By riding the same trails regularly, I can easily judge the progression of my skills. Now starting my third summer mountain biking, I'm realizing both what I've already learned along with an awareness of how much I don't know. It brings a smile to my face when I look back at pictures like these from 2011 and remember struggling with a climb I can now top, being afraid to ride across rocks I barely notice, coming to a dead stop in front of a log, I now pop over without a thought.
As I rode this week, I remembered how we used to have to stop at each and every bench, along with at the top of every small climb to rest and recover. I'm working hard at active recovery, continuing to pedal while I catch my breath. Limiting rest stops. I continue to be surprised how much the line you take or the momentum you have going into a climb, descent or obstacle plays a part. There were places on Sunday's ride I struggled due to a line that put me into bigger roots or rocks, or how by not having proper momentum, I had to put a foot down in areas I've cleaned in past. At the same time in a section of the Muir trails called The Beach, I was pleasantly surprised by how easy it was to ride. I remember the first time we rode that section, stopping half way up to rest. It's the first time I've actually felt like I was enjoying a climb. Minutes later Hell's Kitchen reminded me why it has the name it does.
But with increased confidence and skills, also comes increased chances for error. I'm riding faster. Attacking sections more. Weaknesses are being exposed. At the Ray's Women's clinic, I struggled with both speed and bike angle/position in the bermed turns of the pump track. At Valmont Bike Park in Boulder, I did better at speed, but Kiddo chastised me for not leaning the bike, for going through upright. On Sunday's ride, in a section called Bermuda.... Damn bermed turn. I just don’t trust myself to lean the bike
through them. Towards the bottom of the section, the final left turn, took the turn too high on the berm, upright, no real
lean. On the exit there’s a small tree to the right. Because I was high I was on the right edge of the trail and bbeing upright meant my handlebars were not leaning away, I clipped the tree.
Leading to a face plant and a bloody nose. Funny how many thoughts go through
your head in a millisecond. ....Don't look at tree! You're gonna hit tree. I'm
flying. Splat. Oops there's gonna be a bloody nose. Get off bike off trail
before someone barrels into you. Feel blood begin to pour. Pinch nose....
.
Still work to do. Benchmarks set, and continually updated. I'm super stoked about this summer's riding. Here in Wisconsin I hope to do some rides with other women in addition to the family and solo training rides, there will be rides and the Women's Clinic in Brown County, IN in June, riding on our family vacation to Breckinridge, CO in July and another prior to my nieces wedding at Killington, VT in August. Plan on doing a WORS race or two, The Brown County Super-D, Fall Colors Festival. Hopefully we can sneak in another spot or two, like maybe a trip up tp Copper Harbor, MI.
Tho, face it, even with a desire to more formally train this summer, I still want to stop and smell the roses so to speak...pausing to snap a few pictures and enjoy the view will always be a part of my enjoyment of mountain biking.
Stop thinking so much! Instead of thinking of the berm, look to where you want to go. Your bike and body will follow and it will feel natural. Then it will all just click.
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