Crested Butte little spin around from town
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Gorgeous country for a ride. Those leaves are almost peaking, man.Crested Butte little spin around from town
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This reminds me of this post I read - I see it with the club I ride with, many of whom ride very racey dentist bikes... I ride a Specialized Roubaix which is a square geometry.It's the bending over part that doesn't feel great to me anymore now that I'm over 40. I used to ride racey road bikes with drop bars, cruising around everywhere bent in half. I can do that for about two blocks now.
The thought has occurred to me - since I have always felt like road bikes have me really reaching and putting a ton of weight on my hands - that maybe I need a custom frame with a slightly shorter top tube. Most road bikes are "oversquare" meaning the top tube is longer than the seat tube. A few bikes are "square", but I don't know that I've ever seen a road bike that's "undersquare". Yeah maybe hybrid/comfort Walmart bikes have that geometry, but nothing made with good tubing and skilled labor. The closest thing to ultimate comfort for me are early 80s ATBs. Even by the late 80s/early 90s the cockpit on MTBs had gotten stretched out and long.
It's the bending over part that doesn't feel great to me anymore now that I'm over 40. I used to ride racey road bikes with drop bars, cruising around everywhere bent in half. I can do that for about two blocks now.
The thought has occurred to me - since I have always felt like road bikes have me really reaching and putting a ton of weight on my hands - that maybe I need a custom frame with a slightly shorter top tube. Most road bikes are "oversquare" meaning the top tube is longer than the seat tube. A few bikes are "square", but I don't know that I've ever seen a road bike that's "undersquare". Yeah maybe hybrid/comfort Walmart bikes have that geometry, but nothing made with good tubing and skilled labor. The closest thing to ultimate comfort for me are early 80s ATBs. Even by the late 80s/early 90s the cockpit on MTBs had gotten stretched out and long.
This reminds me of this post I read - I see it with the club I ride with, many of whom ride very racey dentist bikes... I ride a Specialized Roubaix which is a square geometry.
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Why So Many Cyclists End Up on the Wrong Bike
Think you need a race bike? BMC’s endurance lineup could actually be faster—and far more comfortable.velo.outsideonline.com
I know it's written by a manufacturer selling their frames, but I think there is a lot of merit in it when combined with your comment.
I totally agree with most of what’s written there. They keep talking about stack height but when you look at the photos, the bars are almost level with the saddle, and I think that’s what they really mean. Grant Peterson has been saying that for years - bars and saddle level with each other for comfort, and that comfort is the key to somebody using their bike more often and for longer durations.This reminds me of this post I read - I see it with the club I ride with, many of whom ride very racey dentist bikes... I ride a Specialized Roubaix which is a square geometry.
![]()
Why So Many Cyclists End Up on the Wrong Bike
Think you need a race bike? BMC’s endurance lineup could actually be faster—and far more comfortable.velo.outsideonline.com
I know it's written by a manufacturer selling their frames, but I think there is a lot of merit in it when combined with your comment.
Expensive (AU$10k +... or more than I want to think about) race bikes... I think I'm about the only one who has mechanical shifting now, and certainly the only one with rim brakes... which (and the fact I'm not competitive) is why I can't be bothered with racing.Gotta ask - what's a "racey dentist bike?" I think I know but making sure I understand the cultural idiom.
It’s too bad about CB. Even just before the pandemic it took family wealth to live there. Glad you got in one ride for memory’s sake. Fortunately nature, at least the public land part of it, will always be there and doesn’t care about property values. The earth will also be here doing its thing long after humans are gone, and in that sense places like what CB have become seem kind of silly.We ate Himalayan hot noodles and drank beer by the oodles. Once our collective judgment was thoroughly impaired, and our intestines were swollen, we decided to hit some classic Creste Butte singletrack. At night. And we glugged beer at the stops, like the bridge over the creek, the top of the ridge, at the scary stabbin-cabin, and when Richard had to pee. 15 miles, 1800 'Merken feet elevation (and de-elevation), and no deaths.
I'm leaving CB tonight. I used to love this place. There's still a tiny bit of the crunchy quirkiness that made this place so special for all the years -- decades -- I've known it. I loved how far off the beaten path it was -- and not just geographically. I considered moving here in the early '00s. And then the rest of the world found this place during the pandemic. There were always dickhead fly-fishing poseurs, but now it's pretty much a place where trust nepos show off their subtle wealth and not subtle hotness. Their douchebaggery makes the fly fishers of the past seem like people you'd like to hang with. So long CB. It was fun for a while.
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You're right. But in hindsight I think my post isn't fair to CB. It came from a nostalgia for a place as it was when I first "met" it. Real people grew up, lived and worked there, and no DC lawyer's wife would have ever chosen it as a place for her daughter's destination wedding. The place that I met doesn't exist, but new people will meet and fall in love with where it once was, and they'll have that same bittersweet nostalgia, probably with different foundations, when they return in a few decades.It’s too bad about CB. Even just before the pandemic it took family wealth to live there. Glad you got in one ride for memory’s sake. Fortunately nature, at least the public land part of it, will always be there and doesn’t care about property values. The earth will also be here doing its thing long after humans are gone, and in that sense places like what CB have become seem kind of silly.
Man, this is an exact thought I've had over the years. I suffer deeply for all the nostalgia I have.You're right. But in hindsight I think my post isn't fair to CB. It came from a nostalgia for a place as it was when I first "met" it. Real people grew up, lived and worked there, and no DC lawyer's wife would have ever chosen it as a place for her daughter's destination wedding. The place that I met doesn't exist, but new people will meet and fall in love with where it once was, and they'll have that same bittersweet nostalgia, probably with different foundations, when they return in a few decades.
Saying it is one thing. Doing it is another. BravoQuick run yesterday to scope out my segment of the Arizona Trail I steward…..
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