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View Full Version : How many kms/miles do you ride each week?



roadiechick
05-12-2004, 11:33 PM
Hi

Just wondered how many kms/miles everyone rides on average each week? At the moment I am doing about 250km - not sure if that's good or bad, i guess average???

RoadieChick

Veronica
05-13-2004, 03:38 AM
My weekly mileage varies - depending on work, weather, my mood etc. I try to do about 100 miles/week. But lately we've been doing a lot more off road riding so my mileage numbers have slipped.

I'd say 250K is pretty good - probably more than most casual riders - less than the Tour riders. :p

Veronica

grannydea
05-13-2004, 07:27 AM
Around 80-100 per week. More if trainning for a ride some where.

Barb
05-13-2004, 07:38 AM
I work 2 jobs so I am lucky if I get 50 miles in. I'm hoping this summer I will get to 100 /week.

Biking Chick
05-13-2004, 08:00 AM
Originally posted by Veronica

I'd say 250K is pretty good - probably more than most casual riders - less than the Tour riders. :p

Veronica

Good point Vernoica :D

Once the snow is gone and the chemicals and salt are off the road I average 100 miles (161 km) solo. My husband I have a couple of routes that we like to ride two nights a week that are about 30 miles (about 48 km).

On the week-ends we will find a charity road ride or ride one of the rail trails. Our new Saris Cycle-On hitch rack will make hauling the bikes a lot easier this year.

ragbrai40
05-13-2004, 08:22 AM
My goal is 80-100 mi/wk. Does it always work out that way - NO dang it! :( Between rain and running kids after school, riding seems to slip to the back burner.:mad:

So, I try to make up mileage on weekends w/longer rides.

emily_in_nc
05-13-2004, 11:31 AM
I generally get in ~ 150 miles per week during daylight savings time. That includes three shorter weeknight rides and two weekend group rides. From time to time I do a century on the weekend, so my weekly mileage will be higher, and if weather is bad, it will be lower.

Emily

letty
05-13-2004, 11:48 AM
During this time of the year I ride about ~160 miles per week: One week day ride ~25miles; one ride to work day 18miles round trip; one long ride on Sat. ~80miles; one medium ride ~40 mile on Sunday.
During the winter the numbers go down to around to ~100 but then I try to compensate with spinning classes. :D
Letty

betagirl
05-13-2004, 01:24 PM
I do about 120 miles a week, give or take. It helps being in a LBS club that does 30 miles on Tues and Thurs, then 40 on Saturday :)

fultzie
05-13-2004, 01:35 PM
i started working more this summer, and deliberately found a place to live off-campus, so my commute is about 20 miles round-trip (depending on class and work... 5 to class, 5 more to work, then 10 back again). if i can find the motivation, i try to squeeze in 20 miles or so before or after work, and then 40-60 miles on the weekends... it averages out to about 150-200 a week, but that's just during the summer! during the regular semester i'm lucky to get in 20 miles a week, outside of the 30-mile races on the weekends.

ausgirl
05-13-2004, 04:58 PM
I average about 400km per week and that's including racing. But I ride about 6 days per week. Roadiechick - 250km a week is pretty good and certainly enough for fitness. It depends how long you've been riding and what your goals are. If you're racing and serious about the sport, then you have to do lots of kms. I'm in my 3rd road season and doing these kms, but in my first road season because I was still building up a lot of fitness it would have been closer to 200.

roadiechick
05-13-2004, 10:03 PM
ausgirl

how do u split up your kms for the week? do u do some long rides and some short ones, any hill work etc?? this is my first (serious) season by the way. i have been riding about 250km per week for a few months. do u think its time to up the kms?

roadiechick

annie
05-14-2004, 04:35 AM
Now that the weather is a bit nicer and the daylight is lasting longer, I am usually able to get 150-200 miles in a week. I try to get out both weekend days, one day being a long ride (60-100 miles) and then 2-3 weekdays. I ride with a group sometimes and alone sometimes. I love both! One of those rides is off-road. I realize I'm lucky to be able to ride that much!:p My kids are old enough to not need me around too much. ;) My job has an early start and early off, so that gives me extra time. Still............ I always wish I could get out even more. :rolleyes:

annie

Pink Kona
05-15-2004, 02:56 PM
It's nice knowing I'm not that insane - putting hours upon hours on a pole and weaving through rush hour traffic. My coworkers think I'm nuts - 175+ miles a week for just the sheer fun of it - yowsa! Ride on chicas!

ausgirl
05-16-2004, 04:34 PM
Roadiechick, here's what I do...

