Forum menu
Mountain biking in ...
 

[Closed] Mountain biking in winter

Posts: 632
Free Member
Topic starter
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Get my bike out of the shed, fix the puncture.

Staring competition with a bull on a bridleway (bull won). Drag my self through mud/cowshit so sticky I could feel my shoes sucking off into the bog.
Knee deep wade through the River Cherwell to wash the mud off.

6.4 mph average (I've run faster than that, for further).

Get in the shower, burning/itchy feet as they defrost.

Cheese on toast and a pint of tea.

Gotta love mountain biking in the winter, innit.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 3:48 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Sounds awful.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 3:51 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I hate riding in winter unless everything's dry and frozen or dry snow. Complete waste of time, end up walking more than riding and the bike gets trashed ๐Ÿ™


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 3:55 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Prefer the trail centers in winter. Not a fan of bogfests in remote locations with diminishing natural light.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 3:56 pm
Posts: 6315
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

This is why I love living near Woodbury Common, sandy, well drained, all year round trails 8) Out for a ride yesterday, and the bike was clean enough to put away without washing.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 4:16 pm
Posts: 66104
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I love winter riding, except for the wind anyway... I suppose I got back into riding in September so it just feels natural. Now really hot summer days, I can't stand- sweating like a pig, no energy, no respite, every climb's too long and every descent's too slow.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 4:19 pm
Posts: 130
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I love mountainbiking in winter when the mud's froze.
Yesterday at Rivington,and a couple of Saturdays ago the conditions were great,frozen mud,sunny skies,frosty grass,love it!
When it's just a boggy mudfest,I don't bother,get the roadbike out instead.The usual decider is weighing up if I'm going to spend more time cleaning the bike post ride, than riding it.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 4:20 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I live in Wales so if you don't want to ride in winter you can only ride for about 3 weeks of the year. That's why trail centres are so useful
Hopefully get to afon tomorrow, all ridable wet or dry


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 4:25 pm
 br
Posts: 18125
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Out this morning, it was muddy, so what.

If you ride all winter, you are still fit in the spring and can really take advantage of the fast trails.

Certainly 'worked' the new chain in ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 4:28 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I enjoy riding in all conditions....it's cleaning the bike and gear afterwards that's a bind.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 4:29 pm
 nuke
Posts: 5799
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Post-ride tea after a winter ride is the best tasting, most satisfying tea ever. FACT. Only reason I bother riding in the winter. ๐Ÿ˜€

[i]it's cleaning the bike and gear afterwards that's a bind.[/i]

Fork stanchions and chain are the only things that get cleaned on my winter bike although it being equipped with an Alfine does make things simpler. I might knock off some of the larger clumps of mud once they're dry but normally don't bother.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 5:21 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Whats the point in being a fair weather rider???? Find I enjoy the techinical bits more when there wet makes u think how to ride smoother. Dont really enjoy cleaning up afterwards though


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 5:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

It's not the weather that's the problem but the trail. Trying to cross moors in unrideable bog is not my idea of a good day out! I also live in South Wales and fortunately we have lots of magnificent all weather trail centers to use. Come spring however and I hardly visit these places.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 5:41 pm
Posts: 4607
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

It's being warmed up by a sympathetic wife that I like best!


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 5:47 pm
Posts: 919
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I love winter riding. You dont have to ride through a bog and get all muddy. For example a few hours in Woburn yesterday was dry and not muddy. Some slippery winter riding really improves your skills and you cant beat a frosty night ride. It also makes you fitter for the summer.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 5:49 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

You must be joking, I got grief for being late taking her to ikea.... Somehow 'sorry the mud really slowed me down and put an hour onto the expected time' only seemed to wind her up!!


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 5:50 pm
Posts: 793
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

mmmmmm, cheese on toast.....


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 6:09 pm
Posts: 91
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Frozen Loch riding is what real winter riding is about.

[img] https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-C7MHoazFseg/TRTN4mpk17I/AAAAAAAAMWw/43RLSmRz3mU/s800/IMAG0069%255B1%255D.jp g" target="_blank">https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-C7MHoazFseg/TRTN4mpk17I/AAAAAAAAMWw/43RLSmRz3mU/s800/IMAG0069%255B1%255D.jp g"/> [/img]


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 6:15 pm
Posts: 13285
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

my preferred riding spot is under several meters of snow and my "local" trails along the river are a mud bath. riding them just destroys them for summer, IMO.

there's about and inch of ice on the pavements, too....

roll on spring & summer!


