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lph
05-01-2008, 03:42 AM
(cross post with Tips and Tricks, where I asked for advice)

wheee! whooo! I did it :D :D :D

I'm back, safe and sound, and my legs are aaaaching.... It had to RAIN of course, so it was bit hard to get warmed up and I lost touch with my toes after half an hour :rolleyes:

Boy, am I glad I was with a team, though. We'd decided what to do, who goes where and who decides what, and even though it wasn't perfect there was never any doubt about what we were trying to do. So when we caught up with a stray rider or something there was no quibbling about what to do, we just stuck together, passed him, and let him tack on the back if he wanted to.

Clothes - a bit inadequate. I did warm up but I think I work better if I'm warmer and dry. Drink - not too bad, but I will try out using a camelback, Freda be d*mned, at high speed I don't really want to reach down more than necessary. And for me this was high speed, I really had to concentrate and that got harder as I got tired. Food - how the heck do you eat?? Managed to stuff a banana down my throat on one long slow hill in the beginning, tried to eat an energy bar later on but only got down half before I started wheezing because I was so out of breath.

But the best part: my team knew it was my first race and they were SO supportive, little bursts of nice comments all the way. And my dh and son had set up a huge red banner with my name on it on a bridge close to home, and were standing there waving! How sweet is that! :D AND they turned up, with dhs parents, on the final killer hill in to the finish line. Where my team started yelling for me to go ahead and take that hill, since they know I "like" hills (I weigh about 2/3 of these guys, so not too surprising). So never mind the rain, I was cosseted and pampered all the way

Okay, I'll go post this on race results. Ooh, I've so been wanting to post there.

Thank you! for your advice - especially redrhodie - what a terrific thing to say :) Thanks!

Oh, and hard facts: 80 km in light drizzle, rolling hills, in 2 hrs 21 min.

bmccasland
05-01-2008, 03:50 AM
WooHoo Yea LPH!!! :D:D:D

SheFly
05-01-2008, 03:58 AM
First, CONGRATULATIONS! Sounds like you had a great experience for your first race, and that you finished strong.


Drink - not too bad, but I will try out using a camelback, Freda be d*mned, at high speed I don't really want to reach down more than necessary. And for me this was high speed, I really had to concentrate and that got harder as I got tired. Food - how the heck do you eat?? Managed to stuff a banana down my throat on one long slow hill in the beginning, tried to eat an energy bar later on but only got down half before I started wheezing because I was so out of breath.

This is something that 3 years into racing, I still struggle with. I actually tend to neither eat nor drink during a race - too busy breathing :D. I do use a water bottle, but seldom drink the entire thing. And I never eat during a race. However, I know people who do, and they will use tricks like taping a GU to their handlebars so they can easily rip it off.

I try to eat A LOT for breakfast the day of a big race, and then again about an hour beforehand. Also, I pre-hydrate. This defintely helps, but isn't the complete answer.

So, now we can look forward to more race reports from you, yes? :D Congrats again.

SheFly

lph
05-01-2008, 08:23 AM
Thanks! I'd love to not have to eat or drink during a race, but I have the metabolism of a raging wood stove and need to eat OFTEN. Taping stuff to your bars was actually a pretty neat idea. I ate plenty for breakfast (4 slices of buttered bread with slices of apple, sugar and cinnamon :) ) but I could have stuffed down yet another one of those just before the race.

Afterwards I couldn't stand the thought of food, so maybe I did get enough fuel anyway. :confused:

SuperRunt
05-01-2008, 08:33 AM
GRATULERER!!!

And I can attest to the fact that the Norwegian May rain can be *cold* (I'm Norwegian too :)). Sounds like you're with a great team, and that they're happy to have you!

SheFly
05-01-2008, 09:09 AM
Thanks! I'd love to not have to eat or drink during a race, but I have the metabolism of a raging wood stove and need to eat OFTEN. Taping stuff to your bars was actually a pretty neat idea. I ate plenty for breakfast (4 slices of buttered bread with slices of apple, sugar and cinnamon :) ) but I could have stuffed down yet another one of those just before the race.

Afterwards I couldn't stand the thought of food, so maybe I did get enough fuel anyway. :confused:

I usually can't stomach the idea of food right after a race, or even a hard workout, either.

Just wondering - have you tried protein beforehand? What you ate pre-race sounds loaded with carbs, but I know for me (and this may not work for everyone), that protein is key. Typical breakfast on race day is either eggs or peanut butter. Both options include toast/bread as well. I discovered the protein trick worked well for me this year - if I consume it early in the day even on non-race days, I'm not as hungry later in the morning. Something to try, at any rate.

