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Thread: How long?

  1. #1
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    Cool How long?

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    In thinking about Fredwina's and Mimitabby's epic adventures, I was wondering......how long was it before you could cycle anywhere and any distance you desired?

  2. #2
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    Who?
    Those two gluttons for punishment or us slackers?
    2008 Trek FX 7.2/Terry Cite X
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  3. #3
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    In December 2005 I decided I was going to do a double century. I did my first one at the end of March 2006.

    V.
    Discipline is remembering what you want.


    TandemHearts.com

  4. #4
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    It was my second year in the flatlands but about my sixth year of cycling where I got to the point of being able to go out and do a century any old time.
    I might have been able to condense those first four years some; out here it is FLAT... and i was unemployed (and then doing free-lance writing), so that gave me time to ride and get in shape (which I did at my own speed so it was relatively painless :-P )

  5. #5
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    Is there such a thing? Aren't there two kinds of people - the ones who already ride as much as they desire, however much or little that may be; and the ones who will always be training for their next even longer/tougher ride?
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  6. #6
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    Well, I fall into the I-hope-to-do-a-century- camp. So far my longest ride was 72 miles. It's only my second consecutive season, though. I was just thinking about how long, in terms of seasons, before one can do pretty much anything on a bike.

  7. #7
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    My legs can take anything, but I am limited by how long I can tolerate my saddle. I can make it about 75 miles before I'm permanently standing.

    Hopefully the SMP I ordered from ebay will fix that.
    Because not every fast cyclist is a toothpick...

    Brick House Blog

  8. #8
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    Like Andrea, some of my parts can go forever--one being my legs. Butt callouses are fine, too. I think it's the upper body and neck that wouldn't last--but that's a bike fit issue, I think.

    My question is how long do I put up with this bike before I can justify a new one for longer distances???

    I'm not really "putting up" with it, that much. I have a steel beauty on the rack waiting for more love and attention, and that one will fit me better. I'll probably do my first century on her--the Centurion.

    Karen

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by sundial View Post
    Well, I fall into the I-hope-to-do-a-century- camp. So far my longest ride was 72 miles. It's only my second consecutive season, though. I was just thinking about how long, in terms of seasons, before one can do pretty much anything on a bike.
    I'm not sure it's necessarily how long one's been riding...but what type of riding they do. I did two centuries my second season of biking because I trained to do them. I did two my third season, because I trained a little, and because I knew I could. This year (my fourth of biking), I'm not sure I could do a century. I've been riding entirely differently (for utility), so I haven't been able to do the long rides I think I would need to be comfortable doing centuries. Could I do a long tour? Probably. Could I have done the Livestrong century this past weekend (it went right by my house!)...no, not likely. Will I be doing centuries next biking season? Probably, because I miss those long rides. After my commute changes to 40 miles a day next month, I imagine that I'll be capable of doing centuries by the end of this summer, if I have the time to spare.

    I think a lot of it is the type of riding one does and a lot of it is mental.

    Edited to add: Being comfortable on a bike for long hours takes conditioning too. My bike is perfectly fitted to me, but because I haven't been riding it for long hours, I'm not comfortable for long hours. My legs could do it, my butt could do it...but my body would HATE me even though I know my bike is well suited to me and long distance rides.
    Last edited by GLC1968; 06-30-2008 at 02:40 PM.
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by sundial View Post
    I was just thinking about how long, in terms of seasons, before one can do pretty much anything on a bike.

    What do you mean by pretty much anything - centuries? What kind of century? Flat or hilly?

    I would think that if you started off in reasonable shape, one could do a fairly flat century (sub 5,000 feet of climbing is my definition of fairly flat) in your first season if you wanted to and trained for it.

    V.
    Discipline is remembering what you want.


    TandemHearts.com

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by GLC1968 View Post
    I'm not sure it's necessarily how long one's been riding...but what type of riding they do. I did two centuries my second season of biking because I trained to do them. I did two my third season, because I trained a little, and because I knew I could. This year (my fourth of biking), I'm not sure I could do a century. I've been riding entirely differently (for utility), so I haven't been able to do the long rides I think I would need to be comfortable doing centuries. Could I do a long tour? Probably. Could I have done the Livestrong century this past weekend (it went right by my house!)...no, not likely. Will I be doing centuries next biking season? Probably, because I miss those long rides. After my commute changes to 40 miles a day next month, I imagine that I'll be capable of doing centuries by the end of this summer, if I have the time to spare.

    I think a lot of it is the type of riding one does and a lot of it is mental.

    Edited to add: Being comfortable on a bike for long hours takes conditioning too. My bike is perfectly fitted to me, but because I haven't been riding it for long hours, I'm not comfortable for long hours. My legs could do it, my butt could do it...but my body would HATE me even though I know my bike is well suited to me and long distance rides.
    What GLC1968 said! Ditto!

  12. #12
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    well, since you mentioned my name....

    I'll tell you a story, I signed up for the Grand Tour. Then I realize it had 8,000 feet of climbing two week before
    So it really depends. The only two I can recall training specially for were Ride around the Bear(100 miles - 10,000 feet) and the 300K I did at Cayucos(another 5 digit climbing affair)
    That being said, if you do have a goal ride in mind, it doesn't help to get prepared , so you can enjoy it. I usually try to do a metric a week(weather permitting), and found that I can usually do a 200K with much complaints.
    It does help tremendously to have a bike you're happy with.

  13. #13
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    Aug 2001
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    Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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    719

    Thumbs up

    I worked backwards from my solo race date - i knew i wanted to do 10 laps = 160 km...

    i knew when i started training, a 50 km mtb ride was tough...

    so i added in miles each week for 4 months...

    miles goal date
    120.00 20-Aug
    108.00 13-Aug
    97.20 7-Aug
    87.48 1-Aug
    78.73 26-Jul
    70.86 20-Jul
    63.77 14-Jul
    57.40 8-Jul
    51.66 2-Jul
    46.49 26-Jun
    41.84 20-Jun
    37.66 14-Jun
    33.89 8-Jun


    one day a week would be 30% that distance at a harder pace. and the weekends would be back to back days of that distance, followed by 50% of that distance (or viceversa depending on weather and schedules).
    "The greater the obstacle, the more glory in overcoming it."-Moliere

    "Our greatest weakness lies in giving up. The most certain way to succeed is always to try just one more time." -Thomas A. Edison



    Shorty's Adventure - Blog

 

 

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