Great observations.  2 years ago my son and I visited the U.S. National 
Whitewater Center.  In addition to natural and man-made whitewater, they 
have ropes courses and some very nice mountain bike trails.  We hadn't 
expected to bike, so didn't bring ours -- but they rent Giant mountain 
bikes converted to single speed.  We decided to give it a go.  The gearing 
was just right for the trails they had.  It was an amazing (to me) 
'release' to not think about changing gears!  It really did add to the 
enjoyment of it all.  Ever since then I've been tempted to bite, whether 
road or mtb.

On Wednesday, November 29, 2017 at 9:27:52 PM UTC-5, Deacon Patrick wrote:
>
> With several people interested in single speeding I thought I’d start this 
> thread for tips and lessons we’ve learned single speeding (and fixed too, 
> as I’ll soon be diving in). What have you learned, or are learning?
>
> I cover a lot of bits I learned here, in my review of the Quickbeam: 
> https://thegrid.ai/withabandon/quickbeam-sightings
>
> As I’ve been riding exclusively single speed now the last few weeks (and 
> my Hunqapillar is single speed, just using the 60” gear in the cassette as 
> that was the one that worked), I’ve again been impressed with how different 
> the mind/body/heart/soul set is with zero options but pedaling.
>
> With gears, the mind is always watchful and mindful of cadence and asking 
> the question “is it time to shift?” and “will this hill necessitate a 
> shift?” None of that nonsense. Me legs are me gears.
>
> I was good at being relaxed pedaling in a certain RPM range, and I shifted 
> to stay in that.  I “needed” more gear range when the terrain became 
> steeper because otherwise I was out of that range.
>
> Single speeding has taught me to relax from extremely slow cadence 
> pedaling to extremely high cadence. I’ve learned to climb with an 
> unweighted seated position, doing repeated one-legged squats, my weight 
> pushing down on the pedals to assist, my arms pulling on the bars to 
> assist. Yet it is soft and easy. Anaerobic work at an aerobic pace. It 
> feels amazing.
>
> Fast cadences feel a lot like running barefoot (and I expect fixed with 
> increase this in many ways) — floating along, limpid and lithe, riding a 
> rail as circles turn beneath me (this feeling is true all the time, 
> actually, but more so at higher cadences for me).
>
> Ride till you can’t, walk till you can.
>
> Obey this and the amount of time you spend walking will decrease steadily 
> and surprisingly as your aerobic fitness increases. What is “can’t”? For 
> me, it is when I am no longer breathing fairly relaxed through my nose (I 
> make exceptions to this when I want to push myself, or for short, steep 
> climbs).
>
> Intentionally ride the wrong of your two gears, both too high and too low. 
> You will learn a lot.
>
> The one geared bike is an amazing teacher, but it requires humility to 
> learn from it. A deraileur gets in the way of this learning.
>
> Most of all, enjoy and ride with abandon! Grin.
>
> With abandon,
> Patrick
>
> www.CredoFamily.org
> www.MindYourHeadCoop.org
>

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