Wow, great advice.
+1 to breathe
And +1 to go as fast as you are comfortable. You'll get more comfortable with time and experience.
And +1 to everything else. (I'm really not contributing anything here. :D )
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Wow, great advice.
+1 to breathe
And +1 to go as fast as you are comfortable. You'll get more comfortable with time and experience.
And +1 to everything else. (I'm really not contributing anything here. :D )
I was terrified of descents as a beginner (except for very short and familiar ones). I was forced to learn in a cycling trip in Scottland - the first day, I melted the brake pads and they had to be replaced that day. By day 6, I was following my friend's line, hands in the drops. I also have small hands and, on the hoods in steep descents, my hands cramped. The drops worked a lot better.
Heck, when I started riding, even trying to ride faster on a flat road (say 18 mph) felt like I was totally out of control. You get comfortably gradually, your skills improve with riding time, experimenting within reason and pushing your boundaries little by little. Ride within your comfort level, but also experiment when possible to see how things feel. The GCN videos are pretty good and they give you tips you can mix in your rides.
I can't imagine..cattle guards tend to freak me out. I hate them.Quote:
the 20 mile downhills that were broken up with cattle guards.
Wierdly they are used here and there our city, in URBAN neighbourhoods where there are no cattle but just an old-fashioned/dumb/unsafe way of excluding cars.
We must be thinking of two different things, because the cattle grates I'm familiar with wouldn't exclude cars ... in fact, the whole point of them is to allow farm vehicles to pass without having to open and close a gate.
But I couldn't imagine even trying to ride over one on two wheels. At any speed. Even if you were uninjured, they'd taco your wheels. :eek:
ETA: but I guess it can be done. http://jpschroeder.blogspot.com/2010...d-city-sd.html [scroll down to the last picture]
Living and riding in SW Ohio I loved the hilly terrain with the rollers. I didn't give down hills much thought until I moved here. My first ride down a hill near our house (with 2 intersections) freaked me out. Then I tried riding down a mountain pass in the LaSalle mountains in Utah. I was so freaked out I nearly killed myself. I ended up walking 2 miles to the bottom then sagged to flatter terrain. I got a very well fitting bike and practiced riding in my drops with my feet in the 9-3 position on the pedals. Even though I had ridden for years it was so scary to take my hands off the handlebars and put them in the drops so I practiced on small hills. I found I have more strength braking from the drops. I read every hill now and determine if I need to be in my drops or handlebars. Now I fly down the hill next to my house because I know I can stop when I need to.
Every fall we do the Mickelson Trail Trek in S. Dakota. It's an unpaved trail with some long down hills. There's the usual crazies flying down the hills but there are just as many insecure riders. They have their pedals in the 6-12 o'clock position and hang to one side. Some have their bottoms off the saddle which puts them in even more of an unbalanced position. With my feet in the 9-3 position I can stand on the pedals if the trail gets rough and comfortably ride down the hills.
A wise friend once said to me, "trust your bike, it wants to stay upright". That's what got me through that scary downhill in Utah.
Are your cattle guards square (cross-section)? We have cattle guards where each bar is a pole, ie. round cross-section, and they're a breeze to ride across, especially at speed. The one exception would be if they're dented or spaced especially far apart, then you can get a nasty surprise.
I'm not going to be thrilled to even try it. Even for a cross section.
As I said, pretty stupid to have them in a regular street intersection, any urban residential neighbourhood at all...when there's young children living in the area. Even if it was leftover from prairie rangeland days before our city expanded, the cattle grate should have been removed and just put a permanent iron fence or concrete barrier to block cars.
Cars are forbidden to enter since there's a Wrong Way/Do not Enter road sign to indicate to drivers.
Shootingstar, can you describe what you're talking about, or post a picture? Because the cattle grates we're talking about do not exclude cars.
I should clarify, yes I agree cattle grates allow cars.
The situation I'm describing is that the municipality has the cattle grate at a residential road intersection plus a no entry/wrong way road sign to warn cars not to cross over into the neighbourhood on the road.
The cattle grate is not in a suburban area. It is...mid-town. As I said, a relic road infrastructure that should have been removed by the municipality. this is a city....of 1+ million people.
If it doesn't snow more, one day a photo. Not going to happen for awhile since I don't have a car.
You might be able to find it on Google satellite view or street view and post a link to it.