![]() |
|
|
#1 |
|
bum
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Bethlehem, Pa
Posts: 274
|
free mounting giraffes
I just scored a 6 foot giraffe, and mounting the thing using a wall is very difficult and scary for me. I am using the technique I have seen on this forum and around on the web, I have serious trouble getting my second foot up and on without making the seat really low. I was wondering if you all had any tips. Also how long did it take those of you who free mount them to learn that?
I think riding the thing is an absolute blast. I have this uneasy and exhilerating feeling that reminds me of learning to ride a bicycle for the first time as a kid. I don't know why so many people don't like these things. I have plans to make some new gears on our waterjet cutter that make it act like a 24,26, and dare I say 36 inch unicycle so that it would be more feasible to ride to class.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#2 |
|
768 - It's in your DNA
Join Date: Sep 2001
Age: 60
Posts: 8,556
|
I think more people don't like these things because they aren't the easiest unicycle in the world to freemount. It also means you have to ride in a limited area if you DON'T learn to freemount.
You mentioned using a wall in your first sentence. Try using a chain link fence, it's much, much easier. When freemounting, try putting the seat about an inch lower than you would for normal riding. Wear pants that are tight (like sweats or bicycling shorts) that don't sag in the crotch. Loose pants tend to snag the back of the seat. Tuck your shirt in for the same reason. If it is a rubber Semcycle seat, put an athletic sock over the back of it to reduce the friction while sliding over the back. I mount weak (left) footed because the chain is on the strong (right) side. I will describe the way I mount it (omitting the several falls and focussing on the successes) and you may interchange left and right. Stand behind the giraffe and hold the seat post with your right hand and the front of the seat with your left hand. Lean the giraffe slightly forward with the left pedal almost completely down but rotated so that when you stand on it it tends to move the giraffe forward. Place your right foot on top of the tire and wedged against the back of the frame. Sway...feel the point at which everything is positioned just right. Step up on the tire with your right foot. Step on the down pedal with your left foot. Release your grip on the seatpost and swing your right leg over the seat and shove it under you from the front while stepping on the right pedal. SIT DOWN ON THE SEAT. Go forward, idle, or go backward depending on how you ended up on top. In short, do anything necessary to stay up. Repeat lots of times while optimizing the initial angle of the giraffe with respect to the ground and the position of the down pedal with respect to vertical. Alter the position at which you start to compensate for the direction you fall. This includes how far you stand behind it, how the pedals are rotated, the leaning angle (forward), the sway angle (side to side), and whether you lunge slightly forward when you start the first step (like I do) or step straight up. I fell off 30 times before I landed one. I have had three one hour practice sessions and I'm nailing over half of my mounts now. Sometimes I get three in a row. I practice in a 1.5 meter square so I have made it intentionally VERY difficult to succeed. One side goes down a VERY STEEP driveway into my garage, one side goes down the other side of the driveway into the street. The front and back are on the sidewalk but the backside takes me into low tree branches. It is much easier to learn in a wide open, flat, smooth area which will allow you to go any direction you want without running into a barrier. That does not force you to learn to go straight however. Good luck. I hope this helps. I can now run errands on my giraffe and take 3 mile rides on it. Someone with considerably more experience than me will undoubtedly refine the description I just presented to you. I advise you to listen to them.
__________________
-Greg Harper Destroying the climate by shutting down nuclear power plants, one by one, since 1979. JC is the only main man. There can be no other. "A fool on a unicycle is redundant" - J.D. Miller Last edited by harper; 2002-04-03 at 06:42 AM. |
|
|
|
|
|
#3 |
|
768 - It's in your DNA
Join Date: Sep 2001
Age: 60
Posts: 8,556
|
And PLEASE tuck those sholaces in. Your chain wants to eat them and send you to the ground on the gravity express. Don't play that game.
