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In my defence, I thought it would be de rigeur on a cycling forum.
I mean... we discuss commuting distance in miles. We're not into bikes at all, we just like owning Audi estates and arguing about access rights.
Frankly, you should leave nothing but tyre tracks. I never drop anything.
Exactly.
Then one hit the fence, bounced back into the road and took out half a dozen riders.
I would love to see a video of that. That makes me a bad person, doesn't it?
Frankly, you should leave nothing but tyre tracks. I never drop anything.
Does work on tarmac, so bidons are the only option open
Can we not just agree that derailleur is OK, mech is OK, peleton is OK, bidon is fairly ****y for nu-skool roadies that want to be regarded as knowing their oignons, and "Tour de Yorkshire" is just so jarring it hurts?
"Tour de Yorkshire" is just so jarring it hurts?
Oh come on, Côte de Shibden Wall, Côte de Wincobank and the truly excellent Côte de Blubberhouses surely make it worthwhile!
[quote=philjunior ]Can we not just agree that derailleur is OK
No
https://www.sheldonbrown.com/derailer.html
Have we done musette yet?
"Derailer" is much more of an affectation than "derailleur", search your heart - you know it to be true.
cent
I would love to see a video of that.
Someone in the Vuelta on the front row of the peleton lobbed one right across the group and it hit another rider on the head.
If Roadies are ejecting there Bidons/Bottles/gourds, then trail centre riders seem to deliberately ejecting mud guards.
Maybe trying to drop weight to get that KOM, my bike currently sports a down tube Crud Catcher that was discarded complete with fitting O Rings.
The countryside seems to be littered with them.
Mudguards do fall off sometimes though. I had one fall straight off on a descent - but I had the decency to go back for it!
Agreed, some do fall off, but you'd know about it and I've never known a Down tube Guard fall off without the O Rings snapping.
Sticky bidon?
ironically there was a campaign in France to replace 'le weekend' with 'fin de semaine'. stick that in yer bidon.
But it looked pretty usual to discard and collect on the wheel, rather than stopping to refill. Sportives are more race and less ride though, and there are definite areas for dropping litter and bottles, where they are collected.
I've done a few Sportives in Belgium and they set their feed stations up so you can pick up everything you need, filter out via a one-way system and then a [s]mile[/s] kilometre down the road there's a huge net strung up on the downwind side and you just chuck wrappers etc into that. Works well, I never saw any littering outside of the marked disposal zones.
I think the main difference is that the pro's tend to use biodegradeable bidons
I think the main difference is that the pro's tend to use biodegradeable bidons
That's ok then, I take it they disintegrate within seconds of hitting the ground 😉
While we're roadie & using stupid French word bashing, why is every Strava segment with a hill called col de (insert road name here) 😆
While we're roadie & using stupid French word bashing, why is every Strava segment with a hill called col de (insert road name here)
One of the joys of the opening Tour de France stages in Yorkshire a few years back was hearing the commentators saying "col de Buttertubs"!
Works well, I never saw any littering outside of the marked disposal zones.
Also, most riders at the Belgian sportives aren't selfish bastards so they tend to keep their wrappers in their pockets until the proper place to dispose of them. After a recent Ironman here, the amount of empty gel tubes or wrappers was crazy; you'd assume there must have been several hundred people within chance of the win to justify discarding their crap.