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  1. #16
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Minneapolis, Minnesota
    Posts
    502

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    Hi Bat,

    No advice from me, as I am a newbie too, just wanted to say welcome and enjoy your beautiful new bike! I have been riding my new bike since April and it has definitely been life changing. Congrats and good luck!
    2007 Trek 5000
    2009 Jamis Coda
    1972 Schwinn Suburban

    "I rejoice every time I see a woman ride by on a bike. It gives her a feeling of self-reliance and independence the moment she takes her seat; and away she goes, the picture of untrammelled womanhood."
    Susan B. Anthony, 1896

  2. #17
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Orlando, FL
    Posts
    222

    overly optimistic maybe?

    Quote Originally Posted by margo49 View Post
    Glad you have posted pic and on the Getting to Know You thread, Batsheva. You look fabulous and the bike too.
    You still thinking of doing that Ride in Israel. Maybe 2009?
    hey margo49--

    no i'm not thinking 2009--- thinking 2008--
    250 miles/5days from TA through the Negev to Eilat...

    have even booked the time off work for it this week...
    you should join me-- the Kiwi contingent!!

    better get out training then, hadn't i?!!

    batsheva

  3. #18
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Dallas, TX
    Posts
    2,716
    Hello and welcome!

    Looks like you have a nice bike and you are off to a great start! You can certainly achieve your goals if you set your mind to it.

    Getting better... hhhuuummm... you are still very new... and others have given good advice.

    Hill training is always good. It's also nice to have a mix of rides in your schedule. Short days, long days, faster days, slower days, etc.

    I think my advice to you though, would be this... get a computer with cadence on it and know how to use your cadence reading.

    It wasn't until I got a computer with cadence did I really figure out how/when to change the gears. When I learned that... my speed and overall average improved.

    The key is to try to maintain a 90-95 cadence. Finding a perfect balance between using your power efficiently and not giving it away. If you have too high of a cadence, then you are just giving away your power.

    Now... keep in mind that when going up a hill, unless you have a granny gear (triple) you probably won't come close to that cadence, but try to get as high of a cadence that you can.

    Good luck!
    "Life is not a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in a pretty and well preserved body, but rather, to skid in broadside thoroughly used-up, totally worn out, and loudly proclaiming: WOW WHAT A RIDE!!!!"

  4. #19
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
    Posts
    3,997
    Quote Originally Posted by batsheva
    which will improve my capacity for distance and my speed most do you think?

    is time in the saddle-long rides the way to go or short, tough ones?
    Hey there... to improve your distance, you have to improve your endurance. So do 1-2 loooong rides a week - but don't increase your rides by more than about 10% a week.

    Hills will improve your strength and endurance and will support both your goal to improve your speed.

    You can do interval training or sprint intervals (a search for intervals here or in google will give you lots of descriptions) to help with your speed and increase your lactate threshold which will help you increase your speed.

    Ultimately, riding fast will make you faster. But don't ride fast all of the time... you must have active recovery rides, or a day off the bike occasionally - this is an essential part of improving yourself.

    Have a fast tempo ride every 6-10 days.
    And choose a course that you can ride which has fairly predictable conditions and ride it once a month as fast as you can. Make it about 18-25km long and preferably as flat as possible. Note the weather and wind each time and keep a record of each attempt - "what attempt?" you say...
    Every 3-5 weeks, ride that course as fast and hard as you can - this will measure your endurance at speed and will demonstrate your improvements.

    Ultimately, riding, any riding, will assist you in your goal... but making 2-3 rides per week specific will help you reach your goals faster.

    KSH has a good suggestion to use your speedo to watch and measure cadence. I don't have a cadence counter on my speedo, but I do have a heart rate monitor and I train with that.


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


  5. #20
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Rhode Island
    Posts
    1,365
    Hey Bat,

    I am a former pack and a half a day smoker. Granted I wasn't biking at the time, but quitting was a huge deal to me as I am sure it will be for you. To make it easier, check out the following sites:

    Start here: www.whyquit.com and read Noni's story.

    This one: www.howstuffworks.com - search on "nicotine" to find out how nicotine works in the bloodstream.


    Then go here:
    quitsmokingonline.com - it is a free "book" / "course" to help you quit smoking.

    Then here:

    www.quitnet.com - a community of folks just like TE but for folks quitting smoking;

    and this one:

    www.cognitivequitting.com ... a great site for finding out about addiction and cigarettes, and why we have a tough time quitting.

  6. #21
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Posts
    4
    Quote Originally Posted by indigoiis View Post
    Hey Bat,

    I am a former pack and a half a day smoker. Granted I wasn't biking at the time, but quitting was a huge deal to me as I am sure it will be for you. To make it easier, check out the following sites:

    Start here: www.whyquit.com and read Noni's story.

    This one: www.howstuffworks.com - search on "nicotine" to find out how nicotine works in the bloodstream.


    Then go here:
    quitsmokingonline.com - it is a free "book" / "course" to help you quit smoking.

    Then here:

    www.quitnet.com - a community of folks just like TE but for folks quitting smoking;

    and this one:

    www.cognitivequitting.com ... a great site for finding out about addiction and cigarettes, and why we have a tough time quitting.
    I am so glad you posted this info - I think Bat has gotten some good advice on how to improve, but the best advice is to first and foremost- quit smoking.

  7. #22
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Middle Earth
    Posts
    3,997
    oh yeah... quitting smoking should help too

    (although we have a pic in a history book of the Tour de France of a cyclist having a cigarette after a race in the early 1900s, because it was thought to aid recovery!)

  8. #23
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Orlando, FL
    Posts
    222

    well...

    well, nitric oxide in cigarette smoke IS a pulmonary vasodilator actually-- so there is some logic to this actually-- if you ignore the carbon monoxide issue!

    thanks for all your advice on base miles and the type of varied riding to do to improve-- i went out today and had a good ride, although short as it was so hot and was definitely managing better speed--

    the cadence thing is an issue also i think-- i think i maybe should get a cadence computer as i think i 'give away' too much power spinning too much-- i tried today pushing bigger gears and did so much better, not so cardiovascularly knackered - tho' i can feel my leg muscles complaining a little more this evening...

    thanks again everyone for all your advice - i was really touched my your repsonses...

    plan: try no smoking for 24 hrs before my first 'group' ride thuesday morning so i am not carbon monoxided up-- that should get my VO2 up by 15% right away... will report back if it made any difference!!!

    batsheva x

  9. #24
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Orlando, FL
    Posts
    222

    fuel and cadence

    oh my gosh!

    it was the big annual LBS sale today...
    went and bought a cadence computer so there are nasty wires to the rear wheel of my bike now... and also bought some 'gels' seeing as they were reduced...

    WHAT A DIFFERENCE ON MY RIDE!!

    instead of struggling 12-13 mph and it all being tough i was sailing the same route at 16-18 mph with some proper fuel (i eat a minimal carb diet for medical reasons generally) and the cadence monitor which showed I was wayyyyy overspinning at 115-120-- keeping that in the 90-95 range by pushing harder gears with some glucose in my legs-- a 4mph jump and i coulda kept going much longer than the 15 miles i did only time ran out...

    cadence and glucose - WOW!!!!!

    oh-- even though i thought my stock saddle was fine on my bike, i somehow managed to come home with a new one -

 

 

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