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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    North Central Florida
    Posts
    3,387

    For Road Racers!

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    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Off eating cake.
    Posts
    1,700
    Haha! That's as bad as what's-her-name in the women's boardercross in Torino.
    Drink coffee and do stupid things faster with more energy.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Chi-town
    Posts
    3,265
    what a nightmare. Chickens: counted...oh...cr*p!
    Run like a dachshund! Ride like a superhero! Swim like a three-legged cat!
    TE Bianchi Girls Rock

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    My husband has shown that to me. It is just as bad the second time! What an idiot.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    806
    Oh that's flippin hilarious.
    "Only the meek get pinched, the bold survive"

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Charlotte, NC
    Posts
    508
    I can hear him now "oh dear god please open the earth and let me fall in I'm such a dope!"

  7. #7
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    College Station, Texas
    Posts
    1

    whoop! fellow Aggie!!!

    Quote Originally Posted by Aggie_Ama
    My husband has shown that to me. It is just as bad the second time! What an idiot.

    I have that SAME exact jersey that you have in your profile pic. Wow, small world! I'm currently a student at Texas A&M and am currently on the cycling team.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Kansas
    Posts
    492
    ROFLMAO - Still wiping my eyes -

    That's hilarious! I've never cared much for that ritual at the finish. What a way to blow it.

    Deb

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Arlington, VA
    Posts
    1,993
    That's why I am all for BOTH HANDS (or at least one) ON THE DARN HANDLEBARS. At least once a week, I encounter a knucklehead who thinks he's "all that" by riding with no hands on the bars. Usually looking all around to see if anyone else is noticing his wonderfulness. Makes a good snot rocket target as I pass by (no, I haven't and wouldn't do that because I believe in trying to live by the golden rule and know the law of what goes around, comes around. But man, it's tempting!!).

    Luna Eclipse//Terry B'fly
    Luna Orbit//Sella Italia Ldy Gel Flow
    Bianchi Eros Donna//Terry Falcon
    Seven Alaris//Jett 143
    Terry Isis (Titanium)//Terry B'fly

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    3,867

    No-hands is fun :)

    When I was a teenager I rode my bike a *lot* with no hands. I had a really nicely balanced 10-speed and I could ride around my town, around corners and everything, with no hands. I remember Sunday afternoons just riding and riding through the neighborhoods sitting up or holding on, rarely encountering traffic. Ah, heaven.

    Now I have nobby tires that are not so conducive to letting go, but I still need to do it on occasion because of my wrists, and various other reasons. I want to be able to do it whenever, like I could on my 10-speed and even the old Buick. My LBS had to fix the front tire on my Trek because for a while there I couldn't let go at all without swerving. I'm way more careful than when I was a teenager, and I pedal more and go faster and watch the road more closely. I'm aware of what could happen--but in all these years it never has. :robably just cursed myself. lol.:::

    It's a useful skill which I really enjoy having. Maybe because of my miles and miles of experience with it I don't see what the big deal is. But I still wouldn't let go right before the finish line!

    Karen

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    North Central Florida
    Posts
    3,387
    Man, I remember being a kid and being able to ride any bike no hands, even around corners!! Too chicken now!!
    ***********
    "...I'm like the cycling version of the guy in Flowers for Algernon." Mike Magnuson

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Charlotte, NC
    Posts
    508
    Quote Originally Posted by mickchick
    That's why I am all for BOTH HANDS (or at least one) ON THE DARN HANDLEBARS. At least once a week, I encounter a knucklehead who thinks he's "all that" by riding with no hands on the bars. Usually looking all around to see if anyone else is noticing his wonderfulness. Makes a good snot rocket target as I pass by (no, I haven't and wouldn't do that because I believe in trying to live by the golden rule and know the law of what goes around, comes around. But man, it's tempting!!).
    Yikes, I hope you never snot rocket me. Riding upright with no hands is a fabulous gift to the lower back. After hunching over on an aggressive frame for 20, 40 or 60 miles, a few moments upright (on relatively flat straight ground) is heavenly. I'm not "all that", I'm merely stretching.

    By the way, I believe yoga gave me the balance to do that.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Vancouver, BC
    Posts
    3,932
    Quote Originally Posted by doc
    Yikes, I hope you never snot rocket me. Riding upright with no hands is a fabulous gift to the lower back. After hunching over on an aggressive frame for 20, 40 or 60 miles, a few moments upright (on relatively flat straight ground) is heavenly. I'm not "all that", I'm merely stretching.

    By the way, I believe yoga gave me the balance to do that.
    Core strength and balance do it all.

    Being a kid, I always felt lame for not being able to ride with no hands. I still think it's dangerous, and I would never do this in traffic (as I see idiots doing it all the time, on rather bumpy roads...). However it was one of my goals for 2006 to learn this skill, purely as a challenge to my core strength and balance. It took me a while, practicing, but now I can do it and keep pedalling at the same time, on flat, slight downhill or slight uphill terrain. It does bring relief after riding in a headwind, crunched in the drops, for a while. And it gives me great satisfaction. I am very careful to do this in a place where I can't be bothered (coming back home I have a long stretch of 2-meter-wide, perfectly paved shoulder) and catch back the handlebars as soon as I feel any instability. But boy it's great.

    (I can't help thinking about the poor guy in that race every time I do it though!!)

    So ... I also hope I won't be a target to your snot rockets!

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Texas
    Posts
    830
    I always thought everyone knew how to ride with no hands. I learned that almost as soon as I learned to ride. It came to a shock to me one day when I sat up to rest going down a hill...nice, smooth road going a little over 20 mph...two of the riders I was with couldn't believe I had done that. I was shocked to hear they didn't know how to ride with no hands. It feels good to sit up, rest and feel the wind.

    It's not done to show off. The people who do it probably don't even think twice about it.

    Signed,

    knucklehead
    As we must account for every idle word, so must we account for every idle silence." ~Benjamin Franklin

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    australia
    Posts
    392
    I never learnt that but I did learn how to ride and read and book at the same time( my two favoritethings),but only on my home street where the neighbors knew that the book obsessed, four eyed, bike nut who has hyperactive lived, 'so watch where your driving honey.'

 

 

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