This is almost exactly how my parents taught me how to ride. I won a BMX in an art contest as a little kid and wanted to learn how to ride, but my family was too broke to justify buying training wheels. They told me to start pushing myself around the house on it until I felt like I could start pedaling. By the end of the second day, I was racing my older brother down the driveway. The only difference is that they didn't bother to take off the foot pedals. I ended up with some bruised shins, but it was worth it.
@heylolp9 Жыл бұрын
scaped legs were a staple of my childhood anyways so same here we Dad just didn't bother taking off the pedals after work but taught me on the actual bike i would ride
@explorenaked Жыл бұрын
No training wheels, no helmet, not protective gear at all. Shins and elbows were pretty much always bleeding. Mom would tell us "don't come in the house until you rinse off the blood using the garden hose". Oh and we drank from that very same garden hose. How did we ever survive?
@Jehty_ Жыл бұрын
@@explorenaked the better question is: How many did not survive. (not because of the hose, but because of no helmet)
@thedamntrain5481 Жыл бұрын
@@explorenaked this is still happening in Eastern Europe lmao
@tjchad1 Жыл бұрын
@@explorenaked the lead in the hose helped the blood coagulate quicker!
@Infidelio Жыл бұрын
The balance bike was actually the first bike: German Inventor Karl von Drais is credited with developing the first bicycle. His machine, known as the "swiftwalker," hit the road in 1817. This early bicycle had no pedals, and its frame was a wooden beam. The device had two wooden wheels with iron rims and leather-covered tires.
@AnnekeOosterink Жыл бұрын
Right? I was like, how is it new in any way when it was the literal origin? Plus, balance bikes specifically aimed at little kids have been around for ages and ages.
@thonkingintensifies9510 Жыл бұрын
you know he felt like the shit he definetly was a swiftwalker.
@MistaGSpecialEducation Жыл бұрын
For me I immediately rode a two wheel after using training wheels for 3 years
@Nikioko Жыл бұрын
Hence, the name Draisine. More charming than dandy horse.
@sebastianm1901 Жыл бұрын
Also in The Congo People ride in homemade balance bikes
@haydennharves Жыл бұрын
Man, the “dad running behind the kid at full speed” example is so spot on. I had a little 10” pedal bike in my garage that dad took the training wheels off of, and he taught every single kid on our block to ride on that same bike, just by pushing them through the grass and chasing them. Over a decade later I’m knee deep in the BMX racing world, and so thankful for that little 10” haha. Thanks Dad!
@Blox117 Жыл бұрын
actually what he said is not true. tire grip and balance is what keeps a vehicle upright. steering doesnt matter because that only applies when there is no one on it. this is easily observed at low speeds on a unicycle, where steering and leaning doesnt apply yet its very easy to stay upright in a straight line.
@iwatchwithnoads7480 Жыл бұрын
@@Blox117 you're constantly shifting weight to make adjustments when you're riding even in a straight line. Training wheels doesn't force you to do that
@Blox117 Жыл бұрын
@@iwatchwithnoads7480 yep exactly, thanks for agreeing
@ohsweetmystery Жыл бұрын
A few hours pushing and chasing in a parking lot should teach practically any normal child how to ride. 3 years and older have enough coordination.
@upshift_actual Жыл бұрын
@@Blox117 but steering is balancing?
@rusNi314zda Жыл бұрын
Few years ago I taught my 3 years old brother to ride a bicycle. Basically I advised him 3 things to follow: watch directly forward so he couldn't see the front wheel or did not look on the pedals, just concentrating on the road. grip the handle bars tight so he has an extra points of stability and the 3rd one is to keep pedaling with no fear. Little man caught it up in 2 days and now he is a great company for a ride at the age of 7. He's riding basically an adult bike now with no fear and feels very secure in it.
@cat47 Жыл бұрын
russian ;)
@rusNi314zda Жыл бұрын
@@cat47 Ukrainian
@cat47 Жыл бұрын
@@rusNi314zda o cool. stay safe out there
@ifureaddisugay Жыл бұрын
@@cat47 the good ending
@BermPeakExpress Жыл бұрын
Good on you, and good on your brother. Looking far ahead is really good advice for any type of cycling, and so you probably instilled a great habit into his riding for the rest of his life.
@ryankennard6626 Жыл бұрын
This works!!! My 7-year-old had not learned to ride. She had training wheels that we took off this year. Every time she tried it this year, she would almost fall and run home crying. Today, I lowered her seat and took off her pedals and rode around with her. In about an hour, she asked for the pedals and then rode for 2 miles!
@kjellg65326 ай бұрын
Allmost the same experience. He got a balance bike. He fixed it in a few weeks, 2 yrs old. Some weeks later he graduated to a pedal bike and rode along at 2 yrs 3 mnths.
@Anderson_999 Жыл бұрын
Seth in full dad mode in this one, love to see it.
@SEThatered Жыл бұрын
Very wholesome!
@Android480 Жыл бұрын
I couldn’t learn ride a bike as a young kid, but my parents bought me a razor scooter and after just a few weeks of that, I hopped on the bike and got it first try. I think the concept of leaning to steer is almost identical for both, it’s definitely a great safe way of learning.
@fprintf Жыл бұрын
This is what I did with my kids about 20 years ago. Balance bikes were not yet a thing but I knew how problematic training wheels were. But they had Razor scooters and learned all about balance on those. At the time my kids learning to ride at 4 and 3 respectively was seen as an amazing accomplishment. Balance bikes and scooters FTW!
@EpicVideoGamer7771 Жыл бұрын
Razor scooters ftw💪💪
@Generic-Name Жыл бұрын
@@fprintf I actually learned how to rid a bike at 3, the funny thing is the reason. I did have training wheels and my older by a couple years sister was getting them off and got a kickstand. I really wanted a kickstand. My Dad was firm you only get one when you don't have training wheels since it would hit them and no point... I told him to take off the wheels and did it that day lol
@pauljs75 Жыл бұрын
The scooter is better, and learning by standing up to ride rather than the seated position is better. This is because the bike can go all over the place while still being able to keep balance above it. Once seated it "hooks" you and takes your body where the frame goes. So it puts you at a disadvantage, which isn't what you want while learning.
@Generic-Name Жыл бұрын
@@pauljs75 Oh definitely, wasn't disagreeing. Just a funny story that I was able to learn at a young age at the time since I really wanted a cool attachment. Scooter definitely is a good stepping stone to it especially before the no pedal ones he was talking about existed
@srdjanbabic8304 Жыл бұрын
Two years ago, I used this method to teach my girlfriend (24 years of age at a time) to ride a bike. It took her 1 day to learn how to maintain balance and then how to pedal and lean while turning. This method is by far much better than having the training wheels. I think this should be propagated further so that parents apply this more often. Great video as always! Cheers!!!
