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I believe that people need to get out there and discover mountain biking at its purest form - so if that means scratching around a welsh mountain with a wet & soggy OS map for 6 hours or trying to cobbled together some repair to get you back to civilisation - then that's what people need to do to really be a seasoned biker
I suspect that people couldn't care less if they fit into your description of "seasoned biker". I know I don't.
Many of us have done far harder stuffs than 6 hour UK bicycle rides in a bit of rain, and don't feel the need to prove anything to anyone.
@ahwhiles - sorry, was not intending to imply it was anything other than a thought. The Ladybower/Hope Valley routes desperately need some maintenance but I suspect it will be received with the same joy as slabbing of many routes worn bare by ramblers.
Are some people snobbish about trail centres?
Yes!
I say: "**** 'em! Just ignore them and enjoy riding your bike. At least they won't be holding you up when you're hammering down that lovely man made trail!
this isn't a bad thing, just an observation - a biker is a biker and i like bikers
Are you sure?
I like the idea that people a lot faster than me have thought out the trails,so I know that I can go (for me) flat out and not get in to too much bother.
I tend to pootle on natural stuff unless I know it very ,very well.
Oh, and as Gary above said ,they are a bit like going to the gym ,so you can do as many laps as you have time for.
It's all time on the bike init 😉
After 20-odd years of mountain biking I tried a couple of trail centres and:
1 - Got bored.
2 - Was shocked at all the litter thrown down by the trail for the first couple of miles away from the centre.
Why ride round and round in circles when we live in the best-mapped country in the world?
Lager or bitter, I'll drink either ta 🙂
One perk of trail centres is that when the stormtrooper in front doesn't respond to a polite request to let me by I get to practice my block passes...
[b]Wrecker[/b]
Many of us have done far harder stuffs than 6 hour UK bicycle rides in a bit of rain
Purely examples - stuff i cut my teeth on, things that taught me how to handle situations if it goes wrong. I've actually seen people in Afan in the first stages of hypothermia because they have never learnt to prepare for the worst - he was out in crap kit with no waterproofs and his mates had let him drop of the back of the train. Not clever, but bloody stupid in a trail centre
[b]Favouredimage
[/b]
"Are you sure"
Absolutely - I ride week in, week out with 50 plus riders with all levels of ability - from people with £6K carbon superbikes who can't ride for toffee to riders on bikes built on the cheap from STW classified yet who can ride like demons. All great people and add to the mix what makes biking so great
It's even better when you drag people out of their comfort zone, and stick them into a 5 hour slog across Exmoor, the Peaks or the Lakes and see & listen to the satisfaction once they've completed it.
Its one of the biggest pleasures i get from biking - showing people how much more challenging, yet satisfying, biking can really be
Why ride round and round in circles when we live in the best-mapped country in the world?
So many valid answers for that, many of which have already been mentioned more than once on more than one thread. I've wrapped some context around your question. If you look (not very) hard you'll find the answers.
Why ride round and round in circles on purpose built trails that hold up in nearly all weathers, testing your skill and fitness whilst having loads of fun when we live in the best-mapped country in the world, with many of those mapped trails being a bit rubbish in bad weather, often requiring boring/poor trails and roads to link the good stuff together?
We may live in the best mapped country in the world, but without local knowledge that info is pretty useless Tbh. I've lost count of the number of BW and footpaths ( yes I know) that look like they should be ****ing ace but turn out to be a nightmarish slog, monks trod anyone..?
Trail centres for most folk are an easy way of enjoying a day out with a guaranteed decent trail. I think the vast majority of users are either on day release looking for something a bit different, or a winter trip when their own trails are winter destroyed and knee deep horse hoof prints. My day pases are too precious to go to the middle if nowhere that's looks cool on a map but turns out to be shit, that's a waste
seasoned biker
A what now? Is this a new all mountain tag thingy?
Boltonjon, my gf did a 6 hour "slog" around W2 a couple of weeks ago, her sense of achievement and pride when she got back to car was immense, and she didn't stop gibbering on like a big kid for the whole drive home, she cannot wait to get to the Alps and holiday we booked, to suggest her achievement was any less hard earned because it happened to be a trail centre is pretty ****y, no?
