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- This topic has 52 replies, 36 voices, and was last updated 8 months ago by stevextc.
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Lost the urge to offroad ?
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tonFull Member
over the last year or so i seem to have lost the urge or desire to cycle offroad.
it makes me a bit sad, but it has gone. just wondering if it is a age thing.
obviously riding offroad knocks you about a bit, and the risk of falls is more of a risk, it may be this.
i ache like a bastard after any offroad riding. i cant be bothered with keeping bikes clean and well looked after.
i dont look at bikes anymore. mtb’s seem to have no interest to me.anyone else ever reached this junction on you cycling life journey ?
weeksyFull MemberThe opposite really.
51 and MTB inspires me more than ever. I’m trying harder things, riding harder trails and enjoying the lack of control and grip. Even today I was out in the slop playing and gapping a mate on tech stuff.
steamtbFull MemberDon’t worry about it, do what you enjoy, if that’s riding on the road, then enjoy without regrets 🙂 or whatever it is you get enjoyment from, it shouldn’t be forced.
I have no desire to ride a hardtail anymore on rough trails as that can leave you feeling a bit battered! I do a fair bit of resistance training too which definitely helps so overall I feel a lot fresher after hard rides, I’m only 50 though, so not very old yet!
I’ve simplified bike maintenance; mudguards, a quick rinse, lube the chain and mech = done. Stuff seems to last longer than it did when I went to town on the cleaning front.
longdogFree MemberI’m the same Ton.
I have to hammer the naproxen after most bike rides on road, never mind off road now with my OA in my wrists. I’m also totally paranoid of coming off and damaging my knee replacement as I always seem to land on that side. Being larger than the average bear I tend to land with a fair wack too.
When I do do off-road (which I love) it’s tame gravel riding and I’ll just walk any particularly slippy looking tricky bits.
Unfortunately my riding buddy is in peak health for long rides and rough stuff, so we’ve become less compatible, but getting out on the bike is ace so sometimes I just stack up on the painkillers and do it anyway and suffer the after affects.
nbtFull MemberYep. Mostly ride tandem now. Rode mtb maybe half a dozen times last year? Not sure I’ve been out on it this year…
argeeFull MemberI’ve not ridden offroad in terms of what i used to do in about 6 months now, had a slipped disc in my neck pinching a nerve and since it’s got better i’ve just not been into going back, part of it down to self preservation, part of it down to just seeing how much hassle there is in biking these days, such as travel, maintenance, etc, etc.
SquirrelFull MemberI’m 65 (how did that happen?), and ride about 30 miles a day. Around 50% of that is off road (although a bit more when it’s dry), and I mostly ride in the Chilterns which are a bit hilly. I still love it all, but I only really get a buzz when I hit the dirt. I usually ride a hardtail (for cheapness and minimal maintenance). I rarely wash my bikes as I’ve reached the conclusion that the water does more harm than good. I’m not particularly interested in bikes, just the riding. And I don’t think about falling off until I do. I do try to keep supple by stretching after every ride and doing some yoga-ish exercises before bed. Don’t ever really feel wasted.
Not sure what use any of that is, and we’re all different, but that’s my take. I’d say do what you enjoy and works for you. I try not to think about things too much these days, just be present in and appreciate each moment. If stopping for a coffee, or a chat, or a beer, or just to enjoy a view or the birdsong feels good then do it. Everything changes, everything will pass.amodicumofgnarFull MemberI drifted away for a while and went mostly road. Felt the urge again in 2019, bought a new bike and went early adopter on Covid which royally spannered things. Maybe rode the new bike half a dozen times in the following two and a half years. Fitness picked up a bit late summer and now manage to get out round the local trail centre or have a tracks day on the gravel bike a few times a month. At the moment it feels like the urge is there again but the legacy in terms of fitness and co-ordination is the limiting factor.
SSSFree MemberExact opposite with me. Not interested in road. To boring and too many cars/stupid drivers who don’t care about you.
Probably also has something to do with being hit by a car a few years ago. What did I learn. Drivers don’t care about you. Neither does the police or the law.
All off road for me where ever possible. I’ll take the dirty bike and the off-road physicality.
It beats learning to walk again….butcherFull MemberDon’t worry about it, do what you enjoy
Pretty much this. I guess a lot of people go out specifically for the terrain but I just like to be in the outdoors. Doesn’t really matter to me if it’s on-road or off-road, I just ride places I like to be. I see it all as the same thing and don’t really distinguish between them. It’s just riding bikes.
amodicumofgnarFull MemberI’m not riding much road at the moment – maybe one ride this year. Although it’s a quiet part of the world there’s still ever present Amavan risk but it’s mainly I’m just enjoying mtb and gravel more.
kayak23Full MemberYou can’t properly explore a place by road only. The best and most interesting places don’t have roads.
