Although I’m not sure I need help, I definately need an opinion or
three.
This is my second round with unicycles, the first being about 35 years
ago. I learned to ride a friend’s uni, fairly decently, but never did
try to freemount. That was fun for a summer.
Fast forward to a week ago when I managed to talk my wife into buying
me a unicycle. I’m up to about 20-30 feet or so rides, which is
roughly the length of my back deck. Since that’s the length limit for
me for now, I need to learn how to freemount so I can go other places
for distance.
Dang near killed myself! I’m working on a static mount, but the uni
doesn’t understand static. I guess I keep stepping down on the peddle
instead of keeping the weight off that on putting it on the seat.
Anyway, I did that for an hour or so, and finally got on a couple of
times - but somehow had my weight centered instead of leaning forward,
so instead of going anywhere, I just sat there until I fell over
sideways, ala Artie Johnson and his tricycle. (At least I think
that’s who it was, anyway.)
So the big question is this: Is what I’m describing normal while
learning this, or am I doing something way wrong? And the small
question is this: How long does it take to learn how to static mount
a uni?
Welcome back to the world of unicycles, UniMike. I also learned to unicycle when young. For me, that was over 32 years ago.
Freemount help: I found my success rate while learning to freemount rose dramatically when I would practice on a slight up hill grade. I would place the uni in front of me, with the up-hill slope to my back. Place one foot on the back pedal and attempt your freemount.
The reasoning? The up-hill slope behind me prevented the unicycle wheel from “passing under me so quickly”, allowing me more time to find the other petal, maintain control and sucessfully ride forward.
As your success improves, use less and less slope as a crutch to your freemount. Lastly, as with any new skill, practice, Practice and PRACTICE, but always have FUN!!! --chirokid–
or, if you want to put off learning to freemount a bit longer and work on going more’n 30 feet, you can use a carto help you mount in parking lots and such
When I bought mine (24") ~2 months ago, the one guy at the cycle shop that
knew something about riding suggested starting at a curb, that way the wheel
doesn’t kick out behind you.
But I found that once I could do ~30 meters after taking off from a wall,
that this link http://www.unicycling.org/unicycling/freemount.html
helped a lot, and I was freemounting like nothing at all.
Hope this helps you the way it did me.
(I rarely ride the two wheeler now that I’ve fallen in love with the one
wheeler.)
–
Remove the OBVIOUS to autoreply.
“UniMike” <no.address@spammenot.org> wrote in message news:s7bdkvsncf0ms13beniutq5uh8fsdivk99@4ax.com…
> Although I’m not sure I need help, I definately need an opinion or
> three.
>
> This is my second round with unicycles, the first being about 35 years
> ago. I learned to ride a friend’s uni, fairly decently, but never did
> try to freemount. That was fun for a summer.
>
> Fast forward to a week ago when I managed to talk my wife into buying
> me a unicycle. I’m up to about 20-30 feet or so rides, which is
> roughly the length of my back deck. Since that’s the length limit for
> me for now, I need to learn how to freemount so I can go other places
> for distance.
>
> Dang near killed myself! I’m working on a static mount, but the uni
> doesn’t understand static. I guess I keep stepping down on the peddle
> instead of keeping the weight off that on putting it on the seat.
> Anyway, I did that for an hour or so, and finally got on a couple of
> times - but somehow had my weight centered instead of leaning forward,
> so instead of going anywhere, I just sat there until I fell over
> sideways, ala Artie Johnson and his tricycle. (At least I think
> that’s who it was, anyway.)
>
> So the big question is this: Is what I’m describing normal while
> learning this, or am I doing something way wrong? And the small
> question is this: How long does it take to learn how to static mount
> a uni?
>
>
>
The key to the static mount is to keep you knee locked during the mount.
That is, put your foot on the back pedal. Note the angle of bend in you knee joint. Just think: lock that joint in place. Now jump up and put your other foot on the front pedal, try to go a little over so that you have momentum to go forward.
The biggest mistake I see is bending the knee, essentially this produces something similar to the rollback, but it is just a timid mount, without a jump. Without the jump, the pedal you are trying to hit is moving and hits you in the shin. Worse, you finally learn to get your foot on the pedals, but now they are at 12/6, the worst possible position.
If you’re having trouble keeping weight off your back foot you can try this quick excercise: Find a 5-8" curb and place the top of the toe of the foot that is normally on the back pedal when you mount against the side of the curb. Now, without moving that toe or foot hop with your other foot onto the sidewalk. Imagine your foot landing on the front pedal and you gracefully riding away. Now try this on your unicycle. Hope this helps, or you can already self mount by the time I hit “submit reply”.
For that specific problem, try giving yourself some more forward momentum as you push off the ground. That is, if you have your rite foot on the pedal as you start, then push a little more forward off the ground with your left foot as you begin the mount.
I put off trying to learn to mount until I’d made it at 100 yards or better.
I found an empty parking lot that had light poles that were easy mounting
points. One was always within a short walk. When I did start to freemount
I started with the rollback. I tried static a few times and decided to put
it off. I’ll probably give static some serious practice in a week or so.
Anyway I found that having practiced just riding really improved my balance
and I think, for me, mounts would have taken much more time if I’d attempted
back when I could only do 20 or 30 ft. I’m in my second month with the uni
now and try to get out and ride for a bit every other day. I have been
totally freemounting for the last week. Today I finally moved my practice
area to a school track. No mount assist available. My longest ride today
was 1.5 times around the track, about 600 yards. Keep practicing. It comes
quick. Even for us old guys.
-Cubby
42 and the old dog is still learning new tricks… (err skills)
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I’ve spent months learning to freemount, it was a very difficult skill
for me to learn. Here are some tips from experience (I’ve posted these
earlier). Some may work for you (or for others). Or not…
Practice mounting on a slope down. If you are on a
sufficiently steep slope down, it keeps the wheel from rolling
backwards as much as a kerb does. What’s weird about it is that as
soon as you ride, you have to “fight” the slope. When you get the hang
of it, go to successively gentler downslopes.
Think of the mount as if you are flying up through the air. As if
your forward foot does not rest on something so it makes no sense
stepping on it. So you’re pushing off with the back foot, and the
place to land is the forward pedal with the same foot, without an
intermediate step with the other foot. It’s a phase of “ballistic”
flying because the energy has come from the push. It’s like:
PUSH! f l y y y y y y y y land.
Concentrate on the position of the forward pedal, with respect to
the environment (street, earth etc). That is the position where your
second foot has to meet the pedal. You concentrate during the mount on
keeping it there. (This one made the final breakthrough for me
personally, but I think it’s personal and may not work for most
people.)
(Somewhat in contradiction with 3, but it helped too.)
Normally the back pedal is at about 8 or 9 o’clock position. You can
also start in the, say, 6:30 position, and then as you push off to
begin the mount, allow the wheel to roll forward. Then you may step on
the pedal somewhat heavier, because the inertia of the wheel (and
frame etc) will prevent it from kicking back too violently. It goes a
bit toward a rolling mount.
Klaas Bil - Newsgroup Addict
I go a sort of ok speed on my Coker… - Roger Davies