I just got back into riding this year and from reading some of these forums it can seem like nothing has changed much in 18 years. Yes the bikes are better and the equipment is better but are we enjoying riding any more? What happened to riding just because you like to ride? Let me be honest when I read the post about returning riders I did see a lot of good posts about what you should look for. I would like to add the expected “but” here however. Much of the advice is geared towards someone who will be riding a senior century before the years is out. Is that what motivated many of us to get back into riding bikes?
I just want to know how others feel about this issue? I went out and bought a Giant Revive LX a few weeks ago and I enjoy riding just because I still can. I haven’t been on a bike in maybe 19 years and a lot has changed with bikes and with me. The bikes are better and I am out of shape and not likely to get back into the same shape I was in 20 years ago. I am retired and enjoying it. Why then did I get a bike, because I like riding it. I ride it to play Table tennis. I ride it to make small trips to the store. I ride it to the post office. I even ride it to the bike shop to get it serviced or buy some accessory I just have to have. The bike is comfortable and easy on my older out of shape body. But when I read forums about people getting back into cycling it sounds more like recruitment for the next bicycle racing team for 7-11. I went out to join a group of men that ride three times a week in connection with our LBS. There were two groups leaving in the morning, one was full of men that looked for all the world like they were ready for a 25-mile sprint before breakfast. The other was supposed to be a bit easier, so I joined in. Most of the group I was riding with had hybrids or recumbent bikes, I believe the proper term is “bents”? I have to say thank goodness for the kindness of one of the men I was following. I could keep up pretty well on the flat but having never ridden a bike like the Revive LX before I sucked going up hill. My sedentary life and extra weight didn’t help at all nor did my sorry technique. But I did make it the 25 miles and was sore for the next three days.
I guess I have said all of this to find out what motivates others in the over 50 group to get back into cycling? I will join the men on their morning ride again after my vacation. I haven’t given up on group rides. To me the joy is in the riding not the training and sometimes I wonder if people welcoming us back into the fold realize that?
What motivates other returning riders?
Rober
05-29-08, 11:33 PM
I ride because I enjoy riding. I have been on a bike often in the last 25 years, but I have never been on a bike that was less than (now) 25 years old. Yes, the equipment/technology is much better. But I still ride to ride - not to race, or to make "personal bests," or to go higher/faster/longer. I like staying fit and weighing what I weighed in high school, more or less. I still wouldn't feel up to joining a group - I just don't like to have to keep up with others, nor do I like to compete with other riders (even in subtle ways), or get dropped by them. I just really like riding my bike, and do it as often as I can. I hope you keep riding, because it sounds like that is what you like to do too.
maddmaxx
05-30-08, 04:41 AM
I ride because it is fun.........................but I ride because it is more fun than jogging, lifting weights, doing pushups/situps. I ride to explore new places.................................but some of those places are 10 miles out in the woods. I ride because it is fun.......................but it is more fun to be in shape to ride.
Is it a hobby? I build my own bikes. I even build bikes for others. I do not compete in races or ride in groups.....................but I rarely ride to the coffee shop. (that is reserved for vacations). Part of the fun is to challenge myself to ride better then before.
By the way............why can't you get back into the shape you were 20 years ago. Many of us are actually in better shape then we were 20 years ago. It won't happen overnight but it can be done. That is the most fun of all.
Not all here race. Read the post "Ah finally" about Tom's wanderings in the woods. Some race, its how they measure their progress. Some count smiles, its how they measure their fun. The best thing about the 50+ forum is diversity. There are lots of different reasons for being here.
It does happen to be the beginning of get out and ride season for most of us though so don't be surprised when we brag a little.
Artkansas
05-30-08, 04:50 AM
I never left. Bicycling is just the right way to get around. My car is rotting in the parking lot.
I've done a century now, because I didn't do one as a youth. But frankly, that kind of stuff takes too much time.
Now I work more for a bicycle advocacy group. I get to hang out with bicyclists, but don't have to ride with them. And I'm helping improve bicycling for everyone in my state.
I've bought a variety of bikes. A chopper, a recumbent, a huge trailer and am restoring my 10 speed. I allow myself to have fun with bicycling. I don't have to be so serious. I ride in parades
I don't have any meters on any of my bikes. Instead I've worked to develop my inner calibration. I don't know my maximum heart rate, I don't know my cadence rpm, or my cruising speed, but I do know how fast I can go continuously, not in mph, but rather at a gut level, so I don't push myself too hard and have to ease off, panting. This is not a stable setting, and ebbs slightly and expands slightly depending on what I have been doing. But the heart and lungs are calibrated to each other.