Explore.
shermer75Free MemberI’ve been at this juncture a number of times, and then something has come along that has got me back into it again
TheArtistFormerlyKnownAsSTRFull MemberMy mojo comes and goes over the years.
Wait till the sun’s out, you may feel differently
wait4meFull MemberWas just flicking through my phone photos and this time last year I was mainly off road/gravel riding, and the bike looked pretty clean. This year I’ve spent the whole winter on the road keeping clean. And forecast for next week depressingly looks like more rain so will likely be road for a bit longer.
vwwFull MemberI find it a seasonal thing. Can’t be arsed with consistently wet and muddy rides, so way less MTB in winter, and more road. But then summer comes round, trails dry out, can come back from a ride not caked in mud, and all I want to do is MTB.
Longer term, about 4 years ago I started another hobby that I’d always wanted to do (woodworking) and I rode less and less, down to maybe once a week, as I was doing other stuff. Last summer, spontaneously entered an event with a week’s notice, and suddenly caught the bug again. Riding more often, more miles, more events, more goals.
The most difficult part of riding I find (mostly) is getting out the door. But once you do, it’s always worth it.
tonFull Memberi still have the riding bug.
since retiring i have ridden most days. managed 10000 miles in the last 2 years.
and to be honest most of those miles will have been on 50/50 mixed surface. road, gravel and canal side.
but looking back on my strava i cant see much proper mtb riding.
i even bought a fat bike to try and relight my fire. got poorly with my ticker again, so sold the fatty.
i will keep on at it, and see if i can relight the fire.stevextcFree MemberRide what you like, walk, run whatever … you don’t need to enjoy one thing or the other
Personally I detest any road and I’ll go to long lengths and detours to avoid 1/2 mile or just push but that’s me not you.
rockchicFree MemberI am in my 60’s and gradually returning to mtb’ing with a basic hardtail.
I have to echo SSS thoughts entirely on road cycling after a driver ploughed into me a few weeks ago.Now on the road i am more fearful and its a hassle doing detours to avoid roads i think are too dangerous.
Yes,there is more dirt to clear,both clothing and bike,when you are offroad,but i am less on edge.
Riding the red routes at Hamsterley gets the adrenalin going which really on the road can only be matched by Alpine type descents.
I can keep my fitness up by doing the climbs,which is not easy on a 14kg non ebike.
In iffy weather you do need to push yourself to get out but as long as i am not too cold the fresh air and quietness of the forests are worth it.iaincFull MemberSimilar here Tony, I have ridden my gravel bike the most in the last year, then road, then MTB. Similar age and various aches and issues and I have no desire to ride gnarly trails or trail centres anymore.
My plan is to try and ride a lot more MTB this spring and summer and see how I feel. It will be largely on my Levo SL, but I do need to ride my non-e HT too, as it’s only been ridden once since I upgraded all to AXS last Spring, and only been ridden a handful of times since I bought it a bit over a year ago.
If I don’t get the bug back I suspect the MTBs will go.
stevextcFree Memberton
i still have the riding bug.
since retiring i have ridden most days. managed 10000 miles in the last 2 years.
and to be honest most of those miles will have been on 50/50 mixed surface. road, gravel and canal side.
but looking back on my strava i cant see much proper mtb riding.
i even bought a fat bike to try and relight my fire. got poorly with my ticker again, so sold the fatty.
i will keep on at it, and see if i can relight the fire.Unless you are in a rush to sell a/several bikes and you are enjoying it what does it matter to you?
Your answers to that question whether shared or just for you are either going to end up with you thinking “I’m not fussed I’m enjoying what I’m doing” OR a list of motivationsIf you end up with a list of motivations then you can say “I’m going to ride some real MTB this week/weekend/whatever” rather than slip into what has become your default.
You can also then create a list of barriers to achieving it..
iamtheresurrectionFull MemberI consider myself really lucky to have three different groups I ride with, and some decent trails within 20 minutes in the van. Like Weeksy, my 13 year old has fell in love with it and can ride pretty much anything with more speed and style than I’d like.
I’m 49 this year, and maybe never enjoyed riding the steep trails in the woods more than I have for the past few years.
I’m definitely ready for the winter slop to end though, I’m completely fed up with washing bikes and kit after every ride – although taking a Worx Hydroshot to the woods has definitely helped over the past few years with reducing post ride hassle.
I reckon falling back in love with it takes one nice ride in warm spring sunshine, on a quiet remote trail somewhere on a well prepared/maintained bike (especially if you’ve kept half decent fitness on a bike in the meantime).
specialisthoprockerFull MemberDoing the same thing repeatedly for decades will become boring. I’m 50 nearly and have been mtbing since i was 19. Some days i think i should find something different to do.