I race on Saturday, so keeping that in mind.
Sunday is about 110km with the bunch - easy though, only averaging about 30-32kph.
Monday is rest day.
Tuesday is 40km with lots of sprint work in it.
Wednesday is an 80km ride that has a 3km hill climb in the middle of it.
Thursday is a hard 70km ride.
Friday is about 20-30km, very easy.
Saturday is racing - about 60km at the moment, plus often 10km each way to and from racing (good for warm up and cool down).

As for whether its time for you to up the kms, well, how do you feel during your 250km week? Do you find it easy or difficult to do that much? On bunch rides are you able to do your turns comfortably? If this stuff is easy for you, then you can probably increase your kms. Do it gradually though, maybe just to 300km. Maybe there is a longer ride that you can do on the weekend or something.

Your other alternative is increasing the intensity of your training. Maybe you can try changing one or two of your rides to faster bunch rides in your area.

Also do you race? What sort of distance and speed?

roadiechick
05-17-2004, 06:56 PM
ausgirl

your training plan sounds great! so organised, i like it.

to answer your questions:
i feel pretty good doing the 250km, i find it fairly easy to do that much except for finding time. the km themselves seem ok but finding the time is harder. on bunch rides i can do a few turns comfortably but as the ride goes on i eventually get churned out the back and find it hard to keep up. on the weekends i started doing 100km sat and 70km sun (the last two weekends) and that's been good, i feel stronger and feel like the rides that once felt long (50km) are beginning to feel shorter and that the longer rides are getting easier. i guess i should just go on how i feel, if i am recovering quickly and can keep up with the bunch and don't feel lactic etc, i guess then its time to step up the kms???

i have more questions for you if you don't mind me asking....

how do u fit all the km in with work etc? do u mostly ride in the mornings (i only ride in the mornings)? how many hours would it take you to do the tuesday and wednesday rides? what did you training schedule look like in your first year?

roadiechick

gretchen
05-18-2004, 07:16 AM
Holy Shamollie! You ladies are awesome!
I love hearing about others riding "habbits"!
Now that the weather is nicer (and as i say that...it's raining out!) i hope to get 20+/day with longer rides on the weekends.
I can't wait for the day to last a little longer so i can ride in the evening. I have been strictly solo for fear of keeping up with a group! My average (and i swear my computer is stuck here!) is 14.8 various touraine and traffice the first half of the ride. I"m not sure if that's good, bad, or just so so.

You have all def. inspired me!!!!
And made me aware of the fact that i need to learn the conversion from metric to miles!!!!!!!!!!!!! :D
Pile on those miles! :cool:

ausgirl
05-18-2004, 04:42 PM
Roadiechick.

Thanks for the compliment, but my coach organised it for me - he's also one of my best mates too so that's good.

It sounds like you're doing well with your training - being able to do 100km rides is really good. As for fitting in the rides, well I'm a uni student so my hours are more flexible than other people - but I'm doing my PhD so its like a full-time job in terms of hours. The short answer is I make time. I ride in the mornings - this morning I did a 60km ride with the bunch and that only took 2 hours 4:45 -6:45am. My Tuesday ride is about 1hr15min - 1hr30min. One advantage we have here is that from about September until early April the sun rises before or around 5am making it easier to train in the mornings. Today though, dawn didn't start until about 5:50am which is annoying, but even in the middle of winter the sun will always be up by around 6:30am. Another thing with time is it depends on what time you start work and how long it takes you to get there. I don't know what you have to do in the morning but say if you have to be at work at 8:30 and it only takes 20 min or less to drive there, then you should be fine if you're home by 7:30am. Stuff like ironing clothes and getting lunches ready the night before could give you an extra 15min or more in the morning.

My old training schedule was a 70km ride on Sunday, 30km or so each on Wednesday and Friday, 50km rides on Tuesday and Thursday, and racing on Saturday. Racing was shorter then because i was in a lower grade. In my first year I found it hard to keep up even on the 70km ride and might only be able to do one short turn - say 4 or 5km compared with the 8-10km turns that a lot of other riders do. Just stick with it on your longer rides, in a month or so you will feel a lot better on those rides than you do now and it will gradually improve.