I like both, but probably spend more time and trail centres these days partly due to 'grown up' life encroaching on my spare time and partly because of where I live (there's naff all localish, natural stuff worth riding).
I started riding in '96 so would class myself as fairly well seasoned but have never done the whole OS map / survival thing that some believe you need to do so be a true mountain biker. My first years of riding focused around the local woods bit quickly fell into the mucking about on jumps, drops and DH runs. This is probably why I quite like trail centres; the climbs are there to be endured and the downs to be enjoyed.
I also love natural stuff too - I lived in Sheffield for a few years and was pretty lucy to have some amazing riding on my door step as I lived in Lodge Moor. But even then, the riding was very much focused on slogging up to enjoy the descents. There are some great bits of riding around Wyming Brook and Stanage, but they don't really flow.
Bringing the whole value of bikes into it is pretty petty - who cares. Some can afford better bikes than others - who cares? I certainly don't fit into the stereotype as my trusty SX Trail is eight years old!
I believe that people need to get out there and discover mountain biking at its purest form - so if that means scratching around a welsh mountain with a wet & soggy OS map for 6 hours or trying to cobbled together some repair to get you back to civilisation - then that's what people need to do
Purely examples - stuff i cut my teeth on, things that taught me how to handle situations if it goes wrong.
Swoon...
No, trains... sorry.
Trains? TRAINS?
🙄
I'm afraid I can't talk to you anymore.
It's analogous to trad and sport climbing: trad climbers complain that sport climbers haven't "paid their dues". In MTB terms, that means learning to navigate and deal with tough days on rough tracks in the hills rather than how to rail a berm.
The snootiness is unpleasant but they have a point. If you only follow the arrows then you are missing out on a lot. Mountain bikes can take you a long way so get out there!
Edit: just adding a comment that if you find built trails dull, ride faster. Even the smoothest trails are anything but boring on a hard tail if you just lay off the brakes and hit everything faster than is comfortable.
Those claiming to be oblivious to any antagonism towards Trail centers/users on STW are joking right?
There is a small but vocal core of "Anti-Trail Center" STWers,
Why (to a large extent throughout the thread, I just picked the above as one example) are two totally different things being conflated:
1) Not liking trail centres
2) Not liking people who go to trail centres.
If you are a trail centre fan, and a different person says they don't like trail centres, why do you have to take that personally?
For the record, I'm not a big fan of trail centres, but I'm fully in favour of them existing, and I ride them occasionally. I got back into MTBing after 10-15 years out following a trip to Dalby, and my 7 year old's daughter's first experience of "mountain biking" as opposed to riding a mountain bike, was at Nevis.
That said, I'm not a fan in that I don't enjoy riding them as much as I do exploring natural stuff. Does this mean I'm supposed to not like people who do go to trail centres? If so, can someone explain why that should be, because it's not entirely clear?
[i] that means learning to navigate and deal with tough days on rough tracks in the hills rather than how to rail a berm.[/i]
Translation:
You can't come here to "enjoy yourself" you have to spend at least 20 years riding shit bikes with barely useless brakes and crap tyres like i have before you're allowed to buy yourself a nice bike and simply come here to have " fun"
🙄
trad climbers complain that sport climbers haven't "paid their dues"
I only do this because I'm jealous of those who are stronger climbers than me 🙂
For me trail centres offer the next challenge. I can read a map and I've done the "big days out". I've ridden back from the middle of nowhere with my saddle held on by bandages and sticky tape. I've suffered multiple mechanicals in one ride and ended up walking home. I've got back from an unprepared day in the hills and been so cold I've had to shower in my cycling kit because my fingers didn't work. All good character building stuff, but what I can't do is ride the Fort Bill downhill track anywhere near as fast as Steve Peat, I can't do tail whips at warp speed like Danny Hart and I can't do front flips like Sam Reynolds. I probably never will, but at trail centres I can at least practice the necessary skills more effectively than romping over some sodden, muddy hillside in the middle of nowhere. 15 remote off-road miles from home is not the place to practice that big drop off you've never plucked up courage to do before.
rogerthecat - MemberRed route around Ladybower is a very bad idea - trail maintenance is a good idea - perhaps someone should suggest it to the PPA and see if they bite?
i din't really propose it as a suggestion/request, i mentioned it for a thought experiment.imagine that a route had been built, roughly following the current route, only it had more interesting climbs, and longer swoopy descents, and a weather-proof surface.
i suspect it would be more popular than the 'original'.
i could be wrong, but i know we'll never know
You'd be right.