@Warp2090 Жыл бұрын
24 and cant ride a bike 💀 same energy as 30 and not driving
@srdjanbabic8304 Жыл бұрын
@@Warp2090 hahah, you don't know how many like that are out there then 😃
@Warp2090 Жыл бұрын
@@srdjanbabic8304 xd, I mean its not as bad as being 30 and not driving yet, (my step sister)
@geriroush8004 Жыл бұрын
@@Warp2090 Not everybody's parents can afford to get a bike for them. When given the opportunity, she learned pretty quickly.
@WanderingWind71 Жыл бұрын
32 year old here. would love to test this for myself as i have balancing and stability issues even while walking. I have spine damage which causes irregular bouts of numbness in my legs and feet, and have had to switch to using an adult tricycle for transport. I actually might try this if i can scrounge up a cheap two wheeler somewhere just as a learning tool.
@JH-pe3ro Жыл бұрын
Kick scooters will also teach the proper motor patterns for bicycle balancing: once you kick off, it's all balance and carving turns. Also you learn to be very worried about tiny cracks in the pavement. That was my actual progression since I rode kick scooters for a while when I was younger, then picked up bicycle as an adult in about 48 hours(two half-hour sessions).
@renderproductions1032 Жыл бұрын
I used to use this tiny kick scooter so much, even when it didn’t fit me feel. I would end up doing all of the same lean-turns on the scooter that I would on a bike.
@Idiot448111 ай бұрын
Why would you be on the pavement?
@knightsofthedraftingtable1961 Жыл бұрын
As a small child, I remember having some training wheels on my first bike. The thing I specifically remember, since the sensation of turning on a bike still haunts me to this day, is that the training wheels would cause an imbalance of friction on the ground with even the slightest of turns. This very quickly results in falling over to the side, not knowing how to fall safely because they haven't rode a bike before. This video is good.
@ilikesnow Жыл бұрын
Surprised you did not mention the Swiftwalker from the early 1800's. The first bike was a balance bike and that would have been a great history point to throw in there. Great video as always guys!
@BermPeakExpress Жыл бұрын
Oddly enough, you'll see a picture of it in the next video
@bendu49100 Жыл бұрын
And it's not like they disappeared or something, draisiennes have been used for kids for a very long time, that's nothing new.
@sstrazzi Жыл бұрын
I taught my 25 year old brother who never road a bike before how to ride in 3 hours by dropping the saddle and getting him to waddle around the parking lot. He loves riding now. Looking back training wheels definitely slowed my progress as a kid
@DemonFox369 Жыл бұрын
I learned how to ride on my own in 3 days at 24 but I still fear riding a bike on the road with cars. No problem riding where there aren’t cars but I can’t ride it if there are cars
@otobustutkusu303 Жыл бұрын
I learned how to balance without training wheels and some day, somehow, I learnt how to ride all by myself, somehow. don't remember. But I love to ride!
@antonberglund117 Жыл бұрын
I am not trying to be mean. But why didn't he learn to ride a bike earlier? Not enough money for a bike? Uninterested? (And which countrie are you from? From what I've heard and seen America is not built for biking or walking😅)
@sstrazzi Жыл бұрын
@@antonberglund117 new zealand. we moved a couple of times and there was nowhere for us to ride. 15 year gap in riding for me also
@Midnight-wh2bs Жыл бұрын
@@antonberglund117 To be fair, some people just don't ride bikes. Like, I learned how to when I was young, but I haven't ridden one in close to 15 years.
@Abendrotchiller Жыл бұрын
I thought Seth was born on a bike 🤔
@callumgilbert2547 Жыл бұрын
Lol me too
@_frixx_746 Жыл бұрын
Wait he wasn’t ??
@meetv7700 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
@None_of_your_business666 Жыл бұрын
Seth IS a bike
@cactus_cuber1589 Жыл бұрын
I thought Seth’s parents were bike’s 🤔
@shampoochamp5223 Жыл бұрын
My first bike had training wheels, as you might guess. I unsure of why the training wheels themselves were not even, so that they never both touched the ground simultaneously. I didn’t think much of it, but one day, eventually, I noticed that you can balance the bike just so while riding so that neither of the training wheels touched the ground. At this point I was simply riding the bike the way it was intended and never really had to do the whole father-son cliche moment of learning to ride the two wheeler because my training wheels, along with my mushy childhood brain which endlessly explored things, trained me to do so. I felt really proud if that moment because I was able to see that this big event of learning to ride a two wheeler was no big deal at all, and I felt like I had discovered something about the intended use of the training wheels that literally no one I have ever met even talks about.
@justinlee1421 Жыл бұрын
This is the proper way to use training wheels. My parents actually read the instructions and did this intentionally maybe yours did to and just never told you.
@NoThankUBeQuiet Жыл бұрын
That's how you are supposed to use them. Once the kid isn't relying on them you take them off and then do a little work on getting on and getting going + the psychological aspect
@DrakeVaranus Жыл бұрын
Same over here, still remember lightly bouncing between the two training wheels and thinking about how close i was to not needing them...
@kjellg65326 ай бұрын
My advice is to never use training wheels. With them you learn to steer a car, not a two wheeled vehicle. Set the seat low and start duck walking
@colfdralegend Жыл бұрын
I actually had a sort of unique experience with training wheels. My father was sort of distracted by certain things in that time, so he never got around to actually trying to teach me or even raising the wheels up. Thing was though, the wheels started to bend and raise up on their own. I still remember noticing the wheels sort of “bouncing” when I leaned to the side and such and deciding to treat it like a sort of game where I tried to ride without the wheels hitting the ground. It taught me to keep balance, and each time the wheels hit the pavement they bent more. You’re probably right about it not teaching me to turn, but I lived on a cul de sac, so I was always turning and that was how I trained to steer. I remember getting pretty good at going around without even noticing the wheels and eventually my father noticed what I was doing. So he took em off, gave me a push, and I didn’t even come close to falling as I had been doing the same thing for some time. Balance bikes definitely seem better though, I believe my niece and nephews have one. Actually, now that I think about it, I haven’t ridden my bike that much, but last time I did I think sort of sucked at it. Main reason was I was just unhealthy, but I wonder if I have to get used to turning again 🤔
@takatamiyagawa5688 Жыл бұрын
Same, except I think my dad angled the wheels up a bit, or maybe they were just built that way. If you practice maneuvering the bike within that narrow near-vertical envelope, then logically you should be able to keep it up without the training wheels.
@sidecharacter3171 Жыл бұрын
For me, one of my training wheels broke off completely, and we just never got it fixed. I would do the same as you, making a game out of it, to teach myself how to balance properly.
