Should I go bi? Should I go both ways?
#1
Lance Legweak
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Should I go bi? Should I go both ways?
OK, I'm 53 and just got into cycling in May after not riding for a few decades. I'm basically a road guy due to a bad back, but come from a MX background. I've been reading books and magazines that talk about putting up the road bike and dragging out the MTB for winter months due to the cold, wet weather.
My area is pretty dry for most of the winter (No Cal/Sacramento) so I probably will be able to road ride most of the winter, but just trying to figure out if I should do MTB with or instead of road when things are cold and wet, or just stay on the road? I have an OLD MTB that I ride, so I can go both ways when the feeling hits me but was just curious what the more seasoned riders thought about MTB riding in the off season for cross-training?
So should I become a bi-cycxual?
My area is pretty dry for most of the winter (No Cal/Sacramento) so I probably will be able to road ride most of the winter, but just trying to figure out if I should do MTB with or instead of road when things are cold and wet, or just stay on the road? I have an OLD MTB that I ride, so I can go both ways when the feeling hits me but was just curious what the more seasoned riders thought about MTB riding in the off season for cross-training?
So should I become a bi-cycxual?
#2
Senior Member
If your back can take it, MTB riding hones your technical skills and in hilly areas provides a great cardio workout. In my opinion, it will make you a better all round cyclist.
#4
Lance Legweak
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:}
#5
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Sure! Why not? I have been for years.
Actually, now that I think about it, I'm tri-cycxual. I ride a fixie, too...
Actually, now that I think about it, I'm tri-cycxual. I ride a fixie, too...
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#6
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I ride road, mountain, fixed gear, British 3-speed and my Folding bike. Not sure what that makes me, but I'm sure I don't care! I rode my Touring bike (Mercian) to San Diego last weekend, so that fits in there somewhere too, i.e. variations on the road theme.
My major failing is that I still don't have a cyclocross bike. But then, that's what N+1 is for . . .
Rick / OCRR
#7
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You mentioned concern about your back. If you can handle the cost, a modern full suspension trail bike, something with 4-5 inches of travel at each end, would open a whole new and amazingly entertaining world of cycling for you.
I love riding rigid, but suspension makes it so much easier on the body, especially the back. I can ride much faster, longer and more often offroad on my Stumpjumper FSR than I could possibly do on my old Trek 970.
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I have read somewhere that Mountain biking will make you a stronger rider while road riding will build endurance. The two types of riding compliment each other.
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Perhaps you would want to go for "somewhere in the middle" and go for a hybrid? I ride both a hybrid and a roadie and find that I use both quite a lot. After riding the hybrid, which is quite a bit heavier, using the roadie is a real treat--in terms of picking it up and putting it on the rack as well as going up the hills, etc. I use the hybrid a lot for trails and country riding, especially if it has been raining, but then love to use the roadie for those longer, faster riding times. Just a thought!
#10
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Problem is that to experience Mountain biking- you have to have hills- mud and single track. I have to look for the singletrack but Mud can be had just two miles from my house- Hills are only 6 but the singletrack is 10. (Right next to my favourite restaurant for breakfast)
But California in the Winter? Will you have Mud? Nothing better for training than a bike that suddenly gains 5lbs and has a drag brake or two attached to it. That first pic is not blurred---It is rain.
Mountain biking will teach you a few skills- mainly that you should have stayed on the road- but for fitness training and fun- it cannot be bettered.
But California in the Winter? Will you have Mud? Nothing better for training than a bike that suddenly gains 5lbs and has a drag brake or two attached to it. That first pic is not blurred---It is rain.
Mountain biking will teach you a few skills- mainly that you should have stayed on the road- but for fitness training and fun- it cannot be bettered.
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#11
Senior Member
I am having a hard time understanding the original post. What is an off season? Why is it better to ride off road when it is cold and wet? I like mud as much as the next guy, but warm mud is just as nice as cold mud. I have never lived there, but I expect winter in Woodland is not a lot colder than summer in the places some of the forum readers live.
So if you want to ride off road, why limit it to winter? If you like to ride on the road, why stop in the winter???
Sorry, I can offer no insights about the back issue.
So if you want to ride off road, why limit it to winter? If you like to ride on the road, why stop in the winter???
Sorry, I can offer no insights about the back issue.
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I wouldn't do it if I were you.
Anyway, you'd start a fight in my neighborhood by suggesting that you're saving MTBing for freeze-thaw and rut up the trails season. That might not be a problem for your part of California.
If I had to do it over, I would get a nice cyclocross bike and try my hand at that discipline. I think MTBing sucks out loud right now because I had the worst epic disaster of a ride this week. But YMMV.
