I think it was just 10 laps on a Sunday club ride.![]()
Teamwork applies equally to the person that didn't prepare. That sort of behaviour puts the team at risk, not just themselves. Your highest duty is to yourself, and by discharging that duty diligently you thus satisfy your duty to the team as a whole. If uou haven't got your sheet together you're a liability, not a team player.
I topped out at half screw so at most had 4 men under me but not one would have got out the door on either training or a live op without the correct kit. Imagine the fun we'd have had in West Belfast if one of my patrol decided they couldn't be arsed to have the correct gear. "Oooh, Corp, I didnt pack any long (rifle ammo), can I have yours?" It's selfish, dangerous behaviour and to expect others to disadvantage themselves or even put themselves at risk to help them is also selfish and dangerous.
It's natural selection - Darwin wrote a book about it, and if people can't be bothered to read it and understand the lesson then that's their look out. I wouldn't let someone die or come to any real harm, but short of that I won't risk or disadvantage myself to help them.
I am a surprised at the organisers. Most reliability trials I have ridden have a start where you can buy tea and cakes and the same at the finish where they give out the certificates.It was a Sunday and 10 laps of a 10-mile circuit in the countryside and not a shop or anything in sight.
It was a Sunday and 10 laps of a 10-mile circuit in the countryside and not a shop or anything in sight.
Why carry it round then? Just bring your food and leave it at the start and grab something every other lap or something?
I am a surprised at the organisers. Most reliability trials I have ridden have a start where you can buy tea and cakes and the same at the finish where they give out the certificates.
I'm guessing that this reliability trial did not have a compulsory 10 lap distance and rides could choose how many to do and would get a certificate based on the laps they did.
Something not right…people don’t often sign up to 100 mile rides unless they’ve done some decent cycling by which time, they’ll be aware of nutritional demands of 100 miles.