They basically did this in the FoD - the Verderers trail is essentially a collection of the popular bits, covered in that grey hardpack gravel that all these built trails seem to be made of.
Personally, I think it's horrible, like the 'soul' has been ripped out. It is however massively popular.
It's entirely horses for courses though. A case in point: in November we had a boys bikey weekend in Dolgellau. On the Saturday we did Cadair Idris and breaking it down into it's constituent parts -
- it was a straight out and back/up and down route
- there were unrideable boggy bits (in both directions)
- there were unrideable rocky bits (in both directions)
- we got a bit lost
- it was freezing
- it was raining, hailing, sleeting and snowing
it should have been awful. I had a hoot; it was a proper adventure. Others 'tolerated' it.
On the Sunday we did CYB:
- it was warm
- it was dry and sunny
- it was all rideable (badly and only just in sections in my case).
I hated it and gave up halfway round, it was just so false. Others loved it.
[i]- it was a straight out and back/up and down route[/i]
[i]- we got a bit lost[/i]
A rare skill, chapeau sir...
..... the people who always head over to Afan of CYB for a weekend adventure on a bike - people who i would class as non-seasoned mountain bikers ...
That describes me and a few mates quite well. Apart from the last bit about us not being "seasoned mountain bikers"
Most of us have been riding mountain bikes since we were about 15/16 and all in our early 40's now.
Sorry we don't comply with your classification 🙁
[i]A rare skill, chapeau sir... [/i]
Why, thank you 🙂
I suppose I can see why people who haven't been out in the elements too much like those from big cities get excited about the novelty of an "adventure". That novelty has worn off for me now. I've spent far too long cold and wet on various training areas. Now I just want to go and have as much fun on my bicycle as I can and get a bit of exercise. Sometimes this is at trail centres, sometimes riding DH, sometimes natural stuff.
Those who ride mostly trail centers, what do you do the rest of the week (unless you live really localy to one)?
Now I just want to go and have as much fun on my bicycle as I can and get a bit of exercise
Can't argue with that. Case closed 🙂
Those who ride mostly trail centers, what do you do the rest of the week (unless you live really localy to one)?
I mostly go to work and come home too knackered to do much else other than eat something and fall asleep.
I can understand how office workers have excess energy to burn off though 😉
I ride my local trail centre (Cannock) mid week in the summer if I can. Also ride a few more of the natural / u official trail when the weather is better because they're bog fests when wet.
My local woods a good fun, but only first thing in the morning before the local scroates turn up.
Other than that I run or as will be the case this summer, get out in the road bike.
When I lived in Sheffield I still got bored of the riding on my doorstep...although looking back, I was just spoilt.
I can understand how office workers have excess energy to burn off though
Fair point
*ponders gettign some exercise and walking to the coffee machine*
Those who ride mostly trail centers, what do you do the rest of the week (unless you live really localy to one)?
During the winter; boxing, weights, rubgy, pub, run, intercourse etc. Depends really.
During the summer, I ride local to where I work.
I’ve ridden at Coed Y Brenin a few times but didn’t really enjoy it. Most of the stuff was OK but I hated the start of all the trails, where they’ve put in all that deliberately hard rocky pavement right near the car park (just when you won’t be warmed up).
I quite like riding slowly. And I quite like deep mud, it’s just another trail obstacle. I enjoy the challenge of clearing a churned up section of muddy bridleway. I also much prefer riding uphill to down.
I suppose I’ve never been a real mountain biker, I doubt I would be welcome at most trail centres.
Why (to a large extent throughout the thread, I just picked the above as one example) are two totally different things being conflated:1) Not liking trail centres
2) Not liking people who go to trail centres.
Because a proportion (Not all) of those professing their dislike of trail centers seem to garnish their statements with negative comments on those that use TC's.
suggesting TC users lack common sense, the ability to plan for long period unsupported riding without popping back to the car or know how to read a map.