@LilChuunosuke Жыл бұрын
I had an extremely similar experience! But I was only allowed to ride my bike in the driveway & my parents paid far less attention. By the time my mother noticed I was able to ride a bike, my brother actually let me use his old bike, which didnt have training wheels on them, while my brother used my mom's old bike. She had walked up to the window just to check on us, only to stop and yell out to me "WHEN DID YOU LEARN HOW TO RIDE A BIKE?! It had been weeks at that point and only my brother was even aware of it. Also, as someone who stopped riding their bike for many years & just got back into it, DO IT! It's so worth it. I splurged on an ebike to make my commute to work substancially easier & cheaper. I've had some soreness as my body adjusts to it & have had to take multiple breaks due to pain or poor weather, but its SO worth it. I forgot how freeing it was to race down the road with the wind in your hair.
@justinlee1421 Жыл бұрын
This is the proper way to use them your suppose to raise the wheels so they just keep you from falling over but should never touch the ground at the same time. My parents actually read the instructions and as a result I only had training wheels for a few days.
@hansentt Жыл бұрын
Some of my kids had a hard time getting used to the pedaling motion. After they had mastered the balance bike I set their pedal bikes up with training wheels on blocks and had them pedal stationary. They soon learned when to push down on each pedal and when not to. Then I took the training wheels off and that was it. They were riding after just a few minutes of getting used to pedaling and balancing.
@thebiglimey Жыл бұрын
Balance bikes are an amazing gift for kids (and even adults) to learn to ride. A friend helped a 50-year-old woman to ride, purely by getting her on a bike with no pedals, she was pedaling around a parking lot within an hour. When I developed bikes for another California kid's bike company, I did the same thing as Prevelo, by designing the frames to be hard-to-install "training" wheels. Because of that, we had younger and younger riders graduating as confident riders. keep on spreading the good word Seth!
@ManicObsevations Жыл бұрын
Perhaps because you have to know how to balance on a bike, to ride a bike.
@thebiglimey Жыл бұрын
@@ManicObsevations true, but but it’s a knowledge that comes from experience. Kids are very adaptable and can often learn things that adults struggle with, because they have no preconceived ideas, no prior experience and are open minded to having fun whatever happens
@ManicObsevations Жыл бұрын
@@thebiglimey mhm Thats why balance bikes are good
@thebiglimey Жыл бұрын
@@ManicObsevations true story
@SmallSpoonBrigade Жыл бұрын
As an education major, this makes me cringe. This misunderstands how people learn to ride bikes. The short answer is that you don't learn how to ride a bike, it's why people don't typically forget even after many years. If they can't later on in life it's usually a balance issue unrelated to the bike. What you do, is establish the possibility and understanding that the bike will balance itself. As it starts to lean to one side, it will tend to start leaning in the other. If you give a bike enough forward momentum, it will keep upright for a shockingly long distance. Balance bikes are one of those ideas that seems like a good idea, but is mostly just a cash grab as there's nothing that you can do with a balance bike that you can't do with a normal bike with or without training wheels. The point of the training wheels is purely psychological. They keep the bike from leaning so far as to take the rider out of their comfort zone. So, you can focus on the pedaling and forward motion.
@clestoncoxii7506 Жыл бұрын
I'm 59 and like you i learned on training wheels. And likewise taught my sons in training wheels. Mainly because there wasn't a better way at the time. A couple years ago my son picked up a Strider balance bike for his son. It made a huge difference in how fast he learned to balance and steer it. Keep bringing these great videos. They both informative and entertaining.
@SmallSpoonBrigade Жыл бұрын
There still isn't a better way, him showing improperly set up training wheels doesn't really do much to bolster his point. If the bike stands vertically with all 4 wheels touching the ground, those aren't training wheels. I don't know what they are, but they're not training wheels. The whole point of the training wheels is psychological, to manage the fear of falling over. If they're set properly, the training wheels only contact the ground if you've leaned too far. Simply make a game of it about how long you can keep the training wheels off the ground and kids will pick that up faster than folks realize. As far as the balance bikes go, those are pretty much completely useless. You can take training wheels off a bike without much trouble and still have a bike that handles just about the same as it did. But, it's a bit more involved with a balance bike, either because you need to completely replace it, or because you need to install the pedals, chain and related bits of drive kit. What's more, with the training wheels, you can typically adjust them up or down, so you can start with only a little bit of lean being permitted and advance to the point where you have to lean nearly to the point of falling over before they touch.
@Carma281 Жыл бұрын
@@SmallSpoonBrigade username checks out
@memediatek Жыл бұрын
@@SmallSpoonBrigade tell me you didn't watch the video without telling me you didn't watch the video
@SuperPickle15 Жыл бұрын
I don't think 18 months have any fear, by the time they learn fear... they already mastered balancing a bike and thus would know that riding a bike is well with in their skills.
@quantumleap359 Жыл бұрын
Spot on. My son learned on his own on a bike I was repairing for him. The pedals were junk, so before I had a chance to get a new pair, he started riding up and down the driveway, just kicking around. In two days, I installed the new pedals and off he went. Easy peasy, the best way to learn to ride a two wheeler. Great video!
@sothesalamilidwontfit Жыл бұрын
I learned to ride a bike just last year at 19 lol... parent running behind the bike was definitely a much better training tool than more wheels. I used an oversized hand-me-down where my feet couldn't touch the ground and it sucked. biking feels and is a lot more dangerous when you don't fit your bike properly. I finally got my own bike this year and it feels so comfortable being in full control.
@MTB_Rider_96 Жыл бұрын
This was actually way more helpful than I expected it to be because my Daughter-in-law has never ridden a bike, and my son and I need to teach a 30 year old how to ride. Thanks!
@andyu69 Жыл бұрын
Howd it go?
@Logarithm906 Жыл бұрын
Tell her how to use the brakes and then find a nice long slope. Have her get used to just lifting her legs off the ground, then practice placing them on the pedals, then practice actually pedalling (but not producing power, just to get used to how your CoG moves while pedaling), then practice actually putting power down. Did that with a dyspraxic cousin, she was fine.
@aarongeronimo2622 Жыл бұрын
I taught my wife how to ride a bike last year. Children are amazing in how fast they can pick up skills, adults however, take arguably longer. She was terrified of falling and had next to no balance reflex. No pedals and walking the bike got her up and running in 30 or so minutes. Threw the pedals on and about an hour later she could ride without me as a safety. 10/10 method for teaching/learning how to ride a bike.
@DualDesertEagle Жыл бұрын
I used to have a girlfriend who hadn't ridden a bike at least since her childhood, if ever, and taught her how to do so on my old ebay Dirt Jump bike which came with shifting gears and as such was the only suitable bike I had to teach her on since my real Dirt Jumper was single speed only and all the other bikes I could've borrowed from family and friends were way too tall for her. Started by running along next to her to try and prevent her from hurting herself in case of a crash but a few minutes later she was riding around that parking lot all by herself without crashing even once. Felt good to see her enjoying the ride and how happy she was about having (re-?) learned to ride a bike.