10 Wheels
05-30-08, 05:21 AM
The joy is in riding. As I got stronger I wanted to go longer and further.
Group rides are fun. Fun to talk too and see the other riders and bikes.
I ride with a group of 4 to 9 retired folks. We do 75 miles 5 to 6 days each week.
Jet Travis
05-30-08, 05:34 AM
I'm in it for the groupies.
DnvrFox
05-30-08, 05:46 AM
Different strokes for different folks.
Nothing wrong with that, which is why the sticky "returning to bicycling" thread has a wide array and range of input and suggestions.
I STARTED bicycling at 58 years old. Prior to that, I had a beater bicycle all along, but my longest ride was 7 miles.
And, YES, I am in better shape than I was 20 years ago - by far - even at 68 years old, and you can be, also.
And, I love almost ALL types of bicycling. I go to the store with my mtn bike and panniers. I ride to church. I lead senior rides. I like to ride 40-50 miles.
I don't particularly enjoy hammering with the "guys" - but, on the other hand, given the situation, I will give it a shot and try to keep up.
I also weight lift, swim, walk, have a singing group and do a lot of volunteer work.
Personally, I think you are under rating yourself and what you can do, perhaps because you haven't really given other types of bicycling a fair chance, or really are NOT in shape yet.
Give yourself some time.
Many returning bicyclers go through a cycle - comfort or hybrid - then moving on to something else, such as a roadie or doing more challenging mtn biking. And, yes, for a lot of folks, a Century is a desired goal, or a supported week long ride, or unsupported touring, or racing. Isn't it GREAT what folks 50+ can accomplish?
My motives? - FUN, EXERCISE, PERSONAL ACCOMPLISHMENT, SOLITUDE AND TIME TO THINK, BEING WITH PEOPLE, GOING FAST, GOING SLOW, BEING IN NATURE, EXPLORING and many other things.
mandovoodoo
05-30-08, 05:57 AM
It's been an on and off thing for me. Sometimes other stuff takes precedence. Law school led to me doing lots of scootering, for example. Park, then scooter to school.
I'm a better rider. I'm more conscious of form and fit. I don't train per se, but I'm in good enough shape to do what I need to do. I used to do lots of long distance work and I have no doubt that any day of the week I could get up and ride a century. Don't know where that time would come from, and I'd get bored!
Does seem to be an emphasis on artificial goals and equipment. I don't have a cyclometer. I don't have GPS. I do get "lost" sometimes, but I know the terrain well enough to figure things out. In equipment, I have pretty good stuff. Works well. I tinker with it to get it working right. The advances in gear clearly make things a bit easier for me to ride fast and hard. For mellow riding, doesn't make much difference. My utility bike has bar ends, rack, fenders. Steel. Not much different from 30 years ago. I even turned off the indexing for the rear and hardly noticed! But for fast work, the new stuff is so good it makes me want to ride just for the thrill.
NoRacer
05-30-08, 05:57 AM
Different strokes for different folks.
Nothing wrong with that, which is why the sticky "returning to bicycling" thread has a wide array and range of input and suggestions.
Personally, I think you are under rating yourself and what you can do, perhaps because you haven't really given other types of bicycling a fair chance, or really are NOT in shape yet.
Give yourself some time.
Many returning bicyclers go through a cycle - comfort or hybrid - then moving on to something else, such as a roadie or doing more challenging mtn biking or road racing. And, yes, for a lot of folks, a Century is a desired goal, or a supported week long ride, or unsupported touring, or racing. Isn't it GREAT what folks 50+ can accomplish?
Fixed that for you.
donheff
05-30-08, 06:00 AM
I got into riding for reasons similar to yours. I always had a beater around but rarely used it. Then my wife got excited about taking a fully supported tour in Italy. I tried it and loved it so we started riding regularly. Then we bought better bikes and started taking 20-30 mile rides a few times a week. Then I read "Younger Next Year" and realized I could use riding to help me get in better shape than I was 20 years ago. And that worked. :) I still ride just because it is fun.