They are good fun but the do wiggle unnecessarily at times and it does my nut in! When they maximse elevation gain with some great flowing trails they are great though.
i just love riding bikes, natural, cheeky trail centre, i don't really care. The only thing I get a bit twitchy about is people....on the whole I hate people*, so very early morning or weekdays at a trail centre are just lovely. 😀
* did chat to some very pleasant gear dangler and boingy bike boys at llandegla though.
Hmmmm I'd prefer to ride really tough, high speed, technical natural trails all day. But sadly we live in the UK and the weather (especially this last few years) has been rubbish.
If you are into riding for the whole "outdoors" thing I guess that's fine. If you are into it more for blasting as fast as possible or are looking to work on technique etc by being able to session sections, then the variable weather, unreliable surfaces (due to said weather) and the fact not all "natural" places would test you makes a very compelling case for trail centres.
I quite like riding mtb trail centres, it's the only time/place I can 'chick' the chaps.
We haven't had the chance to get bored or become snobbish with trail centres yet as none of them have officially opened here. We're 10 years behind the mainland and most of us are happy to finally have some all-weather trails to ride and somewhere to take the family for a spin.
In my mind a good trail is a good trail. Doesn't mater if it's muck/roots/rocks/bones or made of gravel.
Also, the seasoned mountainbikers comment. 20 foot drops and 40 foot gap jumps are as much a part of mountainbiking as getting lost on a hill with some sandwiches and a multitool. You're missing out if you don't do these things and I pity you. 😀
Cracking thread STW's!!
For the record, i enjoy the odd trip to a trail centre - particularly some of the 7Stanes
However, attacking a natural trail with no idea of what might be over the next drop or blind corner is what gives me the ultimate buzz
I also love meeting various people out on the trails and having a natter about where they're from and where they are going
Likewise, i enjoy riding myself into a frenzy at trail centres, trying to catch and pass everyone i see on the trail and feeling very disappointed in myself if someone is quicker than me
Trail centres have done a massive amount to encourage, nurture and develop mountain biking to what it is today in the UK - which is an awesome sport
However - i'm not looking forward to Swinley forest becoming a mountain biking M25, so I'll be avoiding the new development, instead enjoying the natural stuff and embracing every weekend as another weekend of adventure 🙂
I generally prefer trail centres to natural stuff mainly because natural is often a load of slogging through muddy fields and gates to get to one alright descent, then repeat. I don't really like rocky tech stuff either so trail centres usually offer something more my style of riding. Saying that my favourite place to ride is probably the dh stuff at Woburn which isnt really a trail centre as such! More a selection of loads of mini bike park style runs which is my favourite kind of riding 🙂
There's a certain sort of old skool rider who's never happy with the idea of a sport that's open, accessible and welcoming. They'd rather bore you with tales of how much better it was when they were the only ones on "their" trails (trails which they were probably shown by someone else).
I wrote this quite recently but the idea was buzzing round my head for a while - what if other sports had the same snobbish attitude?
http://bristoltrails.tumblr.com/post/32864805917/natural-vs-man-made
since i started having to wear glasses to read, trail centres have become a more attractive option 😉
i'm not looking forward to Swinley forest becoming a mountain biking M25
Myself and a lot of other people had similar misgivings about the new trails in Bristol, then after the rainapocalypse last summer all the critics have mysteriously gone quiet. I think personally I'd have sold my bikes and taken up crochet if there wasn't a fast, fun weatherproof man-made trail for us to ride while the rest of the South West was turning to mush.
Just to add to an already long thread. I think, if pigeonholed, I would fall in the outdoorsy camp. I can map read and just love being outside, particularly in the mountains or by, or in, the sea. I have enjoyed creating numerous local routes over the years, map in hand, trial and error, getting lost. But, my trips to the myriad different mountains and hills of Britain are the highlights of the year - wether climbing or mountain biking.
However, I also do a fair bit of trail centre riding, such as W2 last Saturday with some club mates. It was a really top day. Trail Centres are great for a mud free, relatively logistically straightforward few hours or full day out. Plus, they offer a very different type of trail experience. E.g. you don't get many flowing, bermy natural trails.
But, I would be very frustrated, or would become a perpetuial law breaker, if mountain biking was confined to fixed trail centres, or even fixed routes.
