So I'm off to Morzine on Saturday morning, could do with a bit of advice. In my head, I know that my bike is capable of doing most of the jumps and drops that I come across, as long as I commit. My problem is in MTFUing enough to commit. Any tips please?
*Pulls up chair..*
I too have this thought on an alarmingly regular basis..
So will be very interested to find out..
4 pints of strong lager before you go will make you a much better rider, just like drinking 3-4 pints before getting in your car
you can't MTFU until somebody here tells you to
1st, its not about your bike being capable,it's you.
relax and go with it
I have no idea, it's my biggest riding problem.
If you have to ask on an interweb forum, you have zero chance of MingTFU ๐
Laugh at me relentlessly but MTFU is another acronym i've not heard!! I'm guessing then that you want to be able to react instantly cos your not gonna be hanging around all day working up the courage???
Man The F*** Up........
For those of you than dont know.
I find my confidence waxing and waining - somedays good somedays bad - I think that practice on easy, mid and mard stuff helps rather than going for the biggy as if you are like be the brakes go on and game over. so try small then medium drops or doubles etc? I amd gradually MTFU recently after a big accident last year - taken me long enough !
Ah had an incling it was something along those lines. Is hitting a big drop screaming "sh********t" and riding off with a big grin MTFUing?? I think commiting depends entirely on where your self preservation switch is set to. I would never do anything i thought i couldn't. I'd have a bash if i was half sure. But you've more chance of stacking if you think its gonna end badly when you do it.
Confidence and commitment are part of our skills "system" - but they cannot exist or be thought of in isolation. We practice physical skills and think about how that process informs our confidence and gives us control (by which we mean emotional/mind control).
Bit late if you're off so soon, but I think you'd benefit from a decent skills session.
I'll just throw in a freebie tip though - strive all the time to extend the reach of your looking - look through the section, not down into the middle of it.
My advice would be to "go with the bike", ie don't think too much about having to pull up or rag the bike in anyway. Someone has made the drop/jump to be rideable and flow, all you need to worry about is enough speed. Get the speed, set the bike up straight relax and just go with it. Once you've nailed a couple, you'll have the confidence for more.
jedi has it, dont worry about pushing yourself too hard, scaring yourself would be counter productive, do what you can do & enjoy yourself.
I am loads faster when I am not going 100% and messing it all up.
Slow down to go faster.
ha ha 'delicous fruit punch flavour'
how manly
About 5 years ago I popped my Morzine cherry, prior to this I was your traditional JayBoy scared of most things which involved my wheels leaving the ground (sadly i've reverted back to this state now).
What I found was that because the trails there are so much different to what you ride here, your kinda forced into doing stuff which you don't think twice about doing, but if you came across them in the UK you'd skid to a grinding holt!
The jumps and drops are far more open so are less scary in a way. And your special bar (think tony hawk computer game) will be pumped from riding such cool tracks you'll be wanting to jump off as many things as possible. Also the tracks are all so much steeper there you won't get a chance to bail since your breaks will have boiled!
Also make sure you drink MONSTER ENERGY...
try not to push yourself everytime you ride.relax and flow with the trail
[img] http://images.fotopic.net/?iid=yzb5pu [/img]
Couldn't resist coffeemaking! Bit bored today! In my coffee break ๐
Nice one foxy, that's excellent!
Cheers and you coffee (mutual appreciation - love it ๐ )
I think you'll adjust to the general level of riding and just get on with it. At least that's what I am hoping having signed up to do Megavalanche on my first trip to the Alps biking. ๐
Be aware of your limit, you will progress alot riding in the alps but don't fall into the trap. The number of times I've witnessed riders with poor riding skills in one area (eg: jumps, drops etc) try something well beyond the current ability and breaking themselves is daft.
Personally I ride the alps for the trails, not the [i]stunts[/i]. As in general their [i]stunts[/i] are badly made and often dangerous. I won't try anything bigger than I'd do at home as there is lots of well built stuff like that in the UK.
You can do it-just look where you want to go and go for it.
You wouldn't be going if you couldn't and you're just nervous.
Thinking of crashing and you will. Thinking of having a blast and you will!
Your choice-what would you tell a mate asking you?
Who wants to ride stunts when the trails are so good?
think rationally. if it CAN be done, YOU can do it.
Well Kramer you're more of a man than I'll ever be!
have you tried growing a moustache?
