Lessons in Flight and Falling: A Midlife Mountain Biker’s Tale

There comes a time in every man’s life when he must accept the simple, horrible truth: he is no longer twenty and realises that the mountain is no longer a metaphor—but an obstacle. Before I hung up my mountain biking gloves and retired to the smooth, civilized tarmac of road cycling, where the road, for the most part, doesn’t try to kill you, and it’s just the motorists you’ve got to watch. I decided—common sense unaccounted for—to take on Richmond’s Buttermilk Trail.

It’s called the “Buttermilk” because, back in the 1800s, before refrigeration and electricity, farmers would leave their milk cans in the cold water there to keep them from curdling on the way to market. That’s right. A place so cold and treacherous that dairy survived without modern technology. Naturally, I thought this would be a perfect place for a man in his forties with the bone density of a biscuit to throw himself down a hill at breakneck speeds.

Now, any sane mountain biker will tell you—before you tackle a new trail, you either ride it slowly first, or you walk it like a normal human being with a mortgage and a desire to see another birthday.

I did neither.

Because while my birth certificate says “middle-aged,” my brain still insists I’m a 22-year-old X-Games finalist with the cardiovascular health of a gazelle. This is, of course, a colossal lie. Because the moment I started pedalling, my lungs were making a sound like a punctured accordion, my thighs were screaming what the hell are you doing, my back complains louder than a French waiter, and I could swear my femur muttered, “Break me and I swear I’ll never heal.”

But logic, as always, was out for lunch.

I launched into the Buttermilk at full tilt, powered by overconfidence, half-remembered BMX tricks, and a breakfast of questionable decisions. And I must admit, at first, it was… amazing. Truly. The wind on my face, the fresh woodland air, the sun bouncing off leaves like something out of a shampoo commercial. I was flowing, riding through tree roots and wooden bridges like a man possessed—or delusional.

The woods greeted me with open arms—and subtle menace. Roots tried to grab my tires like nature’s tripwire. Squirrels froze in shock as I barrelled past, their tiny eyes blinking in disbelief. Somewhere up in the branches, an owl muttered, “amateur,” and went back to sleep. A deer near the trail lifted its head from grazing, looked at me—just looked—and then shook its head like it had seen this episode before.

Seasoned riders—fit, young, Lycra-clad maniacs—whizzed past me, but I didn’t care. I was in my own world. I’d been biking since I was barely out of nappies. I could strip and rebuild one blindfolded. I felt at home, even if that home now had the structural integrity of a damp shed.

It was glorious. Birds chirped, legs pumping like pistons. I was flying. I was fast. I was…

… at the summit of a drop I hadn’t seen coming.

Ten feet or more. A cliff disguised as a trail. A surprise courtesy of gravity, arrogance, and poor planning.

My brain screamed “Brake!” My heart screamed “Jump!” My bones whispered, “Please, not again.” I tapped the brakes. Not too hard—just enough to turn this from a plummet into a vaguely controlled descent. And then I was airborne. If birds were watching, they weren’t admiring. They were laughing.

Somewhere in the distance, a raccoon paused mid-trash-dig, stood up, and saluted.

I screamed. Not a manly grunt or a stoic shout. No, it was the full-body wail of a grown man who knows he’s about to become a headline. “Idiot Local Tries Flight, Fails Gracefully.”

But somehow, by the grace of luck, physics, or divine comedy, I landed. Two wheels down. Everything intact. I rolled to a stop in a clearing and promptly flopped to the ground like a Victorian fainting lady.

Two hikers approached. Kindly people. Looked like they were out for a gentle afternoon walk, not to find a middle-aged man sprawled like roadkill in board shorts. They asked, “Are you okay? Were you chased by a bear?”

“Anything hurt or broken?” one of them asked.

I blinked. Took stock. All bones accounted for. No visible blood.

And I said, “Nothing’s hurt. Just… my pride.”

Which, frankly, hurts worse.

And that was the last time I rode the Buttermilk Trail. Because as much as I love the thrill, I’ve also grown quite fond of being alive. And my knees? They’ve sent a formal complaint to HR.

Now, where’s my road bike and that nice flat Capital Trail tarmac that doesn’t try to murder me?


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75 responses to “Lessons in Flight and Falling: A Midlife Mountain Biker’s Tale”

  1. Sarada Gray Avatar
    Sarada Gray

    The bone density of a biscuit – love it

    Liked by 4 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Trish Avatar

    sounds terrifying!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      It used to be exciting but when you reach a certain age, mortality and pain becomes apparent 😂.

      Liked by 3 people

  3. Megan Avatar

    Lol great writing, I’m a big fan of the raccoon saluting you 😂

    Liked by 4 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks! 😊

      Liked by 1 person

  4.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    This column hit very close to home for me. Long before I turned 75, I could be considered one of the trendsetters in Virginia mountain biking having written “Mountain Bike! Virginia” in the 1990s. While I was never a competitive mountain biker, most weekends you could find me discovering places to mountain bike from the flatlands of False Cape State Park to the distant mountains in far Southwest Virginia. I made a few bucks and had a great time doing it, but I hung up my cycling self and sold my last bike several years ago. I too had to eventually realize that I no longer had the skills necessary to put foot to pedal and propel myself into a vast and beautiful world. It’s interesting to see how Virginia mountain biking has blossomed, and in my more immodest moments I’d like to think that “Mountain Bike! Virginia” played some part in that….

