View Full Version : These Hills are Made for Walkin'
laughlaugh18
11-05-2006, 09:48 PM
Is it kosher to say that you completed a 25 mile ride when you spend at least a couple of those miles walking your bike up hills? :o
Yesterday was the Solvang Prelude, and I’m very proud to say that I actually did cross the finish line of my first 25 mile ride. But oh my goodness, I have never been so tired in my life! The ride was rated as “easy”, but if that's easy, then pigs can fly!
I managed to get up and down the pretty, rolling terrain until we hit this hill right before the sag stop. I was so tired already that there was no way I was getting up to the top on my bike. So, I walked. No big deal, I'm thinking . . . I'm sure the rest of the course will be easier . . . HAH!
A volunteer at the sag stop says there's a hill right after the stop, some rollers, and then one bigger hill right before getting back into Solvang. He said he thought they weren't too bad. HAH! I walked up that first hill after the sag stop, I walked up 2 or 3 of the rollers, and I walked up the at least 4 hills (not 1, darn it, 4) on the last 2 miles into Solvang. So, walking counts, right?
I'm sure to more seasoned riders, my hills were mere inclines. But, geesh, they were hills to me. My friends were supportive and stayed with me on my very, very pokey pace. They rode up the hills and waited for me at the top, and they even stayed with me near the end when all I could manage was a blistering speed of 6 mph on the flats :rolleyes: .
Amazingly, I'm not sore today. I learned that Clif Shot Bloks are my friends, and that actually training for a ride might be a good idea. I can't quite say it was "fun", but I'm ready to try it again. :D
ClockworkOrange
11-06-2006, 02:41 AM
Hi to my ol' SS.
Well done, isn't it a great feeling, agreed, not always enjoyable at the time but a great personal achievement.
Sounds like you have some really great friends but isn't that what it's all about. I bet you secretly laughed your way all up the hills.
Does not matter if you walk your bike some of the way, at least you got out, so easy to sit about doing nothing.
I hope you wore your socks..........:D
Sally
PS Did you get my last PM OK?
Kalidurga
11-06-2006, 03:05 AM
laughlaugh, the one thing that's been driven home to me about cycling time after time is... it's all relative. I tell the folks at work that I go on 20-30 mile rides and they look at me like I'm Hercules (and crazy). I then come here and read about other women riding centuries as a matter of course. I go out and grunt and gasp my way through 9 miles of what I think are pretty tough hills and think I'm getting pretty strong, and then I ride what's considered an "easy" 25 mile loop of hills and get so worn out that I wonder if I'm gonna make it back to my car. Oh, and then, of course, I come here and read about the ladies in the western half of the US who climb 3000-4000 thousand feet on just about every ride...
So I say, darned right it's kosher to say you completed that 25 mile ride! You and your bike both got to the end, and that counts :D
Thorn
11-06-2006, 03:49 AM
Under your own power you and your trusty steed did 25 miles. You did it. Period. Congrats! It doesn't matter that occasionally you had to get off and help your bike up the hills. If you keep at it, soon, your bike will be strong enough to make it to the top of more of those hills. Give her time, she needs training, too!
On a related note: after a complete summer of never succumbing to walking a hill, I took a trip to Texas and discovered "Crankbender Hill". I'm never too proud to walk--better that we're out there and, sometimes walking, than sitting on the couch.
Thorn
When the hills get tough, I have my granny gear; when granny isn't enough, I have my feet.
Bad JuJu
11-06-2006, 04:10 AM
The important thing is to get out there and give it a go--which you did. Stop doubting yourself and start patting yourself on the back. And here's to many more wonderful rides!
Are you kidding.......I've gotten off my bike to walk up what some people would consider to be mole hills! You go girl! 25 miles is 25 miles!
Trek420
11-06-2006, 04:51 AM
Congrats! All self-propelled forward motion counts :D
CyclChyk
11-06-2006, 06:33 AM
25 miles of MTB?? I am impressed no matter how much you walked it!!!
laughlaugh18
11-06-2006, 07:31 AM
Thanks all - I really am glad I finished! I did make up a new song during one of the walks (sung to the tune of "the song that never ends"):
This is the hill that never ends,
It just goes on and on my friends,
Some people started climbing it, not knowing what it was,
And they'll continue climbing it forever just because . . .
This is the hill that never ends . . . (keep repeating until top of hill) :)
Cathy
P.S.:
CC - thankfully, it wasn't all hills, and I was on my trek hybrid (with no knee or joint issues -woo hoo!)
Sally - I just pm'd you again. I haven't received any pm or email from you :(
bikerchick68
11-06-2006, 08:33 AM
laughlaugh... the fact that you crossed the finish line, without having a vehicle drive you across it, means you completed that ride! YOU ROCK!
I have ridden Solvang and I think the reason it may have been deemed "easy" is due to the distance not the climbing... this is a heck of a ride to choose for your first 25 miler :eek: :D good for you!!!
and yep, it IS all relative... after being off the bike for 3 months I have to say, that what were "easy" climbs last year are mountains again right now:o so I know I have to go out and do hill repeats to get back to where I was. Oh joy. :rolleyes: :D
Congrats on completing your ride... and on NOT being in pain! :)
RoadRaven
11-06-2006, 08:51 AM
You finished...