BluesDawg
05-30-08, 06:01 AM
I've been back in it for about 16 years. You might say I do it to stay healthy and to help keep my weight under control. But mostly I do it because I love to ride. There are many different types of riders and motivations and many levels of performance among the 50+ forum posters as there are in bicycling. I enjoy reading about people who are riding longer, harder and faster than I care to do and I enjoy reading about people doing shorter, easier and slower rides than what I enjoy.
My club focuses a lot on bringing new people into riding and I have seen that many times the people who start out intimidated by the speed and endurance they perceive about the average riders will quickly transform into the ones who want to go faster and further and climb more hills. As you gain in fitness and enthusiasm, your abilities and your perceptions change. We don't all change at the same rate and we don't all progress to the same level, but we all change.
Hang in there. Find the rides you like and go with it. Don't feel that you have to achieve certain things if they hold no appeal to you, but at the same time, don't be limited by labeling yourself and setting artificial limits. Just go with the flow and see where it takes you.
wink
05-30-08, 06:42 AM
I ride for the fun of riding. Also helps stay in shape. My wife rides a Revive DX and loves it. But it is flat where we live. She has back trouble and that is the only bike she has found that she can ride for and hour or so with out pain. I like it also but ride other bikes. Just have fun.
Wink
PaulH
05-30-08, 06:58 AM
I got back in because driving to work and parking was too arduous given the traffic and shortage of parking spots in the metro DC area. My wife had given me a hybrid for my birthday about five years earlier, and it was sitting in the basement, having only been ridden a few times. Once I started using the bike to get to work and shop, I descovered that it was not only easier than driving, but more fun. Cycling is the way motoring was in the 1960s - fresh air, adventure, freedom of motion.
Paul
bab2000
05-30-08, 07:11 AM
I ride because my wife makes me.
As empty-nesters, she wanted US to have a common interest, and returning to the things we did together before children, biking was common ground. But she did not like her present bike, and I made the decision to replace that mistake (result of insurance replacement because original bikes were stolen), by letting HER pick out the next rider.
Having been away for a period of time, I was impressed with the newer technology, was surprised by the kindness and knowledge of the LBS s visited, and her determination to return to riding.
Even thought i had forgotten how to ride when test rode a Townie, not realizing the pedals were really forward.
Anyways, with her encouragement, we started to ride again, almost nightly, and then business got in the way, and I had to travel out of town 4 or 5 days at a time. Calling home nightly, she told me were she road, and who she saw. I was actually jealous. So when returned on Friday nights, could not wait to get on my ride and then is when I really learned how much I enjoyed it.
Riding together is a joy, riding solo is an escape, riding for a fund raiser is rewarding, riding with a group allows me to measure my progress or lack of.
A goal is to ride a century again, (rode several in my early twenties, even as a Clyde), also to travel the country with bikes and experience other communities from the view of a bike.
Yes, they say "once you learn to ride a bike, you never forget how" or something like that. But in reality , for me at least, riding is that return to my youth, being carefree, and with the wind, enjoying life, and the company of others with a same found love of just riding ones bike, regardless...
Enjoy and welcome back, it is OK to be a little competitive, even with yourself. :love:
Robert Foster
05-30-08, 07:53 AM
These are some great responses. It helps to realize that there are others that simply like to see the world as they ride through it. I never wanted to indicate that there was anything wrong with riding to push your self or to get in better shape. I realize that done correctly it is almost a natural result of the hobby or sport depending on how you look at it.
I know I will enjoy riding even more as I get back into shape and shed some of the extra baggage I have acquired in 20 years. I only mentioned not getting into the shape I was 20 years ago because I was in very good shape then and it is hard to imagine duplicating that level. I would ride almost every day and put in at least 15 miles. About once a month we would ride from Riverside to Newport Beach and quite often with a group of friends. And like many now at the LBS Friday morning rides we might push ourselves the whole way. Like many others I have several bikes for several different reasons. I also commuted to work on a bike and even after we moved I would only drive half way and ride the last 20 miles just to keep in shape and because I enjoyed it.
It is just good to hear that there are still plenty of others that enjoy riding just to ride. I plan on sticking with the sport and even have started to consider getting another bike, make even restoring a mountain bike, to expand the riding experience. I look forward to riding now rather that worry about not keeping up.
