The most important ADV riding skill you didn’t know you needed | MiniTip Monday
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- Опубліковано 19 вер 2023
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Sometimes the skill you NEED is dirty. Pretty doesn't cut it in a fight and just sometimes it's a fight between you and the earth.
Paddling is one such skill. It's so damn useful. I wouldn't use if I don't need it but when you need it you've gotta be good at it. That's why we made a tutorial about it. - Авто та транспорт
“When your talent runs out”, happens a lot here 😂😂
😂😂
I know the feeling well😂😂
Great tips for doing something many are too embarrassed to admit. The best tip I have taken away is that if your leg is off the peg it should be doing something, not just dangling.
Indeed. That is probably the most important takeaway tbh.
I recently went on a group adventure ride, the group was pretty mixed skill level but I would say it leaned more intermediate/some advanced. I've only been riding for 1.5 years but I have put a good number of miles under my belt in that time. This ride ended up being one of the more challenging rides I've ever done. A notable part was this steep incline, with a deep rut in the middle, and the hill on both sides was pretty steep too. The more advanced guys have no problem riding off camber, and they did it no problem. Some of the other guys tried following them without their level of skill and ended up falling into the rut, and breaking their windscreens.
Being the most novice in the group, I recognized that there was no way I'd be able to do this hill climb off camber. But I also didn't want to turn around and re-route. So I rode up a little bit, and with no shame, I paddled my way up the rut. I definitely looked goofy but both me and my bike made it up an obstacle that I would've turned around for if I was on my own. But you're absolutely right in that it is incredibly tiring.
Mate, I'm just impressed you put your ego away 😂 Thats the smartest choice!
I've paddled pushed and struggled to get my bike up a muddy hill in my own, to say incredibly tiring is definitely an understatement 🤣
Feeling of accomplishment when you get to the top is just as good though
But I'll tell you what I walk a lot more of my green lanes before I commit after doing that a couple times 😂
@@thotfeline5864 Absolutely. We've all made that mistake at some point. 😂
Very helpful. In every ADV training course we're told to be standing and to dab if needed. However, sometimes when the bike is gonna be all over the place, and the ground is soft enough where the bike sinks a foot into the ground, it always felt like sitting would help. Good to see there may be a time & place for it. Thanks
Absolutely! Thanks for watching!
It’s defo a skill worth learning and embracing, I just wish people stopped pissing about with shit boots because get paddling wrong or when they are being dumb and have a dangling leg ploughing in the sand and it gets wrapped under the rear end, you aren’t gonna walk away from that one with a smile on your face! Brilliant as ever Llel, thanks 👍
Amen on this. You're preaching to the converted though 😂
@@BrakeMagazine oh I know that mate👍🤷🏼♂️😂
Thanks for sharing this often overlooked technique. Many people are often laser focused on the Standing, never Dab trials technique like the Pro's do.
We Ain't Profesional. Sadly.
Having a good Paddle technique is obviously valuable and safer. Cheers 🍻 Brake dude.👍
Thanks for watching! My name is Llewelyn or Llel for short 😅
@@BrakeMagazine ,,, yup, I knew that. It was just easier. Please forgive me Brake dude🙏🏻. Hopefully I'm worthy of your approval. 🤣
@@PaydayGabeBCNV Always! Thanks for the helpful comment too :D
Yet more Brake Mag gold!
Excellent video…as always. My skills have improved as I hear your voice in the back of my head telling me what to do. Thanks for that.
Great video! I enjoy the real world advice 👍🏻 The fun thing about adventuring riding is continuously challenging yourself with new skillZ and terrain. There will always be a section that is just above your current comfort zone so having a safe workaround is key!👍🏻
This is a great tip, I got sucked into the big adv bike thing a few years back (2018 ATAS) It's an intimidating machine to ride in muddy ruts and I'd always avoid technical bits and think about trading it in for a dirtbike! This tip has helped immensely though, I'm not afraid to explore now, some chunky 50:50 tyres, sit fwd, get the legs out front and with smooth clutch control I'm tractoring through wet grassy bogged sections that guys with lighter bikes are falling on
Sounds like you’re living the dream, and on a huge bike! Good job!
