Thanks Dirty Girl 1: As soon as the snow melts a bit; I'm taking my girlfriends to the field at NAU and practicing! Maybe I can teach my wheelie challenged genes to wheelie!
Thanks Dirty Girl 1: As soon as the snow melts a bit; I'm taking my girlfriends to the field at NAU and practicing! Maybe I can teach my wheelie challenged genes to wheelie!
All of what dirtygirl said with one clarification that helped me a lot, even though I'm not super good at wheelies.
The pull up that worked for me is more like a row. The muscles involved are my lats, so think of doing a row with bent elbows, and pull your elbows back. Before that, every time I tried my arms were totally straight and it didn't work at all....bend the elbows and pull your elbows back, along with the right pedal placement, right gear ratio, right timing of the pedal stroke, and voila! The front wheel is in the air!
Good luck and happy practicing!
~T~
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hi everyone, tonya from mtbchick.com here just wanting to make sure everyone has a safe and successful wheelie experience!
1- in order to keep from falling backwards, do not pull back on your handlebars
2- in order to keep from falling backwards tip #2- your rear brake will drop your front wheel, so... if you feel you are going too far back, just tap your rear brake
3- absolutely NO upper body strength is required to ride a wheelie
4- you are simply diverting energy, instead of the bike moving forward alone, you are diverting the energy up.
5- try to ride in an easy gear from a very slow pace to start
6- a wheelie can be ridden on any type of bike, it does not require a nice bike. you can even ride a wheelie on a road bike!
7- you can do it!!!!!
Last edited by mtbchick; 01-01-2007 at 06:10 PM.
Yea, right, try a wheelie on an Xtracycle![]()
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I've found that sometimes the mind is the only thing holding you back. It's natural for the mind to think, "don't fall off." With that warning in place, the body gets apprehensive. It won't want to find that neutral balance point.
Try intentionally "wheely-ing" too far so you dismount off the back of the bike. Bike to a flat grassy area with your helmet. Moist ground is softer yet. If you have clipless pedals, don't wear your clipless shoes. You don't want to be hindered. You can even keep one foot off the pedals all together. Find an easy gear (not necessarily the easiest), and drive the pedal down while extending your arms and leaning back. Your free foot will catch you. If you did this correctly, you are now standing with your bike on its rear wheel. If not, hopefully you picked soft ground.![]()
Once you get accustomed to going too far, combine the previous posts (squishing the front tire, etc...) and continue practicing.
BTW You want to practice with at least one finger hovering over your rear brake. If you unexpectedly go too far, touch your brake and your front wheel wheel will come back down. In the past, I've received weird looks from people. It's not every day they see a biker on his back with the bike in the air.![]()
"Whether you think you can or cannot, you are usually right." - Henry Ford
"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
yah I want an xtracycle, too. =P
I can't wheelie. I try. I compress shocks, throw weight up and back while pedaling forward- nothing. I do it hard enough and I get a buzz on the bum from the fsking rear tire. Still nothing. ARGH.