MTB SKILLS: The Basics Of Better Balance

Think of the most challenging part of your favourite trail, something you'd describe as technical, rocky or loose. Now think about tackling that same section confidently - and making it look easy. You can. The skill you need to work on? Balance.


Bicycling |

Think of the most challenging part of your favourite trail, something you’d describe as technical, rocky or loose. Now think about tackling that same section confidently – and making it look easy. You can. The skill you need to work on? Balance.

Photo: Todd Meier
Photo: Todd Meier
Balance is at the heart of everything you do when you ride (short of crashing, that is). Unfortunately, many of us haven’t focused on improving our balance since the day we ditched our training wheels. And our riding suffers because of it.”When your balance is in top form, you’re more comfortable on the bike, which improves your efficiency,” says Dean Golich, former physiologist for USA Cycling. “It makes everything else easier and more enjoyable.”Fortunately, building better balance is something that’s best done on the bike. Set time aside on each ride to practice the following exercises to boost your stability.
The Warm-Up
At the start of each ride, take a few minutes to move around the cockpit: Get your weight back as far as you can, above the rear wheel, then move your weight forward, then to the sides, then low on the bike. By exploring these extremes in a controlled setting, you’ll be more comfortable with them in the heat of the moment.
Slow Ride
Ride as slowly as you possibly can – get right to that “I’m going to fall over” point and focus on moving around to stay upright. When you’re comfortable with this, pick a line (a piece of curb in the parking lot, a log or board on the trail) and ride along it, as slowly as possible. Then do it again, and go even slower.
Stand Still
When you stop on the trail (to wait for your friends, take a breather, etc.), don’t put a foot down. Instead, practice staying upright and still, keeping pressure on the pedals with the brakes applied to control movement. 

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