The journey from small guy to teenager...
- Count Steer
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
Looking at the gap between 1st and 2nd (10s ) I'd argue that Felix is in the wrong competition, ergo Weeksy Minor came 10th really.
Nice work chaps.
Nice work chaps.
Doubt is not a pleasant condition.
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
But certainty is an absurd one.
Voltaire
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
As i say, Felix is a bit of an outlier, his brother is a World Cup racer, he's on a full Pro team and has been for a while, so getting insane amounts of bike time with super fast riders which of course makes him stupid fast, in the results you'll see his brother Oscar who's also incredibly fast. In simple terms, if the boy from 2-10 want to be the best, they've got to work out how to get to these lads, otherwise you're not going to get to the top.
As you may have gathered from some of our posts, getting my boy to the top isn't quite the plan, getting him to the top tier, well maybe that's the dream, to get to where he's pushing some of the top 5 lads, that's kinda our goal. That may be possible, maybe... but not everyone can be the best of course. We'll keep plugging away at it, keep putting in the practice (although with Exams it'll be quiet for a few weeks) and seeing what we can do.
As you may have gathered from some of our posts, getting my boy to the top isn't quite the plan, getting him to the top tier, well maybe that's the dream, to get to where he's pushing some of the top 5 lads, that's kinda our goal. That may be possible, maybe... but not everyone can be the best of course. We'll keep plugging away at it, keep putting in the practice (although with Exams it'll be quiet for a few weeks) and seeing what we can do.
- Noggin
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
That's awesome for WeeksyJr
And you sir are a total gentleman. I know you have the skills and possible the time, but there are few guys that would take the time to totally rebuild someone else's bike to help them out. You rock
And you sir are a total gentleman. I know you have the skills and possible the time, but there are few guys that would take the time to totally rebuild someone else's bike to help them out. You rock
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
You'd be surprised you know. I saw 3-4 others bikes sorted and repaired by competitors parents. I'll be the first to admit, i only repaired bikes who had bugger all chance of beating my lad
Strictly speaking though they were the only ones who needed help and came to me. I'd have fixed them even if they were faster, maybe
But the paddock is awesome "oh shit i've broken a brake"... "come this way kiddo lets sort it" etc etc it's just how it's done in the MTB paddock. Even the parents of my boys closest rivals are people i stand and chat with regularly, of course they want their kid to beat mine, but there's nothing in the way of bitterness that you see in some sports.
- Noggin
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
I guess like a lot of sports? I know I had some amazing help from people on trackdays and race meets (Hill Climb and Track!). Not that I was ever going to beat any of them thoweeksy wrote: ↑Mon May 13, 2024 12:35 pmYou'd be surprised you know. I saw 3-4 others bikes sorted and repaired by competitors parents. I'll be the first to admit, i only repaired bikes who had bugger all chance of beating my lad
Strictly speaking though they were the only ones who needed help and came to me. I'd have fixed them even if they were faster, maybe
But the paddock is awesome "oh shit i've broken a brake"... "come this way kiddo lets sort it" etc etc it's just how it's done in the MTB paddock. Even the parents of my boys closest rivals are people i stand and chat with regularly, of course they want their kid to beat mine, but there's nothing in the way of bitterness that you see in some sports.
I still think you rock. So there are others that do similar - you all rock. It's kindness and being willing to help that makes these things so much better for everyone. So you all rock and are great
Life is for living. Buy the shoes. Eat the cake. Ride the bikes. Just, ride the bikes!!
- weeksy
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- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
The boy just messing about on Weds evening with Katy, going through the details and picking up little snippets of information week in week out from her. Her (and his) dedication is fantastic, I sometimes wonder if she dreads my emails as i spend a lot of time picking her brains. But in reality she seems to love it
The Session has been golden for a while now, whatever issues we had have not been present and the bike is running sweetly. We're heading into Fort William next weekend so it's all be little details for me on the spanners, things like the idler bearing area cleaned, checked bearings, the lower chainguide bearing cleaned, checked etc... Little tiny things like that.
