back on the bike and was still a little unsteady. I thought about it, slept on it, then shot off an email saying, "Okay, heck ya I'll do it!" thinking, well I've got eight weeks.

Well, then I get an email from the captain who was like, yeah, I heard she invited you but... we met this other girl who is super good on the mountain bike but if she can't do it?

So I'm thinking, okay. Yeah. That makes sense. But now I'm a little bummed out.

indysteel
08-10-2012, 12:20 PM
I'm sorry you're bummed.

Just keep at it. You'll get your mojo back. What is making you feel like going slowly right now? Fitness? Fear of obstacles? General unsteadiness? Lack of confidence?

I'm mostly a mtb newb myself, but it helps if I'm focusing far enough down the trail to anticipate what I need to do and if I'm using the various body positions at my disposal. I'm quick to get out of the saddle in ready/attack mode if I'm at all uneasy/unsure about what to expect. And I try to remember that momentum is generally my friend. Not only does it make getting over obstacles easier, the bike is easier to handle, too.

The renewed confidence will come with time. Stick to trails that you're familiar with. A few good passes will do wonders for you. Perhaps some skill drills will help you, too. Go back to the basics.

TrekDianna
08-10-2012, 12:30 PM
It's great that you got back out there. I know too many people who have bikes sitting in their garages after accidents. I am with you on the flat pedals though. I have clipless and I had lots of pain that wasn't going away and found out I had micro tears in my 5th metatarsal tendon. Using the flat pedals doesn't hurt and the micro tears are healing now

indigoiis
08-10-2012, 01:20 PM
Thanks Indy. All of the above. Yeah, I'm scared of it all. And it's a vicious circle because I'm scared, then I'm mad that I'm scared, then I'm feeling guilty about being frustrated and mad, then I try to go too fast to make up for it and then I come to a screechy halt at the next obstacle. It's all just a big boo hoo episode.

Catrin
08-10-2012, 01:32 PM
Thanks Indy. All of the above. Yeah, I'm scared of it all. And it's a vicious circle because I'm scared, then I'm mad that I'm scared, then I'm feeling guilty about being frustrated and mad, then I try to go too fast to make up for it and then I come to a screechy halt at the next obstacle. It's all just a big boo hoo episode.

This all sounds familiar! At least you get to the halting part :cool: As for me, I keep falling (not at obstacles, I also stop for those). It doesn't happen near as often, which is a good thing. As I get faster the falls get harder, but I figure that is part of it for a newbie.

I think it is great you can actually ride on your property, this is seriously cool! Even if it doesn't offer many challenges, it still gives you a place to go when you can't get elsewhere.

As for me, I've decided since my fall/ride ratio is higher than I would like it to be, I will continue riding my current trails solo but I need to have a riding partner for more difficult/longer trails. I think this is wise...at least until my skills finally advance and my ride/fall ratio decreases. Most of my mtb friends have been beating me over the head with this idea...and they probably have something :o