Nearholmer wrote: ↑9 Sep 2024, 11:02am
I’m not a CUK Member (fraud, I hear you all cry!) because our club is BC affiliated, but there is a former CTC branch locally, and I sometimes bump into them when out and about. They are a chatty, pleasant and cheery group, but the vibe from those I’ve met is unquestionably “very mature; traditional touring or day-touring”, so hugely unlikely to appeal to newbies, or youngsters, or roadies, or MTBers, or gravelistas, or ….. well, anyone who isn’t very mature and into traditional touring. That branch has reduced in membership as time has marched onwards.
My local CTC group is doing pretty well, when I started riding with them I thought it would have faded away by now. They were mostly older than me, a youngster of 40, and there were no younger riders coming through, or much effort being made to recruit them. What I hadn't realised was this sort of cycling - where you go, who you meet, what you see and of course the cafe - does have more appeal to the mature rider. They didn't need to bring youngsters through, though they're always welcome, they'd find them when they were old enough. It's now no surprise that the largest rides are the two midweek ones. Most of those riders have never toured, in the sense of multi day trips and they won't consider the day rides to be touring. Don't be fooled by the casual appearance into thinking these are all easy rides. We try and offer a variety, but some of the regular rides are longer and more challenging than those offered by some sporting clubs, though with different objectives.
I think everyone should try a few CTC rides, I put some effort into encouraging people to do so, with some success. I'm not bothered that a lot of riders decide it's not for them, it's hard to explain, so sometimes it won't be as they were expecting. It's often possible to point them in the direction of something that is. What CTC groups can offer, often can't be found elsewhere, and there's enough participants who appreciate that to make it worthwhile. I'd hope that CTC groups continue to cater for them rather than try to boost numbers by offering what's available elsewhere.