__________________
-Greg Harper Destroying the climate by shutting down nuclear power plants, one by one, since 1979. JC is the only main man. There can be no other. "A fool on a unicycle is redundant" - J.D. Miller |
|
|
|
|
|
#4 |
|
bum
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Bethlehem, Pa
Posts: 274
|
Thanks! It sounds like free mounting is at least reasonable from your discription. I hope I catch on even half as fast as you did. I had planned for a practice session this weekend. I hadn't thought of the shoelaces thing, so I've been lucky so far. I won't rely on luck any more. I can't wait to start riding this thing around!
-Chris |
|
|
|
|
|
#5 |
|
Connecticut Muni Rider
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: Manchester, CT
Age: 29
Posts: 11
|
Freemounting Giraffes
Harper had a good explanation of freemounting. The most important thing I can add is this: don't dilly-dally! Once you leave the ground, get to the top and sit down ASAP. And like Harper said don't wear pants that are baggy in the crotch or loose in the cuffs because the chain has a nasty habit of grabbing that cuff (or shoelace) and causing unexpected and violent dismounts.
I ride a 5-foot Landis giraffe that I learned to freemount with a 80% success rate after a few months. I aslo ride a homebuilt 9-footer which I freemount with a 100% success rate. (If anybody believes that one, I have a wonderful piece of real-estate I'd like to sell them, right in the middle of a swamp) Actually, I mount the 9-footer using a ladder and have never even attempted to freemount it. (I didn't even weld steps onto the frame when I built it) I love riding my 5-footer and find I get more comments riding it than on my other uni's. Have fun! Art |
|
|
|
|
|
#6 |
|
Registered User
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: California
Posts: 9
|
I will tell you WHAT. Riding the 5 ft isn't hard if you already have the concept of riding a unicycle down. BUT MOUNTING this is another thing. I have been pulling myself up on this uncycle using something else. I am trying to learn to free mount it the way you are saying and it is HARD
I still can't do it. BUT Ijust started also. IT IS HARD FOR SURE |
|
|
|
|
|
#7 |
|
768 - It's in your DNA
Join Date: Sep 2001
Age: 60
Posts: 8,556
|
I will quote UniBrier's sig file:
"If something's hard to do, then it's not worth doing. You just stick that guitar in the closet next to your short wave radio, your karate outfit and your unicycle and we'll go inside and watch TV." - Homer Not the blind, Greek, epic poet Homer, the TV cartoon Homer. I haven't seen a video of anyone doing this mount but I believe it is the most common freemount technique for a giraffe. You should be able to stand there looking at the uni and picture how it can be done. Then you start climbing and failing over and over again making small adjustments each time. Then you get it.
__________________
-Greg Harper Destroying the climate by shutting down nuclear power plants, one by one, since 1979. JC is the only main man. There can be no other. "A fool on a unicycle is redundant" - J.D. Miller |
|
|
|
|
|
#8 |
|
Small fish, small pond
Join Date: Mar 2002
Location: San Antonio, Texas, USA
Age: 54
Posts: 3,420
|
The 1-2-3, rolling, and climb-the-uni mounts are seen on One Wheel No Limit. Also, one-foot-seat-in-front riding and the like!
__________________
Weep in the dojo... laugh on the battlefield. -- Dave Stockton |
|
|
|
|
|
#9 |
|
x
Join Date: Nov 2003
Posts: 20
|
Until you can freemount
Try using a telephone pole. They're readily available and it's easy to lean your giraffe (sideways) just slightly to get a stable hold. When I was a teen I used this method to mount with a big gulp in my hand. I used to ride 3 miles each way to 7-11, sometimes in the dark, on a 6 ft Schwinn. Watch out for splinters and get REALLY comfortable before you try riding backwards. I've fallen flat on my back on more than one occasion, at a fairly high rate of speed no less.
|
|
|
|
|
|
#10 | |
|
-
|
Re: Freemounting Giraffes
Quote:
.duaner. |
|
|
|
|
![]() |
| Tags |
| free, giraffes, mounting |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | Rate This Thread |
|
|