Mountain Biking - Come Show of Your dirtiest moment for your bike!

Bikeforums.net is a forum about nothing but bikes. Our community can help you find information about hard-to-find and localized information like bicycle tours, specialties like where in your area to have your recumbent bike serviced, or what are the best bicycle tires and seats for the activities you use your bike for.
monster_bike
04-17-03, 05:05 PM
You Know those times where your bike is so muddy its unbalivable well show them of NOW: heres mine:D
monster_bike
04-17-03, 05:06 PM
another pic
monster_bike
04-17-03, 05:07 PM
another
montlake_mtbkr
04-17-03, 05:53 PM
that's not muddy. I can quite clearly see that your frame is red. :p
Dannihilator
04-17-03, 06:16 PM
Spelling.
monster_bike
04-17-03, 07:11 PM
Lol Its as muddy as i could get it that day. also some came of while riding home.:)
DrGonzo
04-17-03, 09:46 PM
Originally posted by danka24
Spelling.
Too bad there's no spell check for a certain someone...
monster_bike
04-18-03, 11:17 AM
Ill spell better, Its Just that I mostly post during the night and very late like 2:00 a.m. Ill spell correctly for you.:)
johndoug
04-18-03, 11:33 AM
ieSpell is a free Internet Explorer browser extension that spell checks text input boxes on a webpage. It should come in particularly handy for users who do a lot of web-based text entry (e.g. web mails, FORUMS, blogs, diaries). Even if your web application already includes spell checking functionality, you might still want to install this utility because it is definitely much faster than a server-side solution. Plus you get to store and use your personal word list across all your applications, instead of maintaining separate ones on each application.
ieSpell is not spyware or adware. Its free for personal and not-for-profit use. Commercial use requires a separate license.
Click here for screen shot (http://www.iespell.com/images/screenshotXP.png)
http://www.iespell.com
flybikeman
04-18-03, 11:38 AM
Yeah 5:05 pm is pretty late.
flybikeman
04-18-03, 11:39 AM
Whoops forgot about the time change thing sorry monster bike
Now to work on your brother.
stumpjumper
04-18-03, 02:22 PM
http://www.imba.com/about/trail_rules.html
Pay close attention to number 2.
Not to be a grouch or opverly critical but spend my winters (and alot of my springs) cleaning up after people who dont have enough sense to stay off of the trails when they get too muddy. Its alot of work armoring creek crossings, raising tread with fill-dirt, constructing drainage, etc. Personally, I dont think slogging through the mud is a whole lot of fun, but if thats what gets your rocks off them may I suggest you local dirt roads or jeep trails?
If I'm totally off base here and you got that mud from somewhere other than singletrack trails then here's my apology in advance.
just my $.02
montlake_mtbkr
04-18-03, 06:17 PM
stumpjumper, you are correct in that certain trails are sensitive to riding in wet conditions, but riding through mud/standing water is A-OK when there is hard pack ground beneath the mud/water. I too have spent many a weekend armoring sensitive trail for year round riding. It can be a bit frustrating when people can't seem to understand why they shouldn't ride on trails closed due to these conditions. I ride 90% in mud but it's in low impact areas or armored trails for the majority.
johndoug
04-19-03, 08:34 PM
I'll be the first with a pic.
These are from riding the "power lines" the 4 wheelers and 4X4s have messed up these "trails" beyond belief.
See, that fender came in handy.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 4.1.12 Copyright © 2012 vBulletin Solutions, Inc. All rights reserved.