Re: [RBW] Riding posture - advice appreciated

2010-12-20 Thread Dave Minyard
Try yoga it's great for improving posture and alignment. I was having issues
with my back while riding to the point of stop riding or maybe get a
recumbent, I had someone recommend trying yoga...which I did and at this
point 1.5 years later it's not an issue anymore. I can even ride on the
drops for extended periods without any issues. The key is to find a good
teacher that will listen and work with you. Really the change is just
amazing. I started with a local yoga for back strength class and found an
amazing teacher. I now practice yoga 5-7 days a week for 20 min. to an hour
at a time and I feel better than I did when I was 30, I'm 50 now.

Cheers,
Dave
On Dec 20, 2010 6:41 AM, Paul Yeoh rawfoodcuis...@gmail.com wrote:
 After looking at some photos taken by Early Grey of me riding his Sam
 with drop bars (example here:)
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/25150...@n08/5260456237/

 I noticed that I am particularly bent in the lower back. Well, no
 surprise really, I've noticed this elsewhere in my life but cycling on
 drop bars makes it really pronounced. What are the implications of
 this crooked posture? How would one go about straightening the spine
 during cycling or anything else?

 On today's ride on my bike (Sam w moustache bars set about level with
 saddle height) I made an effort to keep my back straight and tilt the
 pelvis more. Not easy, and I had a mild back ache 30 minutes into the
 ride. What does that mean?

 On another note, on my way back down the mountain I had an absolute
 blast on the Sam. Smooth, fast and winding road on Marathon Extremes
 and tektro cantilevers - wow. To me, the way the Sam feels on fast
 descents is the highlight of this all-round fantastic bike. (the way
 downhills can be a highlight of the overall cycling experience, unless
 you're riding rough pavement on a racing frame with 23 mm slicks at
 100 psi) The extremes probably slowed down overall speed a little but
 still rode very smooth and comfortable. Not buzzy at all.

 Any advice / help with improving my posture much appreciated!

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Re: [RBW] Riding posture - advice appreciated

2010-12-20 Thread PATRICK MOORE
If you are comfortable and efficient (both together) then you are
fine. I personally find a hugely setback saddle to be both more
comfortable and efficient and this saddle position tends naturally to
a single plane for the back, be my bars 4 cm below saddle (Riv roads)
or 8 cm above (Fargo); but everyone's anatomy differs. I'd say ---
again --- let comfort and efficiency be your guide and, when in doubt,
seek professional advice. (I got my advice years ago from Grant and
kept, so to speak, running with it.)

The Sam is a winner for on rails cornering -- that was my experience.

Patrick rides smoothly and comfortably and wholly pinch flat free on
his 58 cm '03 Curt Custom Road with 22 mm NOS Specialized 559 Turbos
on rough pavement at 85/95 and chooses these tires because no one
makes more supple and better rolling tires for 559 wheels -- wish I
could find the same in 28 mm Moore

On Mon, Dec 20, 2010 at 7:41 AM, Paul Yeoh rawfoodcuis...@gmail.com wrote:
 After looking at some photos taken by Early Grey of me riding his Sam
 with drop bars (example here:)
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/25150...@n08/5260456237/

 I noticed that I am particularly bent in the lower back. Well, no
 surprise really, I've noticed this elsewhere in my life but cycling on
 drop bars makes it really pronounced. What are the implications of
 this crooked posture? How would one go about straightening the spine
 during cycling or anything else?

 On today's ride on my bike (Sam w moustache bars set about level with
 saddle height) I made an effort to keep my back straight and tilt the
 pelvis more. Not easy, and I had a mild back ache 30 minutes into the
 ride. What does that mean?

 On another note, on my way back down the mountain I had an absolute
 blast on the Sam. Smooth, fast and winding road on Marathon Extremes
 and tektro cantilevers - wow. To me, the way the Sam feels on fast
 descents is the highlight of this all-round fantastic bike. (the way
 downhills can be a highlight of the overall cycling experience, unless
 you're riding rough pavement on a racing frame with 23 mm slicks at
 100 psi) The extremes probably slowed down overall speed a little but
 still rode very smooth and comfortable. Not buzzy at all.

 Any advice / help with improving my posture much appreciated!

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-- 
Patrick Moore
Albuquerque, NM
For professional resumes, contact
Patrick Moore, ACRW at resumespecialt...@gmail.com

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RE: [RBW] Riding posture - advice appreciated

2010-12-20 Thread Frederick, Steve
It runs counter to the typical Riv advice, but my back pain went away when I 
moved my saddle forward a bit.  This was recommended during a pro fitting I had 
done in preparation for ordering a custom.

The other trick I've tried with some success is more of an attitude/mental 
thing--what the club riders used to say was to keep your back flat/straight and 
your pelvis tilted, imagine you are trying to touch the top tube with your 
belly button...

Steve

 -Original Message-
 From: rbw-owners-bunch@googlegroups.com [mailto:rbw-owners-
 bu...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of Paul Yeoh
 Sent: Monday, December 20, 2010 9:41 AM
 To: RBW Owners Bunch
 Subject: [RBW] Riding posture - advice appreciated

 After looking at some photos taken by Early Grey of me riding his Sam with
 drop bars (example here:)
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/25150...@n08/5260456237/

 I noticed that I am particularly bent in the lower back. Well, no surprise
 really, I've noticed this elsewhere in my life but cycling on drop bars makes 
 it
 really pronounced. What are the implications of this crooked posture? How
 would one go about straightening the spine during cycling or anything else?

 On today's ride on my bike (Sam w moustache bars set about level with
 saddle height) I made an effort to keep my back straight and tilt the pelvis
 more. Not easy, and I had a mild back ache 30 minutes into the ride. What
 does that mean?

 On another note, on my way back down the mountain I had an absolute blast
 on the Sam. Smooth, fast and winding road on Marathon Extremes and
 tektro cantilevers - wow. To me, the way the Sam feels on fast descents is
 the highlight of this all-round fantastic bike. (the way downhills can be a
 highlight of the overall cycling experience, unless you're riding rough
 pavement on a racing frame with 23 mm slicks at
 100 psi) The extremes probably slowed down overall speed a little but still
 rode very smooth and comfortable. Not buzzy at all.

 Any advice / help with improving my posture much appreciated!

 --
 You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
 RBW Owners Bunch group.
 To post to this group, send email to rbw-owners-bu...@googlegroups.com.
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to rbw-owners-
 bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
 For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rbw-
 owners-bunch?hl=en.

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