motor34 said:
Hey all,
New to the list, so excuse me if this has been gone over before.
Just picked up a single speed cruiser bike - hoping to get these old bones in shape. I'm 47 and this thing is kicking my butt.
Is it feasible to add a few speeds, or should I just grin and bear it?
Thanks in advance - the stuff on this site is amazing.
well- somebody's got to do it, so i'm going to play 'devil's advocate' here and say a cruiser is no way to "get in shape".....if you're a sedentary 47 who hasn't ridden in a while searching for cardiovascular fitness a cruiser bike may be the path to injury and discouragement. a light weight bike (a shop quality, sport oriented hybrid bike for example) with a full complement of gears and reasonably efficient ergonomics will enable your lungs and heart to take over the majority of the workload, at a level of your choosing, without the stress of overloading your knees when you expand the horizons of your riding beyond the neighborhood, the wind blows, or the hills steepen.
will your butt be sore for a while? yes.
will it cost a lot of money? if $400 or so is a lot of money, then yes.
will it take you beyond 'good intentions' ? yes it can.
should you keep the cruiser anyway? heck yeah!!
don't get me wrong, (i can feel the rat rod keyboards heating up already
) you don't have to play lance armstrong, but be realistic. i have at least a half dozen regularly ridden single speed coaster brake bikes. they are great fun and riding one for a few hours is a heck of a lot of work, but i realize they are not the right tool for actual goal-oriented fitness riding. have a blast on the cruiser, but please remember- they are what they are and they ain't what they ain't!
:mrgreen: bonus points if anyone knows what song that last line paraphrases :mrgreen: