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OPINION

Neither of my bike sheds are 'pain caves'... and that's exactly how I like it

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"Don’t be a caveman", says VecchioJo in the most serious defence of riding outside you're every likely to read

I’m a very lucky boy in that I don’t have a pain cave, I have two pain caves. This makes me an apex Zwift predator (see me strut, hear me roar). I’m also an even luckier boy because neither of them are actually pain caves... they’re sheds. Just sheds. Sheds with no glamourising fetishisation of riding a bike going nowhere in them. 

Outside Face Sun.jpeg

The one closest to the house is full of bike crap. A pile of mountain bike tyres the height of a small child, plus half a dozen boxes of other tyres that have been neatly folded and taped up so you can see the logo, and then chucked into boxes roughly separated into road and cyclo-cross with a new one for gravel.

There are split plastic containers of saddles and seat posts, handlebars and stems, front and rear derailleurs and zip-tied cassettes, brake callipers and levers, a plastic bag hiding some tatty old Campagnolo, and a box of disc rotors of varying strata of worn and wobble that are never going to get used again. It’s a history of a life on two wheels with a patina of wistful sentimentality gommed on it that would probably wash off with a spray of degreaser and a determined rub.

There are several sets of forks, one of which I use for hammering home headset crown races as it has the steerer tube removed. There’s a chest of drawers with the random stuff in: tools for obsolete parts, imperial Allen keys, some suspension seat post elastomers, jockey wheels held together with freezer ties, a healthy breeding colony of plastic light mounts, a pick-up-sticks of quick releases and enough ancient alloy bits of uncertain use to keep Alice Roberts going for another series. A bag of plumbing paraphernalia, tins of paint, jars of nails, a garden table, a power drill and accessories, some bamboo canes and all the stuff, tat and maybe-useful-someday gubbins that a shed is meant to have in it. See me shuffle about rummaging for something I know is in here somewhere, hear me mutter and tut.

While there might be enough parts in there to build up a bike or two, I have never ridden my bike in my shed. 

That's because for me, cycling is about being outside. 

Outside Face Buff.jpeg

A bike is a conduit for me to experience as much outside in the time I can spare. I can’t remember how I settled on cycling as it was a long old time ago, and I suspect it was a slow assimilation and progression from just riding to my mates and the sweet shop over there, but I was shockingly flailing at team sports, walking was too slow and running was simply painful. Bikes offered ease, freedom, speed and getting to the real outside quickly without having to deal with the complications of other people.

Over the intervening years I’ve discovered that it does bring with it countless other benefits, but mainly I use cycling to dive into the space rushing around my head. I can get a little tetchy if I can’t feel the wind and the noise and sometimes the rain, and once a while the sun, and the heat and the cold and the surrounding myself in all of the ever-changing whatever that stepping out the front door might entail. It is the full body immersive experience, that starts with the standing in the street divining the colour of the sky and speed and shape of the clouds to decide how many or few clothes to wear, and what to roll in the back pocket for later thanks to living in a temperate climate.

Others may embrace cycling for its fitness gain, its sociability, its travelling to new places, its riding to work-shops-friends-pub, its pedalling a long way, its riding a short way but faster; and while all of those things are also vitally important to me and during any ride some or all of those will bubble cheerfully to the surface, it’s doing all of this with the elements buffeting my face and air billowing around my grey matter that matters the most. 

Outside Face Telegraph.jpeg

It is, I think, being involved, immersed, noticing the headwind kick in as you turn that corner, or the reward of the tailwind after a few hours of battering into it. It is the satisfaction and relief of making it to the top of the climb, it is feeling more than a fan in the face and gliding through a collection of pixels. For all the mumbled oaths of the last miles home in the cold and sloughing wet clothes next to the washing machine whilst spooning peanut butter straight from the jar, there is the inhaling a fridge-fresh Fanta while your skin cracklings in the sun. It is the ache of hunger and tiredness with still enough miles to go and then getting a corner just right so it makes you smile, and that ache and hunger is immediately forgotten. It is both the warm embracing hug and cold sharp slap against the skin. Feeling something, I think. 

Outside Face Spots.jpeg

It is noticing the thousand imperceptible things that go by unnoticed in the minutiae of differences within the day to day on the roads that I’ve ridden day after day, month after month, year after year. The sigh of realising that winter’s not going to hold back any longer because that puddle on that corner has settled again and will be there for the next six months, and the counterpoint of the hushed rejoicing when it disappears at about the same time the sun doesn’t dip below the hill until 6pm and you can maybe just maybe think about going a layer lighter on the next ride.

All of these things and little moments are more important to me than watts and power-ups. It is the feel and rumble and drag of different tarmac textures and the swerves round potholes and drain covers, the total concentration mixed with the cocoon of mindlessness that can wash over after an hour or so when my body has stretched into the ride and settled into itself. And it goes quiet for a bit. Which is why I’m here. Even the mundane nothing of tapping out the miles is a necessary comfort.

