Welcome guest, is this your first visit? Click the "Create Account" button now to join.

To disable ads, please log-in.

Shop at TeamEstrogen.com for women's cycling apparel.

Results 1 to 15 of 15

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Boise, Idaho
    Posts
    1,104

    I will NOT hate hills!

    Nasty start to our ride this morning -- I don't understand how the second half can be so much more fun! We thought we'd go out and practice climbing hills for a while. There's a ride next weekend that's supposed to be hilly. First few miles were very little hills, like giant bumps, you know? LONG bumps. You'd think, when you're fresh, this would be easy, yes?


    Sidebar!
    NO FAIR! Nadine next door just came home from a bike ride: new rack and road bike on the back of her car! She's been riding a loaner hybrid much like mine this season, and we've both been talking about the NEED for one of those things!

    What a lucky lady!!!

    Back to the ride...

    Okay, so I'm chugging up those rotten bumps, in freakin' granny gear, at 4.5mph. This is bad even for me on the wee hills these days, and DH says, as we get to a tight spot, where some moron has parked his motorhome out in the middle of the road (pulled out of his driveway to do it) he has the NERVE to say to me (had a car behind us) "you don't have to slow down!" Which, you can imagine, had me wishing I knew how to make gravel spit up from between my tires and the road right into his face....

    So, we keep plugging away, and I'm trying to figure out WHY I'm struggling, when just two days ago, I felt like I was flying up the hills (hmmm, only 75 degrees out, was over a hundred the other day) and I decide I'm just NOT a morning person, but I'd hang in there a while longer. We cruised past some guy's driveway, and I said to Earl, see that guy's driveway? I don't think I need any of THOSE kind of hills today! Kept on going, and eventually got to where we'd planned to start our "hill exercises" -- MUCH more traffic than anticipated for that early on a Saturday morning, and besides car traffic, the gravel mines are operating and trucks are barrelling around with their loads of gravel. Made it REALLY easy to change my mind about that hill, and made it easier for DH to accept that it was not a real good idea.

    ON THE OTHER HAND, the whatever that was slowing me down was starting to work out of my body, and I was starting to feel much better riding. Still not moving quite "normally" but getting better... So, he says, what say we go on that road where I taught Orianne how to drive? (like I know what he's talking about?????) and led me in that direction. We stop at the top of a fabulous downhill, and he says, want to try that one? The down's immediately followed by an up. Gives me this lecture about use the granny gear, just do what you can, and don't you dare give me crap all week about how you hurt cuz you were too stubborn to quit when you should have and it's all his fault....

    What FUN!!!! We sailed down the first hill, and I think I was almost half way up the new one before I noticed a need to downshift -- and shifted bunches after that.

    Got to the top, though, and noticed I was breathing hard suddenly. Said to DH, I'm not sure, I think I forgot to breathe!

    HOWEVER, "real" hills seem to be easier for me than the invisible hills and little bump hills.

    Had one more "big" hill -- going back the way we came, had to do the pair in reverse, of course -- and I'm SURE I forgot to breathe on the way up the second one! (might have to get myself a note on my handlebar bag!)

    Some GREAT speed coming back toward home, though -- heels down, knees in, breathe, and FLY! back toward town!

    Any more hints besides remember to breathe that will help me to learn to ride up hills?

    Maybe someday, I'll say I like hills, but for now, I promise not to hate them!

    Now, got a question to put in another post...

    Karen in Boise

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
    Posts
    3,997
    Kano... I read this and I wonder if you found the little bumps hard because you hadn't warmed up, and by the time you reached the big hills, not only were you "psyched" and ready for it, but your thighs were well and truly warmed up and ready for them.

    I have heard (in fact it was a thread here in TE) that you should warm up one minute for every year of your age... I am 40, and I before I read that here, I was finding it took me 30-40 minutes to feel warmed up before a hilly training ride, or before a race.


    Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
    "I will try again tomorrow".


  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Off eating cake.
    Posts
    1,700
    But will I get a little more patient with every year that goes by?
    Drink coffee and do stupid things faster with more energy.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
    Posts
    3,997
    Yup...
    Patient... like a leopard waiting to pounce...
    Def


    Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
    "I will try again tomorrow".


  5. #5
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Kelowna, BC, Canada
    Posts
    2,737
    I second what Roadraven said about warming up. I have figured ouyt tha I need about 25-30 minutes minimum to warm up (don't like to do hills before then), and I can really start to fly after about an hour (I'm 46). Dh doesn't seem to need any time to warm up and likes to hammer right away so this week, he gave me a 3 minute head start and I did about 10 k on the flats alone before we hit the hills. He hammers on the flats and catches me at the 25 minute mark. Works really well for us.

    I also find the non-existant hills hard - partly because I hardly notice them visually and I end up trying to keep my pace up to what I was doing previously.

    Good luck with whatever you end up doing - practice does help...

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Southeast Idaho
    Posts
    219

    Thanks I feel better!!

    Thanks Ladies!
    I thought I was the only one who needs time to warm up. I am always feeling like I need 10 -15 miles before my legs come alive. We do a 27 mile route that starts right out on those rolling hills and I scream everytime. Someone said to jump in place to warm up your quads...have you ever heard that??

    Kano,
    I travel to Boise frequently to visit my daughter. My husband and I are always looking for places to ride besides up to lucky peak and back. Where do you recommend? It is nice to see another Idaho rider.

    Anita

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Boise, Idaho
    Posts
    1,104
    Warm up -- interesting -- I do pretty much always feel like the first three to five miles are the most challenging of any ride I go on. Once they're behind me, there's a good stretch of "I could go forever" before I get to the tired phase...

    The other thing I was considering -- I am NOT a morning person, and we were on the road before I'm usually awake! I decided at one point that maybe I should wait an extra half hour or so to hit the road!

    Shiraz --

    Places to ride... We do a lot of the greenbelt too. It's a lovely ride! When we don't go there, most of our riding is out south of home -- we live south of the Edwards theater complex in Boise (you know it!) and there's a lot of roadway out there, between all the new subdivisions that have been going in, and if you keep on going, there's the birds of prey thing -- some nice riding out there too. Freshly chip-sealed even!

    Karen in Boise

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jan 2002
    Location
    On my bike
    Posts
    2,505
    I'll be 52 next month. During my weekday rides - if I needed that much time to warm up - my ride would almost be over!

    I only need 5-10 minutes to warm up. Don't know why - have always been that way. I think it might be habit. I've done my rides first thing in the morning for over ten years.
    To train a dog, you must be more interesting than dirt.

    Trek Project One
    Trek FX 7.4 Hybrid

 

 

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •