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I have taught several people to ride with clipless pedals. I take them to an empty parking lot and have them do circles, practicing stopping and clipping in and out
I then have them pass close to me, sometimes I make them stop, other times pass on by. The only way is to practice until it becomes second nature.
I try to always use the same foot to clip in and out at stops, when I am unsure of what cars or others around me do I try to unclip, leaving my foot on the pedal< Then deal with the situation
When restarting, pedal a few times first before you try and clip in, it is much more stable to clip in with a head of steam
Bottom line you will fall over at least once. we all do, and it will not be our last time either, the good news is you will fall at a stop so it will just be a tip over kinda thing
Good luck on the ride
There are some good beginner training rides out there, Monday night CCC rides leaves from lincoln and california at 6:30 pm, 30 miles or so, moderate pace and it will teach you how to ride in a paceline and in a group.
I have taught several people to ride with clipless pedals. I take them to an empty parking lot and have them do circles, practicing stopping and clipping in and out
I then have them pass close to me, sometimes I make them stop, other times pass on by. The only way is to practice until it becomes second nature.
I try to always use the same foot to clip in and out at stops, when I am unsure of what cars or others around me do I try to unclip, leaving my foot on the pedal< Then deal with the situation
When restarting, pedal a few times first before you try and clip in, it is much more stable to clip in with a head of steam
Bottom line you will fall over at least once. we all do, and it will not be our last time either, the good news is you will fall at a stop so it will just be a tip over kinda thing
Good luck on the ride
There are some good beginner training rides out there, Monday night CCC rides leaves from lincoln and california at 6:30 pm, 30 miles or so, moderate pace and it will teach you how to ride in a paceline and in a group.
The Lakefront Path early in the morning is a good place to ride but otherwise you need to get out of Chicago to aquire miles. There are lots of good routes in the north burbs. One option is to ride Milwaukee or Elston to Milwaukee/Devon and take the North Branch Trail from there. This is a route similar to what many people do:
http://www.bikely.com/maps/bike-path/Standard-North-Ride
If you are "training" for this year's MS Tour de Farms, as in, the one a few weeks from now, I would ditch the clipless and just have fun.
Thank you Dotty for your great advice! Was there a certain area of Chicago you think is easier to ride? By Wicker it's super busy and a little intimidating. Again, thank you so much for the well-wishes! Hurrah for positive reinforcement!
I have taught several people to ride with clipless pedals. I take them to an empty parking lot and have them do circles, practicing stopping and clipping in and out
I then have them pass close to me, sometimes I make them stop, other times pass on by. The only way is to practice until it becomes second nature.
I try to always use the same foot to clip in and out at stops, when I am unsure of what cars or others around me do I try to unclip, leaving my foot on the pedal< Then deal with the situation
When restarting, pedal a few times first before you try and clip in, it is much more stable to clip in with a head of steam
Bottom line you will fall over at least once. we all do, and it will not be our last time either, the good news is you will fall at a stop so it will just be a tip over kinda thing
Good luck on the ride
There are some good beginner training rides out there, Monday night CCC rides leaves from lincoln and california at 6:30 pm, 30 miles or so, moderate pace and it will teach you how to ride in a paceline and in a group.
michaels tips are right on. In addition...you can practice on grass (just watch out for holes, etc.) as long as it is hard (read: not today or after a rainshower). the reason behind this is if you fall...you are less
likely to get road rash. basically with clipless the thinking is ...just practice. a lot. and also ... when you approach a stoplight / intersection, etc. remind yourself to clip out (remove the shoe(cleat) from the pedal **in advance**, since many times when you roll up to a car waiting at the light, etc. you may get distracted and forget to unclip, and then you fall down with a (usually) large audience witnessing you.
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