Let's not talk about
climate change. Let's not try to form a pattern out of the weather changes over
the last two winters as they can still be considered anomalies. Let's just let
the fact that it is raining in February be the elephant in the room.
Normally I don't do
much road riding until April and May when the trails are either an icy mess or
wet and boggy. Road riding has always been a stop-gap measure for me. Something
to do while I wait for the type of riding I want to do to become available.
This is probably a large part of the reason I've never bought a road bike. I
occasionally enjoy riding on the road, but not enough to commit to it.
Saturday I headed
out for what was planned to be about 6 miles of road to the bike trails,
another 6 miles or so of trail riding, depending on how I was feeling, and then
another 6 miles back home. Instead, I ended up riding 33 miles of road. The
plan was to check out the MatSu river park trails to see how they were holding
up prior to a meet up ride I'm planning on putting together for the 6th of
March. I was hoping that either we'd have frozen dirt with minimal icy patches
or, better, crusty, grippy, awesome riding snow over a frozen base.
Maybe my
expectations were way off, but in the end, I didn't even get onto the trails
owing to the fact that the amount of ice getting to the trailhead was enough to
convince me that unless something changes weather-wise that the idea to lead a
bunch of folks around the trails after dark is probably not the brightest idea.
Then again, the rain
we're getting might help. Or maybe not. Two weeks is a long time this time of
year and conditions can and do and will change.
So, the trail riding
idea was a bust. But I wasn't ready to turn around and head home yet. I really
needed a ride of some sort, needed to get my head straight. Besides, I wasn't
looking forward to heading home and going back to work. So I headed east and
south along the MatSu river, riding against the wind, enjoying the feel of
speed and the sound of rubber on clear asphalt.
Sometimes that's
just what a person needs - some riding that allows the mind to completely
disconnect from the body and just wander. Riding trail is a feat of uniting the
mind and the body -knowing exactly where in space and time each part of the
body is and making the adjustments needed to keep the body moving in the right
direction. Road riding allows the mind to wander, to disconnect from the body.
It's a great thing in that way. But not something I want to do all the time.
And, according to some schools of thought, something I should never do on the
bike that I've got.
This is a strange
thing to me - the fact that people will, when they hear that I ride one bike
only and that it is a fat bike, without prompting or provocation, tell me just
how much more efficient I would be and how much more fun I would have if I
bought the right kinds of bikes for riding different surfaces and terrains. I
need a road bike for road riding, a full suspension mountain bike for single
track, an XC bike for riding the farm fields in Palmer, and a commuter bike for
commuting. They tell me I should only ride fat in the snow or on the beach.
My response is
always the same - I often can and do ride all of these terrains in a single
ride - how am I supposed to carry four or five bikes with me on a ride? I'm the
type of guy who, even if I could afford and if the wife would allow me to have
multiple bikes, wouldn't have multiple bikes for the simple fact that I spend
so much time getting a bike to feel just right that the transition to another
bike is generally quite un-fun. I'm still getting used to the Trek over the
Pugsley, six months later. I don't feel, yet, that I know the bike well enough
to really push it to the limits. That takes time for me. Jumping back and forth
between bikes just isn't something I enjoy. Just like with cars. When we used
to have two cars in my family, I always had a hard time transitioning to the
car I didn't drive all the time.
I guess I am a man
of habits.
So, having a
different bike for every type of riding I do is just not in the cards. And I've
spent a lot of time thinking about the types of riding I do and what type of
bike best covers all of them. I'm coming to the realization that maybe the 29+
platform might just be that one bike to rule them all bike for me. I don't
know. Haven't actually ridden one, but I'm thinking about it. I think that the other option for me is to
get a set of 29er wheels for the fatty so that on days like today, with the
rain and the ice, I can have a set of studded wheels. In the summer I could
throw on slicks for commuting or knobbies for trail riding.
I don't know. For
the last few days I've had this sense that something is not quite right, not
quite there. And this feeling manifests itself in a desire to shop or eat.
Weird.
I don't normally
think too much about my bike and whether it is the right bike for me like I am
doing right now. I wonder if it's all connected? Maybe I'm having some early
mid-life crisis? Maybe I just need some drastic and
transformative change in my
life? Who knows?
Maybe I just need
some trails to ride so I get out of my head a bit?
Maybe some moonlit
miles will help clear the funk away?
No comments:
Post a Comment