    Liked by 3 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Wow, it is so nice to hear from you! Thank you so much for sharing. And thank you so much for the Mountain biking legacy. ☺️

      Like

  5. midwife.mother.me. Avatar

    I absolutely loved this! I consider myself a daredevil London cyclist who will cross the city from Shepherds Bush to Camberwell and back two, even 3 times per week whatever the weather. But mountain biking absolutely terrifies me for all the reasons that you so hilariously describe! Give me London traffic any day. But i think we can both agree that the adrenaline, the wind-in-hair, the feeling of freedom from cycling is an unbeatable feeling!

    Liked by 3 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Yes, plus your belief (or illusion) in the control of the bike is a pretty amazing feeling ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. midwife.mother.me. Avatar

        I swear that IF I live to a ripe old age, it’ll be because I cycled. And if I don’t, it’ll be because I cycled! Your partner and loved ones will thank you for not accidentally flying off a cliff. Mine will thank me for not going head to head with a bus. Soo boring, so much less adrenaline!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. AKings Avatar

        Still quite the test of your mortality though ☺️. Was it one of those double deckers? ☺️

        Like

  6. The Oceanside Animals Avatar

    Java Bean: “That looks like the kind of trail our Dada would have enjoyed riding back in the day! Well, except for the part about riding off a cliff …”

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      The cliff is part of it ☺️. It’s enjoyable ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

  7. Chase Avatar

    Enjoyed this read!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks. 😊

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Chase Avatar

        Pleasure! 🙂

        Liked by 1 person

  8. Amy Bellamy, Author Avatar

    This is great! 😂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thank you ☺️

      Like

  9. Mags Win Avatar

    I enjoyed this so much. I laughed so hard at what you said about the raccoon and birds. I love the way you write. I can understand why you no longer choose to bike on the Buttermilk Trail.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thank you 😊.

      Liked by 1 person

  10. dalton perry Avatar

    Nicely riddin. Reminds me of my Stingray days and the miles of hills we rode outback. Miscalculating a slight bend in a steep firebreak no one dared run. Pulling out thorns for weeks from the prickly pear patch I drove through. I need to write scars from those hills on day. See you on the trail, or in a tale.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Like

  11. mitchleco Avatar

    Haha, this was a super fun read, thank you! Reminds me of the few times I went mountain biking years ago. The most heart racing event was a rattlesnake in my path. In my mind, I half skidded half slid to a controlled crash just a few feet from the monster. In reality, I probably looked like a buffoon with the dexterity of an ogre crashlanding WAY before I was anywhere close to danger.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Bet the rattlesnake got scared though 😂.

      Liked by 1 person

  12. Carolina Mom Avatar
    Carolina Mom

    Ouch! That’s scary!

    Liked by 3 people

  13. Sarah Jane Avatar

    Thanks for the chuckle. This made me think of my husband – not on a mountain bike, but he has a habit of thinking he’s still 25 😂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Sometimes we all do ☺️.

      Like

  14. JAM Avatar

    I needed this laugh today A Kings. One of my favorite lines was about your back complaining more than a French waiter. Priceless and wonderfully penned as always.

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Bookstooge Avatar

    If you weren’t wearing a cup, how’d you survive the seat and the impact?

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      I wasn’t riding the seat. Like on a BMX jump.

      Liked by 2 people

      1. Bookstooge Avatar
  16. kagould17 Avatar

    Well written and witty take on realizing youth is fleeting. I was never a mountain biker, but an avid cyclist. My jam was racing down a mountain on skis and thinking I was invincible. Several times, the mountain reached up and smacked me upside the head before I realized I was in fact vincible. 6 years ago I decided the best place for my downhill skis was hanging in my garage and while the thrill is gone, so are the bruises. I too, apparently have the bone density of a biscuit. Cheers. Allan

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks Allan. Downhill skiing is extreme ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

  17. Ana Daksina Avatar

    Oh, LOL!!! I WANT some of those questionable decisions you had, for my own breakfast: don’t know what they did for your cycling (you came down on both wheels, that’s pretty centered!) ~ but they turned you into an even GREATER writer than before! Ah, hahaHA!!

    I celebrated you online today, passed on this post whole & told ’em to come see you for more. Best regards 🙋

    Liked by 3 people

    1. mjeanpike Avatar

      A most entertaining post! I have never been what you would call adventurous and would not even have tried that at 20. Glad it all worked out for the best 🙂

      Liked by 3 people

      1. Ana Daksina Avatar

        I know, me neither ~ I already KNOW I’m not that coordinated!

        Liked by 1 person

      2. AKings Avatar

        Thanks ☺️

        Like

    2. AKings Avatar

      Thank you so much Ana. I appreciate it. ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  18. snowpackjack Avatar

    I’m not sure you are safer on the road. You’re the only one not on your phone.

