Recumbent Trike - My Midlife Crisis Car
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I Want to Ride My Tricycle
I am in my 40s, and I ride my tricycle to work a few times a week and at lunch time. You must have a funny mental picture filling your brain right now! Actually, what I ride is called a recumbent "tadpole" style trike. "Recumbent" means it is ridden sitting back in a full seat with my pedaling feet out in front rather than below me. "Tadpole" is the name given to three-wheelers with two wheels in front and one in the back. (Delta is the name given to cycles with two wheels in back and one in front.) "Trike" is the logical shortening of tricycle ... just as "bike" is the shortened version of bicycle.
My Mid-life Crisis Vehicle
My trike is red, it is fast, and it is fun to drive! I suppose that it's my mid-life crisis car. At least it is not as pricey as a sports car. I test rode one of these sporty little vehicles about a year ago and have not been able to get it off my mind. Over the past couple years, I had taken up cycling as something I enjoyed and was also good exercise. (Read about how I got addicted to riding in my hub "The Lord High Bikasaurus Rex".) I even got to the point of commuting by bike. It is thirteen and a half miles to work, twenty-seven miles round trip. My route lets me use the bike trail along a local river so that at least nine miles of my ride is on a bicycle-only path, which makes the commute more enjoyable.
Commuting on my trike
Why I Switched to a Recumbent
Riding my "Diamond Frame" upright bike (or "DF" as recumbent riders call them) was fun and I did not have any physical ailments that prevented me from continuing to ride the DF, but I was getting tired of my sore neck, caused by having to lift my head up to look forward as I lean forward to avoid some of the headwind. It is tiring to keep one's head at that angle to get under the wind, and it makes one tend to stare at the front tire rather than look ahead and around at what is coming up. I also noticed that my shoulders would get sore from leaning forward - not enough to cause any kind of ongoing problem, but it was not comforable. My route to and from work always corresponded with the wind patterns of the day... in the morning it blows toward the ocean as I go inland, and from the ocean as I ride down river. Wind that was constantly blowing into my face, and slowing me down. I have not even begun to explain that dang uncomfortable seat!
Many people switch to recumbent (both two- and three-wheeled) cycles because of a back injury or some other ailment that keeps them from riding a DF safely, but more and more riders just find the recumbent style more fun and more comfortable. I also enjoy being able to see so much more while riding since it is easier on one's body to look forward and around from a reclined seated position than a leaning forward position. On my recumbent trike I go under the wind. There is a LOT less wind resistance on a trike and I save a lot of the energy used balancing and fighting the wind, to pedal. I have not found my trike commute to be all that much faster than my rides on the DF, but I know I am less winded, less tired, have expended less effort and enjoy the scenery of the ride a lot more.
Fun on Weekends and at Lunchtime
But It Is Weird!
Yeah, riding a trike (or any kind of recumbent) turns some heads. Kids, dogs, and adults all can be seen spinning their heads around as I pass. Being a bit unusual is a benefit when commuting. I have consistently noticed that drivers actually see me and give me MORE room and respect on the side of the road than I ever got riding my DF! I watch in my rear view mirrors as cars change lanes or move way over to pass me. I get smiles and eye contact from drivers at intersections that I never got on my upright bike. I also ride with lights and two flag poles to draw attention. I am sure some drivers think I am handicapped, being so low to the ground on such an unconventional cycle. If sympathy or the "weird factor" brings more safety, then I am all for it. When I first got the trike I took it for a spin around our neighborhood, and a young neighbor, I think he is about 8 years old, looked at me riding in that low three wheeled chair and said, "What happened? Did you get hurt?" I had to laugh! I guess you have to be ok with being "weird" to ride a recumbent.
A whole family of trikes
The Circle/Cycle Is Now Complete
There is a famous riddle from Greek mythology: "What goes on four legs in the morning, on two legs at noon, and on three legs in the evening?" The answer to the Sphinx's riddle was given by Oedipus: "Man -- as a child he crawls, as an adult he walks and when he is old he uses a cane."