:D
It counts!
bcipam
11-06-2006, 08:54 AM
Laugh... GREAT JOB!!! Riding around Solvang, no matter the distance, is tough. And there is no shame, ever, in walking up a hill pushing a bike. It's still exercise! And I can remember when you were worried about a little bike path going up hill. Keep it up. Set a reasonable goal like the metric at Cool Breeze next summer or the 55 at Palm Springs in February. Should be a piece of cake!!!!
BleeckerSt_Girl
11-06-2006, 09:57 AM
If it's under your own power- it counts! Even walking up hills gets your legs stronger. :)
MomOnBike
11-06-2006, 11:38 AM
laugh,
My dear, it's all a matter of terminology. You did not walk up those hills. You simply felt the need for a bit of cross-training. :rolleyes:
And yes, I agree with everyone else. You finished under your own power. It counts. Heck, you started. How many don't even do that, hmmm?
MomOnBike
(the cross-training queen)
Trekhawk
11-06-2006, 11:55 AM
Well done - hills get easier (at least thats what SadieKate keeps telling me).:o
Bikingmomof3
11-06-2006, 11:58 AM
You finished, that is what counts. You tried it, you ahd to walk a wee bit, no biggie, everyone starts somewhere. It will get easier with time and practice. :)
eclectic
11-06-2006, 12:12 PM
I met a cross country cyclist this summer that said "I have never met a hill I couldn't walk"
What are the options, walk the hill or sag home?
Walking the hill will win out everytime.
Great job and keep going! ! !
roguedog
11-06-2006, 12:39 PM
laugh,
My dear, it's all a matter of terminology. You did not walk up those hills. You simply felt the need for a bit of cross-training. :rolleyes:
MomOnBike
(the cross-training queen)
That rocks! LOL I love it.
Aint Doody
11-06-2006, 12:44 PM
Here's my motto---if your hands are on the bike, it counts.
CyclChyk
11-06-2006, 02:31 PM
MomOnBike & Doody - I like the way you two think!!
Meaux
11-06-2006, 07:18 PM
HA! I add five extra miles if there are hills, walking or no! (Just kidding!) Coming from a very flat part of the country, I did my first ride with hills a week or so ago. I am SO out of shape!!
laughlaugh18
11-06-2006, 07:41 PM
My dear, it's all a matter of terminology. You did not walk up those hills. You simply felt the need for a bit of cross-training. :rolleyes:
Yeah, cross training, that's it!!:D :D
Pam, I think I'm gonna first work towards doing the whole 25 miles with my feet on the pedals before I start thinking about metric centuries!
bcipam
11-07-2006, 05:08 AM
Laugh by this time next year you look back on all this and think 25 miles, what a piece of cake. Just keep riding!
BleeckerSt_Girl
11-07-2006, 06:31 AM
I said once to my DH when I got off my bike on a steep hill that "I need to stretch out my legs for a bit" as I started walking up. Sounds so much better than something like "I've had it", and it's true, anyway! And really, my legs DO feel rejuvenated after they've been stretched out a bit by walking up a hill!
I used to regularly walk up certain really steep hills. Now I "usually" pedal up those same hills, but sometimes if the ride has been long, I'll "stretch my legs a bit" up one or two if I'm really tired. ;)
wannaduacentury
11-07-2006, 11:31 AM
laughlaugh, the one thing that's been driven home to me about cycling time after time is... it's all relative. I tell the folks at work that I go on 20-30 mile rides and they look at me like I'm Hercules (and crazy). I then come here and read about other women riding centuries as a matter of course. I go out and grunt and gasp my way through 9 miles of what I think are pretty tough hills and think I'm getting pretty strong, and then I ride what's considered an "easy" 25 mile loop of hills and get so worn out that I wonder if I'm gonna make it back to my car. Oh, and then, of course, I come here and read about the ladies in the western half of the US who climb 3000-4000 thousand feet on just about every ride...
So I say, darned right it's kosher to say you completed that 25 mile ride! You and your bike both got to the end, and that counts :D
I second that. You made it to the finish. I walk a few hills too if I need to. Jennifer
PscyclePath
11-08-2006, 04:33 AM
I met a cross country cyclist this summer that said "I have never met a hill I couldn't walk"
What are the options, walk the hill or sag home?
Walking the hill will win out everytime.
There's no shame in walking a hill. Even the pros have to do it from time to time, such as on the Koppenberg in this year's Tour of Flanders... only 7 guys out of the peloton made it up this one without walking their bikes!!
http://www.cyclingnews.com/photos/2006/apr06/rvv06/index.php?id=raceday/S-KOPPENBERG_6297
And if Alessandro Petacchi has to walk a hill from time to time, I'm certain that you can be excused too...
http://www.cyclingnews.com/photos/2006/apr06/rvv06/index.php?id=raceday/S-PETACCHI_5397
In fact, there's a whole branch of the sport organized around walking or toting your bike up these sorts of hills and into other places... cyclo-cross!
TE
Congrats on your 25 miles. You made it without much aches. I'm very impressed. Walking hills is just another granny gear for me. Wonderful to have great biking buds to give you company and encouragment.
BleeckerSt_Girl
11-08-2006, 06:57 AM
Walking hills is just another granny gear for me.
I just LOVE that! I'm gonna use that from now on! :p
Thorn
11-08-2006, 07:51 AM
Walking hills is just another granny gear for me
Ah....I've always thought when riding that sometimes the granny gear isn't enough and I want to get a great-granny gear. But, now I know what that means....my feet and walking are my great-granny gear. I had it all along, I just didn't know where to find it! :)
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