John E
05-30-08, 08:27 AM
Like "Arkansas," I could not "come back to cycling," because I never left. Many forum regulars know my story, which started as an overweight klutz devoid of any natural athletic talent. I could finally balance a bicycle the summer I turned 12 and got a used 1950s era black 2-speed Schwinn middleweight, followed that Christmas by a bottom-of-the-line Bianchi road bike. From that point on, I was hooked. As a UCLA freshman, I joined the Earth Action Council, which promoted bicycles for transportation. I explored the Santa Monica Mountains and Pacific Coast Highway, eventually being talked into the impossible, a double century, by a 50-year old ex-Marine with a PhD in physics, who became my cycling mentor and part-time employer. That June 1972 12 hr. 18 min. double century remains my single significant athletic achievement. I have accumulated an estimated 100k miles / 160k km of cycling experience and enjoyed every minute of it, with the obvious exception of being left-crossed by a motorist in 1976 and waking up at the UCLA medical center with a concussion, facial lacerations (the permanent "dueling scar" over my left cheekbone), and a double fracture of the left clavicle.
Perhaps because I have kept up recreational and transportation cycling for 45 years, with at least some time in the saddle almost every week during that period, I still favor the traditional road bike, with drop handlebar, tensioned leather saddle, friction shifting (downtube or barcon), toeclips and straps, etc. As some of you know, I am very active in the "Classic and Vintage" forum.
Cycling has been the key to my cardiovascular health and weight control, an environmentally and economically sensible means of transportation, a slick way to circumnavigate urban traffic congestion, a wonderful socializer in person and now in cyberspace, a delightful outlet for my desire to tinker with things mechanical, and the only sport I have ever truly deeply loved. My passion for cycling has fueled my interest in politics, and I have worked with the San Diego County Bicycle Coalition to improve conditions for cyclists.
Rick@OCRR
05-30-08, 09:30 AM
Like Arkansas and John E . . . I never left. Got into it good in '68 and been at it ever since.
Motives:
Excitement! It's a fun sport that is challenging, somewhat competitive (but not always) and fascinating on both physical and mechanical sides.
Identity: I define myself as A Cyclist, see the world through cyclist's eyes, and judge myself by the kind of cylist I have become.
Security: I've made my living in the bicycle industry for almost 50 years, and I love the commercial challenges and get on great with others in this industry.
Rick / OCRR
JanMM
05-30-08, 10:32 AM
I returned to riding bikes at age 23, having stopped at age 15. (I had been a kid riding a bike, not a "cyclist".) Been riding ever since. So, I don't know how it is to "return" as a middle-aged guy but I do know that I learned at 23 that bicycling is fun. It's still fun at 58. It's a lot of other stuff, too, of course, but the major ingredient is ya-hoo, whee-ha, boy howdy!
oldride
05-30-08, 10:51 AM
I've always done some cycling but the amount varied over the years. Last year I decided to do some club rides. I enjoyed them but work got in the way so I only did a few. This year I'm not working and doing much more riding. I recently struggled with some health issues and could not enjoy the club rides. I'm feeling much better and plan to ride with the group again starting Monday. I ride because I love it and the exercise. I enjoy club rides once or twice a week but also enjoy riding by myself.
I recently did some mods to an older MTB which I am now using as a utilty bike. I've really enjoyed running errands and doing some of my shopping on the bike. That adds another level of fun for me. Using the bike as a utility vehicle really reminds of my youth and I see more and more possibilties.
With gas prices, the economy and the environment issues I would love to see more people riding in my town but the auto is still king here. :(
PirateJim
05-30-08, 11:27 AM
I suppose I never really “left” bicycling, since I’ve always had a bike since I was a little kid. However, I count the day I “returned” to be about two years ago now when I decided I really needed to turn my fat slovenly sedentary lifestyle around. Okay, I’m still sorta slovenly, but going out to the garage that day and pumping up the tires on my Trek Navigator and then hitting the road has done wonders for the fat and sedentary part.
It takes a while. For months I pretty much rode as far as I could, returning home uncertain which hurt worse, my legs or my backside. I thought Navigators were supposed to be “comfort” bikes! But slowly “as far as I could” got farther and farther, and eventually time constraints came into play and I began limiting myself to an hour most days with longer rides sometimes on weekends.
The cool part is that somewhere in there I morphed from forcing myself to go “get my exercise” to really looking forward to my ride. I’ve shed about 50 pounds and feel and look so much better it’s amazing.
I found this forum when I started seriously researching another bike which I finally bought a couple of months ago. (Trek Pilot 5.0) Now the exercise and continued advances in fitness remain some of my primary motivating factors, but I also ride for the fun of it. Riding the Pilot is a lot more “athletic” than riding the Navigator, and I’m having fun working myself up to the point of being at least a fairly decent roadie, though I currently have no Century aspirations.