I find it interesting that there is so much snobbery on here about trail centres lacking adventure, route finding, the sense of adventure etc [b] YET [/b]every thread about a trip abroad features a request for the best guiding company.
And most of the trails are man made........
I generally prefer trail centres to natural stuff mainly because natural is often a load of slogging through muddy fields and gates to get to one alright descent, then repeat. I don't really like rocky tech stuff either so trail centres usually offer something more my style of riding. Saying that my favourite place to ride is probably the dh stuff at Woburn which isnt really a trail centre as such! More a selection of loads of mini bike park style runs which is my favourite kind of riding
My sentiments too.
Wilderness riding to me - slogging for hours for mediocre descents
I ride to leave the ground and do bike wiggles, not pain my lungs and kid myself the view is worth it. Though occasionally when it's hot and sunny, when out with the "boys" natural riding can be better than ok.
I'm relatively new too, both to stw but to mtb'ing too. I don't think I've come across any such 'anti' trail centre type tbh. I have, however, met people who just genuinely don't care for the trail centre type of ride! I've never found a 'snobbishness' to them though 😐
I've been extremely lucky to find friendship with people who ride around the peaks a lot and don't mind me trying to hang on!! Of which i am very, very grateful because i love riding these 'natural' trails. But in addition, a recent trip to Gisburn taught me two things: 1) I prefer natural trails and 2) TC's are ideal for noobs like me to 'push' their skills a little but in a slightly more contolled/predictable manner!
It's a shame you've met such shallow people with regards to this type of riding. Like lots have said already ....different folks, different strokes!
I say go have fun! Doesn't matter where you're riding, as long as it makes you smile! 😀
[i]I quite like riding slowly. And I quite like deep mud, it’s just another trail obstacle. I enjoy the challenge of clearing a churned up section of muddy bridleway. I also much prefer riding uphill to down.[/i]
Yup
[i] I have, however, met people who just genuinely don't care for the trail centre type of ride! [/i]
Hiya! 🙂
"Natural" always makes me laugh, too. Had people talking about how great it is to ride natural trails not all that manmade stuff, on trails that I helped build... Had another chap say much the same when we were on a roman road.
Not a fan Of Trail Center's for riding! It's just marketed Mountain Biking! Create's spending for the Industry which is good! But makes something that I'm passionate about in to something that can be ridiculed by a lot of people it seems!If it keeps the sport alive? great! But it still feeds my self indulgent attitude of 'If they haven't been riding for more than 20 years on natural trails how the hell can they understand what it's all about'! But then I'm a Belligerent old ****, and it comes with the "Time served badge"!
I do forget a lot of stuff these days! Like that 'Mountain biking is also all about Acceptance and sharing'... It's usually when confronted by someone with about 3 grands worth too much of bike for a 2 hour trip around the 8 mile red route so they can have a bacon sandwich!.... but hey if it get's them off their arse and they love it? Great!
And Yep! I can be that judgmental! ... It takes a lot of hard work to be this conceited... but wtf! There's a lot of ego's that need winding in a bit out there these days, mine too sometimes! I Love great bikes, I just hate trophy bikes! some never even leave the car park! 🙁
But it still feeds my self indulgent attitude of 'If they haven't been riding for more than 20 years on natural trails how the hell can they understand what it's all about'! But then I'm a Belligerent old ****, and it comes with the "Time served badge"!
There are plenty of us at trail centres who have been riding mountain bikes for 20 + years and are "time served"
We just find it a good place to meet up with a few mates and have a ride and a laugh. Nice and easy to navigate and good fun places to ride.
some never even leave the car park!
🙄 🙄 🙄 🙄 🙄
Don't understand the attitude Timax, you appear to be "against" people enjoying themselves. How odd
My favourite and most memorable rides have all been on natural trails - Lake District, Yorks Dales, NYMoors, Weardale etc. I love being away from populated areas in a wilderness type setting and trails centres are the absolute antithesis of that.
I have no problem with trail centres and ride Hamsterley a fair bit and have visited Dalby, Glentress, Whinlatter, Grizedale, Gisburn etc but I'd get bored rigid riding the same trails week in week out (which a few friends do - every Saturday or Sunday).