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 6:18 pm
 ianv
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Winter riding southern french stylee! 3 and a half weeks and one day of rain ๐Ÿ™‚

Esterel
[url= http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7012/6775081937_cd18d748ac.jp g" target="_blank">http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7012/6775081937_cd18d748ac.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/37621241@N05/6775081937/ ]001[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/37621241@N05/ ]ianvincent[/url], on Flickr

Agly, Pyranees Orientale

[url= http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7153/6709345909_76e0edc529.jp g" target="_blank">http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7153/6709345909_76e0edc529.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/37621241@N05/6709345909/ ]019[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/37621241@N05/ ]ianvincent[/url], on Flickr

IIle sur Tet, Pyranees Orientale

[url= http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7149/6709220245_49819617fb.jp g" target="_blank">http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7149/6709220245_49819617fb.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/37621241@N05/6709220245/ ]008[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/37621241@N05/ ]ianvincent[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 6:22 pm
Posts: 632
Free Member
Topic starter
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

It was a good ride, glad it was on my singlespeed as I could chuck it back in the shed without washing it.

Looking forward to dry trails and sunshine, mind.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 6:23 pm
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

23 mls on Qtox yestday, good company, really muddy in places..
"Ice cream" headache riding back down road on Cothelstone Hill at 40+mph, pint of coffee at home, feet soo cold i nearly cried in the shower,
Big fat steak and red wine supper...
Brilliant..
Do it all again on Weds/Thurs night !!! ๐Ÿ™‚
Slight downside, cleaning bike and kit this morning, the price you pay !


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 10:11 pm
Posts: 1661
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Was really positive this winter, really embraced the mud.

But just now going on rides that average 8mph, pedalling to move downhill, washing yourself/kit/bike taking atleast an hour has taken its toll, i need sunshine and chairlifts now.

Also just fitted new drive, don't want to get it mucky.


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 10:25 pm
Posts: 24439
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

What's not to like ?
[url= http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7007/6766372823_4c8a6867b5_b.jp g" target="_blank">http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7007/6766372823_4c8a6867b5_b.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/rocketdog/6766372823/ ]deore BW[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/rocketdog/ ]rOcKeTdOgUk[/url], on Flickr


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 10:26 pm
Posts: 1377
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

T'was luvverly round here yesterday..
[IMG] [/IMG]


 
Posted : 29/01/2012 11:02 pm
Posts: 17388
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I prefer winter. A new landscape every day.

I don't see any point in cleaning my bike though.


 
Posted : 30/01/2012 12:07 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

its alright, id enjoy it more if i had someone to clean my bike/enough money to replace all the stuff that just gets ground away by the mud ๐Ÿ™


 
Posted : 30/01/2012 1:05 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Enjoy it when it's all frozen, or properly wet and slippy (seemed a lot better last year.) Sticky mud is a chore though. Been out on the road bike more recently.


 
Posted : 30/01/2012 1:11 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

Its all about the mud.


 
Posted : 30/01/2012 4:09 am
Posts: 0
Free Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

I find the mud teaches you to trust the bike, builds confidence and fitness. That said a peaty bog is just going to be pointless. Choose ones soil types wisely. Chalk ground can dry out quick if exposed. Clay is evil when wet. Local pine forests dry out quick except where there is regular traffic over puddles. Quantocks yesterday was tremendous fun with a good mix of trails, plenty of slop about with unseen rocks beneath, trusting the bike to do its job is key.
And what's all this post-ride-tea business? A good pint of best is lip smackingly good when you've earnt it. (disclaimer, obviously not if you're t-total, on a detox or don't like beer)


 
Posted : 30/01/2012 5:32 am
 jedi
Posts: 10249
Full Member
Translate โ–ผ
English
Spanish
French
German
Italian
Portuguese
Russian
Chinese
Japanese
Korean
Arabic
Hindi
Dutch
Polish
Turkish
Vietnamese
Thai
Swedish
Danish
Finnish
Norwegian
Czech
Hungarian
Romanian
Greek
Hebrew
Indonesian
Malay
Ukrainian
Bulgarian
Croatian
Slovak
Slovenian
Serbian
Lithuanian
Latvian
Estonian
 

i love riding in all conditions, it makes the perfect conditions feel so special ๐Ÿ™‚


 
Posted : 30/01/2012 8:51 am