TechCNC wrote on 12/23/14 at 12:39am:
You're only crashing because you never ride in less than perfect conditions. Leaves are the way to develop poor traction riding skills without tearing up the trail. The road is the trail without leaves, stay on it if you lack skills. Otherwise we have a velodrome here in RH if you want absolutely controlled conditions, well except for the wind, if that bothers you then it's the trainer in the living room.
Rode leaf covered riverwalk trails all weekend, even a loop on the cyclocross rig
If he "never [rode] in less than perfect conditions" how is it that he broke a leg and took a header riding in ... less than perfect conditions?
"Leaves are the way to develop poor traction riding skills without tearing up the trail" - I'll let The Cycle Path address leaves and trail preservation with you, but, for my part, I'll offer two thoughts 1) Mountain biking is, by and large, a sport where you are constantly navigating trails at speed while competing with poor traction - gravel, sand, wet roots, rocks, mud, etc. and 2) If the TCs and volunteers didn't clear the leaves off some of the local trails, you wouldn't be riding on the "trails" anyway - you'd be riding on the leaves...
"The road is the trail without leaves" - nope. No, it isn't.
"Stay on it if you lack skills" - so, cyclists who stick to the roads lack skills?
But hey, at least you're not trolling...