New to Mtn. Biking

Stkx66

iMTB Rockstah
I have a friend who is a runner but wants to try mountain biking. I offered to let him ride one of my bikes to see if this activity is for him. The question is where should I take him for his first ride. Telegraph in Chino? 6 miles up and all down all the way back. Floop? Black Star? He's a regular at the gym so I know he'll do ok.
 
I have a friend who is a runner but wants to try mountain biking. I offered to let him ride one of my bikes to see if this activity is for him. The question is where should I take him for his first ride. Telegraph in Chino? 6 miles up and all down all the way back. Floop? Black Star? He's a regular at the gym so I know he'll do ok.
Is he a runner or a swimmer? One can be a gym rat and be strong but have little endurance. I'd take him on the smoothest, least steep dirt you can find.
 
I have a friend who is a runner but wants to try mountain biking. I offered to let him ride one of my bikes to see if this activity is for him. The question is where should I take him for his first ride. Telegraph in Chino? 6 miles up and all down all the way back. Floop? Black Star? He's a regular at the gym so I know he'll do ok.
Having introduced many people to the sport over the past 30 years, I have found that people enjoy relatively smooth singletrack in the trees without much climbing. Lots of twists and turns and some upsy-downsy stuff for the "wheeee" factor. Long climbs on fireroads out in the open are contraindicated.

Whiting would get my vote. I think there's something up in the LA area called Tapia? That looks swoopy and not too hard.
 
Is he a runner or a swimmer? One can be a gym rat and be strong but have little endurance. I'd take him on the smoothest, least steep dirt you can find.
He's a marathon runner. I'd have to go do trail recon at Whiting. I haven't ridden there in ages.
 
Having introduced many people to the sport over the past 30 years, I have found that people enjoy relatively smooth singletrack in the trees without much climbing. Lots of twists and turns and some upsy-downsy stuff for the "wheeee" factor. Long climbs on fireroads out in the open are contraindicated.

Whiting would get my vote. I think there's something up in the LA area called Tapia? That looks swoopy and not too hard.
In my experience Tapia is an uphill grind before you get to the single track.
But what do I know, I ride “one of Those bikes” Just for the record I rode my Mountain Bike when I rode it.
 
In my experience Tapia is an uphill grind before you get to the single track.
But what do I know, I ride “one of Those bikes” Just for the record I rode my Mountain Bike when I rode it.
Can someone else edit a post? I think someone tampered with this one.:unsure:
 
Last edited:
Tapia requires lots of climbing to get back up to the top after a full dh run.

I agreed that if you guys are in OC the basic whiting loop has some fun, fast stuff on the backside and is easy to navigate. You can avoid dreaded hill NP.
Marshall would also be a good start for not crazy climbs and enough pay-off for the climbs you do ride.
 
Thinking back to my early days, coming from being a runner/triathlete, I would say physical difficulty wouldn't scare me away. But reducing risk would probably be smart since I was dumber then than I am now.

Bonelli or Marshall seem reasonable choices, of the places I have been. First choice would be somewhere like Skyline in Big Bear, but...
 
I have a friend who is a runner but wants to try mountain biking. I offered to let him ride one of my bikes to see if this activity is for him. The question is where should I take him for his first ride. Telegraph in Chino? 6 miles up and all down all the way back. Floop? Black Star? He's a regular at the gym so I know he'll do ok.
Chino Hills SP is a great choice. Lower Aliso to Bane on the Chino/Corona side is a nice beginner ride. About a 10-12 mile ride with less than 1000' of climbing. I think Mt. Biking fitness is it's own thing. No matter how good shape you think your in, Mt. Biking is like dog years! Even road biking fitness doesn't exactly translate across...
 
Chino Hills SP is a great choice. Lower Aliso to Bane on the Chino/Corona side is a nice beginner ride. About a 10-12 mile ride with less than 1000' of climbing. I think Mt. Biking fitness is it's own thing. No matter how good shape you think your in, Mt. Biking is like dog years! Even road biking fitness doesn't exactly translate across...
I agree with mountain biking shape being different. I have been on several rides with new riders who were very fit and they had a hard time. Different muscles and being tight because they weren’t confident riding in the dirt.
 
Back
Top