Anyway, you'd start a fight in my neighborhood by suggesting that you're saving MTBing for freeze-thaw and rut up the trails season. That might not be a problem for your part of California.
If I had to do it over, I would get a nice cyclocross bike and try my hand at that discipline. I think MTBing sucks out loud right now because I had the worst epic disaster of a ride this week. But YMMV.
#13
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So you think it would have gone better on a bike with skinnier tires, no suspension and drop bars?
#14
Lance Legweak
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The key is big tires, full suspension, and FIRE TRAILS. You can get hurt out there on that singletrack stuff.
BTW, I hope Georgia thrashes OSU whenever they play. Your coach sounds like the anti-Spurrier.
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First, keep in mind the cycling magazine's main job is to sell bicycles and accessories. So they have a vested interest in telling you you need a different bike for every season. If you have lots of money, then by all means, buy one for every season.
Otherwise, ride an MTB when you feel like riding off-road. Ride a road bike when you feel like riding on-road. That's about it.
I am living, breathing proof (supported with photographic evidence below) that just because it's snowing, doesn't mean you need to ride an off-road bike on the road. I ride both my road bikes all year 'round. The only concession I make to the weather is in tires and fenders. One bike (shown below) gets studded snow tires and wider fenders to cover them, and the other wears fenders only in winter.
Not only do I commute year 'round, I ride with a weekly all-winter, all-conditions shop ride. 75%-80% of those riders do switch to an MTB. And even though they're all decades younger than me, I follow them off-road through the snow with my road bike. Messes their heads right up when an old guy on a skinny-tired bike passes them off-road in the snow. All the sales BS says that's not supposed to happen.
So ride what you like, when and where you like. If you want to switch bikes with the weather or the seasons, go right ahead. But you don't have to just because some magazine says so.
Arriving at work one morning. I see snow, but I don't see mountains. So why do I need a mountain bike?
Otherwise, ride an MTB when you feel like riding off-road. Ride a road bike when you feel like riding on-road. That's about it.
I am living, breathing proof (supported with photographic evidence below) that just because it's snowing, doesn't mean you need to ride an off-road bike on the road. I ride both my road bikes all year 'round. The only concession I make to the weather is in tires and fenders. One bike (shown below) gets studded snow tires and wider fenders to cover them, and the other wears fenders only in winter.
Not only do I commute year 'round, I ride with a weekly all-winter, all-conditions shop ride. 75%-80% of those riders do switch to an MTB. And even though they're all decades younger than me, I follow them off-road through the snow with my road bike. Messes their heads right up when an old guy on a skinny-tired bike passes them off-road in the snow. All the sales BS says that's not supposed to happen.
So ride what you like, when and where you like. If you want to switch bikes with the weather or the seasons, go right ahead. But you don't have to just because some magazine says so.
Arriving at work one morning. I see snow, but I don't see mountains. So why do I need a mountain bike?
Last edited by tsl; 09-05-09 at 02:01 PM.
#18
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I am having a hard time understanding the original post. What is an off season? Why is it better to ride off road when it is cold and wet? I like mud as much as the next guy, but warm mud is just as nice as cold mud. I have never lived there, but I expect winter in Woodland is not a lot colder than summer in the places some of the forum readers live.
So if you want to ride off road, why limit it to winter? If you like to ride on the road, why stop in the winter???
Sorry, I can offer no insights about the back issue.
So if you want to ride off road, why limit it to winter? If you like to ride on the road, why stop in the winter???
Sorry, I can offer no insights about the back issue.
Summers and although we have had a few wet ones- we are on clay and the ruts and trails go solid. Not that pleasant to ride on and dangerous if you fall. May just be tradition but those of us with the two disciplines-Road ride in the summer and go out and get muddy in the winter ----or just cold in the winter if the frost doesn't unfreeze the mud.
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How long was I in the army? Five foot seven.
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How long was I in the army? Five foot seven.
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#20
Lance Legweak
Thread Starter
:}
#21
Lance Legweak
Thread Starter
First, keep in mind the cycling magazine's main job is to sell bicycles and accessories. So they have a vested interest in telling you you need a different bike for every season. If you have lots of money, then by all means, buy one for every season.
Otherwise, ride an MTB when you feel like riding off-road. Ride a road bike when you feel like riding on-road. That's about it.
I am living, breathing proof (supported with photographic evidence below) that just because it's snowing, doesn't mean you need to ride an off-road bike on the road. I ride both my road bikes all year 'round. The only concession I make to the weather is in tires and fenders. One bike (shown below) gets studded snow tires and wider fenders to cover them, and the other wears fenders only in winter.
