>> Do you like it? 

 I do not like it.

>> How do you deal with it? 

On the equipment/technique side, by having drop bars and using them. A good 
time to reflect on belly fat.
We had more wind in recent years here in mid-Michigan, or at least it seems 
that way. So it's been on my mind.

Like you, I prefer to ride into the wind early; unlike you I do it to get 
it over with.

The mental game is important. Accept it, and then use the time-honored, 
secret technique of cycling: 
Left pedal, right pedal, until you get there. No need to overthink it.

The most important step in getting serious again about cycling was to ride 
enough to be reasonably comfortable on long rides. No chafing, no undue 
pains, so that when I get tired and want to slow down, I can let my mind 
wander and not worry about how much longer it's going to be hurt.

Cycling is hard work, and a lot of it sucks, to put it bluntly.
Pushing through the discomfort to a place where you're OK for long rides is 
what makes the cyclist -- far more than speed or athletic ability, or 
equipment.

cheers -m


On Saturday, September 21, 2024 at 5:49:13 PM UTC-4 Patrick Moore wrote:

> Do you like it? How do you deal with it? -- body position, gear choice, 
> pedaling style.
>
> I just had very enjoyable short ride, <15 miles, on the 76" 18 lb Joe 
> fixed custom, deliberately choosing upwind routes because they were upwind 
> and not for the return downwind spinning.
>
> It took me almost literally 10 years to adapt my fixed gear pedaling style 
> and, above all, mental style, to adapt to riding fixed against headwinds -- 
> about 1996 to mid '00s; very clear recollection about this. But I finally 
> learned to "go with it" instead of "fighting it," and now I greatly enjoy 
> it, just as I enjoy riding up hills fixed; at least, if the distances are 
> shortish and I'm feeling good, the last bit very important. But the biggest 
> factor is how you think of riding into the wind.
>
> One reason I like drop bars all the time and only drop bars, besides my 
> very sensitive left palm, is that they let me get down in the hooks with 
> bent elbows and hands light on bar when riding into a strong wind.
>
> Patrick Moore, who meant to stop and take a pic of the mudflats in the 
> almost-dry Rio Grande where it passes under the Paseo del Norte and 
>  Montano Boulevard bridges but who was going so fast that he couldn't stop.
>
>
> -- 
>
> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Executive resumes, LinkedIn profiles, bios, letters, and other writing 
> services
>
>
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> *When thou didst not, savage, k**now thine own meaning,*
>
> *But wouldst gabble like a** thing most brutish,*
>
> *I endowed thy purposes w**ith words that made them known.*
>

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