@bruh10246 Жыл бұрын
Weird, I tried to learn how to ride a bike when i was little and never really get anywhere. But when i try again when i was older(18) i got it way quicker precisely because i have less fear of pain. I guess we all got a different learning curve
@trinityy-7 Жыл бұрын
@@bruh10246 you completely misused the term "learning curve" there
@higherquality Жыл бұрын
"I taught my wife how to bike" I live in the Netherlands and the "wife" part of the sentence is so odd to me
@DualDesertEagle Жыл бұрын
@@higherquality Why is that? I'm sure that even in the Netherlands there are adults who haven't ridden any bikes for a long time or never learned how to do so in the first place, albeit probably few and far between.
@neino36 Жыл бұрын
I vividly remember the day I realized for the first time that my training wheels were hindering me more than helping me. I asked my dad to remove them, a few flops later I was riding with the best of 'em. A few scrapes and bruises are just part of the learning process.
@mulletsmayhem492 Жыл бұрын
I remember I kept telling my dad to take them off. He was busy but finally after asking probably 20 times that day he grabbed them and bent them up😂 started riding just fine without
@-user_redacted- Жыл бұрын
I asked for mine to be taken off and after a week of no luck I took matters into my own hands and bent them until the wheels pointed at the sky. Training wheels are the worst.
@juliecampbell860 Жыл бұрын
I agree with all statements you made. I never learned how to ride a bike as a kid. Now that I'm an adult, I run into 2 issues - there are no balance bikes for adults, and the "right" size of bike for me has the seat too tall for me (at the lowest setting) to walk the bike with the pedals off (which makes it harder for me to even stand over it with pedals on too). Might have to learn on my daughter's bike, now that she just sized up.
@7GtwNYkHYs Жыл бұрын
I was 4 when I learned to ride. Before I even rode the bike my dad removed the training wheels saying "you don't need those." So yeah, I learned how to ride with my dad running behind exactly as you described. Balance bikes for the kids is a great idea
@dunbar5741 Жыл бұрын
Highly recommend the pedals off strategy. My parents are both avid bikers and this helped me learn to ride a bike in a single afternoon as a child.
@jnawk83 Жыл бұрын
i taught my 3 year old how to ride in about 30 minutes. he had had balance bikes his whole life (he has an older brother with whom we had used training wheels, BIG mistake).
@Lautere Жыл бұрын
Your videos got me into mtb 4 years ago and its the best thing that ever happened to me. Thank you Seth for making the best mtb videos!🤙
@liutang Жыл бұрын
My son went from completely scared of the bike to riding in one week thanks to a balance bike. These things are a game changer.
@dumiahbro Жыл бұрын
My dad has always pointed out the flaws of training wheels to people and told them you should instead get your kid a balance bike. I was using training wheels for 2 years until I was 5 years old, and they didn't teach me to ride a bike at all. After my dad got me a balance bike, I was able to ride a bicycle 1 week later. Glad to see a popular youtube video addressing this.
@nballard88 Жыл бұрын
My kid couldn’t grasp riding a bike with training wheels so it just sat in the back yard. After seeing the video, we pulled the training wheels and pedals and dropped the seat. One week of using this as a balance bike, we put the pedals on and he was riding in 5 minutes. Game changer!
@blackswan135 Жыл бұрын
Being Dutch, but growing up in South Africa, my Dutch uncle was appalled to find me riding around with training wheels. Immediately kicked them off and gave me a push down the lawn and I was good to go (after a few face plants)
@s00p3rman Жыл бұрын
I have done this method with all three of my kids (started the hard way with the 1st one) and they were pedaling on their own with about 3 hrs of practice. An hour and a half of balancing, coasting down a slight decline and walking the bike back up. The next day they do it again a few times to get confidence, then I put the pedals on. Do the same thing with pedals and BAM! They suddenly get it and I celebrate (my awesome parenting skills😂)and hug them and tell them how proud I am. So glad you talked about this because it's an essential dad skill that nobody knows how to do.
@b.s.adventures9421 Жыл бұрын
I’ve taught kids this in the parking lot of the bike shop used to work at. It’s so cool watching kids just get it and take off.
@Hawk3r11 ай бұрын
Thank you Seth, I have two kids who I started on balance bikes...and they were doing great. For my eldest I then made the stupid choice to get her on a 16" with training wheels to practice the Pedals... Massive mistake as all of a sudden she forgot how to balance the training wheels kept catching and obviously undoing everything she learnt about the balance. I did the same, removed the training wheels and Pedals, really had to build her confidence back up (it took months). finally today she has mastered it! My youngest, has not had training wheels at all. We are taking the same approach this time on a 12" pedal bike, started with pedals off and no training wheels. Already he is now on the verge of being able to pedal and balance at 3 years old. Thank you for videos like this, really amazing information and hopefully it will help other dads get kids outside and having fun! Keep doing what you do! Merry Christmas!
@meowserita Жыл бұрын
Just gotta say perfect time to post this video as its getting to perfect biking weather and theres a ton of kids that want to learn including my little sister who i might just try and teach later with the info from here.
@anthonymiller1305 Жыл бұрын
I couldn’t agree more. My kids were going down hills with their feet up on a balance bike at 18 months, and taking jumps at 2 years. At 2.5 years I bought my oldest his first pedal bike, threw training wheels on it for a day so he could figure out how to pedal and use brakes and the next day he was good to go. My youngest is now 2.5 years old and will be making the switch to pedals in a few weeks.
@jbw5485 Жыл бұрын
Yep. My exact same experience with my two boys. Training wheels don’t allow you to get that feeling of leaning and steering into the turn to balance.
@trinityy-7 Жыл бұрын
wait you let your 2 year old kid do jumps on their bike?
@jbw5485 Жыл бұрын
@@trinityy-7 no but my oldest was jumping at 6 yrs old. Where did you get that from?
@trinityy-7 Жыл бұрын
@@jbw5485 not you the original commenter
@anthonymiller1305 Жыл бұрын
@@trinityy-7 doesn’t everyone?
@sawdustysneeze Жыл бұрын
20 years ago I taught both my boys on what we called the black magic bike. A very small bike that never had training wheels on it. Both learned to ride at a very young age 3-4. I swore up and down to all my friends and brother that training wheels slowed down the learning process. I did not need validation, but I’ll take it! Thanks for the entertaining video once again.
@Gribbo9999 Жыл бұрын
My daughter had a tricycle when she was very young ( pedals and steering) Then she learned to ride a scooter (for balance on two wheels). When she was given her first bicycle she just got on it and rode. She already has all the skills. No extra learning required.
