Arwen's Mom
Mother of Dragons, Breaker of Chains
yupI should also add, skill changes with speed, as the technique is totally different the faster you go.
yupI should also add, skill changes with speed, as the technique is totally different the faster you go.
oh God then I REALLY suck as my hub is SILENT...wait! unless I am on the big bike, then its noisy, instant graduation to a higher level
I would say I am definitely an "11"...
All my friends that never rode a mountain bike at all, and haven't ridden any bike in 30 years think I'm great!
This is true for everything in my life, especially the difference between the mirror and pictures. In the mirror, I have a little grey hair, a little bit of a gut, unfortunately the camera sees a slob who makes Anderson Cooper's hair look like salt and pepper.My skill level is inversely proportional to the mean skill level of the people I am riding with. When I ride alone, I am infinitely skilled.
I've seen Kevin take a 12" log with no problem...after some warm up of course.we have cat 1 riders on here that can't do a log over more than 6".
12" is the warm up.I've seen Kevin take a 12" log with no problem...after some warm up of course.
Skill and fitness are relative terms to how you ride, so it's kind of pointless to try to categorize yourself. I like @Norm 's definition because all this sh*t really is open-ended. The one thing you do know is that every time you ride, you have a chance to get a tiny bit "better" (however you want to define that - faster, better bike-handler, smarter at reading a trail, better endurance, etc.) and there isn't a ceiling on that until you stop trying to improve. Where is your level? It's probably a little higher than it was last time you rode and a little lower than it could be after the next ride.