Ausgirl

gretchen
05-18-2004, 07:39 PM
Ok, do you think i have the right idea..just pack miles on when i possibly can?
or...should i be pushing myself more?
:confused: gretchen

annie
05-19-2004, 03:51 AM
Depends on you goal, Gretchen. Are you aiming for long rides, races, or long fast rides? Or all of the above?:D If you want distance, you need some endurance training, to go fast, you need to push yourself to higher efforts. To do both, you need a combination.

Once you have some good base miles in (say 500) you can begin to push yourself more. You need the base to get muscle, tendons, lungs, ready for harder work. Since you had surgery not long ago (that was you, right?) you probably need to make sure you are recovered from that before you put lots of extra effort on the bike.

I take two days a week that I really work hard on the bike. I either go out with a fast group and work to stay with them or else I go out on my own and do hill work or intervals. I get in at least one longer ride each weekend, 60-70 miles or longer. I try and do one easy ride on whatever day it works out best. Sometimes I'll do a social ride with the bike club. I ride as much as I can. Not mornings, 'cause I work pretty early. But that means I get off early so sometimes I go right after work. If I go in the evening, I always have lights with me so I don't have to cut my ride short if it gets dark. Sometimes I think I'd like to live on my bike, but the real world just keeps interfering!:rolleyes:

Of all the bike quotes I've ever read, I still think I like Eddy Merx's best. It's short, simple and to the point. "Ride lots."

annie

Veronica
05-19-2004, 04:24 AM
I use that quote by my name. I like it a lot. One of the patterns in my Hokey Spokes can be programed and that's what it says.

V.

gretchen
05-19-2004, 12:48 PM
WWOW! I LOVE that quote!
That is SO true....use up life, huh?!!!!!
I have a paint your own pottery shop (I'm an artist) and am going to paint that on a tile...
i wonder how many people will "get it".
I live in a town where that is def. not a way of life!!!!!!!!!!!!!

:D gretchen
ps...annie...thanks for the advice! I'm out for distance...how ever i get there (hopefully sooner then later!) is fine with me. I just don't want to die on my bike trip this summer! Day after day of 70 miles is scareing the heck out of me!
I did 24 this morning...should have stretched more first. This weekend i'll go for 50? 60?
Hey, how often do you stop and stretch, take a break, etc?

magrat22
05-19-2004, 01:04 PM
Hey Gretchen, how long have you been riding? I'm only at 12-13 kph as I only started road biking a week ago (although I got the bike 3 weeks ago, I spent 2 weeks working up the nerve to ride it!!!) so I'm really unfit. Have to say though my experience on it so far has been positive. I never thought I'd cycle 10km..I know if sounds like nothing to you and the other ladies on this forum but to me it's amazing. I'm really hoping to increase it to 20 soon and from there up and up.

Man designed pavement for us to ride bikes on ;)

annie
05-19-2004, 01:29 PM
Gretchen,

I did 64 miles by myself last Sunday. When I'm out alone, I don't stop much. Twice, just to refill water bottles and potty break. But only for as long as that takes and then I'm off. I don't stretch much unless I am feeling sore. I try to start out slowly enough to warm up that way and my bike fits me so well that I don't tend to get many aches while riding. I also try and cool down on the bike before I get home. I suppose I should stretch more........... If I get out for a short evening ride, 20-30 miles, I probably won't stop at all. Two water bottles is enough to get me through so far. Tho' once it heats up, I'd probably have to stop once for a refill. I really try to stay hydrated.

If I'm with a group, I stop when they stop, go when they go, etc. Some groups are fast, some are more social. I enjoy both.

Tonight is our womens' training ride. I'd best get moving and feed the family so I can get out on the ride! :D

annie

p.s. glad you like the quote. So do I! :p

ausgirl
05-19-2004, 07:48 PM
Magrat22

Congratulations! Just getting that roadbike and getting out there on it is a huge step if you haven't done much sport for a while! I know, about 3 years ago when I took up cycling I'd never really done any sport before that - just the physical education that you have to do at school. 10km is a great start and as long as you're willing to stick with it you will be doing 20 and 30km rides before you know it. Have fun, it's a great sport!