I just got back into riding this year and from reading some of these forums it can seem like nothing has changed much in 18 years. Yes the bikes are better and the equipment is better but are we enjoying riding any more? What happened to riding just because you like to ride? Let me be honest when I read the post about returning riders I did see a lot of good posts about what you should look for. I would like to add the expected “but” here however. Much of the advice is geared towards someone who will be riding a senior century before the years is out. Is that what motivated many of us to get back into riding bikes?
For myself, the answer is yes, since 18 years ago I wasn’t having much fun as evidenced by the fact I left my bike sitting in the garage on flat tires most of the time. If the question is more general and applied to the whole bicycling community, I would venture to guess the answer is no. People who were “into it” 18 years ago probably had as much fun with the sport/game/recreation that is bicycling then as we do now. We just have the benefit of being able to do it a bit easier/faster/lighter because of the advances.
The underlying point is that these forums are largely populated by people who are “into it” currently; hobbyists if you will (and some pros). I suspect that the vast majority of people who just ride for the pure pleasure of being out in the air and sun on a bike never would seek out a site such as this. They’re off reading about fishing or golf or hunting or quilting or whatever they think of as their hobby. Thus many posts will be about goals that people are working toward or reports about trips or events that people have participated in. Ride reports like “I went out yesterday after work and rode three times around the neighborhood in forty-five minutes with three stops the shoot the breeze with friends I spotted along the way.” are going to be rare.
CACycling
05-30-08, 11:36 AM
After 30 years of riding an average of 10 miles a year, I acidentally returned to cycling last September. I was working on an old MTB that was replacing the bike I'd given my son and during that process I discovered (actually, much of it was rediscovered) the following:
Riding is fun. Riding is getting me back into shape. Riding to work releaves stress and saves gas. Riding is an activity that my wife and I enjoy doing together on a regular basis. Riding alows me to enjoy the beautiful area we call home. Riding farther than I've ridden before lets me know that I'll ride even farther in the future. Riding gives me an excuse to work on bikes. Riding is fun!
maddmaxx
05-30-08, 11:40 AM
Pirate Jim has a good point. It is unlikely that I will post that I spent about 30 minutes yesterday trying to relearn how to ride for more than about 2 seconds (and 25 heart beats) without touching my handlebars. I did just that.
How is it that something that was so simple when I was a kid has become impossible at 62.
wrk101
05-30-08, 02:04 PM
I'm in it to get back in shape, after 30+ years of a desk job. I retired, and as the lbs added up, and the BP crept up, I knew I had to do something.
The mileage for me is all about the fitness improvement.
wobblyoldgeezer
05-30-08, 02:25 PM
A good question, and already (no doubt more to come) plenty of good responses.
Statisticians (Tom?) might be able to quantify and aggregate the answers, but as a rough guess -
Some here might be in the camp of "Never tried this until later in life, I like it, it makes me feel good, and I can feel the health benefits, it makes me feel younger, maybe I should buy a better bike"
Others might be in the camp of "I've done this since I was a kid, I like it, it makes me feel good, I can feel the health benefits, and I'm going to ride till I pass out or until I'm faster than when I was younger, maybe I should buy a better bike, the garage is full but the spare bedroom still has room for a couple more"
The intersection of the 2 groups is probably found over apple pie after a nice ride with good friends.
Endorphins and coffee add to the experience.
The Weak Link
05-30-08, 02:27 PM
Babes. I do it for the babes. They think I'm cute in bib shorts.:eek:
I rode in order to keep up with my son. It's a lost cause now.
I love getting outdoors and seeing the scenery. Which doesn't explain why I ride sometimes in the dead of winter when they're nothing to be seen.
But I mainly ride so I have something to do with the thousands of dollars of bike equipment I have on hand.
ad6mj
05-30-08, 02:49 PM
I ride for fun. Fitness is a benefit and the more fit I get, the further I ride, which makes me more fit and ride further.... I don't care for group rides except an occasional charity ride. I like to ride at my own pace and enjoy the solitude.
SaiKaiTai
05-30-08, 07:32 PM
Late to the dance again, it is I, Mr Irrelevant! What a day at work today... no time for nothin'
No news, I rode everywhere, all the time as a kid. I rode a lot in my 20's, too.
