Just curious—does your friend still have her bike, or did she sell it? Or was she renting one for your rides?
Also, how tough were your routes? If they were intermediate or advanced, a newbie like me would probably just walk the bike down, clutching my life in my hands—and I might not join again after that!
I’ve tried a few new sports and enjoyed some, though I couldn’t continue others due to lack of time.
Personally, I’m slowly falling in love with mountain biking, though I know the risks. If I were younger, I would’ve fallen head over heels for it, but now I’m much more cautious. I even have friends who took bad falls and needed years to recover before riding again.
If people were more risk-averse, they might quit mountain biking altogether and stick to road biking—arguably “safer,” but definitely less fun.
The truth is, mountain biking isn’t for everyone. For three nights this past week, I was dreading the route I had to take back to civilization. I kept telling myself: I got myself into this, and I have to get myself out.
Had I joined your group on such a gnarly, sketchy section, guess what I’d do the next time you invited me? Probably say no!
It was so hard for me to stay present and navigate those landslide zones without spiraling into thoughts of slips or rockfalls.
Next time, I’ll go back—but without MisterGordo. I have Nepali friends and downhill/Enduro addicts who love such trails but I am still new..
So, back to my question: does she still have her bike, and what level of routes did she ride with you?
(09-10-2025, 06:32 AM)Flowrider Wrote: I've a friend who joined our Random Riders mountain biking group and came on a few rides with us and then just stopped riding. totally
When I asked her why, she couldn't come up with a reason except for, "Just didn't like it"
Have you come across similar or real reasons why people just stop riding?