Outside Face Grimmace.jpeg

Of course, this mean that there are times when I’m stuck indoors tracing rain drops down the window pane. There are seemingly endless interminable, head-filling, thick dark cloying soup days. So I mindlessly and mindfully bike tinker and do stretches and basic body maintenance routines instead, so that my rickety old body might be a little more limber for when it’s my level of passable to go outside again.

While there is a level of rain that it is pleasurable to ride in, and the romantic in me sees a beauty in it, it happens only infrequently. It’s often becomes just a retrospective justification for that very expensive jacket, and it can get old pretty damn quickly. Some days it’s a faux-rugged giggle, some days I’ve done this shit enough times already and I don’t need to do it again.

I’ve tried riding a bike indoors, and while I get a sweat on and feel like I’ve moved blood and air around a little bit faster than just being on the sofa and made lungs and legs hurt and worried about dissolving headset grease with sweat, I feel desperately unfulfilled and… empty. I have some rollers that are trundled out once a year just to check I’ll never really use them, and I bothered a turbo for a while when I had a broken arm, merely wanting to agitate legs to stop them from atrophying while I watched half a film a day. It was the Turbo Of Illness that was passed around a group of friends for several years to whomever was broken at the time and needed to fool their muscles that they were riding a bike. I’m not sure if anyone knows who actually owned it initially, I’m pretty sure no one knows where it is now, I’m guessing under some stairs where most turbo trainers hibernate and die. That has been it. 

I’m not dismissing riding staying still, as it is clearly a remarkably effective tool if that’s what you want. I’ve noticed when cycling friends have spent time in their garages and sheds indulging their sufferfests that they’ve got noticeably quicker, and it takes a little more effort on my behalf to keep up with them on the hills, or I watch the elastic snap and resolve to up my game. I see it as good training for me, for free.

Does it mean that in whatever race I might enter I’m erring towards the fast sluggish rather than the sprightly, and I’m there mainly to prop up a page of names? Yes. Am I that bothered? Not really, as my personality isn’t podium-based. Do I know that if I used this static tool in the shed as part of structured training I would be better able to withstand the rides I want to do throughout the year, those big rides with enough outside as it is? Absolutely. If I want to ramp up the efforts I’ll sprinkle more hills into my ride instead, and then throw another one in just after I’m about ready to go home. When there’s no option to just climb off and stagger back into the house, it tends to concentrate the mind and focus argumentative legs towards one more pedal revolution. It’s a training regime of sorts, and more importantly it makes me smile inside. 

Outsde Face Kitty.jpeg

 

Crawling into a cave (Pain, Man or otherwise) to play Super Mario Cipollini Bros just isn’t for me, and that’s aside from that posturing terminology giving me the eyerolls. I need to ride a bike outside because it’s Outside, and that brings me necessary release and escape. I am happy to tolerate that this option might not be available all the time, and to accept both the rain and the sunshine with equal grace and apply some kind of carrot-based system to every cold, gritty, damp, component-destroying ride followed by a aftercare regime that’s three times as long as the ride with the promise of skipping up the road under bucolic dappled shadow some time later often nudges me out the door.

I might be miserable, but it’s a more contented miserable than your being in a shed miserable...

Jo Burt has spent the majority of his life riding bikes, drawing bikes and writing about bikes. When he's not scribbling pictures for the whole gamut of cycling media he writes words about them for road.cc and when he's not doing either of those he's pedaling. Then in whatever spare minutes there are in between he's agonizing over getting his socks, cycling cap and bar-tape to coordinate just so. And is quietly disappointed that yours don't He rides and races road bikes a bit, cyclo-cross bikes a lot and mountainbikes a fair bit too. Would rather be up a mountain.

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47 comments

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dave atkinson replied to Daveyraveygravey | 9 months ago
4 likes

Daveyraveygravey wrote:

If I'm honest, I'm suspicious of the numbers Zwift comes up, so why do indoor miles "count"?!

I mostly think that Zwift miles are fairly generous, but I don't think that at all when I'm climbing Alpe d'Huez or Ventoux. If I've spent over an hour (or nearly two hours for ventoux) getting to the top, that counts for me. Similarly round here i can bimble along the bristol bath path and back and barely break a sweat, or i can drop into the valleys to the south which are full of savage climbs and give myself a kicking. all miles are not equal, but then they never were. I just add them all up. ebike miles too...

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Tom_77 replied to dave atkinson | 9 months ago
5 likes

dave atkinson wrote:

I just add them all up. ebike miles too...

 

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richliv replied to dave atkinson | 9 months ago
1 like

I don't average 20mph usually IRL but do on Zwift, so the mileage is definitely over generous to Zwifters. But saying that, it's all a game so who cares. It's a nice means to an end for me. Spent lockdowns getting very fit indoors which was nice when I got out but then, so had everyone else... but in retrospect it was more about my mental health and cycling for me is exactly that still. So I appreciate the OPs view! (Took a while to get to that 🙂)

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philhubbard replied to richliv | 9 months ago
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The way to understand Zwift miles is that they are generating a "life like" speed for a situation that not many leisure riders find themselves in (pushing hard in a group). 

