A lefty is a fat bike fork/shock thingy already...Cannondale should make a fat bike Lefty and call it the Hefty.
OH CARP. wife just brought home first nog of the season...
When it is cold out. I am inside walking on fine silk carpets covering Old growth Oak. My feet never touch cold stones or dirt. I am blessed for that....
IMBA has become the NRA of the bike world. They only care about bike manufacturers selling shit, even it that shit isn't a proper bike. I for one despise the 'populist' mtb movement. Although cheezy, the EXTREME sports era brought the expectation that riding a mountain bike was difficult, required skill and had associated risk.
IMBA has become the NRA of the bike world. They only care about bike manufacturers selling shit, even it that shit isn't a proper bike. I for one despise the 'populist' mtb movement. Although cheezy, the EXTREME sports era brought the expectation that riding a mountain bike was difficult, required skill and had associated risk.
I remember when "flow" was a goal worthy of achieving. Now it's a built in trail feature. Good riders can find flow on any trail even if it's technical, rocky, rooty, etc.IMBA has become the NRA of the bike world. They only care about bike manufacturers selling shit, even it that shit isn't a proper bike. I for one despise the 'populist' mtb movement. Although cheezy, the EXTREME sports era brought the expectation that riding a mountain bike was difficult, required skill and had associated risk.
Yup. Flow is something that should happen with the rider, AKA "in the zone".I remember when "flow" was a goal worthy of achieving. Now it's a built in trail feature. Good riders can find flow on any trail even if it's technical, rocky, rooty, etc.
Operating a go pro isn't doing nothingAnyway, these days flow is building a trail that you could roll a bowling ball down and it would stay on line the whole way down the trail. The rider is in the zone because they don't have to do anything.
This is why I love technically demanding trails. You have to pay attention to what you're doing otherwise you crash. Makes it difficult to think about all that crap in your daily life that you're trying to get away from.Yup. Flow is something that should happen with the rider, AKA "in the zone".
This is something near and dear to my heart as it was something I studied in Grad School. Well I studied the computerized control version but it has a direct analog to the way our brains work. When you get good enough at something, you basically know what to do, muscle movements etc, well in advance of doing it. I believe it is called adaptive learning in neurology, feed forward in the controls world.
When you are learning you take action based on error feedback (better turn because I am going off the trail). When you get good at something you can see ahead and take action exactly when it is required even if it is a new trail. Experience tells you how hard you can corner on that kind of dirt etc. Error based feedback is used to make corrections but when things are going well it is only a small part of what is going on.
Anyway, these days flow is building a trail that you could roll a bowling ball down and it would stay on line the whole way down the trail. The rider is in the zone because they don't have to do anything.
My doctor believes I was able to recover faster from my injuries, because I was a cyclist all my life. He believes the more I ride the more things will rewire themselves. I am going with it. I don't trust my doctors in the States. Canadian Doctors are so much more honest and forthright. They like to get paid mind you. But not so overtly as to make you suspect what they say.Yup. Flow is something that should happen with the rider, AKA "in the zone".
This is something near and dear to my heart as it was something I studied in Grad School. Well I studied the computerized control version but it has a direct analog to the way our brains work. When you get good enough at something, you basically know what to do, muscle movements etc, well in advance of doing it. I believe it is called adaptive learning in neurology, feed forward in the controls world.
When you are learning you take action based on error feedback (better turn because I am going off the trail). When you get good at something you can see ahead and take action exactly when it is required even if it is a new trail. Experience tells you how hard you can corner on that kind of dirt etc. Error based feedback is used to make corrections but when things are going well it is only a small part of what is going on.
Anyway, these days flow is building a trail that you could roll a bowling ball down and it would stay on line the whole way down the trail. The rider is in the zone because they don't have to do anything.
Operating a go pro isn't doing nothing
Yup, doing athletic shit makes you better at doing other shit.My doctor believes I was able to recover faster from my injuries, because I was a cyclist all my life. He believes the more I ride the more things will rewire themselves. I am going with it. I don't trust my doctors in the States. Canadian Doctors are so much more honest and forthright. They like to get paid mind you. But not so overtly as to make you suspect what they say.
Have you started wearing reading glasses yet ?Yup, doing athletic shit makes you better at doing other shit.
Had my eyes tested earlier in the week. I am getting old and the vision is going away. However I managed a perfect score on the depth perception test. They said most people only get about 50%. I attribute that not to having good eyes, but regularly putting my life in the hands of my ability to sense speed and distance. I am well practiced in accurately processing the crap data my eyes are giving me.
No but I need to. Right eye is fine, astigmatism in the left. Ordered some up, two week delivery.Have you started wearing reading glasses yet ?
Read it now.No but I need to. Right eye is fine, astigmatism in the left. Ordered some up, two week delivery.
Completely agree! Some trails that people label as "flowy" are like riding on curvy sidewalk. If I wanted to do that, I'd just buy a road bike.This is why I love technically demanding trails. You have to pay attention to what you're doing otherwise you crash. Makes it difficult to think about all that crap in your daily life that you're trying to get away from.
Do you even IMBA, bro?Completely agree! Some trails that people label as "flowy" are like riding on curvy sidewalk. If I wanted to do that, I'd just buy a road bike.