Male dominated...and the reason is?

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.
I'm asking because Mrs TF is the only female fixed I know. Well not quite true, there is one other locally [triathlete] who has a fixed but never rides it. Cycling in general we know is male dominated but why is there almost a complete absence of ladies? Is it a confidence thing?
I persuaded Mrs TF to give it a go on the road after she had ridden track a couple of times, after one ride on the road she was hooked. It will almost certainly get her stronger for next year's TT season and from a mental viewpoint it is building her confidence.
Any other explanations?
 

Tim Bennet.

Entirely Average Member
Location
S of Kendal
Mrs TF is the only female fixed I know
Some people suggest that women are brighter than men.

This would support that claim; they reserve their fashion choices to frocks and shoes.
 

Landslide

Rare Migrant
Outside of London, I probably know more female riders than fixed riders.
When I'm down in London, there's probably a higher percentage of women in the fixed scene than there are women in the general cycling scene. What's my point...? No idea!
 

MacB

Lover of things that come in 3's
The female guide to fixed perfection:-

think about fixed, decide you need the options of gears and freewheel, dismiss as being too limiting and impractical


The male guide to achieving fixed perfection:-

you get curious about single speed and whether you're 'man enough', you dress this up as a desire for simplicity.

once you've looked into SS you realise that it lacks the macho connotations of fixed

you then buy into the 'human bike interface being sublime' idea of fixed

the bike will be minimal and needs to be steel to cope with your 'power'

it will have a front brake only and you will laughingly refer to how you have everlasting brake blocks as your powerful legs mean you don't need to use it

you will half kill yourself learning nonchalant trackstanding - no other type will do

the gear will be large but, despite almost killing you to get up an incline, will only ever be referred to as the 'easy' Winter training gear

while internally screaming 'look at me and tremble/worship before my raw power', outwardly you will, at all times, be casual about the whole thing

when descending you'll fail to recognise how silly you look with your legs spinning 90 to the dozen, you'll also lie about how much you use your brakes

you will learn to patronise users of 'gears' in many subtle ways, always to include, when reaching the top of a hill, 'that used to be so much easier with gears'

at all times you will MTFU, at no point do you mention your knees are about to explode and your face should never betray you via a grimace of pain

if injury, due to fixed riding, forces you off the bike, that injury will always be blamed on something else


simples:biggrin:
 

patheticshark

Well-Known Member
Location
Clowndon
-the fixed gear scene is portrayed as very masculine, look at Knog's advertising
-there are less women riding than men generally
-there are especially less women riding in the age bracket that most fixed gear riders are in - women aged 16-26 are less likely to ride than any other age/gender group

however: there is not a complete absence of ladies. There are tons of female fixed riders in London, especially with Charge and their attempt at world domination... more singlespeed yeah, but those girls probably just like going fast down hills. And what about Vicky Pendleton/Lizzie Armitstead/Wendy Houvenaghel etc...

there may be a complete absence where you're looking from, but not where I am.
 

patheticshark

Well-Known Member
Location
Clowndon
Because it's vaguely related, and because I made a new blog today and now I am shamelessly shoving it in everyone's faces, here is a blog post on teenage girls and riding bikes. Or not riding bikes.

http://40milesofhell.wordpress.com/2009/11/17/whats-stopping-teenage-girls-from-riding-bikes/
 
patheticshark said:
Because it's vaguely related, and because I made a new blog today and now I am shamelessly shoving it in everyone's faces, here is a blog post on teenage girls and riding bikes. Or not riding bikes.

http://40milesofhell.wordpress.com/2009/11/17/whats-stopping-teenage-girls-from-riding-bikes/

Good post. It's a topic of much debate in our house and I think we tend to agree with you. On another thread I've suggested that role models would have a very important part to play in getting girls cycling.
I personally think that Jo Rowsell and Sarah Storey would be ideal, but of course, and here's the sticking point, we need the media.
 

trio25

Über Member
It's probably the same ratio overall, but if there are less female cyclists to begin with then it leads to less fixed cyclists?
 
trio25 said:
It's probably the same ratio overall, but if there are less female cyclists to begin with then it leads to less fixed cyclists?

I don't think so, I'm a club cyclist and a member of CTC, in fact my last club had about 250 members out of which maybe 30 were female but none rode fixed. London aside I've never met one. I'm just curious as to why - from a female point of view.
 

trio25

Über Member
How many of the men rode fixed?

There are a few about, I work with a girl who rides fixed, only one of the boys does so its even there.
 

robin IX

New Member
Location
NE Herts
I think it just depends where you are. I know e few girls who ride predominantly on fixed.
Though generally round here (norwich) there are plenty of girls riding in general, but I think that's due to the university.
 

Baggy

Cake connoisseur
My main reason for not riding fixed is that it's darned hilly round these parts. The second is that I just don't fancy it.

I do know one fixed rider of the lady persuasion who lives in Scotland, and knew several more when I lived in London.
 
Top Bottom