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I quit riding because of numb junk also.

Too bad I wasn't riding in my 20's and 30's..with numb junk I would have avoided many bad decisions.
 
I stopped riding after my daughter was born. In order to maintain my road riding, I had to keep my mileage up, and that was just too difficult with life.
 
My wife tells me you dont have to go20-30 miles every time. You can just go 5. I look at her like shes crazy.

No numb junk thanks.
 
I stopped riding after my daughter was born. In order to maintain my road riding, I had to keep my mileage up, and that was just too difficult with life.
Yep. Lotta hours.
Another thing, there are designer jeans for men - you see tech bros wearing them and stuff. If you ride a lot, your calf won't even fit in the thigh section of those jeans.
 
If anybody near Pdx wants a nice cannondale mountain bike let me know. I have like 9 of them now and need to move some on. These are the older made in USA full suspension ones.
 
If anybody near Pdx wants a nice cannondale mountain bike let me know. I have like 9 of them now and need to move some on. These are the older made in USA full suspension ones.
Nice bikes.

Funny, when I bought my first entry level (ie cheap) mountain bike with full suspension, I thought it would be good for commuting and road riding. What a learning experience. Overcoming the shock absorption made me expend twice the energy as a non suspended bike..especially uphill. That bike lasted a month then went into the dumpster.
 
My wife tells me you dont have to go20-30 miles every time. You can just go 5. I look at her like shes crazy.

No numb junk thanks.
15 miles in and you're really just getting warmed up on a road bike. Especially if you're trying to do 50+ rides on the weekends.
 
My legs don't look like that. I ride an e-bike. Going 20 to 30 miles is easy with an electric bike. Upgraded to an e-bike 12 years ago and have never gone back. I'm on the third one now. Even since upgrading to electric, I've been riding so much and getting a lot of exercise. To me, it's a good investment for my active healthy lifestyle.
 
Nice bikes.

Funny, when I bought my first entry level (ie cheap) mountain bike with full suspension, I thought it would be good for commuting and road riding. What a learning experience. Overcoming the shock absorption made me expend twice the energy as a non suspended bike..especially uphill. That bike lasted a month then went into the dumpster.
I prefer gas shok forks and a solid rear frame. You don't lose power while cranking, and rough terrain is easier with the front suspension
 
I don't mountain bike. I road bike and have plenty of rural roads around to do it. Made the switch to tubeless last year.
 

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