Re:
Have been getting to know this beast and the drop set-up, and am pleasantly surprised and impressed. I was skeptical that a crouched position would be much good down hill, and very gloomy about the prospects of dirt drops being any use wrangling an old tank up hills.
But the overall ride is great fun, and downhill performance is superb:
We dropped off the edge of the hill in the photo below and had a fine old time getting through a grass track deeply-pocked with cattle tracks. Yet unlike Mr Tomac, I was in perfect control and got through the oomsca without fuss (although not as comfortably as on my steel bike).
When the track firmed up into a puddly chalk highway, the Canny came into its own and is a flyer. Hovering over the saddle in the drops and pedaling hard was a sweet - the old girl floated over the ruts, and the directness of the ally frame was a boon.
Getting to the top of the hill was less easy (!), but in-saddle climbing worked nicely holding the middle of the bars, and out-of-the-saddle-on-the-hoods riding still kept traction. Drop bars on this machine are never going to offer the technical uphill ability that a nice wide riser set on a light bike will, but hanging onto the hoods is by no means catastrophic.
Birdsall (3)
(You'll notice that, rather than encumbering the 'Dale with a kickstand, I bring an assistant. My fear is that minimum wage levels and workplace pension legislation will put an end to this convenience. Such is life.)