Partly because riding a bike with a broken foot and torn ligaments is easier than walking.
Even after the foot got put back together again, riding was fun so I kept at it into my 30's
Then I quit because it got dark before I got home from work.
So, for 20 years I sat on the couch waiting to die until I realized that was actually going to be sooner than I wanted.
Time to get back into shape.
But, to do that, you have to find something that you can stick with and for me that was the bike.
And it was the bike because, it's fun and totally free.
So I ride a bike because it's fun and totally free.
But the side benefit is I get to see how far I can push myself and the farther I push, the farther I can push. It makes my doctors happy and I feel better about myself than I have for -literally- decades.
I don't race and I never will... I'll just keep finding rides that hurt and make me suffer because, when I beat them, I feel like I'm cheating death just a little.
snaproll
05-30-08, 08:45 PM
Two words... shin splints.
At 49 I was training for my first marathon and came up lame. Two weeks later I could walk without limping but still couldn't run. I pulled my hybrid down and started riding semi-seriously for the first time. I bought my first road bike a few months later and haven't run since.
I enjoy the efficiency of a bicycle, the amount of ground that can be covered with even a small amount of effort. I like the way bikes look. I like the smell of bike shops. I enjoy tinkering with bikes and keeping them tuned. I have absolutely no need for a better bike but still think about owning a Litespeed or Cervélo. I am smitten.
I have found a way to turn almost everything I do into a competition - from running to driving to flying, but I'm determined not to do that with bicycling. I ride with small groups occasionally but generally prefer to ride alone. I take breaks when I want to and am looking for fitness to be a side benefit of enjoying a ride, not the other way around. I ride because I like it, just like I did when I was ten.
wrafl
05-31-08, 06:55 AM
The joy of riding is what motivate me. On top of that, the great health benefit you get. I thought I was in good shape before I took cylcing seriously since I walk daily for up to 6 miles. My first time on a bike 3 years ago proved me wrong as I couldn't even get back home after a mile ride. More time on the saddle will get you conditioned to ride distances that you won't imagine is possible on a bicycle. I'm looking forward to do a century this summer. Enjoy your bike and safe riding.
TruF
05-31-08, 09:09 AM
We got into riding last year for the fun of it and having a healthy activity we could enjoy together. I quickly realized that I also wanted to do club rides and replaced my hybrid with a road bike. Not interested in racing. Am thinking about a century maybe next year, just to see if I can. I also like the social aspect of cycling. Meet a lot of great people in the local clubs.
And I am quite willing to post ride reports of rides on our favorite bike paths. With pics. ;)
Red Rider
05-31-08, 09:24 AM
I've read this thread with interest. I always wonder at others' motivation to ride. I really enjoy reading how people find their passion and new direction via bicycling.
I ride for almost all the above reasons. I also ride and race (having never done so before June '07) out of curiosity: How much faster can I go? How much excitement can I stand? How far can I go and still enjoy the ride? What will happen if I do something totally out of my comfort zone?
What happens is that each challenge that I meet, each day that I choose to ride (whatever kind of ride it is), I grow and change significantly. I believe this to be true for others, as well. Every time you ride you are changed. How and how much you change are up to you -- how open are you to change?
When I first got back on a bike over 3 years ago I never imagined that I would do what I do now on a bicycle. What I've discovered about myself on a bike have translated into other aspects of my life. I have fundamentally changed as a result of my riding. I'm not the same person I was before my first century, my first tandem ride, my first race. And the physical benefits are great, too.
Ride. Rest. Repeat. It's a good life.
Robert Foster
05-31-08, 11:00 PM
But what I am wondering is if we can ever capture the joy of riding a bike just because and without any excuses. How many can remember the feeling of getting their first bike? I can and it was pure joy. It was a cruiser and big old balloon tires that would ride just as well on dirt as they would pavement. I rode that thing everywhere and miles didn’t matter. I can also remember my first 10 speed and the feeling that I had a pure racer. I must have changed the tape on the drops at least once a month just to keep it looking good. Like many once I learned to drive the bike was left more and more behind. But I returned in full force in my 20s. We road everywhere and we even had a trailer for going to the store and one for hauling the baby after he was born. Between my 20 and late 30 cycling was a driving force between my friends and I. I managed to ride a few times from Riverside to Lake Arrowhead and back. It is a pretty good climb for anyone interested in giving it a shot. But I am not sure I enjoyed riding just for the sake of riding. I think I road a bit out of the desire to show I could keep up with the younger riders. Sometimes I would get home and almost collapse in a chair till I could get the strength to make it into the shower.
