As bicycle tires keep getting fatter, more riders keep steering them off-road in search of gravel and adventure, and Lycra gives way to as the performance fabric of choice, it鈥檚 tempting to say that good old-fashioned road cycling鈥攁 riding style characterized by shaved legs, set jaws, and a general air of humorlessness鈥攊s in a supertuck on the descent into total irrelevance.听In fact, it鈥檚 so tempting,听I鈥檝e even said it myself!
If the prospect of road riding鈥檚 demise doesn鈥檛 fill you with dismay, I can鈥檛 say I blame you; certainly听there鈥檚 much to deride. The Age of the Roadie was a time of high tire pressures and tight sphincters, filled with , , , and a fixation on the ride quality of carbon fiber that could at times border on the . And who can honestly say they鈥檝e been able to peruse 鈥溾 in their entirety without being overcome by douchey听chills?
Nevertheless, road riding is also steeped in tradition, and in this sense it鈥檚 like barn dance. Sure, it may not be for you, but at least it鈥檚 good to know there are still people keeping the old ways alive. Furthermore, the fundamentals of road riding can serve you well across all cycling disciplines, which is why it deserves a place on the list of Things That Should Never Be Allowed to Die, along with books made out of paper and manual transmissions in cars. Here are just a few vital lessons about cycling that only good old-fashioned roadiedom can teach you.
Pack Riding
Yes, we鈥檙e all distancing socially right now, but someday humanity will once again commingle.听Unless you plan to consign yourself to a life of riding alone (or worse, doing triathlons), it鈥檚 essential to learn how to ride in close proximity to other cyclists safely. Nothing teaches you how to do this more effectively than riding in a tight pack of roadies. Even if you鈥檙e not a road racer, sooner or later the opportunity to gain the drafting and social benefits of riding with others鈥攚hether it鈥檚 in that big gravel epic or just a weekend jaunt with friends鈥攊s going to present itself.听If you鈥檙e properly schooled in pack positioning and paceline etiquette, it鈥檚 a lot less likely you鈥檙e going to go down,听or cause someone else to go down. Indeed, pack riding proficiency is the cycling equivalent of a vaccine: not only can having it protect you, but the more people who have it, the safer we all are.听听
Nutrition and Hydration
You can read all the fitness articles you want, but the best way to learn about fueling and fluid management is by setting out on long road ride. Sure, this stuff is important for all aspects of cycling, and long rides are in no way unique to road bikes, but the minimalistic nature of road riding means you鈥檝e got to strike a more delicate balance than you do on your fully-loaded bikepacking rig. Eat too little too late and you bonk; gorge yourself on the wrong foods and you鈥檒l cramp up or puke. Furthermore, with only two water bottle cages and no place to store cargo except for your jersey pockets and maybe the elastic band of your shorts, you鈥檒l learn how to carry on board exactly what you need to sustain yourself and nothing more. Think of it this way: there鈥檚 driving your SUV to Costco and buying enough groceries for the (perceived) apocalypse, and then there鈥檚 walking to the local market with a canvas tote bag and picking up just enough to prepare both you and your partner a lovely dinner. In terms of fueling, road riding is much closer to the minimalist ethos of the latter, only with more energy gel.
Aerodynamics and Economy of Motion
Steve Jobs that a human on a bicycle is the most efficient form in nature. (鈥淐omputers are like a bicycle for our minds,鈥 he then concluded.)听
Sure, at first glance a pack of roadies may seem like nothing more than a chain gang toiling away alongside the Highway of Futility, but when you鈥檙e part of one you realize it鈥檚 a sophisticated organism with a collective consciousness, like a flock of geese or a pack of Juggalos. As road cyclists, by tapping into our innate ability to move fluidly, communicate wordlessly, and above all share our effort by taking turns on听the front of the group, we too can ultimately increase our odds of survival by moving swiftly and efficiently through our environment.听听
Moreover, whether riding alone or with a group, the road cyclist acquires an intimate understanding of the wind听and forms a complex relationship with it. No cyclist knows better than the roadie how to use the wind to their advantage, or how to force an opponent into it, or how to cheat it. Indeed, to find a form of locomotion that requires a more profound understanding of the wind than road cycling, you鈥檇 have to take up sailing or aviation.
Maybe this is why roadies are so full of hot air.
Bike Fit And Comfort
Proponents of an upright cycling position will often cite road bikes as the epitome of discomfort鈥攁nd of course they鈥檙e absolutely right. Certainly no upright bicycle will position you to cut through the wind as you would on听a road or time trial bike, but there鈥檚 also no reason to subject yourself to such a position unless you鈥檙e in a really big hurry.
That said, even if you鈥檙e not a racer, becoming accustomed to a road bike position does have another advantage: if you can get comfortable on a road bike, then you can get comfortable on anything. It鈥檚 the same thing with formal wear: some people put on a suit or a gown and they walk around all stiff like they鈥檙e in a suit of armor, while others manage to comport themselves with a natural elegance and grace. Figure out how to ride a road bike for a few hours without your lower back hurting and your crotch going听numb, and you鈥檒l be squarely in the latter camp.
Bike Handling
Road bike tires may be getting wider, but they鈥檙e really not that wide. The same people who decry the road bike position also point out the absurdity of riding a bicycle with narrow high-pressure tires that can easily send you flying if you encounter so much as a pebble. At the same time, there鈥檚 something to be said for being able to descend at 40 mph on a contact patch the size of an M&M while zipping up your jersey and rummaging around in your back pocket for a CLIF BLOK鈥攅specially when you鈥檙e also doing it without disc brakes.
General Fitness
Road riding is all about grinding out the miles. No stopping to regroup or admire the scenery, no 鈥渟afety meetings,鈥 no breaks save for perhaps a quick coffee at the turnaround point or a pee by the side of the road.
Oh sure, you might argue there鈥檚 no fun in that either, but there鈥檚 plenty of time for that after the ride鈥攁fter proper cooldown and recovery, of course. But by then you鈥檒l be ready for bed.