2manyoranges
Old School Grand Master
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Leave no trace. I have climbed and ridden in some very sensitive places, where a locked back wheel or heavy landing can leave a lasting mark - and saw that as a A Very Bad Thing. Of course there was huge pressure on mountain biking then - we were new out there and there was, despite a careful approach, lots of trail conflict between mountain bikers, walkers and horse riders. We stuck to the rule of 'bridleway only' but were still shouted at. On the South Downs, you could easily leave a 10 metre scar in the delicate turf by braking without care, or widen the trail by avoiding all the sludgy puddles. We really strove to leave no trace.
But now.....
Mountain biking these days seems to be about digging supportive berms and jumpy jumps. I have ridden bike parks and purpose built alpine DH trails. I like them. They Are Nice. But the kind of approach advocated in this film supported by Shimano is 'community digging'. Maybe in Canada there's enough wilderness to support this kind of thing without compromising the local flora and fauna. But we've lost SO much habitat and so many wildlife populations as a result. A trail through a forest actually uses a hell of a lot of land and disrupts a lot of ecosystem. And it sure disturbs the flow of water across and through the topography. A friend of mine's profession is conservation science, and he is very concerned about the amount of trail building in local woods. A bunch of mice disturbed and moved on means a hungry owl. And accessible earthworms on a loamy trail means more badgers. A noisy trial where once there was silence means fewer deer, less browsing and less light getting to the forest floor. It changes things - sometimes perhaps for the better, sometimes for the worse, but it sure changes things.
I am still of the 'use the bridleways and leave no trace' school of retro-riding. I like flow trails, and can see that in cities and locations where there are no rights of way and landowners give their permission, and it's all done with sensitivity to the context, it may be fine....ish
https://www.pinkbike.com/news/video...me-to-life-before-your-eyes-in-blueprint.html
But now.....
Mountain biking these days seems to be about digging supportive berms and jumpy jumps. I have ridden bike parks and purpose built alpine DH trails. I like them. They Are Nice. But the kind of approach advocated in this film supported by Shimano is 'community digging'. Maybe in Canada there's enough wilderness to support this kind of thing without compromising the local flora and fauna. But we've lost SO much habitat and so many wildlife populations as a result. A trail through a forest actually uses a hell of a lot of land and disrupts a lot of ecosystem. And it sure disturbs the flow of water across and through the topography. A friend of mine's profession is conservation science, and he is very concerned about the amount of trail building in local woods. A bunch of mice disturbed and moved on means a hungry owl. And accessible earthworms on a loamy trail means more badgers. A noisy trial where once there was silence means fewer deer, less browsing and less light getting to the forest floor. It changes things - sometimes perhaps for the better, sometimes for the worse, but it sure changes things.
I am still of the 'use the bridleways and leave no trace' school of retro-riding. I like flow trails, and can see that in cities and locations where there are no rights of way and landowners give their permission, and it's all done with sensitivity to the context, it may be fine....ish
https://www.pinkbike.com/news/video...me-to-life-before-your-eyes-in-blueprint.html