I bought better bikes and better equipment and even got a set of rollers to train when the weather was bad. Then we decided to move to the mountains and riding just became a chore. The road bike was worthless on some of those mountain roads as the multiple small potholes caused from winter snow plowing would eat a racing tire and destroy a rim when you least expected it. Mountain bikes were pretty heavy 20 years ago and just didn’t interest me back then. I sold the road bikes and the tandem and gave it up.
When I decided to buy a bike this time I wanted to capture the joy I had when I got my first real bike. I wanted to ride and see the things around me just because I could. I knew where I had been and that isn’t my motivation this time. I want a smile on my face while I am riding not a grimace. What I guess I am trying to say is my motivation has changed. I know it is a healthy sport but that is a side benefit not a motive for me. If you see my point?
Mark Turner
05-31-08, 11:23 PM
It does happen to be the beginning of get out and ride season for most of us though so don't be surprised when we brag a little.
I've become more obsessive with tracking my mileage, time and speed than I ever was when younger, and noted today that I rode more in February than I did this May. It's harder to find time to get out and ride (or do other fun stuff) during the growing season when I work much longer hours (as a photographer specializing in gardens and native plants -- see http://www.pnwflowers.com).
I never left cycling. I ride for fun, fitness, and economy. Most of my riding currently is for fun and fitness, but when I had day jobs outside my home I commuted by bike almost every day. I ride for many errands over a mile (for which I usually walk). I did all our grocery shopping on my bike this week (4 trips to four stores and filled my panniers each place and had to bring the 12-pack of microbrew and two boxes of cereal home in a backpack from the last stop).
I started doing 25-50 mile rides on a single speed bike as a teen and still like to ride that distance. I like to cover distance and push myself to go fast on my bike. I climb hills so I can zoom down the other side. Roads with no hills are boring. I used to like the wind in my hair, but now its short and I wear a helmet.
DnvrFox
06-01-08, 12:44 AM
I want a smile on my face while I am riding not a grimace. What I guess I am trying to say is my motivation has changed. I know it is a healthy sport but that is a side benefit not a motive for me. If you see my point?
I have long maintained that someone who bikes (or whatever) for fitness alone won't be bicycling very long.
Yes, I see your point. I do it for fun.
Bud Bent
06-01-08, 07:40 AM
We obviously have a wide variety of riders here, and that is as it should be. When I was 9 years old, there was nothing I loved more than riding a bike. When I started riding again at 53, to gain fitness and help lose weight, I quickly discovered that it was just as much fun to me then as it was when I was 9.
Within a couple of months, I realized that I enjoyed riding so much, I didn't just want to get fit, I wanted to get VERY fit. Now, I just love riding, and love how I feel, being this fit, as opposed to how I felt before.
My recent health issues were a reminder that being fit won't cure all. Medical problems are still going to happen to us 50+'ers, but compared to most people our age, when it comes to surgery, hospital stays, and such, you are way ahead of the curve if you are fit. I was treated like a freak at the hospital, and one young doctor told me I was in better shape than any of the staff. That sounded funny, coming from a young doctor to an old lung cancer patient.
The Weak Link
06-01-08, 07:53 AM
I'll just keep finding rides that hurt and make me suffer because, when I beat them, I feel like I'm cheating death just a little.
That's actually quite profound. I especially get that feeling when I mountain bike, as it seems I've courted death on an occasion or two on my Wahoo.
Yesterday the Buenos Aires was tuned, and as I cycled I heard only the sound of the treadless tires as they softly whirred against the pavement, and the wind rushing by me, and the birds, and....about a gazillion cicadas with their creepy high-pitched buzzing sound. Except for the cicadas it was wonderful.
You also learn to ride with your mouth closed during cicada season :eek:
Robert Foster
06-01-08, 09:22 AM
Yesterday the Buenos Aires was tuned, and as I cycled I heard only the sound of the treadless tires as they softly whirred against the pavement, and the wind rushing by me, and the birds, and....about a gazillion cicadas with their creepy high-pitched buzzing sound. Except for the cicadas it was wonderful.
