News1 min ago
Riding a bike for the first time - aged 55
Can you get stabilisers for adults?
Any tips on what to do / how to do it?
Obviously she doesn't want to look silly in the park riding a bike with stabilisers on!
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Oneeyedvic. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.My wife is exactly the same. I have discovered that it is much more difficult teaching an adult to ride a bike than a child! I've yet to find any stabilisers for adults so we've had to resort to free-wheeling down any gentle slope we can find (me running alongside holding the saddle at first & then letting go). Unfortunately, even though Mrs Pid enjoys it, we haven't got very far with that method, partly due to lack of gentle slope but mainly due to the embarrassment factor.
If you haven't done so already, I would recommend contacting your nearest cycle group & also check if the council have a cycling officer. We're lucky enough to have a council that have occasional courses teaching adults to ride from scratch - once Pid Junior is a little older we'll be signing up.
A really good place to learn to ride is the local cemetery. Very few people go there so you don't get an audience. Have you got a lady's bike ? If not a small frame, maybe 17 inch, so she can slide forward off the saddle quickly without hurting herself.
I use clip pedals now (SPD) and had to practice for a while in the cemetery because I kept falling off !
Will call the council later today and good tip about cemetery.
Cheers again (and any more thoughts welcome)
For starters, try lowering the seat 1) so she can put her feet down to stop herself falling 2) so she can get good purchase on the ground with her feet and ask her to propel herself on the bike at a safe pace. You need to get some speed up to get stability. Get her to put her feet up on the pedals and coast along, maybe making some turns (feet up out of the way!). Once she's happy with that, you can progress to pedalling - you'll need to raise the seat back towards the proper height for your wife to make pedalling easy.
If she's going to be riding in traffic eventually, she needs to be confident enough to be able to look around.
Best of luck!
there is a bike shop local to us that sells standard bikes that have been converted to three wheelers.
its a simple conversion, but quite expensive. an alternative would be a tandem.
have seen bikes in europe that are rode side by side. again a simple conversion
if she has the use of a bike, make the seat low enough for her to put both feet flat on the ground. its not the perfect riding hight but it will offer more control if she begins to loose her balance. as with other learning processes, dont force her into anything... just let her set her own pace...
Also, in switzerland when children are learning they do not have stabilisers, they have bicylces with no pedals. They then just scoot them along with their feet until the feel comfortable enough with the balance and the handling of it. It means that you don't need a slope all the time, you can just push your self along and obviously, gradually you coast for longer and longer without putting your feet down. maybe a cycle with the pedals removed might be good for an introduction.
good luck with it.
p.s and don't forget the helmet. Safety gear might also make her feel more confident as if she does fall, she won't be so hurt.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.