It does seem that some riders hatred of trail centres stems from an envy of other peoples bikes. That other people somehow don't deserve their high end bikes as they are not 'real' mountain bikers. What a crock! People can ride what they like how they like.
nickc - Member
Don't understand the attitude Timax, you appear to be "against" people enjoying themselves. How odd
Don't agree with you nickc - he's not saying that he is against people in trail centres enjoying themselves - quite the opposite - he says that its good that they're getting of their arses to ride a bike
However, I am confident that i am interpreting him correctly, when he says he isn't a fan of TCs
That's very different from saying that he is not a fan of [i]other[/i] people enjoying [i]themselves[/i] at TCs
[i]'If they haven't been riding for more than 20 years on natural trails how the hell can they understand[/i]
This.
It's a statement disparaging people who don't ride bikes in the same way the he does.
I'm a 30 year+ rider and my badge is bigger than yours! SFU! 😀 ... Truthfully? Trail centre's are convenient! And as long as I'm with my mates I couldn't give a ****! ... I just find it all a bit safe,sanitized and not in the spirit of what I remember and recognise!
I know it's never going to change back... But it won't be blimmin long before that'll be the only place we can ride!....
I just look at some of these guys (not you of course, you've got a badge) and just think " You just don't get it do you"... But as I said? I am that judgmental! ... It's probably down to me being more worried about them thinking " whose the old tramp with the old filthy bike and why does he keep staring"...
We used to do a really bizarre thing "back in the day"... we used to just go up to complete strangers and talk to them and say Hi! maybe I should start doing that again?... then again! I hate disappointment! and people thinking your after summut!
There's a lot of inflated ego's in them trail centre car parks! Mainly from spending an inordinate amounts of money! Yet all I'm really frustrated about is I want them to understand all of it (mountain biking) not just the Trail centre bit! And the more candid bit about that! is that it will keep what I know, love and understand relevant and not make me feel so dated! God forbid we lose sight of where and why it all started! But if it is what gets them out on their bikes? it's good!
8)
Slow techy stuff is great, yeah.I quite like riding slowly.
Each to their own, it can be fun at the time. (Just not at cleaning time. 😆 )And I quite like deep mud, it’s just another trail obstacle.
BURN HIM!!!I also much prefer riding uphill to down.
Some people "mountain bike" in order to ramble but go further, a trail center has nothing to offer them. Proper, err, I mean other mountain bikers are looking for an exercise in machine control. This can be found in natural terrain, and in trail centers. I'd like a trail center made entirely of combes, I love combes.
[i]Some people "mountain bike" in order to ramble but go further, a trail center has nothing to offer them.[/i]
Hi there.
[i]Proper, err, I mean other mountain bikers[/i]
Easy there hotshot, don't make me strangle you with my map case 😉
[i]There's a lot of inflated ego's in them trail centre car parks! [/i]
One of them appears to be yours...
I love 'natural' trail riding for the navigational challenge. A trail centre can never emulate the kind of self sufficiency you need to ride Mastiled Lane, Gatesgarth or Doctor's Gate.
There's a lot of inflated ego's in them trail centre car parks![b] Mainly from spending an inordinate amounts of money![/b]
The bit in bold should read......
"Mainly from people who think [b]their[/b] opinion of what mountain biking should be is better than everyone else's"
Im a chatty sort of person, plus I'm always ready to roll at least 15 mins before my other half, so I always end up chatting to people at trail centres, from families to bunches of mates and old buffers on 25 year old bikes wearing ron hills and brasher boots, and always find people perfectly agreeable and nice.
I've certainly never come across anyone like you describe.
[i]There's a lot of inflated ego's in them trail centre car parks![/i]
First thing i do when i roll up, even before im changed or got pads on, i grab my 5k bike, manual the length of the car park, whilst looking everyone i see square in the eyes, turn around, head back to the car whilst bunny hopping every obstacle i see, making sure it's a sufficiently skillful display, all just to demonstrate i am THE dominant male. If anyone attempts to say hello, i blank them.
That's how you win at MTBing, right?
There's a certain sort of old skool rider who's never happy with the idea of a sport that's open, accessible and welcoming.