Best channel for ADV-riding. By far.
The kindest words man
Great tips all! One thing from a safety perspective I think is to not let your legs get too far back when paddling keeping them forward as much as possible. When they go back your balance goes with them. I almost broke my leg letting this happen when in sand. "Purposeful paddleing" thats a good tip! Thank you!
I was thinking of recording exactly this subject recently (not as well, obviously)! It's those skills you need when you're starting out, or lose confidence, or just generally survive outside your comfort zone...having a non-perfect fallback that's a little less reliant on technique is perfectly valid and necessary imo. My very first set of experiences was riding bikes across India, across all sorts of terrain and I had zero technique or training...but using the dirty fallbacks, staying slow, and sitting down a lot kept me alive!
Amen to this! Still make that video! :D We need this stuff from lots of different sources :)
@@BrakeMagazine will do! The battle I have with my own intellect is the half decent things I do now like standing up, focusing on good body position etc which have no doubt allowed me to do things I wouldn't have managed before...should I have just done those things at the start? I'm honestly not sure, as my brain was only comfortable at that time doing other things, and riding (somewhat) confident in whatever form is at least half the battle.
Not to mention when you’re tired you tend to fall back on muscle memory, if you practice techniques that you do subconsciously, you can prevent them from being more sloppy, putting yourself at risk of falling.
@@Kingofthepnwdorks Exactly!
Great video and real world advice thanks
I’ve paddled my way out of all sorts of hurt. Big fan 💪🏻
Amen brother. Done whole enduros without managing to stand 😅
@@BrakeMagazine I paddled basically the whole 24 hours of D2D. It’s the taking part that counts, right? 😂
"Master Rut Paddler" - that would be me!! :D Another awesome video chap!
Thanks 👍
Brilliant as always. Thank you.
Glad you enjoyed it!
To be honest with you, I have ridden for a week the Ktm 790/890, the Tenere 700 and husqvarna 901 Norden in the same condition as chris birch. The Ktm 790/890 make you feel competent to pass through everything due to the weight being so low and but overall it is a great bike. The Tenere 700 feels more like a motocross bike then the Ktm because everything is more controllable and overall perfect for tight places. The Husqvarna 901 Norden is a mix of both in way it's hard to explain.
would love to see more frequent videos, great video
Me too 😂 Sadly it's a bit of a balance between filming them, editing them and doing it quickly. If we had more sponsorship we could do more but there is only so many hours in a week. :/
I've just spent the last five weeks reviewing bikes which means editing has to go on hold. :)
Great advice
Cheers!
That when an adventure definition is true..
Amen!
That is an awesome tip!! Off-topic your Patreon link in most of your videos is not clickable. Other links are.
Huh. I will fix that! Glad you enjoyed it! :)
I hate paddling because, as you mentioned it's extremely tiring and I can pull a leg muscle very easily. These, I guess, are the reasons why I should go and practice that ;)
100%
When my wheels fall into a groove, I prefer to take my feet off the pegs so I don’t jam them or get rammed onto a rock or object hiding in the grass (habit from riding in the days before flip pegs)
I'll be changing my nym to Master Rut Paddler.
😂😂
And keeping weight on the seat
Great point!
I can't paddle, my legs are too short 😢
Not true! For sure you can. It might have to be one footed and a little more careful but it’s possible!
I learnt when I was short as a teenager ☺️
Gen X... " Obviously ".
I'm defo not Gen X 😂😂
Wtf?!
HTF?
Those trails are pretty shagged. Does anyone or riding group ever repair them?
When it is so deeply rutted that your bike hangs up, eventually people will stop using this track and make a new one beside it, ruining the nature that people seek
Good advice otherwise
Sadly not, no.