• This topic has 55 replies, 40 voices, and was last updated 9 years ago by m1kea.
Viewing 16 posts - 41 through 56 (of 56 total)
  • Roadies, why so miserable?
  • robdob
    Free Member

    Another question. Why do the forum smart Alec’s think that if something has been discussed once IT MUST NOT BE DISCUSSED AGAIN?

    Get over yourselves.

    Jamie
    Free Member

    I think it’s less the topic has been discussed, more it is a pernicious statement that seems to border on troll-lite.

    …anyway, the fact we are now on page 2, means it’s getting discussed to a certain degree.

    mrblobby
    Free Member

    Can we not just make it a sticky thread?

    yunki
    Free Member

    Incredibly small penis should answer most of the questions in this thread

    mrblobby
    Free Member

    Most of the questions in this thread seem to be questioning the OPs trolling motives, so you may be right.

    grahamg
    Free Member

    I’m afraid I’m one of the annoying ones rolling along with a shit-eating grin and saying hello to people.

    Euro
    Free Member

    If you find road riding boring you must be doing it wrong… Or live somewhere really crap

    What should i be doing right to make it exciting?

    I was pedaling in an anti-clock wise direction so i’ve got the basics covered. It was faster than walking and i got plenty of fresh air but road riding is much slower than travelling by motorbike and my attempts at injecting some excitement into it were unsuccessful (bike broke) so i was doing it wrong on that front. I see road riding as the serious/grown up side of cycling and that’s not what cycling is about for me at present. Moving house to somewhere less crappy isn’t going to change that.

    why in 2014 do people use information technology so badly? With 200,000+ topics in the bike section alone the chances your question has been asked before. Posting a new thread rather than searching is a really inefficient use of a huge resource

    If you’d used the excellent search function, you could have found the answer to that question. 25 efficiency credits will be deducted from your account.

    bigad40
    Free Member

    Ha ha, just went out on road bike and did some hill climbs and got a puncture.
    But guess what…
    I still really enjoyed myself.
    Weather is nice.
    It’s a quiet-ish road.
    And I’d still rather be out on my bike, mountain bike or road, than doing almost anything else.
    And I greeted a mountain biker just to make a point

    munrobiker
    Free Member

    Surely you’d be miserable too if you had to ride this?

    Not all of them can be hora though, surely?

    crashtestmonkey
    Free Member

    If you’d used the excellent search function, you could have found the answer to that question. 25 efficiency credits will be deducted from your account.

    🙂 FWIW I find the advanced one works fine.

    My first road ride was a joyless death march,I perservered as I was carrying an injury and it quickly clicked, and I now do more on road than off road riding. My 2005 R1 has just been SORNed, first time in 20+ years I havent had a road legal bike, as those rest days where I’d blat into wales for a long day of lane carving (and spend a fortune on petrol) I now spend out on the road bike. No faffing loading cars and driving to some worthwhile trails, I’m on quiet roads 5mins from my door. More sociable than MTBing if you want it to be as you can chat as you ride. Cover more miles so (as long as youve got the surroundings) you see more than on an MTB. Flying along the flats with legs spinning smoothly and a feeling of effortlessness has a feeling of purity and is a bit zen. Climbs are there to be conquered and pain to be overruled. Then spin out, tuck and fly down the other side, lifting your vision and using your bodyweight as if you were on a motorbike, every roadie remembers the first time they topped 50mph.

    As long as you are riding and enjoying it it’s all good, I hope road riding clicks for you as its another option/dimension, but if it doesnt youre loving MTBing so its win-win.

    I smile and wave to everyone out on a bike, be they ‘serious’ roadies, gnarly MTBers or commuters, farmers or pensioners pootling to the shops.

    Every time I see an adult on a bicycle, I no longer despair for the future of the human race.

    H. G. Wells

    Jenko
    Free Member

    They may look miserable, but they are secretly revelling in the ‘glory of suffering’.

    Mister-P
    Free Member

    The roads did seem quieter this morning. And last night too for some reason. If it means I get to ride my bike with less numpties on the road I might have to start hoping Ingerlund win and get through to the next round.

    stevious
    Full Member

    I’m miserable because I hate the inconvenience of having to look upon another member of this doomed species. Each and every one of you makes me feel sick.

    Euro
    Free Member

    My first road ride was a joyless death march,I perservered as I was carrying an injury and it quickly clicked, and I now do more on road than off road riding. My 2005 R1 has just been SORNed, first time in 20+ years I havent had a road legal bike, as those rest days where I’d blat into wales for a long day of lane carving (and spend a fortune on petrol) I now spend out on the road bike. No faffing loading cars and driving to some worthwhile trails, I’m on quiet roads 5mins from my door. More sociable than MTBing if you want it to be as you can chat as you ride. Cover more miles so (as long as youve got the surroundings) you see more than on an MTB. Flying along the flats with legs spinning smoothly and a feeling of effortlessness has a feeling of purity and is a bit zen. Climbs are there to be conquered and pain to be overruled. Then spin out, tuck and fly down the other side, lifting your vision and using your bodyweight as if you were on a motorbike, every roadie remembers the first time they topped 50mph.

    Good answer 😀 Pretty much covers many reasons why i (and maybe most of us) cycle in the first place. I’m still a bit too keen on using every lump, bump and curb as an excuse to play to make owning a road bike a practical thing though. I prefer the extra freedom and robustitude of using an mtb – sounds really very obvious but you’re not limited to the roads. I do ride on roads* (not really road riding though) in order to get to the wild, but if i spy something interesting on my travels (easily done where i live – maybe i should move somewhere crappier still 😉 ) i can go explore and not worry about having to walk home.

    I hope road riding clicks for you as its another option/dimension

    I’d like to give the road a go some day but i’ll need to shake the inner child in me first for it to work. It’s on the long finger and my ‘plan’ is it to continue to do what i do, for as long as my body will let me, then retire to the road 😀

    * 500 efficiency credits deducted and a further 10,000 good citizen credits deducted for using footpaths on occasion.

    martib
    Full Member

    I have come to the conclusion, that the ones who do not smile, nod, reply hello, morning, evening etc are concetrating on smashing the KOM on that Strava segment and any diversion from that task, would be against their marginal gains 😉

    m1kea
    Free Member

    I’ll bite

    Yesterday whilst roadieing into work I approached a bridleway junction with a chap on a MTB waiting there. Nodded hello to him and got completely ignored.

    This morning on’t MTB, riding down a quite crappy gravel track on NCN20, I met two women coming the other way on road bikes. Good mornings were exchanged all round.

    Conclusion? One nil to (us) roadies 😆 😛

Viewing 16 posts - 41 through 56 (of 56 total)

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