@annaairahala9462 Жыл бұрын
I actually never learned to ride a bike past training wheels. The step from feeling safe with the wheels to having nothing always felt too great. Been wanting to get back into it and learn, but not in a financial position to do so currently and feel nervous as an adult to be learning
@gabrielatrillo4109 Жыл бұрын
I also never fully learned how to ride a bike without the training wheels. I don't know what it was but I would keep losing my balance and after scrapping my leg to the point of some blood coming out, even with the encouragement of my dad of how far I went, I never got back on.
@johnnystankiewicz295 Жыл бұрын
Man, if i had the ability to teleport i would definetly teleport to you guys and just run behind you to catch you when you are about to fall. Its such a good thing to be able to ride a bike, its very fast and efficient. My dad taught me by first attaching a broom handle to the back of my bike and helping me balance when i was having troubles, and when i was getting a hold of it he just ran behind me and caught me if i was about to crash.
@a.nobodys.nobodyАй бұрын
.... you can buy a used bike for $15. Or free. Not a valid excuse, get to it!
@UMIunited Жыл бұрын
I remember the exact moment I truly "learned" how to ride a bike. I had relied on the training wheels a lot, so when I knew that they weren't there, I basically just fell over every time. But in some instances, I noticed that I just went in a straight line even without the training wheels. Yet in practice I couldn't pull that off 90% of the time. One day my friend was practicing with me. He had just learned a few weeks earlier and was extremely enthusiastic about teaching me. So he held my seat and pushed me....or so I thought. I looked back when I felt I was going a bit fast and immediately realised that he didn't even hold my seat let alone push me. It felt weird but amazing because I didn't fall over that time. But then I hit a wall and stopped. From then on, I could properly ride without training wheels.
@ef6820 Жыл бұрын
Just took my kids off balance bike and onto a pedal bike with wheels. This video is extremely relevant and timely for us! I could tell the training wheels were actually “un-training wheels” and will be removing them just after they understand how to pedal. I give them 2 weeks on “training” wheels, tops.
@playgroundchooser Жыл бұрын
4:32 THIS!! This is *EXACTLY* what happened to my daughter when she was learning to ride her bike. The reliance on the training wheel to keep her upright was a real hard habit to break, because she had learned to turn at speed without having to do the lean. We didn't make that mistake again with my son, and he took to it much quicker using a little strider type bike.
@takatamiyagawa5688 Жыл бұрын
Eh, training wheels worked for me. I recall finding it annoying when the training wheels touched the ground because they don't roll as smoothly as the main wheels, so I naturally learned to maneuver the bike without letting the training wheels touch the ground. They were angled so the bike could lean a few degrees each side. Sure, this does not permit more aggressive turns possible with no training wheels, but, I had confidence that if I could keep the bike within that tight upright envelope, then I could handle it when the barriers to that envelope were removed.
@harcormor Жыл бұрын
As someone who within the past 3 years had to go through teaching a kid with training wheels I definitely see they are the wrong way to go about it. Had the hardest time with the transfer from the training wheels because: 1) she got used to them catching her, and 2) also got freaked out by how the back wheel came off when it naturally tried to lean. So then with the wheels off she was afraid to let it lean like it needed to. We eventually got there, but it just took longer than it should have.
@sunnyskies3969 Жыл бұрын
My first time riding a bike started like this. I hopped on the bike with my step-dad holding the bike steady, and started getting rolled forward. He kept pushing me and I was pedaling. I never noticed he got left behind, I thought he was still supporting my bike. Id actually managed to keep my balance first try without realizing. I then stood on a curb, hopped on and rode off again. I love how quickly I picked it up. Thank you step dad for one of the few fond memories I have of you. We don't talk anymore
@ManLikeEddy Жыл бұрын
your profile picture explains why
@sunnyskies3969 Жыл бұрын
@@ManLikeEddy haha, no, not the reason. My parents don't really care. They judge, but at the end of the day they could care less. Nah its my mom's side of the family (stepdad) and the way they treated me that led to us not talking anymore
@ManLikeEddy Жыл бұрын
@@sunnyskies3969 eh it's just parents nonsense when you grow up to be older you learn to understand that you shouldn't involve yourself and just live your best life and I understand you might say your best life is with them but did they ever think their best life was with you?
@cooldudessurvival Жыл бұрын
Honestly teaching someone how to ride is very fulfilling, when I was 8 I taught my 5 year old neighbor how to ride and I still feel proud of that 15 years later.
@Beezenberry Жыл бұрын
Ever watch a video that perfectly expresses a thought you’ve had for years but never said anything about. 🤯 Wouldn’t expect anything less from Seth. My eldest daughter didn’t learn to ride a bike until the training wheels came off, now she’s never off her bike. My youngest however still clings to the idea she needs her training wheels. Can’t wait to show her this video. Hopefully we will be adding another member to our riding squad soon. 🤞Thank you Berm Peak Express. 👍🇦🇺
@mtbwithtfb Жыл бұрын
I hope every parent, include my daughter who is expecting my first granddaughter in August, watches this video. I would love to see my granddaughter get into mountain biking with me. Thanks Seth.
@ArturPiel Жыл бұрын
100% true on all here. Another useful thing I did to help my kids learn pedalling when transitioning from the balance bike is build a simple stand for the pedal bike out of wood to keep the back wheel in the air. That way the kid can learn pedalling on a stationery bike. And adding that to knowledge of how to balance, had the youngest riding off-road and pump track at age of 3 with a huge grin on his face.
@tompang5296 Жыл бұрын
My childhood best friend and I incentivised each other to get rid of our training wheels as quickly as possible. Both our bikes' training wheels were elevated, so we both experienced fabulous bursts of speed and smoothness whenever one of us managed to balance on two wheels whenever we raced each other. We had been itching to remove our training wheels for almost a year by the time our parents decided to have our training wheels removed!
@feathermerchant Жыл бұрын
Well, I did learn to ride using those 'ineffective' training wheels! Circa 1954, I noticed that sometimes both training wheels were off the ground. I went home and, all by my lonesome, did my first task as a mechanic and removed the training wheels. Double sense of accomplishment (in spite of parental neglect)!
@jeskli11 Жыл бұрын
I was born in 2002, two-wheeled balance bikes weren't really a thing at least in Europe, so I obviously started riding with training wheels. Unfortunately my parents didn't take any photos or videos from those days, but the moment, when the elevated wheels both detached from the ground and I was balancing the bike by myself is one of my most memorable experiences from my childhood. That might have been perhaps my third ride on the street. After that my dad took the training wheels off and never had to mount them back.
@gosera-1108 Жыл бұрын
I was also started riding with traning wheels here in Europe and as you asoon i could balance with out having them touch the ground they disapare, which is why im so confused when i see them installed so they always contact the ground becuse that wasnt the purpose for them
@tjchad1 Жыл бұрын
Also, it's just a lot of fun to just pump around flat ground without pedaling- same as on a skateboard seeing how long you can cruise without putting a foot down. Good to learn all the dynamics involved.