You also learn to ride with your mouth closed during cicada season :eek:
That is the kind of experience I was thinking about, although cicadas are not a big problem here in Southern California. I have been out early in the morning and could hear the buzz of the high-tension wires as I traveled down the road. I have watched a hawk catch a field mouse. These are things that interest me. It is much like hiking and camping it is a non-intrusive connection with nature. The more I ride the more I realize I will push or test myself. But what I am trying for is to only do that when I want. If I build or restore a used mountain bike I want to ride to explore or even visit with a friend as the miles go by. When riding with a group I simply don’t want to be the one that pushes everyone to the point that we drop the weakest rider. Maybe that is because for the first time in my life I have had the chance to be the weakest rider? I guess I am a pack animal and enjoy the pack more than the hunt. Life sometimes changes things.
yakmurph
06-01-08, 01:59 PM
My motivation is superior to yours, because my motivation to ride is mine, not yours.
:twitchy:
SaiKaiTai
06-01-08, 04:24 PM
That's actually quite profound. I especially get that feeling when I mountain bike, as it seems I've courted death on an occasion or two on my Wahoo.
Yesterday the Buenos Aires was tuned, and as I cycled I heard only the sound of the treadless tires as they softly whirred against the pavement, and the wind rushing by me, and the birds, and....about a gazillion cicadas with their creepy high-pitched buzzing sound. Except for the cicadas it was wonderful.
You also learn to ride with your mouth closed during cicada season :eek:
Wait a minute... I must have completely missed this... You have both a Gary Fisher and a LeMond?
You are my long lost twin :D
late
06-01-08, 04:25 PM
Do or die.
Robert Foster
06-03-08, 09:49 PM
Going to four stores and bringing the beer home in a backpack shows just what can be done. When I was in Kenya lots of people used bikes to haul things we would never think of. I was very impressed to see a man with about 20 pieces of ¾ inch PVC riding down the road. They were making a gravity feed water system for his mother’s house and that was the quickest way to get the PVC home. I think if I decide to do more of the shopping on my bike I will need a small trailer.
Mark Turner
06-09-08, 07:04 AM
I think if I decide to do more of the shopping on my bike I will need a small trailer.
When we had small kids I had a Burley trailer to haul them around in, which I also used for much of the grocery shopping. My youngest is now 19 and we long ago got rid of the trailer. It would sure make the shopping easier. If you have a place to store the trailer between trips then I think they're great.
Allegheny Jet
06-09-08, 10:11 AM
Back to the OP's question: I ride as long and fast as I can and when ever I can. I even started racing this year and I'm 55yrs old. When I was young the "joy of biking" was riding faster and further than any kid in the neighborhood. As I grew up that same motivation carried over to any sport I competed in and continued thru college, where I ran track, and into my adult life. I was beginning training for Master's Track and Field in my early 40's when a constantly sore left ankle caused me to visit an orthepedic doctor. I was told to stop any weight bearing excersize or risk needing two ankle replacements in my lifetime. I took up riding bicycles again at age 43 and never looked back. Riding gives me the freedom to push myself just like I did in running or playing basketball. Riding also gives me the excersize my body and mind crave. Riding with a group of guys and pushing myself is fun, at least it seems so after the ride. Being competitive is my nature weather when doing activities myself or in a group. Even though I golf infrequently, I still try to win any hole possible. Most everyone who visits this forum has a different reason for riding bicycles, but, the bicycle is the "common thread" that connects us together. Getting support or encouragement from others regardless is what makes this forum so desirable to us.
patentcad
06-09-08, 10:21 AM
What motivates other returning riders?
Not group rides.
Just riding my bicycle, which I do alone 90% of the time. I like it that way.
CW Spook
06-09-08, 04:27 PM
I'm a lot like PirateJim and WRK101. 'Retired a couple of years ago and put on about 40 pounds. I decided I needed to do something to get back in shape and biking is more fun than most other forms of exercise. 'Bought a new recumbent as an incentive and am slowly working my way back into condition. Now I'm looking forward to hauling the bikes to some good trail areas and getting some longer rides in.
cyclinfool
06-09-08, 07:00 PM
I like fat men in Spandex.
http://bikehugger.com/images/blog/fatguyinspandex-1-01.jpg
:roflmao2:
alicestrong
06-09-08, 09:16 PM
Pirate Jim has a good point. It is unlikely that I will post that I spent about 30 minutes yesterday trying to relearn how to ride for more than about 2 seconds (and 25 heart beats) without touching my handlebars. I did just that.
How is it that something that was so simple when I was a kid has become impossible at 62.