Every rider has different needs when learning mountain biking basics. But some approaches just seem to work better for us women.

Trek Dirt Series Mountain Bike Camps is the longest-running program focused on women’s-specific instruction. After 17 years of staging both women’s and co-ed downhill and cross-country camps across the U.S. and western Canada, coaches have found pathways that seem to help female riders learn faster and happier.
“Women tend to like to know how a skill works, what to do, and when to do it,” said Candace Shadley, director of the mountain bike camp series. Her Dirt Series crew breaks down more tendencies like that right here.
Progress Step By Step, Celebrate Small Successes

Women are inclined to break up big tasks into smaller, more manageable pieces, said Shadley. This works well in mountain biking. It can give female riders a mental break and possibly also an uptick in confidence.
Picture a ledge on a rocky technical climb, for example.
“First, you learn how to lift your wheel with a pedal stroke, then add in specific timing, and then incorporate the weight shift needed to apply that skill to a clean ledge feature,” she said.
Many failed attempts are critical, according to Dirt Series coach Lisa Sher, a Level 3 instructor trainer for the Bike Instructor Certification Program.
“You must build new muscle memory. Having a step-by-step progression allows you to progress safely with lower risk,” she said.
You’ll know you’re progressing when you feel better about approaching a ledge in the middle of additional challenges, according to Shadley.
She said, “Small successes add up to big successes, and the more accomplishments you accumulate, the easier it is to envision accumulating even more.”
Work The Analytical Angle in Mountain Biking

Find Riders You Can Identify With
