I've been passed by runners on hills more than once. Makes me laugh every time. I was built for endurance, not speed.
I've been passed by runners on hills more than once. Makes me laugh every time. I was built for endurance, not speed.
Not to get all serious and everything, but I don't really understand what riding faster than men, or riding fast at all, has to do with not being afraid of or intimidated by cycling. You can be slow as molasses and still embrace the sport and have passion for it.
When i first started riding I was always being passed by everyone else. Now, 2 months later I rarely get passed and end up passing a lot of people. I feel a certain satisfaction in this and see it as a mark of my improvement. There is absolutely nothing wrong with riding slow and enjoying that but for that competitive streak I love being able to pass people. I especially love to pass boys but more often than not they still pass me.
Afraid? not sure I follow you? Dropping boys or being dropped by them isn't the issue, but rather attracting every dude who wants to prove their manhood by taking on the girl riding her commuter bike and carrying a 15 lb messenger bag, when all I really want is a peaceful commute... I'd rather not encourage those types.
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
visit my flickr stream http://flic.kr/ps/MMu5N
From their About Us page -- I just don't see what this has to do with "dropping boys":
we are a network of women triathletes and cyclists who have attitude.
We are not afraid nor intimidated by the bike or the sport.
Our goal is to bring together women in communities and world wide who share the passion of riding.
Ah - I guess they figure dropping boys proves they are tough? I prefer to commute/train in peace for the most part and when I do ride with people I definitely prefer that I've chosen them, not just gathered them along the way. I wouldn't want the type of attention that jersey would likely garner.
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
visit my flickr stream http://flic.kr/ps/MMu5N
Well, as someone who was a bit intimidated by the bike before I started riding a lot more, and still am a bit on the scaredy cat side when it comes to upgrading to a real road bike with clipless pedals and all that...okay, a lot on the scaredy cat side of that one...I think she'd be lumping me in the need-not-apply group.
Alas.
Roxy
Getting in touch with my inner try-athlete.
I'd wear that and I'm the slowest woman on two wheels.
At the gym I wear a tee shirt that says "I Make Boys Cry".
So what if it's not true (anymore)? It's all in fun and a great conversation starter.
2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
2009 Jamis Aurora/Brooks B-68
2010 Trek FX 7.6 WSD/stock bontrager
I have been dropped by guys wearing jeans, on a mountain bike, wearing a heavy backpack.
I (and my DH, a very strong rider) are regularly dropped by the local guy who has no use of his legs and rides a recumbent hand cycle.
On the other hand, I regularly drop guys on my group ride. Yea, they are old, but so am I.
love this thread.... my goal would be to drop some boys!!! maybe some motivation, right?
I like the jersey but I think there should be small sayings all over like the comments "yeah, old guys on mountain bikes" or "3yo on trikes", etc.
Then it would be hilarious - at least to me - and I would wear it. This, I would not wear.
Dar
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“Minds are like parachutes...they only function when they are open. - Thomas Dewar"