+1! I'm so remedial when it comes to jumping over things..
+1! I'm so remedial when it comes to jumping over things..
erm - not being the expert at all, I don't know if this works for no-suspension bikes but we just learned this yesterday:
when you come to the obstacle, bend down (at your hips, hope I'm getting across how I mean it) with your torso over the handlebar and yank up, until your arms are straight, and the bike will follow as your "arms get too short". - don't bend your elbows.
It's a little secret you didn't know about us women. We're all closet Visigoths.
2008 Roy Hinnen O2 - Selle SMP Glider
2009 Cube Axial WLS - Selle SMP Glider
2007 Gary Fisher HiFi Plus - Specialized Alias
I was taught another way - I figure you try anything and see what works for you!
The way I was taught starts pretty much the same. Bending forward in a nice "attack position" with elbows nice and bent at about right angles and shoulders low, you push DOWN on the handlebars and then pop them up with your elbows bent. You sort of use the arms like springs. And use the bounce to help you lift up. (Tip for the uncoordinated like me - try this without the log first!)
Even if you don't have front suspension, if you are running fattish tyres at a lowish pressure, you will get some bounce out of them. This will pop the front of the bike up.
When you do pop it up, don't try to pop it OVER! You want your front wheel to land on top (or just behind the top) of what you are going over. This way you can use the momentum of rolling down the other side to pull your back wheel over too. If you try to pop your front wheel all the way over it to the ground on the other side, you have very little time to unweight your back wheel before it hits the object and you are likely to stop dead with a wheel on each side! It'll take a bit of experimenting (and probably falling over like a gumby if I am anything to go by) to get the timing right!
Happy experimenting!![]()
Last edited by pinkbikes; 04-19-2009 at 01:35 PM.
OK, I am brand new to this forum... WHAT is a DH? It comes up everywhere....
The way I've learned it, it's more of a whole body movement than an arm thing. If you push with your feet some and move your body back with a hip snap, that completes the motion. The compress and pull up with your arms thing never worked for me.
I have been working on this way, the true wheelie, which people say is more about the power stroke than hopping the front wheel (loading/unloading, whatever). I don't know... I haven't gotten it yet. I know I need it, not just for log jumping but for wheelie drops off of steps. It is frustrating, though.
DH says, "didn't you ever do wheelies when you were a kid?" Ahhh, no! First of all, my bike had a banana seat and streamers on the handlebars. Second, I don't have any big brothers. Third, I don't know what I was doing when I was twelve (maybe rollerskating?) but it wasn't impressing the girls with my BMX moves.![]()
Keep trying, trying!