    Liked by 2 people

  19. leggypeggy Avatar

    I think you should say you were chased by a bear.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Fortunately not ☺️.

      Liked by 2 people

  20. lisaapaul Avatar
    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

  21. Ahzio Avatar
    Ahzio

    In 30+ years of running forest trails, not one raccoon has saluted me, although one did engage in a stand off with me. True story.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Who won the stand off? 😂

      Liked by 1 person

      1. Ahzio Avatar
        Ahzio

        He did. I had to turn around and head back in the opposite direction. And it was at sundown. (Enter Morricone music)

        Liked by 1 person

      2. AKings Avatar

        😂 that’s funny.

        Liked by 1 person

  22.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Bentrovato! Abbiamo duecentosei ossa, qualcuno ne ha di più… Nessun problema 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

  23. Gerry Palermo Avatar

    It’s the perfect blend of ‘that sounds like fun and ‘how did I survive’. The best!

    Liked by 2 people

  24.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    This is a great story. As a bloke who has been mountain biking badly since Muddy Fox bikes became cool commuting in London back in 1991, I’ve had numerous incidents like this, in fact I’ve had my face and parts of my body rearranged over the years.

    I’m now 65, retired and still giving it my best shot around the trails and am off exploring in Scotland next week, the e-bike has made it easier on trails I don’t know but still burns plenty of calories, though more speed and weight brings new challenges.

    I tried going the other way during Covid when I started doing longer trips, and bought a road/gravel bike but it certainly didn’t work for me, all those cars were far more intimidating than trees and bushes.

    The weird thing is, that I still manage to have an incident that involves the bike, me and an obstacle on every ride – even places I’ve been riding for years – new obstacles appear and I find them.

    I think I have another post coming on for my Two Wheel Fun section 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Hi! Thanks for sharing your story! I suppose London is more dynamic than a trail ☺️. I’d love to mountain bike in Scotland, if only I can still trust my endurance!

      Liked by 1 person

  25. re Avatar

    The bone density of the biscuit has entered common parlance a few hours ago and from an engineering point of view it perfectly renders its structure… :):):)

    Liked by 4 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks ☺️

      Liked by 1 person

      1.  Avatar
        Anonymous

        sure

        Liked by 1 person

  26. David Avatar

    A brilliant story I can so relate to. A colleague at work was still hurtling down steep tracks in his 60s, and after 3 hospitalisations and a concussion in 6 months his manager pointed out they were paying him to be there and if he wanted to keep his job (and his life) he had better accept reality.

    Personally I am more into hiking almost non-existent tracks, even in my late 60s. However but after my recent adventure of hiking up a stream that wasn’t even a trail, when as I stepped from one slippery rock to another my back foot slipped and I did the cartoon “horizontal 2 feet in the air, praying gravity doesn’t see me” move. Gravity did see me and I lay in the stream thinking “these rocks are comfortable, just stay there, get up slowly and hope nothing is broken because you are an hour from help with no cell coverage and nobody knows where you are”. Luckily everything still worked and after plastering up a cut on my chin (I found you can’t look at your lower chin with a phone) I walked out on adrenalin and have spent the last 5 months as my shoulders have slowly returned to normal. I have also promised my wife that I will stick to safer tracks from now on.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Hi David, thanks for sharing your story. I might try hiking too, although I think I’ll stick to the trails, I’m not exactly what you might call an “outdoorsman” ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

  27. arlene Avatar

    How lovely it must be to go back to something you love – mountain biking.🚲

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      I’ve transitioned to road biking now ☺️

      Liked by 2 people

  28. fitz77 Avatar

    Another great post. Thanks for conveying us into another world for a short while.

    Liked by 3 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊.

      Liked by 1 person

  29. Michael DeStefano Avatar

    That trail looked inviting for a hike but not road bike friendly. It would’ve have crippled me and my Cannondale.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      There is a really good road bike trail in the city of Richmond called Capital Trail. Your Cannondale would be perfect.

      Liked by 1 person

  30. Bronlima Avatar

    I am a timorous cyclist who takes it easy. On the cycle path, even old ladies out for a gentle stroll whizz past me.

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      I think I might try your way. I love cycling and I don’t think I’ll ever give it up voluntarily ☺️.

      Liked by 1 person

  31.  Avatar
    Anonymous

    Hi there. Thank you for visiting and following HoB. Much appreciated!

    Liked by 2 people

  32. gc1963 Avatar

    The child in us….

    Liked by 1 person

  33. krishnasmercy Avatar

    This reads like it’s straight out of a King of Queens episode. Kevin James would do your story justice 🙂

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thanks 😊

      Like

  34. tenzenmen Avatar

    Which country was this in?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. AKings Avatar

      The U.S. In Richmond, Virginia.

      Like

      1. tenzenmen Avatar

        Cool. I was curious as the pictures look a little like England.

        Liked by 1 person

  35. Marcela Avatar

    I loved your post. It was entertaining and funny!

    Liked by 2 people

    1. AKings Avatar

      Thank you 😊. Please subscribe if you could ☺️.

      Like

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