We're currently breaking in some new pads, yesterday he was out bedding them in. First set is a set of EBC and we've got a set of Galfer Pro to try this week if we get out. I was chatting with the boy/Katy about braking and whether we can make up time using the brakes in different ways. We've run Uberbike race matrix pads for ages, but the fact he's getting 6 months+ out of a set of pads makes me wonder if we're really making the most of the brakes in terms of pads/performance, hence wanting to try something else.
I tried a set of Hayes Dominion on Katy's bike this week and they feel AWESOME... but chatting to my mechanic, they're a bit up/down in terms of rebuild, servicing, repairs etc and the SRAM Code RSCs really are incredibly simple on his bike. We've never had an issue with them and they just 'work'. The mechanic was selling me on the idea of Tech4 Hopes, so he's going to grab a set of spares and we'll fit them to the Session for Antur Stiniog shortly as a 'test' and see if the boy gets on with them. I'd then need to find my big boys wallet to get them bought lol.
He's still mid-GCSE mode and working hard, so this weekend racing is taking a back-seat, which i'm fine with, we'll soon have them done and be back in full flow.
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
They say Ebikes can't jump. LOL. First time he's ridden the bike. It did make me laugh as me and Katy were discussing what bike to use, she said "Ebikes would be great to maximise time/laps, but only if he's confident on it"
I replied with
"have you ever my him before?"
I don't really get involved in the coaching aspect, but i can see from the videos and the track at Fort William what they were going for, keeping smooth, keeping tucked, maximising speed through pumping the downs etc etc.
I replied with
"have you ever my him before?"
I don't really get involved in the coaching aspect, but i can see from the videos and the track at Fort William what they were going for, keeping smooth, keeping tucked, maximising speed through pumping the downs etc etc.
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
Interesting last few days have seen another sponsor come onboard for the lad.
https://kaliprotectives.com/collections ... 6295549022
IMG_20240522_150552 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
That's all you get for today hahahahaha. But Kali have come up with helmets and gloves for the boy. They're a partnership with Oxford who supply us with cleaning products, lubes etc..
We spent some time this week trying on different sizes, pads, helmets etc and then they popped one on the courier van for us which arrived today at Rotec.
It'll get a full showing off on Sat morning when we get to Fort William and he does with his full new race kit.. I'm excited for him.
Getting ready for the long long drive now, the bike is ready, his stuff is ready, sadly the weather isn't looking like playing ball and 2 of his riding mates are no longer going after spending time in A&E this week, 1 with concussion, 1 with a broken arm... So it's kinda a double edged sword that the boy isn't going up early due to doing a GCSE exam on Fri morning. But i think we're as ready as we can be.
https://kaliprotectives.com/collections ... 6295549022
IMG_20240522_150552 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
That's all you get for today hahahahaha. But Kali have come up with helmets and gloves for the boy. They're a partnership with Oxford who supply us with cleaning products, lubes etc..
We spent some time this week trying on different sizes, pads, helmets etc and then they popped one on the courier van for us which arrived today at Rotec.
It'll get a full showing off on Sat morning when we get to Fort William and he does with his full new race kit.. I'm excited for him.
Getting ready for the long long drive now, the bike is ready, his stuff is ready, sadly the weather isn't looking like playing ball and 2 of his riding mates are no longer going after spending time in A&E this week, 1 with concussion, 1 with a broken arm... So it's kinda a double edged sword that the boy isn't going up early due to doing a GCSE exam on Fri morning. But i think we're as ready as we can be.
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
Thanks bud. Yeah this is one she'll come to. Mostly as it's a bit of an adventure and a bit of a hardcore track etc.
I managed to keep the boss happy I think, so all good there. Got today off and headed out for a 6am ride as obviously I won't be riding this weekend.
