
Originally Posted by
Dogmama
You can spin slowly up hills to try to get a recovery ride in.
Ummm, I can't!
It is quite hilly where I am, and I have found that, unfortunately, I'm just not fit enough to spin up hills as recovery. I'll either drive my bike to someplace flat, or ride the trainer. I recently put my ancient, old, un-road-ridable mountain bike on the trainer, and I am leaving it there for the summer for recovery rides. I have found that by leaving a bike on the trainer, I find it easy to jump on for an easy spin, followed by a rolling-pin massage on my quads. It is really helping my recovery.
As for bike journal, I'm pretty geeky (Lise, I said geeky, NOT non-eecky!
) and record a lot. But, I'm finding that it does help over the long haul to see trends. I record:
Non-biking workouts
Bike maintenance/repair records
Route
Weather
Nutrition
Mood
Notes about how my body feels, soreness, burn, nausea, etc.
Riding partners
Mileage
Time (actual riding time)
Time (total time)
Avg. Speed (actual riding)
Elevation Gained
Heart Rate Average & Max
Time spent in 3 HR zones (plus time spent above & below)
Each week I total: time riding, elevation gained, miles, time in HR zones
It kind of seems like a lot sometimes, but I find that the picture of time, mileage, climbing and HR intensities helps give a much more complete picture as to why I feel great, or exhausted, or whatever. And, I'll realize that, oh, what looks like a stagnant few weeks in terms of mileage might not really be if my elevation gain per ride really increased, or if I did twice as much steady state HR work, etc.
"The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury