jinx
11-15-2011, 11:38 AM
I mean, I really do. I ride, arguably, the heaviest, stoutest downhill bike ever made. I choose to ride it over my 5" light, all mountain bike on most every trail in the wasatch, due to the fun I have plowing over all terrain. I mean, I really may be one of the biggest proponents for riding big bikes on just about every trail ever, but...
Back when i was younger, stronger, and QUITE A BIT dumber I took my big bike down to Gooseberry Mesa. Sure, I thought I had fun dropping shelves and plowing rock piles, even though it was the worst work out i ever participated in. Fast forward a few years later, I took a long weekend and hit the goose along with Little Creek Mesa as well (no, I was too busy riding to stop and take pics; yes, it still did happen). This time I took my "all-mountain" (read: over mountain, enduro, xc, super d... what ever the hell marketing scheme you wanna call it) bike. After riding both bikes on this trail, I dare say that anyone that takes their big bike on these two trails is crazy! Now, I know that as you big bike guys are reading this, you are smiling to yourself thinking "hell yeah, I am crazy. I am a crazy ladder bridge dropping, log hopping, crazy S.O.B. - INSANE woohoo, I am hard core!!!", but thats not the insane that i am refering to right now. If you get butt hurt easy, go back to the main page...
I had infinitely more amounts of fun on the small bike, and I am not just talking about the xc aspect of the trail either. Riding around on the slickrock (off trail), I was able to find a step up/step down combo over a long tall boulder, a flickable quarter pipe, and 7' gap with butter smooth transitions. The slickrock sections of the trail ride like a humongous skatepark, plenty of flow. Have you ever seen a 8" travel bike on a pump track? Negative, ghost rider...
I dont want to hear any comments about its "their own choice" or "some people only have one bike" or "if someone thinks it's more cool, then let them choose to be gay". I dont care if you or him or her rides a big bike on the Goose. I am just saying that any drop or jump or transition on the Goose can be ridden with a 4-5" bike no problem. Matter of fact, in my opinion, the best bike to run on the Goose (especially if you are planning on hitting every drop that can be found) is a 4-5" travel full suspension with stiff fork and shock, like a slopestyle bike with the longer seat tube. Off the top of my head I am thinking a Transition Bottlerocket would recieve my vote. I would like to know what Greyhair Biker thinks about that selection (Since he's the only one here that picks the correct bike for any chosen trail - IMHO).
Back when i was younger, stronger, and QUITE A BIT dumber I took my big bike down to Gooseberry Mesa. Sure, I thought I had fun dropping shelves and plowing rock piles, even though it was the worst work out i ever participated in. Fast forward a few years later, I took a long weekend and hit the goose along with Little Creek Mesa as well (no, I was too busy riding to stop and take pics; yes, it still did happen). This time I took my "all-mountain" (read: over mountain, enduro, xc, super d... what ever the hell marketing scheme you wanna call it) bike. After riding both bikes on this trail, I dare say that anyone that takes their big bike on these two trails is crazy! Now, I know that as you big bike guys are reading this, you are smiling to yourself thinking "hell yeah, I am crazy. I am a crazy ladder bridge dropping, log hopping, crazy S.O.B. - INSANE woohoo, I am hard core!!!", but thats not the insane that i am refering to right now. If you get butt hurt easy, go back to the main page...
I had infinitely more amounts of fun on the small bike, and I am not just talking about the xc aspect of the trail either. Riding around on the slickrock (off trail), I was able to find a step up/step down combo over a long tall boulder, a flickable quarter pipe, and 7' gap with butter smooth transitions. The slickrock sections of the trail ride like a humongous skatepark, plenty of flow. Have you ever seen a 8" travel bike on a pump track? Negative, ghost rider...
I dont want to hear any comments about its "their own choice" or "some people only have one bike" or "if someone thinks it's more cool, then let them choose to be gay". I dont care if you or him or her rides a big bike on the Goose. I am just saying that any drop or jump or transition on the Goose can be ridden with a 4-5" bike no problem. Matter of fact, in my opinion, the best bike to run on the Goose (especially if you are planning on hitting every drop that can be found) is a 4-5" travel full suspension with stiff fork and shock, like a slopestyle bike with the longer seat tube. Off the top of my head I am thinking a Transition Bottlerocket would recieve my vote. I would like to know what Greyhair Biker thinks about that selection (Since he's the only one here that picks the correct bike for any chosen trail - IMHO).