Home Forums Bike Forum Anyone else hate mud so much they don't want to ride?

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 123 total)
  • Anyone else hate mud so much they don't want to ride?
  • Stoatsbrother
    Free Member

    Mud is to MTBing as Powder is to skiing…. well almost.

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    3 hours dragging myself through the mud

    1. fit some decent soft condition tyres
    2. fit crud guards
    3. descend steeper trails: you don’t get bogged down
    4. re-ascend on roads and hard-packed gravel tracks
    5. completely avoid flat, dirt trails because they become bogs

    It can be a labour of love though. If there is one thing that trail centres are good for, it’s relief from winter mud.

    Susie
    Free Member

    Hate it, although mainly because I don’t like getting so cold while cleaning all the crap off the bike after.

    martinxyz
    Free Member

    If i go out in a group (once every 6 years) and folk start burning through puddles and mud i will keep up and join in. Not really into the mess of the bike and clothes these days.

    I remember going out on sunday group rides when i was about 24years old wearing a thermal long sleeve top with a base layer through the whole winter and never feeling really cold. Even when i left the house i didnt feel like i had to warm up quickly. I only had summer socks and shoes on with lycra shorts too. These days,15 years on, i over dress as i would rather not get caught out and start shivering half way through a ride if theres a few stops. I wear a merino base layer,maybe a fleece or a windstopper and an event jacket over the top with a buff on the head (sometimes one around the neck if it drops to around 3c)showerproof or waterproof altura longs with trail shoes or winter spds.

    Anyone else feel the cold as bad as i do? Maybe i`m just not riding hard enough!

    big_n_daft
    Free Member

    just not riding hard enough!

    go SS, you’ll warm up 😀

    grtdkad
    Free Member

    Enjoy it to a point, though definitely prefer it when the temperatures drop and it becomes solid again. Just very wary about changing grip levels from one corner to the next. Had too many sketchy moments today to get any real speed up – that said, my rear NN is like a semi-slick 🙁

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    my rear NN is like a semi-slick

    I’m of the opinion that winter riding is when tyre type/condition actually makes a difference.

    jam-bo
    Full Member

    Rediscovered Whitewater Kayaking last winter. Paddle when it rains, ride when it doesn’t.

    andrewh
    Free Member

    Hate the mud.Mostly road all winter for me. Love the snow though, will get the SS out when it comes!

    hugor
    Free Member

    Its amazing how deceiving it can be too.
    Hers’s a few pics from my ride today.
    Even very mild climbs had me using rude words that I normally reserve for much greater challenges.

    Looks great right? Then you look down!!

    Now tomorrow is buggerred dealing with the aftermath of this.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    Hate it. Hate it, hate it, hate it.

    The inside of the swingarm on my otherwise pristine bike has been scrubbed down to bare metal after just one ride on clay like mud last year and the stuff seems to find it’s way into everything. Spending ages de-clagging a bike as the sun sets and the air turns chillier is a pain.

    Some people say that biking in winter makes you a better rider, to some extent I’d agree but then I bought two skills compensators for very good reasons.

    Roll on March.

    willfaz
    Free Member

    It bothers me if it’s only muddy because it’s been churned up by horses or something!

    bruneep
    Full Member

    today

    -4C

    hugor
    Free Member

    ^^^^^ yeh well I can’t wait for that!!!
    No mud, or post ride faff but great fun.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    +1 for snow riding.

    The only maintenance required is to GT-85 the chain thoroughly after use. The rest of the bike practically cleans itself.

    And nothing brings tyre treads up cleaner…

    fatsimonmk2
    Free Member

    love the mud just makes the same trails diffrent really like the challanges that wet roots etc bring to the ride and as i ride singlespeed just put the bike back in the shed till next ride,walk in the house strip in kitchen and put riding gear in washing machine job done head for shower 8)

    Nobeerinthefridge
    Free Member

    Fuxake get a grip. Keep yer full sus in the garage, ride yer hardtail. Out in the mud, home, hose down and GT85 and wipe the chain. Repeat.

    Most people on this thread just don’t like washing the bike, tells a story about how lazy people have become.

    grtdkad
    Free Member

    bucket & sponge. sorted.

    grtdkad
    Free Member

    Yeah buzz. I agree re the tyres. I must have twenty in the garage that would be more suitable than this one which has been worn to hell…

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    These look like crossmarks? Get some winter tyres! Good choice of car though 😀

    woody2000
    Full Member

    Nobeer ftw. It’s only mud for gawds sake. Wet dust 😀

    Hose, brush, lube. Beer 🙂

    singletrackmind
    Full Member

    Sucks like a dyson .
    2 hours on the road bike today .
    Why detroy hundereds of pounds worth of kit getting filthy and ruining the trails for ever . Big blocked traction tyres are great for you , but churn it up for everyone else ,as do the horseees .
    Speeds are down to jogging pace and proper cornering speeds are out the window .

    mrmo
    Free Member

    long since gone off mud, three hours on the road bike today and the bike is clean, no chance of that on the mtb at this time of year.

    buzz-lightyear
    Free Member

    Big blocked traction tyres are great for you , but churn it up for everyone else ,as do the horseees . Speeds are down to jogging pace and proper cornering speeds are out the window .