I try to mix it up with gravel, city riding, and longer trips. TBH a few health issues causing general daily discomfort has made the thought of injury from the riskier stuff i used to ride very unwelcome. So i find myself avoiding the bigger features (which means i lose my confidence etc.). Plus I’ve known people really screw themselves being weekend warriors. In fact one guy I knew died from a fairly small jump gone wrong.
So yeah, I have lost the love. Just can’t think of what else to do. Cookery? Stamp collection? Twitching?
SaccadesFree MemberKinda similar, find myself doing more road as it’s less faff overall and the distance numbers are kinda addictive.
One of the answers is running a bike that doesn’t need to be cleaned.
Hard tail with alfine hub and coil forks.
Despite doing more road, it’s all type 2 fun, unlike MTB which is much more in the now
oldnickFull MemberWhen it is muddy and I’m horribly unfit (thanks covid and various other virus’s) the MTB stays tucked up in the garage, and I do more road stuff (with a really friendly club).
I hope the urge will return, it does most years.
funkmasterpFull MemberOnly 46 here but done over by triple Covid. Fitness ruined, high blood pressure and lung capacity not great. Lost my mojo for riding completely. Only ridden a few times in the last year and feel utterly battered and tired afterwards. Considered selling the HT (only bike) and getting a short travel full sus. Don’t have the money though and thinking I’m best off selling the bike and putting the money away.
mildboreFull MemberI’m 68 and I lost the urge after losing fitness through a knee replacement then an infection that hospitalised me then covid. Dragging my heavy unfit @rse round wasn’t fun, and last year I didn’t touch a bike for 3 months. Last December I was having the usual old man moan about “nothing to prove, creaky joints, no energy blah blah” when I suddenly thought “what would happen if I just stopped making excuses and got on with it like I used to?” Since then I made a resolution to ride 2 or 3 times a week till the end of March. Now I can feel some fitness returning, I’ve bought an ebike and can’t wait for the Spring and summer so I can go on some biking adventures with my son
sirromjFull MemberDon’t have the money though and thinking I’m best off selling the bike
What would you get for it? Probably not much to be worth the agro of sellingbit to out into savings. Keep it for when fitness improves! Think of it as saving for your fitness rather than finances.
48 here and dream of MTB but the best I get right now is riding over mounds of rubble on my hybrid commuter dumped on a disused road.
funkmasterpFull MemberProbably get about £1k I think. Not a small amount of cash for me.
hairyscaryFull MemberWhat @weeksy said
weeksy
Full Member
The opposite really.51 and MTB inspires me more than ever. I’m trying harder things, riding harder trails and enjoying the lack of control and grip. Even today I was out in the slop playing and gapping a mate on tech stuff.
tjagainFull MemberIts been a few years since i did much real mtbing. The main barrier is i cant be arsed with the ride to the trails and on the odd occasion i do i can’t be arsed doing more than one climb when i get there. I’m contemplating getting an ebike but not 100% convinced that will change much
I have some urban singletrack i do ride but thats a few mins riding only
jaminbFree MemberYou should live in suburbia, you have to chase the decent offroad. Admittedly first proper offroad (with climbs) ride of the year out to the Surrey Hills. Absolutely exhausted after 4hrs of slip slop sliding for 70km but so much more rewarding than any of my local loops.
Don’t understand the aversion to cleaning – 2 mins with a brush on the end of the garden hose whilst having a celebratory beer and ready to go again.
tjagainFull MemberDon’t understand the aversion to cleaning –
Me neither. I leave a muddy bike to dry and brush the worst of it off when dry if I can be bothered
sirromjFull MemberProbably get about £1k I think. Not a small amount of cash for me.
Ah fair enough. I’d be lucky to get them for all of mine! Still think you’re better off keeping it, they’ll be even more expensive when you realize you want to go riding off road again 🙂 (if you think that’s likely).
tjagainFull MemberHairyscary / Weeksy
ton and I are a decade older I think. At 50 I was riding the hardest and best I ever had. Now its different.
stevextcFree Membertjagain
Its been a few years since i did much real mtbing. The main barrier is i cant be arsed with the ride to the trails and on the odd occasion i do i can’t be arsed doing more than one climb when i get there. I’m contemplating getting an ebike but not 100% convinced that will change much
For me an e-bike is a total game changer on “can’t be arsed” days.
stevextcFree MemberDon’t understand the aversion to cleaning – 2 mins with a brush on the end of the garden hose whilst having a celebratory beer and ready to go again.
It’s not just the bike though TBH. This time of year drying clothes is a major pain.
weeksyFull Memberton and I are a decade older I think. At 50 I was riding the hardest and best I ever had. Now its different.
I hear you, but in the OP, he didn’t make any indication about age being an issue/factor in this, it was more a generic question i answered.
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