In the beginning stage, it's fine to kickoff in order to start the Trikke, but it won't be long before you never have to kick to start again -- it'll be a matter of pride to not touch ground with a foot. Your handlebars could be 5 degrees more forward. Good beginner spirit -- you're surrendering to the machine instead of grouching about its yet-unfurled mysteries. I'd envy you, but, DANG, I get a heap of unfurleds still every day from my machine too -- gotta love it, eh?
This is a typical "first time" experience. With practice this person will "get it" and be able to do not merely these slight slopes, but hills too. Just gotta practice. But here is the important concept: the rider is smiling and having a blast. Why is that important? Because that smile never goes away, and every day, every rider gets aboard with a certainty that "fun will happen." Six years of trikking later, I'm still smiling. Try to find a more fun fitness machine. Can't can't can't.
In the beginning stage, it's fine to kickoff in order to start the Trikke, but it won't be long before you never have to kick to start again -- it'll be a matter of pride to not touch ground with a foot. Your handlebars could be 5 degrees more forward. Good beginner spirit -- you're surrendering to the machine instead of grouching about its yet-unfurled mysteries. I'd envy you, but, DANG, I get a heap of unfurleds still every day from my machine too -- gotta love it, eh?
TrikkeGuy 3 years ago
This is a typical "first time" experience. With practice this person will "get it" and be able to do not merely these slight slopes, but hills too. Just gotta practice. But here is the important concept: the rider is smiling and having a blast. Why is that important? Because that smile never goes away, and every day, every rider gets aboard with a certainty that "fun will happen." Six years of trikking later, I'm still smiling. Try to find a more fun fitness machine. Can't can't can't.
TrikkeGuy 3 years ago