Not only do I commute year 'round, I ride with a weekly all-winter, all-conditions shop ride. 75%-80% of those riders do switch to an MTB. And even though they're all decades younger than me, I follow them off-road through the snow with my road bike. Messes their heads right up when an old guy on a skinny-tired bike passes them off-road in the snow. All the sales BS says that's not supposed to happen.
So ride what you like, when and where you like. If you want to switch bikes with the weather or the seasons, go right ahead. But you don't have to just because some magazine says so.
Arriving at work one morning. I see snow, but I don't see mountains. So why do I need a mountain bike?
Otherwise, ride an MTB when you feel like riding off-road. Ride a road bike when you feel like riding on-road. That's about it.
I am living, breathing proof (supported with photographic evidence below) that just because it's snowing, doesn't mean you need to ride an off-road bike on the road. I ride both my road bikes all year 'round. The only concession I make to the weather is in tires and fenders. One bike (shown below) gets studded snow tires and wider fenders to cover them, and the other wears fenders only in winter.
Not only do I commute year 'round, I ride with a weekly all-winter, all-conditions shop ride. 75%-80% of those riders do switch to an MTB. And even though they're all decades younger than me, I follow them off-road through the snow with my road bike. Messes their heads right up when an old guy on a skinny-tired bike passes them off-road in the snow. All the sales BS says that's not supposed to happen.
So ride what you like, when and where you like. If you want to switch bikes with the weather or the seasons, go right ahead. But you don't have to just because some magazine says so.
Arriving at work one morning. I see snow, but I don't see mountains. So why do I need a mountain bike?
#22
Senior Member
.... from the posts I've read so far, although MTB riding is not mandatory in the winter months, it is good cross training and will lead to better fitness and better road skill on the road bike, so sound like a win-win-win situation ( just love the look of all the new MTB's compared to my 19 year old GT RTS-2!).
:}
:}
I like the newer FSR's as well but just rode a 10 year old Rocky Mountain Thin Air HT for a week while on vacation and absolutely loved it! Something about steel bikes..I just couldn't talk my brother out of parting with it!!
#24
just keep riding
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I still need to do some "Cow Trailing" to see how my back will handle it, then kind of decide from there, but from the posts I've read so far, although MTB riding is not mandatory in the winter months, it is good cross training and will lead to better fitness and better road skill on the road bike, so sound like a win-win-win situation ( just love the look of all the new MTB's compared to my 19 year old GT RTS-2!).
:}
:}
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First, keep in mind the cycling magazine's main job is to sell bicycles and accessories. So they have a vested interest in telling you you need a different bike for every season. If you have lots of money, then by all means, buy one for every season.
Otherwise, ride an MTB when you feel like riding off-road. Ride a road bike when you feel like riding on-road. That's about it.
I am living, breathing proof (supported with photographic evidence below) that just because it's snowing, doesn't mean you need to ride an off-road bike on the road. I ride both my road bikes all year 'round. The only concession I make to the weather is in tires and fenders. One bike (shown below) gets studded snow tires and wider fenders to cover them, and the other wears fenders only in winter.
Not only do I commute year 'round, I ride with a weekly all-winter, all-conditions shop ride. 75%-80% of those riders do switch to an MTB. And even though they're all decades younger than me, I follow them off-road through the snow with my road bike. Messes their heads right up when an old guy on a skinny-tired bike passes them off-road in the snow. All the sales BS says that's not supposed to happen.
So ride what you like, when and where you like. If you want to switch bikes with the weather or the seasons, go right ahead. But you don't have to just because some magazine says so.
Arriving at work one morning. I see snow, but I don't see mountains. So why do I need a mountain bike?
Otherwise, ride an MTB when you feel like riding off-road. Ride a road bike when you feel like riding on-road. That's about it.
I am living, breathing proof (supported with photographic evidence below) that just because it's snowing, doesn't mean you need to ride an off-road bike on the road. I ride both my road bikes all year 'round. The only concession I make to the weather is in tires and fenders. One bike (shown below) gets studded snow tires and wider fenders to cover them, and the other wears fenders only in winter.
Not only do I commute year 'round, I ride with a weekly all-winter, all-conditions shop ride. 75%-80% of those riders do switch to an MTB. And even though they're all decades younger than me, I follow them off-road through the snow with my road bike. Messes their heads right up when an old guy on a skinny-tired bike passes them off-road in the snow. All the sales BS says that's not supposed to happen.
So ride what you like, when and where you like. If you want to switch bikes with the weather or the seasons, go right ahead. But you don't have to just because some magazine says so.
Arriving at work one morning. I see snow, but I don't see mountains. So why do I need a mountain bike?
Take care, Greg