My Month of Doing 100 Wheelies a Day
In her quest to master a quintessential cool-kid trick, 窪蹋勛圖厙 contributor Kim Cross found the sweet spot at the crossroads of work and play
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A wheelie is the bicycling equivalent of hanging ten on a surfboard or spinning a basketball on your fingera skill as profoundly cool as it is functionally irrelevant. Pedaling around with one wheel in the air wont help you win a race or bomb a gnarly descent. Unlike a front-wheel lift or a bunny hop, it has no business on a trail.
What the wheelie lacks in utility it makes up for with pure, unfiltered radness. Theres something thrilling about a skill that isnt a means to an end but the end itself, whose value in doing it is just doing it, simply because you can. Yet its more than showing off. Its about seeking an elusive, almost mystical state of precarious, dynamic balance. Youre chasing a sweet spot, a moving target thats constantly shifting in every dimension, including the one inside your head.
In 20 years of mountain biking, this skill has always eluded me. So in January 2020, I hatch a plan: 100 wheelies per day for 30 days3,000 attempts, all toldspread out over two or three months. Ill consult some experts about technique, but mostly Ill just put in the work. And Im willing to fail prodigiously.
How will I define success? The ability to wheelie indefinitely, until I choose to put the wheel down. Ill simultaneously tackle the manuala different method of one-wheeled cruise controlbecause maybe the moves will inform each another. And also because: Why not?
Its a juvenile pursuit for a professional writer with a mortgage and a 12-year-old boy. There are more productive uses of my time. But maybe, just maybe, theres some value in tilting at your own quixotic windmill.