oh and, weekly miles started at 100 and after this weekend will be at 150.
oh and, weekly miles started at 100 and after this weekend will be at 150.
Squeaky, it took me a long time to be able to comfortably ride 20 miles.
You have to build muscle. Riding horses, hiking use those muscles in different ways from turning pedals.
I think you are very ambitious!
mimi's point is well taken, it does take a while...
going from 100 to 150 is a big jump, like what, 50% higher?
I'd actually say to taper some before a century, unless you do them all the time...you want your body as fresh as possible.
Squeaky, are you saying that you get really tired from riding 20 miles, and yet you are going to attempt a century ten days from now? What's been your longest CONTINUOUS ride lately? (not morning/evening separate trips combined)
Lisa
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I feel like I'm doing okay after the 20 miles and that I could do more, but it's the continuous burn that I'm wondering if it will ever go away. The farthest mileage at one time is 30. We're planning to do 50 this weekend, which I know is still a far cry from 100. Also, a majority of my rides have been on my mountain bike, either keeping up with the roadies or commuting. I've been on the new road bike twice and it hardly seemed like I was working at all.
I'm forcing myself not to ride today or tomorrow, and then I was thinking I'd hit it hard again this weekend and then taper off. If these 2 days off prove to be effective for Saturdays ride, then I'll do that prior to the century as well. Does that sound like an okay plan?
I probably should've decided a lot sooner than a month out that I wanted to get back into biking and do a century. On the bright side, if I fail, my husband is running sweep and he can pick up my parts along side the road.
squeaky - lol @ dh picking up parts!
Now, now, we really don't want that to be necessary!
Ok, so me personally, and it is hardly a rule or mandate, just what I do....I will do a century provided I am doing over 100 miles over a week *and* at least one ride over 60 miles.
If I couldn't do the above, then a century would not be in my plans.
Also I have to say, whatever event I would be doing, I would train on the bike that I plan to do the ride on. So if it were an off-road event, I'd ride the MTB, and vice-versa. Your body may be a bit shocked spending 6-7 hours on a bike for the century, a bike that you ride infrequently and nowhere near as long~
I used to subscribe to the 'it has to hurt'/'no pain no gain' school of thought. No more. If I am sore, then I don't ride or if I do, I'll go at a super easy, slow pace. You can't get better if you are still recovering![]()
Last edited by Cassandra_Cain; 09-28-2006 at 06:15 AM. Reason: typos!
Thanks for all the great advice, I'm going to need it!