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
Another one down. Kid we know pretty well and always chat to his old man
- weeksy
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- weeksy
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- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
Well as always that was some weekend.
Sat brought a load of new kit, jersey, helmet and gloves. So the boy was looking pretty flash.
IMG-20240526-WA0003 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240526-WA0002 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
Saturday brought great weather, not too many flying insects and lots of flying riders, some well and some badly! The attrition rate was pretty high, although not as high as it was for wheels.
The wheels on the Session though survived well, but for some reason we don't seem to suffer wheel issues. He was running 22F and 22R with an Argotal front and Krypto rear, both DH super soft.
Practice went well and he went into seeding pretty happy.
Seeding he placed 24/72 which wasn't bad, but he felt he couldn't quite let go like he should and does on other tracks. But a solid run down.
Sunday started dry and went well again, more crashes and more people off for A&E. But ours went smoothly enough.
As we got to 12ish and the rains came, hard and long, staying for a chunk of the day. This changed the track massively and my cleaning job for race
IMG_20240526_142310 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
But he's happy in the wet so went up for race run. It went well enough, he was 4s slower than yesterday in the dry, so we were happy with that and more importantly, both him a d the bike in one piece.
22/68 he placed. Not quite hitting 20th which was his goal for 2024. But the field as always in Youth is insanely hard, people fast as heck everywhere. So we came in happy overall.
I'll write a bit more when back next week, but for now, that's your lot.
Sat brought a load of new kit, jersey, helmet and gloves. So the boy was looking pretty flash.
IMG-20240526-WA0003 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240526-WA0002 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
Saturday brought great weather, not too many flying insects and lots of flying riders, some well and some badly! The attrition rate was pretty high, although not as high as it was for wheels.
The wheels on the Session though survived well, but for some reason we don't seem to suffer wheel issues. He was running 22F and 22R with an Argotal front and Krypto rear, both DH super soft.
Practice went well and he went into seeding pretty happy.
Seeding he placed 24/72 which wasn't bad, but he felt he couldn't quite let go like he should and does on other tracks. But a solid run down.
Sunday started dry and went well again, more crashes and more people off for A&E. But ours went smoothly enough.
As we got to 12ish and the rains came, hard and long, staying for a chunk of the day. This changed the track massively and my cleaning job for race
IMG_20240526_142310 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
But he's happy in the wet so went up for race run. It went well enough, he was 4s slower than yesterday in the dry, so we were happy with that and more importantly, both him a d the bike in one piece.
22/68 he placed. Not quite hitting 20th which was his goal for 2024. But the field as always in Youth is insanely hard, people fast as heck everywhere. So we came in happy overall.
I'll write a bit more when back next week, but for now, that's your lot.
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
We ended up coming back last night instead of today, i think everyone had peaked and just wanted their own bed, so instead of stopping half way down for the night, we just stopped for food there and i made the final jaunt getting back at 10.30pm .. So everyone a bit tired.
The weekend though was awesome again, the Highlands of Scotland are a lovely place (if you ignore the midge bites i have now) and the track/racing is incredible there
_DSF9596 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
_DSF9606 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
Cool pic by Hannah at Singetrack forum
He'll have to get on the case of picture purchasing, but for now this one will do.
It was great seeing the boy bonding with his mates again and riding all weekend with them, they're all becoming a tight little group and having fun, it'll be a shame when that invariably ends as people drift off either into teams or other sports, but for now we're really enjoying the vibe in the pits they all have together. Sadly though one of the crew broke her collar bone in the morning on Sunday and ended up having to head early to A&E to get it seen to, but as we know, that's the nature of the beast and sport. She's OK though and everyone has been really helpful and positive to her.
We had a few interesting fixes as always over the weekend, Katies (team-mate) Session needed a pivot main bearing set swapping, happily for her she had both me and the Trek mechanic from Cotswold Cycles on hand and it was swapped quickly and easily.