In contemplating my personal wheeled experience, I wonder if cycling life is not a cycle in itself. We start riding a tricycle, we then might have a four wheeled transitional experience with training wheels and a bike. After we learn balance we graduate to two wheels. Then we grow up and have to drive a four-wheeled car. As the fat of mid-life comes on, some of us try returning to two wheels, and then maybe even to a three-wheeled thing like I am on. I suppose eventually we graduate to a four-wheeled wheelchair unless we stay healthy in our latter years. I want to stay on three wheels.
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Bicycle Pedal Extenders Recumbent Trike STAINLESS STEEL
Current Bid: $27.00
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Warrior Recumbent Tadpole Trike DIY Plan
Current Bid: $16.95
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StreetFox Recumbent Tadpole Trike DIY Plan
Current Bid: $16.95
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Cat trike, trike Recumbent decal
Current Bid: $5.95
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DeltaWolf Long Wheel Base Recumbent Trike DIY Plan
Current Bid: $16.95
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Go Ahead, Try it
If you enjoy cycling and have not tried a recumbent bike or trike, I would encourage you to. Don't let your friends who fancy themselves the next Lance Armstrong talk you out of it saying that recumbents are for "people who can't ride a real bike." Recumbent bikes are just different, not unworthy of "healthy" riders. Although most "professional" races do not allow recumbents (because they would be an advantage over DFs?), most people do not race for a living. Cycling on a recumbent can be more enjoyable and more comfortable. I know 'bent riders who outrace DF riders, and can compete even on uphill rides (which is generally slower on a recumbent) and on long 100- and 200-mile rides!
To lean more about recumbent bikes, try a search on the internet or check out a few of the links I have added below.
Even Leo Laporte rides a trike!
Links about Recumbent Cycling
- My YouTube Channel of Trike Videos
If you want to see more videos... Here is where I upload all my trike riding videos. - BentRider Online
Reviews and forum for recumbent riders - The Recumbent and Human Powered Vehicle Information Center
Recumbent and Human Powered Vehicle Information Center - TerraTrike - Makers of my brand of Recumbent Trike
The World's Most Comfortable Bike! Recline, Relax & Exercise in Style. TerraTrike is committed to producing the most innovative, comfortable and earth friendly human powered vehicles. - Utah Trikes - Custom Recumbent Trikes Shipped Nationwide
Great trike shop located in Utah, but the ship everywhere.
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Oh good I'm glad you finally did this-- and I finally saw it. I went to check your profile when I saw your "one year" medal. You might want to add that youtube video that your friend took.
Hey, this is great - I ride a tandem quite a bit, and that turns a few heads too. I'd love to try a recumbent though, they go like the clappers - been overtaken plenty of times on big rides by you guys! Good plan to preserve the neck too - We rode Paris Brest Paris a few years ago (1200km in 90 hours non stop) and by the end there were guys who were having to hold their heads up with one hand whilst riding because their necks had collapsed but they were so hellbent on finishing (eww - crazy folks). The guys in the recumbents were nice and cosy though!
Keep riding!
men nice ride
so coooooool
This is a great insight to your trike. A recumbent is recommended to me occasionally but the moolah factor won't allow it right now. These are very fast- except up hill- but nothing is.
LOL
Good for you. I just bought a mountain bike for my mid life crisis. We shall see how long before I switch :)
Looks fun, but I would have to be somewhere isolated to try it myself.
I am college student and i like trike so much that i end up buying terratrike which i rode for two months. It was very nice comfortable. But then i sold it and now i bought new trike called Artifice made by action bent from Taiwan. I am still waiting for the delivery and hoping so much to flaunt my new trike on Independence day. I live at Huntington beach. But trike cost a lot and i have spent almost 2000 bucks on trike. ( selling old + buying new one)
I just ordered the new Terratrike Rover. Under $1000 and a really fun and safe Trike to ride.