@ReneParlesak Жыл бұрын
Hi Seth! Maybe you read this. I'm 45 and live in Austria. As I grew up my parents did not teach me how to ride a bike but my brother and I got one of this old folding bikes that were popular in the 1980s. We were to short to start riding siting on the seat so we started by climbing up to the seat from the luggage rack in the back. That was possible the worst way of learning how to ride a bike 😂. My kids are spoiled as I happen to get them a Woom 1 out of Christians garage when Woom bikes first started here in Vienna. Since then they went through quite a view bikes and are now both riding their Mountainbikes better than a lot of adults. They are 10 and 7 now. I can just confirm that balance bikes are the best way to go and also it is important to let them decide how fast they want to learn and not pressure them too much. Cheers from across the big pond René
@jamieamendolagine205 Жыл бұрын
I completely agree with you. Strangely I ended up with the training wheels anyway. We had our toddlers on balance bikes, and they loved it. Once we got pedal bikes, they didn't quite get it. After a month or so of them not getting it, I gave in and installed the training wheels. They then road the pedal bikes for a few months. Eventually I took of the training wheels and, just like your were saying about how you transitioned, I ran behind them for a bit. I have three kids basically the same age, and they were all riding pedal bikes without the training wheels one day 5 minutes apart. -- I highly recommend balance bikes, and no training wheels, it just didn't happen that way for us.
@ericthompson3574 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for the video. It popped up on my ten year olds KZbin, the next day we removed his pedals and training wheels. Three hours later the pedals were back on the bike without the training wheels. He ride for hours, He loves it. Balance was his biggest concern.
@ollythomas6702 Жыл бұрын
My grandad taught me. After riding round the park on flat ground with training wheels, he took them off and put me at the top of a hill. Pushed me off and I did indeed balance. I was upright all the way down the hill as I gained massive speed and went straight into the metal slide. It hurt quite a lot 🤣 I have no idea why I neither steered away or used the brakes, but it did certainly teach me I didn't need the training wheels any more.. 😅
@Logarithm906 Жыл бұрын
I was similar, I spent way too much time with training wheels, my parents got tired of it and took me up a hill (well actually a volcano...) and *push*. I finished figuring it out by the time I got to the bottom. I did similar with my dyspraxic cousin, she had a fair bit of practice with being pushed and balancing in the garden but that pushing force isn't natural. So we took her to a (shallower hill) and let her go down it a few times, first few times was just to keep her feet off the ground, then she practiced placing her feet on the pedals while balancing (but not actually pedaling), then we added pedalling to the mix but only to get used to turning the pedals while balancing, not to produce power. After a few times she had the confidence to actually put some power down into the pedals and off she went. The problem was stopping her once she got it all together...
@Panfleto89 Жыл бұрын
Seth, thanks for the explanation. It makes so much more sense now. I was very critical of the balance bikes, mainly because I would see kids still using them a lot instead of bikes with pedals. I think that is a point that does needs to be made. Once, the kid knows how to balance, there is not need to keep them on that style bike longer than needed.
@BermPeakExpress Жыл бұрын
Interestingly enough, A LOT of kids keep riding their balance bikes after they learn to ride a pedal bike. To them it's just another toy that provides another type of fun. To me they're good for small spaces like a driveway
@sandy_knight Жыл бұрын
My dad spent months trying to teach me to ride in the mid 80s, unfortunately he couldn't ride a bike himself so he didn't really understand the mechanics of balancing on a bike so he failed in his endeavours. I eventually taught myself but only after I'd grown enough so my feet touched the ground.
@moladiver6817 Жыл бұрын
In Dutch we don't call these training wheels but side wheels and they're meant to give the smallest kids the ability to ride a bike. I never thought of these wheels as training wheels and they specifically don't teach kids to learn to ride a bike. They're only there to keep them from tipping over. So traning wheels sounds quite strange to me. I don't have kids and I have no idea how it goes these days. Holland is also a radically different place when it comes to cycling so it's difficult to compare anyway. Side wheels don't teach kids to cycle just as walkers don't teach kids to walk.
@kimobous1076 Жыл бұрын
Nice
@amysilverstone9059 Жыл бұрын
I started on training wheels, my dad decided to keep those for as long as I need to get the basics of my controls. Then he took me to the local school's stadium place without training wheels, he was supporting the bike for me to get used to moving, and then he would let go, and he challenged me with going as far as I can without losing control... Most often I just couldn't feel when he was letting the bike go so when I started to getting how to balance, I was really surprised to start seeing him meters behind - it felt like he was holding me the whole time right until I started losing control. Later I got better and better, my final "exam" was cycling back home which I successfully completed. I was not young to be fair, I was like 6 or 7... But damn that was worth it, I love cycling nowadays.
@kaylee6208 Жыл бұрын
My first bike had training wheels, and I remember pretty quickly my mom took one side off so there was just one. I still remember how much harder it was to turn in the direction the training wheel was on, and was very happy when I got them both off and didn't have anything getting in the way of my turns.
@KarlosEPM Жыл бұрын
That' s exactly how I learned!
@The4Crawler Жыл бұрын
I could never get the hang of training wheels, especially with "adult supervision". One day, a kid down the street had a small bike w/o training wheels he was riding. I think he got called in for lunch and I asked him if I could try the bike while he was inside. A few minutes later and I was riding around the block. It was the lack of "advice" on what to do and not do that was the biggest help. Instead, just get on the bike and figure out how it works.
@eoinkenny3188 Жыл бұрын
One of my earliest memories was when I was around 3/4 and I first encountered a bike with training wheels. Given that I already knew how to ride (as Seth described, plus scraped knees) I had your typical 4 year old reaction of getting immensely frustrated with it and crying because I couldn't turn how I wanted😂
@ChrisLewisthx1377 Жыл бұрын
This video came out at just the right time, so thanks! I’d been struggling to get my twins riding, though I’d seen them demonstrate all the needed skills separately - they could pedal, they could balance and corner on scooters, etc., and I’d filmed them lifting the rear wheel up on training wheels so had identified the problem. But this video, along with the footage I’d taken of them, helped to demonstrate the plan to them. They love KZbin Kids, so an external source of validation was supremely helpful. The next day we went out without training wheels or pedals, and within 30 minutes of each other they were riding independently. That was about a month ago; last weekend they came with me on a ride and did 10km on 16” wheels!
@seansnyder2855 Жыл бұрын
It's good to see you finally accepting your hand in life and riding bikes more your size Seth.