On the morning of Sat after run 1, our mate Isaac had an issue that his rear axle was mullered, the threads were destroyed. We set about a plan and sent his mum to Nevis Cycles and we tried to think of weird and wonderful fixes we could go with. I then thought i'd go see Andy at Viris. They ran GT Furys the same as Isaac previously. In a very weird twist of fate, one of Andys riders had lost his bottom shock mount bolt/spacer and was running round the pits like a loony before having to end up going home early.
So, I had one of these bolts/spacers and a deal was struck with Andy, he gets our spacers and we get the axle happy day. Isaac was back out racing
Over the rest of the weekend it was mostly wheels. Not for us, although we did have spokes loosening, but many many broken, battered and destroyed wheels throughout the paddock.
The boys race run was fairly solid and looking at the results his actual position in relation to various riders is about right in truth, that's where he is in the grand scheme of things roughly. So we're as always happy to get down in 1 piece with a bike that works and a rider that's not broken. He is again closer to the guys who are occupying the higher places and of course that's his job to work out how, why and what he can do to get closer and up to them. We will of course plan and work on that in the coming months (Starting with Antur Stiniog on Thurs) But the reality is, these riders are just bloody impressive as riders, any single one of them could 'make it' in terms of results in the coming years, it's no shame in being 22nd in a National DH in this Youth cat that's for sure.
So today it'll be into the garage later to sort, check, clean, etc both kit and bike, organise gazebos, chairs and everything else, it's half a days job at the end of each weekend and honestly really it drains you but, well, it's what we do
We are considering a bit of a plan change later in the year now, the plan is/was to race all the Nationals with Glencoe being the 3/4 Aug. However we're also racing Champery for the European Championships on the 10/11 so we'd be getting back from Glencoe on the Tuesday and driving to Morzine on the Wed and i simply don't think that's going to work. Add into the fact the midges and desolation of Glencoe, the £300+ expense of racing there and of course the potential for a mechanical/accident that would wipe us out of the Euro Champs, it's just not the best idea i think. So we're pretty much decided on canning Glencoe. Riding or skipping 1 National isn't going to make or break his season and define where he ends up in the sport and there's only so much we can realistically do sometimes.
The weekend though was awesome again, the Highlands of Scotland are a lovely place (if you ignore the midge bites i have now) and the track/racing is incredible there
_DSF9596 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
_DSF9606 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
Cool pic by Hannah at Singetrack forum
He'll have to get on the case of picture purchasing, but for now this one will do.
It was great seeing the boy bonding with his mates again and riding all weekend with them, they're all becoming a tight little group and having fun, it'll be a shame when that invariably ends as people drift off either into teams or other sports, but for now we're really enjoying the vibe in the pits they all have together. Sadly though one of the crew broke her collar bone in the morning on Sunday and ended up having to head early to A&E to get it seen to, but as we know, that's the nature of the beast and sport. She's OK though and everyone has been really helpful and positive to her.
We had a few interesting fixes as always over the weekend, Katies (team-mate) Session needed a pivot main bearing set swapping, happily for her she had both me and the Trek mechanic from Cotswold Cycles on hand and it was swapped quickly and easily.
On the morning of Sat after run 1, our mate Isaac had an issue that his rear axle was mullered, the threads were destroyed. We set about a plan and sent his mum to Nevis Cycles and we tried to think of weird and wonderful fixes we could go with. I then thought i'd go see Andy at Viris. They ran GT Furys the same as Isaac previously. In a very weird twist of fate, one of Andys riders had lost his bottom shock mount bolt/spacer and was running round the pits like a loony before having to end up going home early.
So, I had one of these bolts/spacers and a deal was struck with Andy, he gets our spacers and we get the axle happy day. Isaac was back out racing
Over the rest of the weekend it was mostly wheels. Not for us, although we did have spokes loosening, but many many broken, battered and destroyed wheels throughout the paddock.
