Yvon
Re: Aussie Steve's Post (Takes 1 & 2) entitled "Your age and your weekly mileage."
Hello to you all,
New on-board, I wish to thank, not only the site administrators, but also Aussie Steve for his above referenced post, a post which greatly incited me to join your interesting "cycling community."
Since, on the subject at hand, "riding a bike" seems to be closely tied up to age [Steve, now in his forties I believe, was reportedly told by his workmates that he was (I quote him) "... too old to ride a bike... "]. I would like to use this opportunity to re-assure him, and anyone else for that matter, that there is no age limit to ride a bike, nor any limit preventing anyone to reach "high peaks" in this sport.
With no pretention whatsoever of being an exception, I was one (1) month short of my fiftieth (50) birthday when I rode across the Westernmost English Channel in 1985 from Cherbourg (France) to Poole (England), a 92-mile (148 km) journey in 16 hours and 42 minutes. 4 years earlier, I had linked the Bahamas to Florida. All this is very much detailed in my fairly recent website: Yvon Le Caer (http://yvonlecaer.com/) .
In the early eighties, I was riding an average of 15,000 miles (24,000 km) yearly and during the few months preceeding the 1985 Channel crossing, it was not unusual for me, while in Cherbourg, to ride 60 to 70 miles on the road in the morning, then ride AquaCycle (pedal watercraft of my own design) for 2 or 3 hours in the afternoon, mainly in the "Grande Rade" (artificial harbor) of Cherbourg.
So, keep riding Steve. Trust me, you will gain the last word and outlast all these "couch potatoes" you are writing about.
Yvon Le Caer
Yvon Le Caer (http://yvonlecaer.com/)
Hello to you all,
New on-board, I wish to thank, not only the site administrators, but also Aussie Steve for his above referenced post, a post which greatly incited me to join your interesting "cycling community."
Since, on the subject at hand, "riding a bike" seems to be closely tied up to age [Steve, now in his forties I believe, was reportedly told by his workmates that he was (I quote him) "... too old to ride a bike... "]. I would like to use this opportunity to re-assure him, and anyone else for that matter, that there is no age limit to ride a bike, nor any limit preventing anyone to reach "high peaks" in this sport.
With no pretention whatsoever of being an exception, I was one (1) month short of my fiftieth (50) birthday when I rode across the Westernmost English Channel in 1985 from Cherbourg (France) to Poole (England), a 92-mile (148 km) journey in 16 hours and 42 minutes. 4 years earlier, I had linked the Bahamas to Florida. All this is very much detailed in my fairly recent website: Yvon Le Caer (http://yvonlecaer.com/) .
In the early eighties, I was riding an average of 15,000 miles (24,000 km) yearly and during the few months preceeding the 1985 Channel crossing, it was not unusual for me, while in Cherbourg, to ride 60 to 70 miles on the road in the morning, then ride AquaCycle (pedal watercraft of my own design) for 2 or 3 hours in the afternoon, mainly in the "Grande Rade" (artificial harbor) of Cherbourg.
So, keep riding Steve. Trust me, you will gain the last word and outlast all these "couch potatoes" you are writing about.
Yvon Le Caer
Yvon Le Caer (http://yvonlecaer.com/)

