@daanbos5918 Жыл бұрын
In Dutch we call balance bikes “loopfietsen” or “walkbikes” which in my opinion is more accurate
@nafakirabratmu Жыл бұрын
For some reason I still remember vividly the day I learned how to ride a bike on two wheels back when I was 3 years old too. I had a bike with helper wheels, and my father told me to try and ride it in such a way, so the helper wheels made as little noise as possible. Over the course of a day, my dad gradually bent them higher and higher until the moment they were so high it was practically impossible for them to touch the ground without me falling over.
@Nikioko Жыл бұрын
0:19: NO! “Balance bikes” are NOT a relatively new development in bicycle history. The opposite is true: Run bikes, also known as dandy horses or, after its inventor, draisines, are the oldest form of bicycles! Karl Drais invented his “Laufmaschine” in 1817.
@ChrisakaPES Жыл бұрын
I learned at around 21 on some public bike rentals so I could move around with friends and they essentially played the dad roll on a incline street we were on. Thankfully the people nearby on the bar patio were nice about it and turned it into a positive experience.
@shoobydooby2564 Жыл бұрын
100% agree that balance bikes are the right way to teach a kid how to ride a bike. I couldnt get the hang of riding a 2 wheeled bike until I was 8 or 9 years old, and i was practicing for a couple years. i only learned how after coasting down a hill on my dads rusty, old bike from his childhood with pedals that couldnt turn (basically an accadental balance bike)
@bjamin Жыл бұрын
This is how I wanted to teach my daughter, but it freaked my wife out not having pedals, so she failed a lot with the training wheels until she let me do old school of running behind holding her seat as she wanted to ride with her friends.
@michaelmann3636 Жыл бұрын
I have preached this to all my neighbors with kids for a long time now. When my brother and I learned to ride at age 4-5, we where just given pedal bikes right from the get go, no stinking training wheels. Of course it was pre 1970 and it was survive or die.😂
@retroryan838 Жыл бұрын
I would say pre 1960. Safety became important in the 60s from what I’ve heard.
@michaelmann3636 Жыл бұрын
@@retroryan838 totally depends on where you or who you were raised by, I would say.
@aviphysics11 ай бұрын
All my kids started on a two wheel with pedals removed, then learned how to peddle on training wheels before transitioning quickly to doing it all.
@kjellg65326 ай бұрын
Our little toddler had a balance bicycle and a toy tractor (tricycle) at the same time. The tractor to grow muscles in the legs. He mastered the bike at 2 yrs and some weeks later a pedal bike.
@skitterly Жыл бұрын
After a really bad bike accident in 6th grade I had a couple years where I didn’t ride bikes out of fear. So in high school I had to completely reteach myself how to ride a bike. And the balance bike method is kind of exactly what I did. I would try to peddle but keeping my feet ready to catch myself if I tilt. I also kept my seat low to touch the ground. It took a while but the more I practiced the less and less I needed to catch myself :)
@crischansan Жыл бұрын
I taught myself to bike, maybe in middle school. Now that I've seen that 5:54 I realized that that's how I learned - quickly and didn't even fell. Since I taught myself and was alone, I used both feet like that without putting them on the pedals and just slowly glided and tried to balance. It was like instinct, but this knowledge will help me to teach, maybe, my future child/children or other people who want to ride a bicycle. This is like an 'Aha!" moment. Thank you.
@sgainforth Жыл бұрын
A small counterpoint for balance bikes: two of my kids were just never that interested in their balance bikes. They rode them occasionally, but they never really used them *fast* enough to learn to balance. When their friends started riding pedal bikes they were suddenly interested, but trying to teach them immediately on pedal bikes proved difficult, as they were trying to learn balance and pedaling at the same time. For the older one we sorta forced our way through, and he ended up not liking biking...probably from all the difficulties and frustrations we both felt. For the younger one we actually bought training wheels and had him tool around with the training wheels until he got the pedaling down, and then teaching him without the training wheels was easier. My third son, the youngest, loved his balance bike and rode it constantly. For him, when it came time to graduate to a full pedal bike, the transition was easy. His was the first time I believed people when they said starting with a balance bike was better. For my older two I actually think it was counterproductive.
@MSUTri Жыл бұрын
Perhaps the key for less interested kids is to find a gentle sloped hill for them to go down with the balance bike. They can pick up enough speed to make it interesting, but not so much to make it difficult to control.
@sgainforth Жыл бұрын
@@MSUTri Yeah, knowing what I know now I'd start them back on the balance bike in earnest. Or, I love Seth's idea of just taking their pedals off and getting used to the actual bike they'll end up pedaling.
@char1194 Жыл бұрын
As a kid after using training wheels for awhile, my parents decided to put me onto the next step of learning to ride a bike by... removing the left wheel. Not sure why they thought that was a great idea but I got really good at riding while leaning to my right! idk if its cos of this but I do have some trouble making sharp turns, even though im quite proficient at other aspects of riding a bike
@clovisdesousa3366 Жыл бұрын
I ended up doing the opposite. My son used training wheels for about 5 months. He as able to learn how a bike feels under him like turning and all the basics all on his own. After that,I took them off and he just took off riding by himself. He basically taught himself to ride. Now, a month later, he's on a mountain bike.
@johndef5075 Жыл бұрын
Sounds like my experience. This is another one of those not really a problem problems😅
@Jehty_ Жыл бұрын
@@johndef5075 Clovis just told us that it took his son 5 months to learn how to ride a bike. How do you consider that "not really a problem"?
@Srt3D01-db-01 Жыл бұрын
They can take all the time they want. They are actually having fun, not competing. I probably just use regular bikes and use the usual training: learn to balance and progress as they want and how they confident feel instead of buying an expensive "balance bike" crap. So much overexplaining this subject on this video , still
@BermPeakExpress Жыл бұрын
There's nothing you can do to stop an athletic kid from mastering anything physical
@clovisdesousa3366 Жыл бұрын
@Jehty21 I let him learn on his own and on his own time. He loves riding his bike and is now interested on taking on new terrain on it. It was never a problem.
@DaveFer4 ай бұрын
My dude! Thanks so much for making this video. After showing this video to my wife and kids, I took the pedals off my kids' bikes and they basically taught themselves to balance-ride and then pedal-ride in like 2 days each. I've been trying to get my kids to try learning literally for years and they've been super resistant. Also, for years, I've been trying to explain to my wife and in-laws that the kids should learn without training wheels ... and I don't think they were onboard with that. But now they are. LOL
@username5155 Жыл бұрын
It’s amazing how I literally can never ride a bike because I’m autistic and people don’t make bikes with training wheels for people as large as me. Great video about a man talking about something not made for him.
@frontenac5083 Жыл бұрын
*If you want to explain something, get a clue about the basics! Centrifugal force does not exist (**4:00**). Go back to physics 1.0.1.*
@asdfoifhvjbkaos Жыл бұрын
that's like saying that "cold air" doesn't exist because it's really just "less hot" air. sure it's technically incorrect but the statement is perfectly useful in casual conversation when you're trying to explain something.
