Osiris
Zen MBB Master
After 400+ miles on my V20, I now feel completely at home on it, but there remains one important technique I have yet to get the hang of: climbing hills. I'm referring here to the climbing technique advocated by Jim Parker and others, which involves recruiting upper body muscles to produce more power at the pedals. I've watched the video on YouTube featuring Marie Parker, and I understand the principle involved. It's not difficult to grasp how pulling the pedal toward you by moving the handlebars could add some power to each pedal stroke, providing it's timed correctly.
In actual practice, however, it's difficult to see how this can be made to work. As anyone who has spent time riding a bicycle or recumbent knows, it takes only the tiniest movement of the handlebars to cause a pretty significant directional change. Just a bit of wrist movement is all that's required to execute 90 degree turns at intersections, and that's at a fairly modest speed. Move the handlebars that much while traveling at a high rate of speed, and you're likely to crash.
How then is it possible to move the handlebars any significant degree to the right and left while climbing a hill without initiating directional changes that will either send you off the road or into oncoming traffic? I've managed to do it at ~5 mph, but most "hills" in Florida are flat enough that I can easily climb them at 15-20 mph, and I certainly don't want to be weaving all over the place at those speeds. Even more puzzling is that this technique is advocated even for performing sprints, but the last thing I want when accelerating to 30+ mph is any side to side wagging of the front wheel.
Anyone care to explain this?
In actual practice, however, it's difficult to see how this can be made to work. As anyone who has spent time riding a bicycle or recumbent knows, it takes only the tiniest movement of the handlebars to cause a pretty significant directional change. Just a bit of wrist movement is all that's required to execute 90 degree turns at intersections, and that's at a fairly modest speed. Move the handlebars that much while traveling at a high rate of speed, and you're likely to crash.
How then is it possible to move the handlebars any significant degree to the right and left while climbing a hill without initiating directional changes that will either send you off the road or into oncoming traffic? I've managed to do it at ~5 mph, but most "hills" in Florida are flat enough that I can easily climb them at 15-20 mph, and I certainly don't want to be weaving all over the place at those speeds. Even more puzzling is that this technique is advocated even for performing sprints, but the last thing I want when accelerating to 30+ mph is any side to side wagging of the front wheel.
Anyone care to explain this?
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