I do almost all of my riding on the road. Partly that’s my preference, partly it’s because I live in a part of the country where the off-road options are limited. If you’re still keen, you can thread rides together by adding up lots of short bridleways and field edges with bits of road and the odd longer path, but you’ve really got to want to do it.

I did go through a phase a few years ago where I tried to ride my MTB more, but I had a deadly combination of a desire to ride hard, an ability to kick out quite a lot of power, and minimal off-roading skills. I was like a Ford Focus with a jet engine. I’d hurl myself down tracks at 400 watts, and to say I fell off a lot would only begin to cover my interactions with the terrain. In fact, I fell off always.

Dr Hutch

Multiple TT national champion, best selling author, coach and commentator, Dr Hutch writes exclusively for Cycling Weekly each week.

Three Peaks cyclocross race, Lachlan Morton rode a gravel bike. Gravel bikes are banned for the Three Peaks, so he turned it into a cross bike by fitting narrower tyres.

Then there are flat-bar gravel bikes that are, I’m often told, nothing at all like an old rigid mountain bike. Despite looking identical.

I’m not finished. I recently read a group test of all-road bikes, which were described as occupying the gap between endurance road bikes and the racier end of gravel bikes. As I’ve already admitted, this isn’t exactly my area of expertise, but that sounds like a very, very small target to fire a bike at. I reckon I could make my S-Works SL8 road bike into a workable all-road bike by letting 25 psi out of each tyre and being sanguine about the odd puncture.

It does remind me of other things that I do understand better. In the 2000s, manufacturers would maintain that there was such a thing as a “crit” bike – a special road bike that was better on short circuits because… well, who the hell knew. Geometry, yada yada, responsiveness, yada yada.

Think this sort of thing is an artefact of the past? Without looking it up, can you tell me whether we are, right now in the late autumn of 2025, in a period where “aero bikes” and “climbing bikes” are two separate things? Or are we in one of those halcyon months where they’ve been unified into bikes that are both light and aero? This is a question I should know the answer to, but I don’t think anyone can keep track.

A cynical person might think that part of what’s going on here is an industry that’s still getting over the pandemic and wants to sell multiple bikes to each customer, and reckons that the more categories it can find between track bike and full-suspension MTB the better.

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If that’s the case, I’m happy to do my bit for the industry. I’ll just mention my friend Bernard, who recently texted me an image of a cracked wheel. “I don’t need a gravel bike,” he said. “I need a pothole bike.”

It’s just a suggestion.