With respect, Mr A, I think you're conflating a couple of things here. Leigh Woods is a classic example: when I see kids rolling down what [i]used[/i] to be a techy bit of singletrack, I am [b]genuinely & utterly delighted[/b], both for them and the future of the sport. The veritable explosion in numbers (including entire families) out & about in LW & AC is one of the best things that's happened to Brizzle biking in recent years. And the construction of an artificial network was a necessary development if mountain biking was to continue in both areas on a sustainable basis. But not for a moment am I going to p r e t e n d that I enjoy that [i]particular[/i] section (to be specific, the bit of the old Rim Trail that runs along the bluff*) in the way that I used to. Especially now that I can't climb up it. 😉
It's got nowt to do with my attitude to other riders, be they newbies or not - all are welcome & the more the merrier. It's about personal taste. I like ba'stard roots & awkward stuff, much in the way that I like Earl Grey tea and steel frames - AFAIK, this is not a thought crime.
(*FWIW, this was the [i]only[/i] bit of the LW new-build that upset me - although not asmuch as BRT2, obviously.)
I'd get bored rigid riding the same trails week in week out
Me too. Not sure what this has got to do with trail centres though.
navigational challenge
Doctor's Gate? Mastilles Lane? If you think they're navigational challenges you've spent too long riding those pesky sanitised trail centres 😉
I'm talking about the blanket dismissal of "trail centres" that floats up on here from time to time, accompanied by the STW Trail Centre Thread Bingo of "sanitised", "not proper mountain biking", "posers in car parks", "they're for people who can't read maps" and the like. If a particular bit of trail isn't to your tastes, fair enough.
As an aside, in my few years of maintaining trails I've had people moan when trails are in a bad state, moan when volunteers repair them, then moan when they wore out again, then moan even louder when properly built trails replaced them. The conclusion that I've formed is that people like to have a moan. 😉
I'm talking about the blanket dismissal of "trail centres"
Oh, I agree. IMO, even "posers in carparks" should be a cause for celebration - anything that has people spending money on bike stuff is a clear win. It's one of the few occasions when I believe in trickle-down economics. As for trail centres: if you don't like 'em, don't go there!
(I should apologise for latching straight on to your post - much like the Vietnam War, some of us are still fighting the great LW trails debate in our... [i]minds[/i]. 😀 )
The conclusion that I've formed is that people like to have a moan.
There's no pleasing 'em, to be sure (and let's face it, moaning about stuff is the very lifeblood of STW). On the subject of repairs, work has prevented me attending the BTG dig days, but I'll try and remedy that.
ride the trails you like riding, have fun, enjoy yourself?
ride the trails you like riding, have fun, enjoy yourself?
How dare you suggest it.
sorry, my bad 😉
No no fuzzhead, that's not the right attitude, you have to be dismissive of any one ( other than yourself of course) at a trail centre, as they are clearly try hard wannabies, who just don't get it, and need to go to real trails to do real mountain biking. It's no use just buying a nice bike ( that you clearly somehow don't deserve) and having fun, no you have to pay your dues first*
Ok?
* which appear to be at least 20 years of cycling before even thinking about daring to go to a trail centre
I've never been a fan of trail centres myself, I don't enjoy the way they ride or the "manufactured surface" that they have to use to cope with the masses etc, I've always preferred the feel of pine needles, roots, rocks, mud and peat etc but again its just a personal thing.
I can see the attraction of them as they're a "quick fix" for many plus its an easier way of attarcting many to MTB rather than facing the scary thought of naviagating and piecing together your own rides.
Llandegla is only a 40 min moorland ride away from the door but holds no appeal to me (although we had some cracking loops in there pre tail centre days). Locally within the Llangollen/Wrexham area there are some of the best riding to be had in Wales but again I prefer to build or search out that special bit of trail.
I've always preferred the feel of pine needles
It's the best kind of magic carpet.
I've never been a fan of trail centres myself...........I've always preferred the feel of pine needles
You've been visiting the wrong trail centres then 😉
I have to say, if trail centres existed 25-odd years ago when i was "paying my dues", i'd have been first in line 🙂
^ best post of the thread 🙂
I'll ride anywhere. Au naturel and trail centres. It's all riding to me.
What I do like about trail centres, is not bumping into self-righteous walkers.
Mr agreeable. That bit of trail is fantastic. Right on my doorstep too
