My
cycling upbringing was a dirty one. I
don’t mean “dirty.” I mean dirt-y. Long before I joined the staff at Cadence, I
was riding into the woods behind my childhood home, shovel in hand. When of age—15 to be exact, and started
working in the local bike shop, I took that same 20-inch BMX bike and started
riding the local singletrack. It wasn’t
until I came to Cadence that I started riding bikes with skinny tires and
shaving my legs. So it’s only natural
then, that I would write a post extolling the virtues of our fat tire
friends. But you’ve heard it all before,
right? Yet you still haven’t tried
mountain biking.
I’m
about to lay down a serious list of reasons why you should—nay, must—try riding
off road. I won’t even bother with
trying to just tell you how fun it is. I
am going to tell you how you can use mountain biking to help drastically
improve your road cycling—guaranteed.
After reading this, cast your fears and doubts aside and get
into the woods.
Angela
Lansbury, I like your dress, but that is not the “into the woods” I was talking
about. But seriously folks, let’s get
down to brass tacks. How can riding in
the woods help your riding on the road?
Diversify your fitness – Road cycling and
mountain biking require a very different kind of fitness. While the types of efforts required in each
are very different, they are mutually beneficial. Introducing mountain biking into your
training will help against reaching any plateau in your fitness. After doing the same type of training and
intervals for a whole season, your body adapts, and you will get less and less
benefit from doing them. Mountain biking
efforts are usually short and explosive—you either go as hard as you can, or
you walk up the hill. You will go deeper
than you want to—but those explosive efforts help build power. But forget the specifics of it—getting a
change of pace that your body will react to is the biggest performance benefit.
Drive that bike – I’m just gonna say it: Many road
cyclists and triathletes are poor bike handlers. It’s ok—really, you’re not alone. Don’t worry though; there is help to be
had. Get on a mountain bike and head
into the Wissahickon! Mountain biking
requires more agility and bike handling than road cycling and the effects of
the practice you get on the trails will be immediately transferred to your
skinny tire bike. Hoping curbs, avoiding
road debris or other cyclists will seem like absolute child’s play after you
have taken some trips through the woods.
Get off that trainer – Winter training on the
road bike sucks. Let’s just be honest
about it. Riding a trainer for hours is
no fun. We got lucky this winter with
some very mild weather, but during a normal January, you are not going to get
much time outside, unless you are a total juggernaut and are willing to ride
through some freezing cold winds. Here
is the good news: While you are freezing your toes off on the road, those of us
in the woods are warm. On any given
winter ride, the woods will feel 10-15 degrees warmer than riding on the
road. The trees knock down all of the
wind. No wind = still feeling your
fingers and face at the end of a ride.
Snowy winter MTB rides are a load of fun, while your friends are stuck
inside on the trainer, you can come with me into the woods and get one hell of
a workout, and have some fun to boot.
Beat that burnout – Cycling is fun, but be
honest, sometimes you’re just over it.
As people get more competitive, the cycling calendar seems to extend
further and further from both ends, until you have no time off between the end
of your season and starting to train for next year. At that moment you want nothing to do with
cycling. You’re burnt. You need a change of pace. Mountain biking can fill that void. It’s extremely fun and much less
straight-faced than road cycling—just what the doctor ordered at the end of a
long season, all the while maintaining your fitness. So instead of slogging through another off
season (or mid season) with low motivation because of burnout, change it up—relearn
how fun it can be to just go out and ride.
Jump off some stuff. It’s a hell
of a good time.
This
is by no means an exhaustive list, but I want to get the point across that
trying mountain biking isn’t like some kind of religious conversion. You won’t automatically stop shaving and
start wearing baggy shorts—not that there is anything wrong with that. You can keep your spandex. Mountain biking can be a tool to improve
yourself as an athlete—in a multitude of ways.
It may seem that mountain bikers and road cyclists exist in two separate
worlds, but it’s just not like that. You
can have both. You can learn from
both. And who knows, you might just like
it in the woods.
Shameless
Epilogue Plug: We have Orbea demo
mountain bikes. If you want to try
before you buy—which I highly recommend—you should take advantage of them! They
are here to be ridden. Plus, all any of
the demo fees can be applied towards the purchase of a new MTB. Bam.
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