    Nope. But it depends where you ride.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    I like mud but I don’t like what it does to my trails, so I tend to avoid them when they’re too soggy.

    mrbump
    Free Member

    mud just ads variation to the trails and keeps them intresting and provides a different challange. it also greatly improves your skills.there nothing like nailing a technical section of trail in wet muddy conditions and getting the two wheel drifts on!
    i can see that it may not be so much fun if your a xc mile muncher
    riding on less tenchnical boggy moorland etc.
    trail centres with armoured surfaces are a good bet if don’t like mud. some places ,such as cannock, actually ride better in the wet.

    pop-larkin
    Free Member

    What is this cleaning of the bike people talk about??

    TandemJeremy
    Free Member

    Dunnno pop.

    _tom_
    Free Member

    snow riding is awesome, makes the tyres look brand new again 🙂

    singletrackmind
    Full Member

    Try South Downs death chalk clag . Where , in a split second the back wheel is suddenly the front wheel and you are doing a close up inspection of the green algae that bloom on the wet chalk , the very thing that gives it the drag co-efficient of melting ice.

    Sue_W
    Free Member

    singletrackmind – I remember the first time I encountered wet chalk on a bike. I did a great impression of bambi on ice (just far less cute!). Went back home to Wales realising that biking down south wasn’t always as easy as I’d assumed …

    zippykona
    Full Member

    Buy some schwalbe 26er cx tyres. £10 an end from on one.
    They don’t give you extra grip but you sure slice through the muddy bogs.
    Ride a hard tail with mud guards and a neo guard and you are laughing.
    On my regular loop I know there are going to be some real horror sections but look forward to trying to clean (!) them.

    PJM1974
    Free Member

    Cycling on wet chalk does wonders for toning one’s glutes.

    Nothing works… wet chalk defies tyres as diverse as Minions or Small Block Eights. You just have to be ready to bail at a second’s notice.

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Solution seems simple- paint your tyres with this:

    Chalk will stick to them lovely after that.

    jools182
    Free Member

    Mud is horrible

    Everything is a slog, then its another half hour cleaning the bike, then hosing yourself down, dragging grit through the house until I can throw my clothes in the washing machine

    Rubbish

    Dry or frozen is where its at

    epicyclo
    Full Member

    Mud is the very best reason for riding a singlespeed. Don’t bother cleaning it, just wait for the next rain – never far off.

    hugor
    Free Member

    Full respect for those who ride SS.
    On yesterdays ride the drag was so great that I was in granny on some of the flats. Any incline would result in a spin out, and I had to bypass a few climbs through grassy paddocks as they would have just been long pushes through bog – not much fun.
    I’ve got mud right through the house and car.
    I hate cleaning bikes. Its not laziness it just seems like a pointless exercise when 30 seconds into your next ride all your efforts are wasted.
    I’ve decided its trail centres in the winter for me.
    As for tyre selection they don’t come much more aggressive than my Bonti 29-4’s.

    brooess
    Free Member

    I’ve overtaken walkers on the SDW, downhill, sideways and on my ~rse too 🙂

    KingofBiscuits
    Free Member

    I understand where you are coming from Ben.

    I’ve lived in Leeds for 18 months now and the local loop, or variations of, take in Roundhay, Shadwell, Wyke, Harewood, Eccup, Adel and MVT. I rode for the first time yesterday after a 3 week absence due to a crash and it’s the worst I’ve seen it. Sh1tty, horrible conditions.

    Luckily for me I loved it due to my riding absence and hopefully it will freeze over in the near future. In the meantime I’ll be heading back down the M1 to ride my old local loop out of Sheff which is less boggy due to the surface and gradient. Lee and Cragg Quarry are also other options. You just need to ride elsewhere, if possible, until it freezes*

    *Probably said elsewhere in the post

    dobo
    Free Member

    cx are ace in the mud, you dont slow down as much and seem to be able to carry a straighter line.

    fat tyes on a mtb is such a chore in sticky mud

    yesterday i did manage to rip out a screw from my spd cleat, probably from all the mud and frozen cleat..

Viewing 40 posts - 41 through 80 (of 123 total)

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