@Nick-dv3ww Жыл бұрын
Centrifugal forces absolutely do exist depending on your reference frame.
@Nerderkips Жыл бұрын
Balance bikes arent new? they were literally the original bikes lol
@nickpro1 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video. My child was on a balance bike since 15 months old and had a blast. I totally recommend a balance bike for any kid because of how much fun we found it to be.
@FriendBe Жыл бұрын
When i was 14 my friend (who was 12 i think) didnt know how to ride his bike so i taught him how. The way i did was by basically just having him ride my bike down a slope without his feet on the pedals. He figured it out pretty quickly. Didnt know that was a common way to teach people so thats cool to hear. Great vid.
@guususus Жыл бұрын
In dutch training wheels are called “zijwieltjes” literally translates to “side wheels”, I think that’s a better designation for them. But it makes sense that we have that here cause we have more bicycles than people.
@RyuuTenno Жыл бұрын
When you brought up that the best way would be to push yourself around with your feet, that made me realize that that's how I learned. For a while I had a bike with training wheels, and then it finally broke beyond repair at one point, and so for several years I didn't have access to any kind of bike. I ended up learning how to ride far later than I would've liked, but, I do remember doing it fairly quickly when I did. And, during that time, I was able to kind of kick off the ground a little bit at a time when trying to figure it out. And this all took like 2 days max to figure the whole thing out, cause first was just going straight, second was turning, lol. But, after that I was able to just fly around the neighborhood on a bike pretty well (including being dumb and hitting patches of loose sand on a corner while changing speeds/gears without trouble, lol). But, I do remember that the training wheels always gave me trouble, but, could never figure out *why* they gave me trouble.
@kaimon23 Жыл бұрын
Seeing kid Seth made me smile, so adorable 😢
@SoLowKaspar Жыл бұрын
Thank you for making this video. It has never crossed my mind that a balance bike was a thing.
@chriscox4085 Жыл бұрын
Good explanation for motorcycle physics as well.
@_film_flashback Жыл бұрын
When you say it's not the gyroscopic effect of the wheels, consider this. Take a complete bike wheel, attach a string to one side of the axil, spin the wheel in an upright orientation as fast as it would be spinning on the bike, let the wheel spin suspended from the rope from one side. see how well or not well it holds its stability. I think you think the wheel needs to spin faster than it does to exhibit the gyroscopic effect. That said, yes, it's also the steering geometry. Everything you said about that is correct.
@Fezezen Жыл бұрын
I learned to ride a bike without training wheels when I think I was 5. I recently relived that memory when helping my 6 year old niece learn to do it too. She was terrified, but kept trying with me franticly running behind her to make sure she didn't crash.
@Ronald-qj5nx Жыл бұрын
I was about 5 yrs old & had training wheels on my 1st bike, I could never get used to riding without them, even with my dad running beside/behind me, I got demoralised and the bike got put aside for a while as my dad wouldn't put the trainer wheels back on. One day, on my own I decided that I wanted to play with it. The back yard had a slope on a portion of it and so I took the bike there and started rolling down the slope with my feet out the side for support. It didn't take me long to realise that I didn't require my legs as outriggers any more, so my feet went onto the pedals and next thing I knew, I was pedalling back up the slope!!! I had taught myself how to ride!!! This process took me maybe an hour, 2 hrs at most, I was SO proud of myself
@TSeific Жыл бұрын
Great video!!! Balance is absolute key (look at Nino Schurter's training). Reinvented balance bike is often overlooked. But the most important for your child - have fun, go outside, move (even with training wheels).
@killerwaffle7632 Жыл бұрын
I learned on training wheels before these were known, or maybe they didn't exist. But my little cousins learned on these, and they learned so much faster. I didn't learn how to ride a bike until I was 6, they learned when they were like 2! Balance bikes are great.
@macaroniwithoutcheese175 Жыл бұрын
I never really had any experience riding bikes, just some waddling around with trainers. we once went to an empty and remote nature reserve on an old airfield with paved roads, and my parents did the same thing, just without running behind. I learned pretty fast how to not crash because pavement and WWII airstrip don't feel too great on your knees.
@patrikmoller3643 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for a great video, I fully agree with you about the training wheels and my and the missus have had a few discussions about having or not having training wheels on our kids bikes My kid who's 4.5 years old learned to ride his first "real" bike just about a month ago but before that he pedaled around on his different three wheeled vehicles and also he's had two different balance bikes, one very light and then one that's a bit heavier and more like a real bike. He got his big bike when he turned four but apart from when we bought it he had no interest in even trying and we didn't want to push him to it in case it backfired, so we just let the bike sit where he could see it all the time when we where outside and one day he said he wanted to try and it didn't take many attempts before he rode by himself. I strongly believe that's a combination of letting him do it in his own pace and the experience he's had with with the balance bikes as well as pedaling his three wheelers Now a month later he's starting to get quite daring and giving his mom heart attacks when she see's his stunts, and he's also started to go on bike rides with the girls in the neighborhood :)
@iuppiterzeus9663 Жыл бұрын
I love to see that this discussed. When talking about the steering geometry of a bike - I would enjoy a detailled video on this specific topic. Maybe you even have that already, I'm pretty new on your channel and I really enjoy your content :)
@vincentstartuplarbin2786 Жыл бұрын
So true ! My kid learned to ride a bicycle like a grown up in as few time as a nap tooked me 😅 Of course this followed two or three years of balance bike (or Draisienne as called in France, dating from 1817 according to Wikipedia also a bit different, mostly lacking of front fork tilting) and tricycle or bike with training wheels pedaling. Note that during this training time, the balanced bike always was the favorite one. So in the end, the missing part - how to initiate pedaling while still not moving - was learned in minutes and mastered in days. And during this perfecting time, the most useful advice where the ones from my motorcycle school: don't look down, look where you want to go (not where you're afraid to go), lean forward a bit when twisting the handlebars.
@kamicokrolock6 ай бұрын
I'm all for Balance bikes. I had training wheels as that was what we had at the time. Once they came off I had to relearn how to ride a bike because they had been a crutch I never Developed the feel or core strength for it even with a set of training wheel that didn't quite touch the ground. My solution was to coast down our yard, in the grass, where there was a shallow hill, sans pedaling. Eventually I would get the proper feel of it and put my feet on the pedals an off I'd go. I ,for years would recommend to people who hadn't learned to ride yet to just get a regular bike (or take off the training wheels), sit on it and coast down a hill and forget about the pedals until they were having fun and confident with coasting.
@dom-romer663 Жыл бұрын
0:49 that deep sigh at running into the car brings back memories lol