rich p said:I've been to Lausanne and it's flat, flat, flat. A lot of Switzerland is flat and the rest is downhill. You'll be fine with no gears at all.
Really?
You have just made my tears stop, can i have a hug?
rich p said:I've been to Lausanne and it's flat, flat, flat. A lot of Switzerland is flat and the rest is downhill. You'll be fine with no gears at all.
Crankarm said:Luasanne the town itself is flat along the lakeside, but if you want to go anywhere other than along the banks of Lake Geneva you are going to have to climb some steep hills and you won't do it on a 72" gear. You can try but I reckon you will be pushing your bike most of the time. You could cycle south back to Geneva I suppose. The scenery is stunning. Vevey east of Lausanne is nice. really you want to get onto the French side and ride the cols of the Alps, be a real fixed cyclist in the same mould as the early TdF greats.
Why Lausanne anyway, going to clear out your Swiss bank account or make a deposit?
Crankarm said:Luasanne the town itself is flat along the lakeside, but if you want to go anywhere other than along the banks of Lake Geneva you are going to have to climb some steep hills and you won't do it on a 72" gear. You can try but I reckon you will be pushing your bike most of the time. You could cycle south back to Geneva I suppose. The scenery is stunning. Vevey east of Lausanne is nice. really you want to get onto the French side and ride the cols of the Alps, be a real fixed cyclist in the same mould as the early TdF greats.
Why Lausanne anyway, going to clear out your Swiss bank account or make a deposit?
GrahamG said:Don't go lower than a 65" as you'll not be able to get down anything! Seriously, you're young and fit so should still be able to get some rides in on a mid-high 60's gear - there's plenty of audaxers (maybe of questionable sanity...) who do all the welsh hills and other similar routes on fixed so don't worry about it. You can always get off and walk (mtb shoes advisable over road shoes) otherwise it's just a whole different riding style - slow and grindy expelling just enough effort so that you don't grind to a halt but not so much effort that it's unsustainable.
Joe24 said:Thats just made me cry
Im going to Wales soon near Snowdonia with my 72" fixed, that might be fun![]()
yenrod said:Go up the Lanberis Pass (the road with snowdon on your right -literally-) and if you can get up that Joe you really ARE some cyclist.
Seriously Joe, DONT even think you can fixed'it around wales on youre fixed bike - as your stupid. YOU NEED GEARS. Engalnds flat compared to Wales.
Take a hill in Wales: in 30-50ft you can be gettting on for 30mph in that distance (DOWNHILL OBVIOUSLY).
Whereas in England: you have to sprint to get to that speed.
FORGET THE FIXED
yenrod said:Go up the Lanberis Pass (the road with snowdon on your right -literally-) and if you can get up that Joe you really ARE some cyclist.
Seriously Joe, DONT even think you can fixed'it around wales on youre fixed bike - as your stupid. YOU NEED GEARS. Engalnds flat compared to Wales.
Take a hill in Wales: in 30-50ft you can be gettting on for 30mph in that distance (DOWNHILL OBVIOUSLY).
Whereas in England: you have to sprint to get to that speed.
FORGET THE FIXED