| Cycling Training Post here if you need some help with training or have some training tips to share. Lots of training is something everyone who is into cycling has to do. |
| | |
![]() |
| | LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
#61
| ||||
| ||||
Quote:
Belgium... each time I went there I was left with the overriding impression that the entire country smelled like brussel sprouts - and I though the smell of cow sh1t around the Trough of Bowland was bad. |
|
#62
| ||||
| ||||
Quote:
Just to really put things in perspective, as you may have gathered I started cycling again a few years ago after over a decade off the bike where I raced for ~10 years. With less than 3 months of psuedotraining ( messing around on the trainer and I think I climbed a few small hills no bigger than a few hundred feet) and being oh, about 60lbs heavier, I dragged my sorry rotting carcass around the first four climbs of the Deathride (12,000ft of climbing mostly over 7,000ft in altitude) and had it not have been for a 30 minute forced delay on the last descent of Ebbetts pass due to the helicopter needing to land and whisk someone off the hosipital PDQ, then I would have got to the cut off at the start of the final climb earlier than I did and maybe done all 5 (I got there at 4.05pm and the cut off was 4.00pm). I think I may have keeled over half way up that climb though.... So - 10 years off, 60 lbs more (I lost leg muscle so count 65+lb of extra fat) and 4 big mountains... you lose hardly anything over a period of a few weeks. That said, I don't think I've ever seen 'weird stuff' like I was seeing up the second climb of Monitor Pass - the side of the road was travelling faster than the road that I was staring at like a zombie... The next time you're off the bike with a cold, flu or even something worse - just do whatever you need to do to get well and to the point where you're able to get on the bike, healthy. The little bit of top end that you lose is small change in comparison to thinking that it's all going down the pan and ending up turning that cold into a pretty bad chest infection that needs a month of the bike with some killer meds. Use that time off the bike to do other stuff or even just review what you've been doing. Sometimes that few nights of staring at the numbers will shine the lightbulb of enlightenment on a few things. |
|
#63
| |||
| |||
Quote:
The second half two other guys took over and really upped the pace more than I could handle for a comeback ride. I should have split off from them and followed my route back to the cars. If I hadn't had the time off to heal I could have held on the pack better. I wasn't the only one to fall off the small group. Two other guys had trouble keeping the pace. Twice I went back and pulled one of the guys back up to the group, but it just took too much out of me and the last few miles I struggled big time. I don't blame the guys for upping the pace because of the freezing cold air and we all wanted to get it done. I am starting to slowly ramp up my effort again on the trainer with staying in the upper L2 and lower L3 range.
__________________ My Blog |
|
#64
| |||
| |||
[QUOTE=swampy1970]Got a cold? Chill and relax... "The next time you're off the bike with a cold, flu or even something worse - just do whatever you need to do to get well and to the point where you're able to get on the bike, healthy. The little bit of top end that you lose is small change in comparison to thinking that it's all going down the pan and ending up turning that cold into a pretty bad chest infection that needs a month of the bike with some killer meds" This is real smart advice. Next time anyone gets sick, read this paragraph and then go to the couch and watch a movie. It's the same with riding in dangerous conditions. Last week there was ice all over the place here. I went out with a teammate and I wasn't happy with how safe it was. My teammate is young, keen and obsessed with training volume. I went down on some ice, bashed my hip and shoulder....luckily managed not to bang the head (no helmet - not smart). I said "sod this" and went home - the reason being that missing one day because of ice, is not as bad as missing a month with a broken collarbone, or 3 months with a broken hip. Younger teammate looked at me like I was mad, and went on for 4 hours. I expected him to end up in hospital but he was lucky. |
|
#65
| |||
| |||
Quote:
I was getting a lot of colds thanks to my kids so I gave the stuff a go. It tastes pretty foul but does seem to work. I have had a couple of 'attacks' where I could feel a cold coming, but then nothing happens! I'm not in any way connected with anybody who sells the stuff, but I did a bit of (of course totally reliable) internet research and it seems to be an acknowledged immune system booster. Seems to work for me. |
![]() |
| Bookmarks |
| Tags |
| train, winter |
« I need help !!! I need to lose weight real fast with a stationary-bike !!
|
Tracking Strength Training in WKO »
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 01:56 PM.
Multilingual forum supported by vBET Translator 3.2.2
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright © 2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0
Copyright © 2001 - 2009 cyclingforums.com
Multilingual forum supported by vBET Translator 3.2.2
Powered by: vBulletin Copyright © 2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.3.0
Copyright © 2001 - 2009 cyclingforums.com















Linear Mode


















