Today I remembered what I hated about mountain biking...

teebsgt

Dirt Disciple
Heavy rain last night, but thought I'd take advantage of brightening skies to get out of the house on my usual little loop down to Thames estuary marshes. Lots of puddles but all good so far, relaxing.

Then start to hit some more low-level waterlogged areas and hit that worst possible kind of mud, that hellish clay gunk that sticks like glue. I've soon picked up so much, combined with some gravel that the wheels actually don't turn! The GT designers in California obviously didn't factor in mud clearance when designing the LTS, combined with the 2.4/2.2 tyres I'm running! Had to stop four times to try and degunk and even un hooked my rear Maguras! Then had to clear off the chain as that started to clog right up.

Slog the bike back home (which is all uphill), must weigh at least a few kilos more in clay despite best attempts to wash off in puddles! SPDs don't work bunged right up.

Then get home, attempt to clean off bike in an already soggy garden. Got no hosepipe, bucket of water is brown within one dip of the brush. Everythings soggy, everything still has clay in it. Don't wanna put bike away half-cleaned. Then it starts to rain...

MTBiking. We love it.

:evil:
 
At lest you gout out there!

I was plagued by punctures before i got 100 yards off road (after a 3 mile ride to the offroady bit's)
 
I sometimes take the bike home via a jetwash in the local service station...
 
:LOL: I know how you feel, took my Proflex for a ride last week and the combination of claggy mud and twigs/grass conspired to completely stop the wheels from turning, and as you say the SPD's don't work when clogged up with mud either (especially as the mud gets compacted from repeated attempts to get your shoes into the damn pedals).

Had I been riding my Orange which has some 1.7 Geax Barro mud tyres on I doubt the problem would have been nearly half as bad, British designed frames always have good mud clearance
:D
 
Mountainbiking is all about being prepared.

Can you fix up a hosepipe? if yes do it!

if not.... do you own a car? if yes get yourself a dirtworker to hook up to the car for bike cleaning.

http://www.dirtworker.co.uk/

just noticed they do a rechargeable version so no car needed either!

http://www.dirtworker.co.uk/products/18 ... -nomad.php

also invest in a good brush set and cleaning product.


my current fave entry product is the Kaaboom dirt busting bag @ £19.99.

;]

Oh and good one for getting out there and doing it..... :LOL:
 
to be fair GT designers didn't factor mud into any of their deigns

just dry dusty cali trails
 
Narrow tyres is the way to go - firstly they don't jam your frame up solid, secondly they cut in deeper and usually find something solid at the bottom.
 
pah...!


the day before the snow came:

home_again_172.jpg
 
Or a pressurised weedkiller sprayer from a garden centre - fill it with water, pump it up and hey-presto!
 
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