Ausgirl

roadiechick
05-19-2004, 09:43 PM
Magrat22

I agree with ausgirl. You've taken the first step, got the bike, started riding! Before you know it you will get addicted and want to do more and more km/miles.

I read a good quote somewhere, I think it was someone's signature, not sure if it was in these forums but it said something like: 'It only take one pedal stroke to start a revolution'. I like it.

Keep it up and congratulations.

RoadieChick

magrat22
05-20-2004, 08:16 AM
Ausgirl you only started 3 years ago and your already doing 400km a week....holy hannah!! Well there's hope for me yet then, right so in 3 years I'll be doing 401km a week..:D

Actually I'm really proud of myself as I went out biking yesterday I was tired but I wanted to keep to my schedule and I nearly fell off 5 times but the amazing thing was I didn't!! If that had been a month ago I would have been eating pavement pie. I know I'll kiss one of these days but by then I'm hoping I'll be so attached to my bike I'll be more worried wether it's okay then me. I've already started checking it before I go to bed!!. :confused:


Thanks for to you and Roadiechick for your support.

ausgirl
05-20-2004, 04:23 PM
Nearly falling off 5 times... it's all part of the learning process. You're right, I don't like to say it, but one of these days you will fall off because it happens to everyone, I just hope you don't get anything worse than gravel rash out of it. Being more worried about the bike's health than yours is natural - I crashed in my second race ever and got a heap of gravel rash and got knocked out for 5min, but the first thing I wanted to know when I came to was whether my 2nd hand $250 chromoly bike was ok!

Use these first few months not just to increase your kms and fitness but learn some bike skills too - how to get your water bottle in and out while riding, clipping in and out of clipless pedals (if you have them) and how to corner properly.:D

gretchen
05-20-2004, 04:36 PM
Ok, Let's talk "the corner thing"!
I've got the water bottle down pat, no problem, can ride with one hand, signal for the full turn, even look behind me without making my bike swirve all over the road.

BUT!...the taking a sharp turn! I can take a sharp turn on my hybrid with no problem but when i'm on my road bike...i feel like i have to slow way down! I think it has something to do with the feet being glued to the peddles? Maybe being afriad of not being able to just casually put your foot down for balance?

Not sure...but any tips would be helpful!
:confused:

ausgirl
05-20-2004, 05:00 PM
This is probably because on a road bike you're often going faster than what you would be on the hybrid. A common trick is to raise your pedal on the side that you're taking the corner, so that you don't accidentally clip your pedal on the bitumen. I mean if you're turning left, make sure that your left pedal is raised. Make sure that your hands are on the hoods (where the brakes join the handlebars) and apply a bit of the pressure to the side opposite where you are turning to balance things out a bit. So for a left turn have your left pedal raised, lean to your left, but apply a bit of pressure to your right hood. This seems to work for me.

MM_QFC!
05-20-2004, 06:52 PM
hey gretchen - in addition to ausgirl's excellent tips for cornering, I found it helpful to remember to both: stand on my outside foot/pedal when cornering as well as to focus on picking a line to follow on the corner and looking to where I wanted to go...not right down in front of my wheel. The body mechanics of standing on your outside foot helps automatically keep your inside pedal away from touching the surface and taking you down. And, no matter what the road ahead brings - just give a quick glance right in front of you to spot glass, potholes or other road hazards you want to avoid, then have your eyes focus on where you want to go - look ahead 10-20 yards and you'll "magically" avoid what you need to avoid. Sounds simple and it is - if you can keep yourself from staring at the big hole or roadkill or whatever and just trust that that brief glance will stamp the whereabouts in your brain and help you avoid it.
Hope it helps - tailwinds to you!
Mary

gretchen
05-21-2004, 03:13 PM
thanks! Those are such great tips! Now to practice!
The brain is an amazing thing! Those are the same "rules" to use when drawing , painting, etc. a line...you focus ahead and magically your pen or paint brush is pulled there.

I didn't get to ride for the past two days and am going buggie!
Tomorrow, it better not rain!
Hope everyone gets in lots of riding this weekend and report back on Monday with all the miles!
(what's the conversion from K to Miles?)
:confused:

Veronica
05-21-2004, 04:07 PM
100 K = 62 miles or so. I usually round to 60 for ease of conversion in my head.

V.