The Riding For A Lifetime Podcast

Why everyone SHOULD start on a hardtail.


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Show notes:
- I think that everyone should use self-limiting methods as
much as possible when learning something new.
- In the gym this means free weight and movements that limit
how much load you can do based on your mastery of the movement (TGU and Single
Leg Deadlift for example) and on the bike this means a using a hardtail. I’d go
so far as to add in flat pedals and 26 inch wheels but that is another topic.
- A hardtail forces you to learn how to use your body to
absorb impacts on the trail and how to use skill to maneuver your bike up and
over things. It also teaches you that if you didn’t make it then it was
something you did wrong, not the bike.
- A FS often teach new riders to rely on their suspension to
absorb impacts. It also teaches riders to look to their bike for the solution
to the problems on the trail.
- Riding around bashing into everything with your FS bike
isn’t the same thing as riding a trail with some style and grace.
- Once a rider has spent some time (6 months give or take)
on a HT then they will be able to get more out of a full suspension bike. It
will also save them some money on their first bike, which is just going to get
beat to shit anyways.
- The problem is that the mindset of putting new riders on a
FS bike right off the bat - especially in areas that don’t have a lot of rocky,
technical riding - stems from a larger problem in the mountain bike industry.
- At its core, this problem is what mountaineering legend
Mark Twight called “replacing skill and courage with cash and equipment. They
make the summit, not the style, the yardstick of success”.
- We should be telling new riders that it is alright to suck
at first and that we don’t expect anything out of them. They should be taught
that building their skill and courage will allow them to make better use of
technology when the time comes.
- A FS also gives some riders a false sense of confidence.
If someone doesn’t really understand their own riding ability and gets on a
high-end bike that can get them through a lot of stuff they will be more likely
to take risks that their skill level won’t be able to bail them out of if
needed.
- We also forget that riding itself isn’t supposed to be
fun. Mountain biking is an oblique path to happiness, kind of like climbing a
mountain or writing a book. The act itself is often uncomfortable and painful
but afterwards we find the contentment and happiness we’re looking for. Trying
to make riding easier in an attempt to make the act itself more fun isn’t the
real goal and sends the wrong message to new riders (That climb sucked? Great,
it was supposed to! vs. That climb sucked? Have you thought about getting
_______ to make it easier?)
- In the end we all want more riders to take up our sport
and have fun doing it. But I also think that it is good for the sport if we
also teach new riders that it is alright to suck as they go through the
learning curve. Spending some time on a hardtail will help new riders speed up
that learning curve since it forces them to use proper technique more than a FS
will.
Until next time...
Ride Strong,
James Wilson
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