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Thread: Jonny Walker at pace. Helmet cam

  1. #1
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    Jonny Walker at pace. Helmet cam

    Crikey, I felt a bit nauseous after a couple minutes viewing.


    Manopausal.

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    I'm surprised at how piss-easy that trail was, not that I'd be able to ride it anywhere near that fast, but would have thought a national-level enduro would be a little more technical than that.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jay GTI View Post
    I'm surprised at how piss-easy that trail was, not that I'd be able to ride it anywhere near that fast, but would have thought a national-level enduro would be a little more technical than that.
    You would be surprised how not 'technical' most of the enduro tests are here in NZ too.
    If they are running ISDE style enduros, the ones which are like rallies but on bikes. Then most of the riding isn't to be as fast as possible, just arrive before the assigned time runs down. As all the classes race the same track, if you make it challenging for the expert riders, you risk causing bottlenecks further back with the intermediate riders. You have three riders riding on each minute, so a bottleneck can get pretty big quite quickly.
    So generally the special tests are just interesting sections of track, not necessarily super challenging, but with plenty of obstacles.

    There are exceptions to this though. The 2014 Whangamata national enduro was marked out when all the tracks were dry, and then one of the tropical storms came through. Whangamata is steep and pretty much all clay. There was a ~60% finish rate for the experts, and a ~30% finish rate for intermediates.

    Its not an extreme enduro, the aim is so that everyone finishes, not just one person.

    Heres a few examples
    Oparau enduro https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ctMNYNH-2k
    Riverhead enduro Chris Birch riding https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9AmyQaVJOjA
    we may just go where no ones been

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    Ta for that. Weren't sure how to explain the difference between Enduro formats. I do believe they run the Rally Raid bikes in the same event ala Lyndon Poskit.
    Manopausal.

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    Yes I think you guys are right, I had the wrong idea with enduro racing. I guess I was just expecting one or two sections that would be the equivalent of the "expert" sections we get on a lot of trail rides. Not hugely difficult, just a little bit more challenging than access roads and relatively wide trails.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jay GTI View Post
    Yes I think you guys are right, I had the wrong idea with enduro racing. I guess I was just expecting one or two sections that would be the equivalent of the "expert" sections we get on a lot of trail rides. Not hugely difficult, just a little bit more challenging than access roads and relatively wide trails.
    You are correct though. That test in the first video does include quite a lot of road type sections. It depends on the venue mostly, and how keen the organisers are to make new trails.

    Sent from my HTC One using Tapatalk
    we may just go where no ones been

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    Sticks on the trail always make me nervous at speed for some reason.
    For a man is a slave to whatever has mastered him. Keep an open mind, just dont let your brains fall out.

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    Quote Originally Posted by noobi View Post
    You are correct though. That test in the first video does include quite a lot of road type sections. It depends on the venue mostly, and how keen the organisers are to make new trails.

    Sent from my HTC One using Tapatalk
    Yeah I have done some riding in the Welsh mountains (hills, they get confused about what a mountain is over there), much better trails than that vid and I know the forest area I was in was used for some British enduro rounds.

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    Quote Originally Posted by unstuck View Post
    Sticks on the trail always make me nervous at speed for some reason.
    Yus, those hard pointy things certainly temper my throttle hand.
    Land access in the UK is positively draconian since teh foot & mouth out break. Areas I used to ride oop north are now total no gos.
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    Quote Originally Posted by george formby View Post
    Yus, those hard pointy things certainly temper my throttle hand.
    Land access in the UK is positively draconian since teh foot & mouth out break. Areas I used to ride oop north are now total no gos.
    Its not just foot and mouth, the ramblers have a large, well funded and well organised lobby group putting pressure on local councils to reclassify greenlanes and byways to make them no access for trail riders. Sadly they've been very successful so far.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jay GTI View Post
    Its not just foot and mouth, the ramblers have a large, well funded and well organised lobby group putting pressure on local councils to reclassify greenlanes and byways to make them no access for trail riders. Sadly they've been very successful so far.
    Yup, was going to mention that. The woolly hat brigade are very powerful lobbyists. Ironically from a lot of land owners perspective they are also a nuisance, leaving gates open for stock to wander, littering & pooing in the hedges. A pobbled hatted, kagoul wearing blight.
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  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by george formby View Post
    Yup, was going to mention that. The woolly hat brigade are very powerful lobbyists. Ironically from a lot of land owners perspective they are also a nuisance, leaving gates open for stock to wander, littering & pooing in the hedges. A pobbled hatted, kagoul wearing blight.
    Yep, complete pack of arseholes for the most part. While there is the Trail Riders Fellowship to fight back, they are way less powerful, under-funded and struggle to retain greenlane and byway access (they have had some success, but it is limited). A lot of these trails have been classified as greenlanes and byways for hundreds of years...

    I read a great little story in TBM from a trail rider who was knocked off his bike and then punched in the face by a bobble-hatted prick, pissed off that he had to share the greenlane. Apparently we would have all loved to see the look on the prick's face when the rider produced his police warrant card from his rucksack... But that shows exactly what trail riders have to deal with in the UK.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Jay GTI View Post
    Yep, complete pack of arseholes for the most part. While there is the Trail Riders Fellowship to fight back, they are way less powerful, under-funded and struggle to retain greenlane and byway access (they have had some success, but it is limited). A lot of these trails have been classified as greenlanes and byways for hundreds of years...

    I read a great little story in TBM from a trail rider who was knocked off his bike and then punched in the face by a bobble-hatted prick, pissed off that he had to share the greenlane. Apparently we would have all loved to see the look on the prick's face when the rider produced his police warrant card from his rucksack... But that shows exactly what trail riders have to deal with in the UK.
    We had the odd altercation over the years but not quite as drastic. Is TBM that wee half size trail bike mag? Excellent tome.

    The TRF do sterling work but it's David v Goliath and everybody knows bikers are hooligans and should be lashed.
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    Quote Originally Posted by george formby View Post
    We had the odd altercation over the years but not quite as drastic. Is TBM that wee half size trail bike mag? Excellent tome.

    The TRF do sterling work but it's David v Goliath and everybody knows bikers are hooligans and should be lashed.
    And then we have to put up with the horsey brigade.

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    Quote Originally Posted by BoristheBiter View Post
    And then we have to put up with the horsey brigade.
    They don't like anybody who has never owned a pony.
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