Australian Mountain Bike

WOMEN’S MTB

- WORDS: Cameron McGavin PHOTOS: Phil Warring

Cameron McGavin looks into the booming women’s mountain bike scene around the tropical city of Cairns.

If you build it, they will come. Just ask the TNQ Women’s Mountain Bike Group, which is smashing through the wall of lagging female cycling participat­ion with a grass-roots movement that’s transformi­ng lives and adding another layer to Cairns’ vibrant MTB scene.

The TNQ Women’s Mountain Bike Group Facebook page has more than 300 followers and more than 100 women proudly wear its jersey. The group’s social rides can attract up to 40 riders and last year it joined with the Cairns Mountain Bike Club to establish a women’s enduro racing series at Smithfield Mountain Bike Park. Members are embarking on MTB-related businesses that are feeding the love back into the group. Things are snowballin­g.

“With a little bit of pushing it’s turned into this amazing community of women,” says Cass Abell, one of the group’s founders. “You’re at the trailhead, you’ll see someone and then suddenly there are 10 of you going out on this mission. Everyone’s so keen.”

So where did the group start, what’s it all about and what next? We met with Cass and two of the group’s other key movers and shakers, Jade Robinson and Jacinta Pink, to find out.

MEETING UP

Jade: “When I moved here I had no girlfriend­s whatsoever, so pretty much anyone I saw on the trail who looked like a female I was like, ‘Let’s be friends’. I can honestly say that 99.9 per cent of my girlfriend­s here I’ve met through riding. And these are two of my best friends.”

Jacinta: “I was riding by myself one day at a race and so was Jade. She was like, ‘You should do it with the girls!’ so – I dunno – I just decided to start racing.”

Cass: “I was the mum who rolled onto the tracks in a set of lycra pants that I’d cut off myself.” Jacinta: “I remember when I met you!” Jade: “She was wearing a leopard-print singlet, knee pads, short cut-off lycra…” Jacinta: “I’m like, ‘Who is this chick?’” Cass: “I’d never ridden with girls before. I started off riding with all the boys and I’d heard about a couple of the girls riding, so I friended them on Facebook saying, ‘Can we catch up and ride?’. When we met they were like goddesses and I’m this dork… it took one ride before I went to the mountain bike shop and got cool!”

STARTING THE GROUP

Cass: “There were maybe three or four of us and there were other girls around who rode but noone was really doing anything together.”

Jade: “So we were like, ‘Let’s go on more adventures!’. I’d ridden some amazing trails with boys and I think that’s how it really started. I thought, ‘I want to take 12 girls on this amazing trail I rode’.

Jacinta: “Because usually it’s the boys and one girl.”

Jade: “And the girl gets, not left behind, but…”

Jacinta: “Well, you’re riding by yourself.” Jade: “So we put that on Facebook and called it ‘Girls’ Adventure Group’ and then it just grew.”

Cass: “We started doing rides once a month. We’d get 12 of us and do these epic downhill rides. Then it started getting to be more and more rides. So we all went, ‘Why don’t we get everybody in on this?’ and Jade put together the TNQ Women’s Mountain Bike Group page.”

CREATING A WOMEN’S ENDURO SERIES

Jade: “We all ride for a bike shop called Discovery Cycles. Larry and Stacey [Lanza] own it and Stacey is the busiest woman I know – she loves riding but needs something to look forward to and train for. She said she’d love to race but the only thing she was doing was Triple-R every year, so I said, ‘How about we create a race?’. We made a plan, spoke to the club and that created the girls’ enduro. We did three races last year, each three stages.”

Cass: “We had way more people than we thought we’d get.”

Jade: “We had 35 riders!”

Cass: “We were thinking, ‘Where are these women coming from?’”

BUILDING THE SKILLS BASE

Jade: “I wanted to get the girls riding particular sections of each race because if you’re not riding with people who push you it’s hard to ride anything new and out here [Smithfield] most of it’s technical. So the plan was to do a skills clinic on a particular technical section and get them riding it comfortabl­y so they could race it. That led to Cass doing her clinic and she now has a business.”

Cass: “Yeah, it’s called Ride Fundamenta­ls. This other chick Ret [Lauretta Howarth] was doing a lot of cross-country stuff and when I got my MTBA coaching certificat­e she said, ‘Come and give me a hand’. But I was like, ‘Nah, let’s push these girls and get them doing cool stuff rather than just riding on the road and up dirt trails’. So we help women get to the enduro level.”

Jade: “We’ve all been beginners. I was a complete beginner when I moved here. I had my husband, and he is an amazing rider, but learning from a guy is completely different to learning from a girl. That’s why it’s so good Cass and Ret are doing what they’re doing.”

Cass: “Girls get so intimidate­d riding with men when they’re beginners and we really want to pull that back. They’ll get pushed down something, break their wrist or collarbone and then you never get them back on again.”

LOOKING AHEAD

Jacinta: “The normal enduros are pretty gnarly and it’s only been us riding them, so we hope getting the girls confident enough for the women’s enduros might start them onto doing full enduros. It’s all about building confidence. We have lots of girls who haven’t done the enduros who are capable of doing it, they’re just lacking confidence. The word ‘race’ makes it scary but they just need to see it’s really just fun.”

Cass: “The plan is just to keep building the community. Last year was the tip of the iceberg, this year we’re gathering troops and by the end of next year I’m hoping we’ll have a solid crew of girls that we’ve really pulled up to the next level. That’s what it’s all about – getting women confident, happy and keen on bikes.”

Jacinta: “Forcing them to! Building an army!”

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