SheFly

lph
05-01-2008, 12:20 PM
Duh - I can't believe I didn't think of this. :o I ate my usual high-carb breakfast because I usually commute by bike, and am on my bike max an hour after eating. So I know it works and I can digest it fast. I didn't think of the fact that this morning I was up eating breakfast over 2 hours before the race started.

Before long Sunday rides I've usually had bacon+eggs for breakfast, for longer-lasting fuel, and it does work better.

Tusen takk, superrunt, hyggelig å se deg :-)

lph
05-02-2008, 03:52 AM
Results are in! I was no. 488 overall, and placed 5th out of 30 women in my age group, and 14th out of 106 women altogether. Very pleased indeed :D

Especially because most of the women who beat me beat me thoroughly, i.e. are in a totally different class. There was a clear drop down to the next bunch, where I was one of highest placed. Way cool!

SheFly
05-02-2008, 04:04 AM
That's an awesome result! Congrats!

SheFly

redrhodie
05-02-2008, 05:31 AM
Wowweeee-- great results! Imagine if you'd had some protein?! What a fantastic first race. I'm guessing you're hooked! Can't wait to read about your future WINS!

Trigress
05-03-2008, 08:38 AM
GRATULERER!:D

I didn't race - I heard from a friend that it was fully booked, and so I didn't race. Didn't feel too bad when I saw the rain either, and as my hubby said - "well, I don't feel like bleeding in a roundabout in Lørenskog anyway". Funnily enough I talked to one of the chaps at Sørensen Sykler today, and he'd done exactly that - bleeding in a roundabout in Lørenskog: 4 stitches... :(

I'm considering Askerrunden tomorrow, if I race that will be my second race ever, and my first since 2005!

Kos deg med strålende resultat, og ha en fortsatt fin helg! :)

lph
05-03-2008, 09:49 PM
Go Trigress! Hope you do Askerrunden and have a great trip! Weather will be fantastic, at least.

(btw, hope that wasn't Lorentz we passed "bleeding in a roundabout in Lørenskog" :( He's really nice)

Trigress
05-04-2008, 01:11 AM
It was Lorenz... Apparently he'd driven into someone who fell, then just as he was about to conclude that he was down, but seemingly ok-ish, then someone else landed on him, pedals in his back and neck. Unbelievingly he was smiling when he told me!

Lorenz has halfway talked me into joining Frøy though. I'd like to race, but not on my own (it's sad - I raced the whole of Smaalene alone, being a novice cyclist two weeks after getting my first road bike), so I think it would be nice to train with a club and then race with them. I checked out the starting list for Askerrunden, and it had only 12 in the amateur class, one of them being one of the best triathletes in Norway. So I chickened out for fear of racing alone. I'm such a crap cyclist it's hard to find someone on such an abysmal level!

The substitute motive for not racing today is that I have new speed trial bars that I'd like to try out...

lph
05-04-2008, 04:35 AM
Oh darn. He's such a dear. He almost talked me into Frøy, too :D I have a colleague who rides with Frøy too, but I landed on Ceres since they're just a bit closer.

Riding with a club is a real experience, I can recommend it! I've learned lots of stuff I never knew, and I feel a lot more confident about maybe entering a race on my own now that I know "what's going on".

There are also some women in Rye, if you'd prefer. If you check the women's results for Enebakk Rundt you can get a feel for how many women are in which clubs, and at what level. Reckon we'll be getting race reports from you some time very soon now ;)

Trigress
05-04-2008, 09:15 AM
You now almost certainly have helped Lorenz talking me into Frøy. Frøy is my local club, they meet up in Hvervenbukta, which is suitable for me whether I come straight from work or from home. It's a big club too, so surely there must be more abysmal riders than me there? They also have spinning classes in the winter at SATS Hellerud, and that's quite a lot more doable than Studentidretten downtown. Lorentz also insisted that the girls in Frøy were a lot nicer (hyggeligere) than in Rye! :)

There appears to have been more accidents in Enebakk Rundt: my boyfriend just came home from Askerrunden, and one of his teammates from Follo had hit a car and completely wrecked his bike! :eek:

Thanks for the encouragement - I now feel very certain that I indeed will join a club. Have you seen the weather forecast? It's marvellous - sunshine a whole week!

spindizzy
05-11-2008, 01:11 PM
lph:

I think that time is most excellent. Imagine a sunny day...(and protein!)

RoadRaven
05-13-2008, 11:21 AM
LPH!
What fun
Congrats

I have never had a "team experience", but it sounds like this was a great way to beging your racing adiction. :p ;)

Well done you :D