Different types of hills

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Fab Foodie

hanging-on in quiet desperation ...
Location
Kirton, Devon.
I quite enjoy the short steep out of the saddle attack - :sad:

Me too. I've decent leg strength with compromised cardio. After years of fixed riding and gas-pipe 3 speeds in native Devon I find climbing out of the saddle comes naturally (except on the Brompton).
You can never have too low gearing either.

Practice does make perfect however.
 

DaveReading

Don't suffer fools gladly (must try harder!)
Location
Reading, obvs
Shock news: how fast you can get up a hill depends on how fit you are.
 

Citius

Guest
Shock news: how fast you can get up a hill depends on how fit you are.

;)

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albion

Guru
Different types?

Well we have the Up Hill and of course the Down Hill.
And if you have holes in your socks a Darned Hill might be the job.
 

PK99

Legendary Member
Location
SW19
Different types?

Well we have the Up Hill and of course the Down Hill.
And if you have holes in your socks a Darned Hill might be the job.

And if you don't have enough hills and want some more you have a f****** hill.
 

Cuchilo

Prize winning member X2
Location
London
I have problems on steep climbs , so when I got my new bike , I had a triple chain ring fitted ,cost £30 extra , it is by modern standards a heavy bike, yep slow, lot of pedaling , lot of puffing , but it does get me to the top ! The bike does bob up and down a bit on the back end also , I read somewhere , maybe CW , that In Italy ( I think ) it is common to see bikes with triple rings fitted because of the hills , does help ,
Try Nightingale lane :okay:
 

Accy cyclist

Legendary Member
I've been riding the hills around here for years. I haven't increased my speed(I wouldn't call it that!:laugh:)but i have got out the habit of making excuses to stop a few times while climbing them. The stopping to check if anyone has rung my phone or to see where the other riders are:whistle: has decreased significantly. I now tend to go up them in one movement. I think it was mind over matter. I just felt the need to stop because i was climbing a steep hill, even though i wasn't overly out of breath or had aching legs. The elderly gent who runs the Wednesday slow riders group caught me slacking quite a few times and rollocked me every time. I have to thank him for his encouragement in getting me out the habit of having an unnecessary skive!
 
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Heisenberg71

When you're dead, you're dead
Location
Wakefield
Surprised nobody has mentioned the age old technique of getting a run up.
Chucking a quick sprint on the flat leading in, then holding it for the first third of the short ramp gets you well up it with minimised effort. Then sit, drop a gear or two and dig in with cadence. Before you know it, you're there.

Technique gets you so far, but I agree that the only long term sustainable solution is lose weight, get fitter and keep riding hills. There's no silver bullet.
 
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