Where did you get the dachshund flag..........I have four dachshunds and a TT Zoomer Trike...Frank
It's always fun to find like minded people, although, when I ourchased my Micro in 2002 I wasn't experiencing a "mid-life" crisis - I just wanted to ride very long distances without too many problems.
You might be interested in what I have posted at my blog http://www.crazytrike.com. It has postings from most of my rides over the years and specs on the trikes I ride.
Either version of the recumbent looks like loads of fun. However, there are no bike paths on the routes I would use one, so it'd have to be a regular adult trike like the ones I used when I worked in Inventory Control in a huge warehouse. We used them not only for covering distances quickly but to haul misplaced stock in the basket between the back wheels. They even had handlebar bells like on kids' trikes...ding ding! They looked "clunky" but were amazingly fast. So fast, in fact, we were regularly warned to *slow down*. Right. Weeeeeeeeeee!
Anyway, thanks for a great hub on leg-powered "mid-life crisis cars". ;D
I was these advertised and thought I would like them because at the gym I like the bikes where my feet are in front. Great videos. I feel like I was on a test ride with you - without the aerobic benefit, of course. I might hold out until they raise them off the ground a bit. Thanks for the very good info about recumbent trikes, Glenn Frank:)
This is so completely cool! Thank you for the useful information. I've just changed my life to semi-retired, and I want one of these so badly. However, read "semi-retired" as now without cash. So it'll have to wait,but I hope not too long. It would be great to have a source for used trikes, just so more people could get one. Do you know of any sites like that?
Also, I was interested in the neck position on the recumbent. I noticed in your videos that a neck rest is available. With your neck at that angle, do you have to use the rest very much?
Thank you!
I signed up for a 480mi ride next September. I have been training since Nov. ( cross training inthe gym & riding my mnt bike ) I am considering building the warrior tadpole. Do you have any advice?
Looks great! The Warrior normally weighs in less than 50lbs. AtomicZombie.com
About 4 years ago I became really angry about gas prices. About the same time I wanted to go a little green. I also wasn't sleeping right and felt the beginings of high blood pressure. First I looked at high end scooters 650cc things and also recumbent bikes. I ended up buy a Honda Elite 80, got a motorcycle endorsement and did a Forest Gump, I just started walking and kept walking, turned it into a daily 6 miles rain or shine. I sold the scooter because cars would ignore or intententionally intimidate me. They did the same on my walks. There are not too many sidewalks around here. Not giving up I transfered excercise indoors, continued to get in better shape, and noticed people on the stationary recumbents. A spark seemed to go off, reminding me about my original study of recumbents. Last Friday, I got on my sons DF drove it around the block twice and said to hell with it, so what if I look like a goofball, I'm getting something I can sit on and peddle. I went on to Craigslist and bought an EZ-1 AX, their higher quality alluminium recumbent. It took a little tweaking as the prior owner only drove it a few miles. Anyway, the first day, I drove it around the neighborhood for a little over 1/2 an hour. The next day about 15 miles, no pain, just pure pleasure. Today, just a few miles (6), but already I 'm wondering "Why did I wait so long? Why do people ignore the basic nature of their bodies? Why not accept that for the vast majority of our lives we only range a few miles for little things which is most suited for a bike or trike? I'm 50, take no meds, have ok readings on everything. Is it better to spend a few hundred bucks on a bike or better to spend 100,000 on open heart surgery? What are people thinking?" Well I guess we are all just a bunch of goofballs. Sure it is true, eat right, excercise, and we die anyway, but I think death may just be walking, he ain't gona catch me on my bike!











Guy 2 years ago
I told my wife that my greenspeed trike was my mid life crisis and that she was lucky "I had not bought a car we could not afford, or run of with a dolly bird."Her comment was that those options would have been easier to explain to her friends. Mind you the crisis continues, I just bought a bacheta Giro.