I've found a lot of the paces seem reasonable compared to crit races or chaingangs for example that I have done

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Rendel Harris replied to philhubbard | 9 months ago
3 likes

Don't forget that there is zero wind in Zwift, which makes a huge difference, perfect tarmac apart from the small number of sections that deliberately aren't (gravel, wooden bridges etc) and, especially, no braking on descents. My Zwift record for descending Box Hill, for example, is significantly better than my real life record, simply because on Zwift you can approach the hairpins at 45 mph and go round them at the same speed, which is a bit tricky in the real world. As a heuristic I count Zwift miles as about 80% of the real world equivalent.

On the more general question, I enjoy time on Zwift when it's do that or do nothing, i.e. when illness precludes getting out or when the weather is too dangerous for riding - ice, gale force winds etc. Also, as Brauschel noted elsewhere on this thread, not all of us live near desirable riding roads, living near the centre of London if I only have half an hour to spare for exercise I'd sooner do it through some nice virtual scenery with headphones blasting than go and do a thirty minute loop on congested pollution-choked roads, stopping every 200m for traffic lights and junctions.

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wycombewheeler replied to Rendel Harris | 9 months ago
4 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

 on Zwift you can approach the hairpins at 45 mph and go round them at the same speed, which is a bit tricky in the real world.

Sounds like a rider that has never got his knee down.

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Rendel Harris replied to wycombewheeler | 9 months ago
1 like

wycombewheeler wrote:

Sounds like a rider that has never got his knee down.

I have!* Unfortunately on the occasion I did the rest of me then followed...

* on a motorcycle, is it actually possible to get your knee down on a bicycle?

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wycombewheeler replied to Rendel Harris | 9 months ago
0 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

wycombewheeler wrote:

Sounds like a rider that has never got his knee down.

I have!* Unfortunately on the occasion I did the rest of me then followed...

* on a motorcycle, is it actually possible to get your knee down on a bicycle?

I wouldn't try, as tarmac makes short work of skin. I'm not sure whether there would be enough grip for that angle of lean on tiny tyres either. And there is the risk of pedal strike.

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Backladder replied to wycombewheeler | 9 months ago
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wycombewheeler wrote:

Rendel Harris wrote:

wycombewheeler wrote:

Sounds like a rider that has never got his knee down.

I have!* Unfortunately on the occasion I did the rest of me then followed...

* on a motorcycle, is it actually possible to get your knee down on a bicycle?

I wouldn't try, as tarmac makes short work of skin. I'm not sure whether there would be enough grip for that angle of lean on tiny tyres either. And there is the risk of pedal strike.

I'm sure the grip is there on modern tyres, the problem is saddle height!

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Mr Hoopdriver | 9 months ago
4 likes

Couldn't agree more yes

It's about being there and doing it.  It's probably why I don't understand why more people don't ride purely for the pleasure of  it.

 

 

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mctrials23 replied to Mr Hoopdriver | 9 months ago
6 likes

Because for half the year in the UK there is little pleasure to be had riding outside. Personally I don't have huge amounts of time to ride but I want to be able to ride 70km+ without taking 4 hours to do it. I don't want to have a miserable time for the first month when the weather gets nicer because I have zero fitness. 

I have kids and need to be able to keep an eye on them in the evenings so I can do a quick hour on the trainer while I watch the TV I have no other time to watch. 

Plenty of people simply get more enjoyment out of their sports and hobbies if they are better at them. 

I don't understand why more people don't understand that everyone is different and enjoys things differently. 

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VecchioJo replied to mctrials23 | 9 months ago
4 likes
mctrials23 wrote:

I don't understand why more people don't understand that everyone is different and enjoys things differently. 

me too

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Brauchsel replied to VecchioJo | 9 months ago
4 likes

I think it's because the media keeps publishing lifestyle journalists' articles suggesting that the authors' ways are just that bit more "real" than the things we mere consumers do, what with our "kids" and "jobs" fripperies distracting us. 

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quiff replied to VecchioJo | 9 months ago
0 likes

I might be miserable, but it’s a more contented miserable than your being in a shed miserable...

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larrydavid replied to mctrials23 | 9 months ago
0 likes

Zwift in particualr has changed cycling and cycling culture - and for the worse IMO. 

Even in the summer months there are people turning down rides outdoors in favour of Zwift. It's led to the death of a couple of local bunches whereby people no longer cycle not if its raining, but if the roads are wet. 

The provision of a convient alternative means there are more on the Zwift than on the road when the wether is anything else than perfect. 

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mctrials23 replied to larrydavid | 9 months ago
1 like

I have to admit that I have ignored a couple of rides this winter because its been raining for days, the weather is grey and sad and I simply don't think I will enjoy dealing with sopping wet/flooded roads along with the potential for rain.

Come summer though, if the weather is nice I am outside when possible. I still do a bit of Zwifting in the summer but thats more to do with family obligations and work. 

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larrydavid replied to mctrials23 | 9 months ago
0 likes

Understandable - but group rides are based on people turning up whatever the weather. 

I've don't bother anymore with the Club Saturday fast bunch because it was too weather dependant. I just do my on thing now and left it (n.b. there is only 1 club were I live so no choice to join another). 

I think in future there will be 'cyclists' who only Zwift. 

 

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