Some friends persuaded me to join them for a CX bike outing on the local mountain bike trails. (None of us have mountain bikes, so this is the closest we could get.) We went to the park with the easier, less technical trails, since this was my first time riding off-road.
I spent a lot of time coasting with my hand on my rear brake, trying to keep my feet out of my pedals (my CX bike mostly gets used as a back-up road bike, so I've got clipless on that) and clipping trees and falling off. This set of trails is fast and flowy, but has some tight spots between trees. There was a lot of crunch-crunch-scrape-"**** you too, tree!" I hope I never have to ride a bike in ecologically sensitive areas, because I might have wiped out 15 species if yesterday was anything to go by. Adding to the difficulty was a lot of downed branches and sticks. My riding buddies were awesome--the one guy (he races CX and wants to get into MTB was well) in particular is really good about adapting to other people's levels and not making them feel bad about themselves. We went out for beer and pool afterward.I now have an assortment of bruises on my right leg, including a spectacular one on my knee from hitting a rock mid-creek crossing. (It was from the bike hitting my knee--I landed on my feet.)
I can't tell if this has cured my desire to get a mountain bike or simply intensified it.



I now have an assortment of bruises on my right leg, including a spectacular one on my knee from hitting a rock mid-creek crossing. (It was from the bike hitting my knee--I landed on my feet.)
Reply With Quote
