Free Mountain Bike Ebook
ejflash wrote:
I want your feedback on the following two questions: 1. If you had 5 minutes to talk with a pro mountain biker what question are you dying to get answered? I'd ask if he'd ever heard of Fletcher's Law of Inverse Appreciation. |
Free Mountain Bike Ebook
wrote: I'd ask if he'd ever heard of Fletcher's Law of Inverse Appreciation. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Would you please quote Fletcher's law? If it's anywhere near as good as Murphy's law, it's a winner. |
Free Mountain Bike Ebook
Leo Lichtman wrote:
wrote: I'd ask if he'd ever heard of Fletcher's Law of Inverse Appreciation. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Would you please quote Fletcher's law? If it's anywhere near as good as Murphy's law, it's a winner. The Law states that the less there is between you and the environment, the more you appreciate that environment. For example, you will see more of nature driving than you will flying over it. Get off the freeway onto a back road, and you will see still more. Get out of your car and onto a bike, and you will see yet more. But to really see and appreciate the most, you have to walk. Bill __o | How many wilderness areas do we need? _`\(,_ | How many Brahms symphonies do we need? (_)/ (_) | - Robert Marshall |
Free Mountain Bike Ebook
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Free Mountain Bike Ebook
wrote: The Law states that the less there is between you and the environment, the more you appreciate that environment. (clip) ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Lichtman's corollary: The total benefit of an outing is the product of the quality times length. If you go faster, you get less, but you get more. If you're not moving one of the factors is zero. If you're moving too fast, the other factor approaches zero. Somewhere in between, there is a maximum. |
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