The boys race run was fairly solid and looking at the results his actual position in relation to various riders is about right in truth, that's where he is in the grand scheme of things roughly. So we're as always happy to get down in 1 piece with a bike that works and a rider that's not broken. He is again closer to the guys who are occupying the higher places and of course that's his job to work out how, why and what he can do to get closer and up to them. We will of course plan and work on that in the coming months (Starting with Antur Stiniog on Thurs) But the reality is, these riders are just bloody impressive as riders, any single one of them could 'make it' in terms of results in the coming years, it's no shame in being 22nd in a National DH in this Youth cat that's for sure.
So today it'll be into the garage later to sort, check, clean, etc both kit and bike, organise gazebos, chairs and everything else, it's half a days job at the end of each weekend and honestly really it drains you but, well, it's what we do
We are considering a bit of a plan change later in the year now, the plan is/was to race all the Nationals with Glencoe being the 3/4 Aug. However we're also racing Champery for the European Championships on the 10/11 so we'd be getting back from Glencoe on the Tuesday and driving to Morzine on the Wed and i simply don't think that's going to work. Add into the fact the midges and desolation of Glencoe, the £300+ expense of racing there and of course the potential for a mechanical/accident that would wipe us out of the Euro Champs, it's just not the best idea i think. So we're pretty much decided on canning Glencoe. Riding or skipping 1 National isn't going to make or break his season and define where he ends up in the sport and there's only so much we can realistically do sometimes.
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
We've canned the Glencoe race now. Partly because we're all absolutely fried right now after this weekend and the fact Glencoe would be at least as intense as that, but with worse nights sleep. But there's also the expense. Fort William was a pretty damn expensive place, considering the fact Scotland is a fairly poor place in parts, i can't see how average people can spend much time in places like FW, it was almost London prices (but i bet the staff don't earn lots), i'd guess the weekend cost ITRO £1100 with accomodation, even though with tenting/vanning we'd save £400 of that, it's still having to find £700 for the weekend... which doesn't really fly for us.weeksy wrote: ↑Tue May 28, 2024 7:43 am We are considering a bit of a plan change later in the year now, the plan is/was to race all the Nationals with Glencoe being the 3/4 Aug. However we're also racing Champery for the European Championships on the 10/11 so we'd be getting back from Glencoe on the Tuesday and driving to Morzine on the Wed and i simply don't think that's going to work. Add into the fact the midges and desolation of Glencoe, the £300+ expense of racing there and of course the potential for a mechanical/accident that would wipe us out of the Euro Champs, it's just not the best idea i think. So we're pretty much decided on canning Glencoe. Riding or skipping 1 National isn't going to make or break his season and define where he ends up in the sport and there's only so much we can realistically do sometimes.
The boy will be disappointed, but i'm sure the Euros and the week after in Morzine will make up for it.
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
IMG-20240528-WA0057 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0023 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0043 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0007 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0035 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0046 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0023 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0043 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0007 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0035 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240528-WA0046 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
- weeksy
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Re: The journey from small guy to teenager...
We drove up to meet mates at Antur last night, to be honest I could still do with resting instead of driving up here. It wasn't helped when we rocked up at our campsite, we'll, in a very loose term. I'm not sure if the midges or the sheep were worse, possibly the sheep standing outside the tent screaming all night.
IMG-20240529-WA0011 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
But we then had an excellent day here at Antur and met a few other racers who are all now going nuts on the hill pushing eachother.
Last night's pizza for lunch and of course some cake.
It'll then be a long drive back and work tomorrow
I got about 8-9 laps in myself today which was ace, if a little lonely lol.
IMG_20240530_151131 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
IMG-20240529-WA0011 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr
But we then had an excellent day here at Antur and met a few other racers who are all now going nuts on the hill pushing eachother.
Last night's pizza for lunch and of course some cake.
It'll then be a long drive back and work tomorrow
I got about 8-9 laps in myself today which was ace, if a little lonely lol.
IMG_20240530_151131 by Steve Weeks, on Flickr