Wish I knew how I was supposed to sit on my bike...
It's been 900+ miles now on the road bike - and I'm still not sure I'm sitting properly in the saddle.
I was professionally fitted when I bought it, and they did alot of adjustments to let me ride "more upright" since I learned to ride on a hybrid. So I know I don't "lean" down into my handlebars as much as many of you probably do.
Yesterday, for the very first time, I actually got down into the drops and it felt kinda cool (I was there for about 40 seconds going down a small hill).
But it's my butt position I don't quite get - all this talk about "sitting on your sit bones". I know from yoga what my sit bones are and I think I tend sit more in dog position than in cat position (I don't mean the arch of my back, which tends to be kinda flat while riding, but rather the arch of my sit bones, which tend to "arch out/upward" as in dog pose, putting a lot of my soft tissue on the front of the saddle. I know I'm not "tucking my sit bones under", because that would force me to sit "more upright" on the bike and I'm trying to learn to lean forward and down.
But I worry that I'm really putting my weight on my soft tissue, instead of my sit bones. While they make contact with the saddle, I don't think that's where my weight is. I know if I tucked my sit bones under, putting my weight on the bones themselves, I'd be able to sit upright on the bike (maybe hands free for a moment, like folks do crossing a finish line). That's something I can't do now - my weight is too far forward.
Anyway, I'm probably making no sense at all.
But I keep thinking about replacing my saddle to get the pressure off my soft tissue, but before I do it, I want to figure out if I'm sitting right on the saddle in the first place.
Ok, I've got a plan. Thank you!
Great advice from everyone! Now I've got a plan.
1) Try out the new saddle I saw at a Trek booth earlier this year (the sales rep had the "measuring thing" so I know what size I need). She thought the "Bontrager Inform RL WSD" would be good for me. If it's no good, keep trying.
2) After the new saddle is on, get refitted at my LBS. When I had the first fitting I'd never even been on a road bike before, so I'll bet some follow up tweaks are needed.
Thank you!