View Full Version : burning legs and wierd sore hips
violette
06-09-2008, 10:43 AM
I went on a 60km bike ride yesterday and about 1/2 through, my legs started to burn, and I mean BURN. I know about lactic acid but this lasted a good hour. Then my hips started to hurt, this has never happened to me. I have to tell you I bought a new bike, Specialized Roubaix Elite. Do you think its the fiting.
alpinerabbit
06-09-2008, 10:47 AM
No, it's the fact that you are using gears you are not fit for.
You were probably mashing and tearing up your quads... sorry to be so blunt.
But you are covering the topic nicely in your other thread.... you forgot to mention you wore yourself out so much you had to throw up at home.
BleeckerSt_Girl
06-09-2008, 12:38 PM
Sounds like you need lower gearing. Also sounds like you need to build your strength up a bit at a time.
redrhodie
06-09-2008, 12:46 PM
Could your saddle be too high?
F8th637
06-09-2008, 12:48 PM
I have to agree with the other girls in that it sounds like you may have bitten off a bit more than you could comfortably chew. Don't think it's a fit issue but a training one instead.
I have to agree, it sounds like you over did it. Drink lots of water, massage, eat protein after a ride, to help counter the effects.
The pain in your hips may be caused by tight glute muscles brought on by too much effort that you were not prepared for. I suffer from recurring bursitis-like pain from my glutes pulling on the hip joint (somehow - I'm not an anatomy expert, just repeating what a chiropractor told me). It can be caused by overwork on the bike (too heavy a gear), or, worse, from doing so, and then following that with a long downhill with no pedalling (much more likely on the mountain bike) - staying in the crouched and ready but no moving position is a sure way to get the muscles to tighten and not want to give up!!!
I suspect if it was a fit problem, the pain would happen much earlier in the ride, but I'm not a fitting pro either. :o
I hope you get it resolved soon so you can get out there and ride. Lots.
Hugs and butterflies,
~T~
redrhodie
06-09-2008, 01:10 PM
Oh, I just read your other thread (double chain ring). Yes, gearing is the issue.
KnottedYet
06-09-2008, 06:20 PM
Riding 'til you puke your guts up... well, the sore legs you got from that ride probably are NOT due to a fit issue.
I don't know much about gearing, but after reading the comparison between the gearing of your old bike and your new bike, I'd definitely be in the "gearing issue" camp.
violette
06-10-2008, 06:03 AM
I have to agree with all of you. I was fooling myself in thinking I could just do 60km with no problem. But like in my other thread, I think I'll have to change my gears. I only told my biking buddy that I threw up. My husband would kill me if he knew. He keeps telling me to "slow down or you're going to make yourself sick?"
F8th637
06-10-2008, 06:52 AM
I have to agree with all of you. I was fooling myself in thinking I could just do 60km with no problem. But like in my other thread, I think I'll have to change my gears. I only told my biking buddy that I threw up. My husband would kill me if he knew. He keeps telling me to "slow down or you're going to make yourself sick?"
He's right. You should slow down. I don't think the problem was that you fooled yourself into doing a 60km with no problem, the problem is that you pushed yourself so hard to finish 60km in too hard a gear for too long a time. Why do you feel that you needed to ride so fast or so hard? I think you and your bike need to get to know each other better first. I also think that you think that because your bike is more expensive than your last one that you should automatically be able to do bigger and better things right away. Slow down. Properly train. Don't bite off more than you can chew and in time you'll be able to do all you want to on your great new bike. Live and learn, right?
violette
06-10-2008, 10:13 AM
He's right. You should slow down. I don't think the problem was that you fooled yourself into doing a 60km with no problem, the problem is that you pushed yourself so hard to finish 60km in too hard a gear for too long a time. Why do you feel that you needed to ride so fast or so hard? I think you and your bike need to get to know each other better first. I also think that you think that because your bike is more expensive than your last one that you should automatically be able to do bigger and better things right away. Slow down. Properly train. Don't bite off more than you can chew and in time you'll be able to do all you want to on your great new bike. Live and learn, right?
You're absolutely right!
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