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Now then... i don`t mean riding into a bog or thick gloopy stuff and getting stuck. I mean Mud mud that has actually stopped the wheels moving.....
Yesterday afternoon, coming down Latrigg. A cheeky trail through the trees only to find the logging machins have been in....a fairly steep descent following massive catterpiller track ruts. Quite enjoyable they were, jumping over logs and branches etc and only covering the brakes for control...with thick sticky mud flying everywhere...Only to find the bike slowing a little, i released the brake levers and still slowed... so a few pedal strokes were in order which made no difference at all. Looking down i can only describe what was a small football sized clump of mud jammed aginst the rear seat stay tube and round the front mech/ bottom bracket, totally jamming the rear wheel ๐ฏ
Any one ever had this โ bearing in mind we were oing down a reaonable gradient........
And didnt have the camera to take a shot!!!!! ๐
Yip, on a STW ride last year round Yorkshire.
Had a new fork, a Reba on my Cotic Soul and a 2.25 Maxxis advantage on the front, stopped the front wheel dead.
But so did Junkyard and Mrs Flash, but they has mud jamming on the rear. (yankee bikes)
not much you an do except dig it out ride 100yrds and dig it out again ๐
(yankee bikes)
Too right - they don't design them to allow for this, because they don't have mud in America.
Of course I had the experience of getting stopped by mud build up whilst riding in Utah ๐
Had an Orange O with quite a bit of mud clearance do this many years back, had to scrape it clear with a stick before I could carry on.Not just Americans that were susceptible to Cardiff's clay soil.
My SC VPFree last summer, kind of takes the fun out of DH when that happens.
I had a similar thing (as did many others!) at the Tunstall round of the Winter series this year....
Ah, brings back happy memories of Sleepless and Mayhem.
My partner had her Stumpy completely jammed in the Alps earlier this year. She made it about 1/3 of the way down the Venosc descent at Deux Alps before the clay jammed both the rear wheel and the cranks. Mine fared slightly better in that at least everything kept turning.
Of course I had the experience of getting stopped by mud build up whilst riding in Utah ๐
Yeh, southern California in July for me (crazy idea, trying to ride after light drizzle)
"not much you an do except dig it out ride 100yrds and dig it out again"
I find pushing briefly pushing the bike backwards often (but not always) helps better at getting the wheel rolling
Sounds like SiTS 2008!
That looks about right Hip......
This can be a fairly frequent occurrence if you ride in certain parts of Nottinghamshire, often you can't even push the bikes through it as the wheels just jam in about 10m.
Did somebody mention Mountain Mayhem?
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[url= http://www.flickr.com/photos/36823018@N00/2601021349/ ]IMG_3423[/url] by [url= http://www.flickr.com/people/36823018@N00/ ]*ChrisB*[/url], on Flickr
Yes, I used to get this pretty much every winter where I live. This summer I splashed out on some zippy fast summer tyres (Small Block Eights - which are great) only for it to lash it down for the last month. Sigh.
Local clay round here is pretty bad, especially just after harvest when there's all the bits of straw binding it. It can be like trying to ride on ice with a big brown pair of slicks, until everything jams up and its a case of carrying the bike. Its usually about this time I get a puncture. Horrible.
Standard occurence in south Cambridge. Brighton Big Dog was the same. I'm surprised this is even comment worthy, I would have assumed this happens to everyone 10 times a year.
I would have assumed this happens to everyone 10 times a year. ๐
Saturday was my first time 8)
Happens alot in yorkshire too.






