Still Looking for a New Year’s Resolution? Try a group ride.
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In 2009 I bought my first bike, a Trek WSD 1.5 road bike I immediately named Spartacus in honor of Fabian Cancellera http://www.fabiancancellara.com/fc.php?site=aHR0cDovL3d3dy5mYWJpYW5jYW5jZWxsYXJhLmNo . I left the shop with a bike, a helmet, a few other assorted gizmos and no idea what I was doing. It’s a wonder I survived the summer. After each outing (I won’t dignify what I was doing by calling it a ride), I’d be back in the LBS buying more equipment and asking more questions. The folks at the LBS were very patient and gave me advice that I didn’t always take the first time I heard it. Clean my chain? Omg, you’ve got to be kidding. Change a tire, by myself? You jest.
One of the pieces of advice they kept repeating was I needed to try a group ride, they insisted I would learn so much by riding with other people. In my imagination all I could envision was a sea of Lycra-clad 25 year-olds who shaved their legs with more precision than I did.
But I went anyway. I found a group ride through the Potomac Pedalers http://www.potomacpedalers.org/ at Wakefield Park. So on a late summer evening I showed up with Spartacus, so nervous I could barely get my gloves on my hands.
To make a long story short, everything that could go wrong did. The C/D Ride Coordinator had canceled for the evening. That left me on my first group ride with, yes, the A and B riders. As you can imagine I was dropped rather quickly. But not before I was lost back in the twisting turning roads of the residential neighborhood. That night was not the best night I’ve ever had on a bike but I could see the potential for learning and decided I’d keep going until I could finish with the group.
But the more important point to the story is riding with groups taught me so much. At first I simply listened and watched as an entire culture unfolded in front of me. Hand signals, so important, but I only learned them by watching other people. What to wear, I picked up by watching others. How to shift efficiently, I learned to do by watching and being open to the advice I was given.
If you haven’t ever tried a group ride, that would be an easy New Year’s Resolution to make and keep. And I guarantee your experience will not involve being dropped, getting lost, and falling down. Even though my first attempt wasn’t a resounding success, it was enough of a good thing that I went back.
Happy trails,
ann
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