"Being retired from Biking...isn't that kinda like being retired from recess?" Stephen Colbert asked of Lance Armstrong
Silver I'm right there with you. It has been 4 days since I've been on my bike and I'm going crazy. I plan to ride tomorrow afternoon come h*ll or high water (neither is expected here in Shelbyville). The temps are suppose to break the 50's so I'm going to be brave and ride (hand and feet warmers will be activated). The rest of the week is hit or miss (cool and/or rain). I wish normal temperatures would return!
Marcie
Heck I'd be thrilled to see temps go up to the 40's!![]()
You guys are a bunch of wimps!![]()
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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I hear ya. 3 days off the bike - two of which spent driving 1000 miles to retrieve a new transplanter from Michigan - and I'm READY for my Time Trial DVD tomorrow morning!
Stinking weather isn't helping. Could we wind up the snow showers for the season? Please?
Today is my day off, and it's 37 out right now.![]()
I'm actually considering pulling out the rollers again (like we did yesterday...oh, the 2 of us on side-by-side rollers doing Spinervals. What a sight!).
Yeah....I really want to put away the long sleeves and tights. If I can't go skiing, what's the point of cold weather???![]()
2007 Seven ID8 - Bontrager InForm
2003 Klein Palomino - Terry Firefly (?)
2010 Seven Cafe Racer - Bontrager InForm
2008 Cervelo P2C - Adamo Prologue Saddle
Hi, my name is Marcie and I'm a weather wimp. It has been 5 days since I've riden in temperatures above 50.
I'm going to will the mercury in the thermometer to 50 today so I can at least get in 15 miles. Tomorrow is looking good. I hope to ride here at home, pack the bike and head into Louisville to join the evening club ride.
Silver, buzz on down and we can get a few miles in before the rain moves in Wednesday.
Marcie
Silver, and anyone else dealing with these way-below-normal temps: I feel your pain. I road last Monday in a sleeveless top. Yesterday, I has my warmest gear on, plus feet and hand warmers--and I was still cold. I just had to get out there though. I managed only 32 miles at the CIBA ride (where only about 15 brave souls showed up) before giving into the cold. They say you should "ride the temperature" so I'm okay with it. I'm going back out there today and tomorrow though, before the rain and wind sidelines me again. Don't the weather gods know I have mileage goals to consider?
Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.
--Mary Anne Radmacher
I've been incredibly bummed out by the weather, too. The other day I got fully dressed in cycling gear and just couldn't ride. It was too cold and too windy (and if I had ridden, I would have been riding in a heavy snow because it started 20 minutes after I bagged the ride). And it's supposed to rain Thursday during my women's running/walking program -- again. UGH!!!
Let's go sunshine!
~ Susie
"Keep plugging along. The finish line is getting closer with every step. When you see it, you won't remember that you are hurting, that anything has gone wrong, or just how slow or fast you are.
You will just know that you are going to finish and that was what you set out to do."
-- Michael Pate, "When Big Boys Tri"
Amen to that! The past 4 days have been temps right around 30 with winds at 20mph gusting to 30-35! I have been absolutely miserable. As a teacher, this is my week of break and I had big cycling plans. Very disappointing so far. I hope today the winds will die down a little, I'll brave it if it's 32 and relatively calm!
-Emily
Yeah....a couple of weekends ago we did 100+ miles, last weekend we slugged through some sloppy wet, but outdoor riding. I thought I'd seen the last of evil Coach Troy and his Spinervals propaganda until fall. Alas, this weekend, I wimped out and slunk back to the basement...I swear that ECT had a smirk on his face Saturday as he ordered once again..."big gear, 15"
Listen...I was truly the biggest weather wimp in the world up until a couple of years ago.
I didn't exercise at all, I was 25 pounds overweight, had no real muscles to speak of, and all fall, winter, and spring I was COLD. Cold, cold, cold.
I would pile on 3 or 4 heavy acrylic sweaters, extra cotton waffle longjohns under my jeans, triple thick crew socks, scarves, ponchos, you name it. I looked like the Michellin man, but i was.... COLD.
Then I started walking...3 miles briskly every day. That helped my circulation and heartrate a bit, and i got a few muscles and started losing the extra pounds. But I was still pretty cold. Still piled on clothes like Michelin man.
Last Fall, with the advice of my smart DH and after some additional reading and research, I realized I needed to get better clothes for what I was attempting to do. People kept telling me "There is no bad weather, only bad clothing." Could they actually be right, I wondered? Me- the total weather wimp who huddled like a cat on sunny windowsills, in front of radiators and sitting on heating vents all my life....could I possible brave the elements on my bike and not be miserably frozen? Didn't seem like something **I** could do.
I set out to get properly equipped for the winter. Real wool was the foundation element to build upon.
I put heavy wool knee socks over wool hiking socks. Thinsulate hiking boots over those. Thick wool tights to wear OVER my chamois lycra cold weather tights. Underarmor sportsbra. Thin merino wool undervest. Thin merino wool longsleeve base layer. Merino LS turtleneck to wear over the base layer & vest. Heavy wool outer zipper vest for over that. Warm stretchy inner-fuzzy polyester wind-proof jacket. Nylon windbreaker/shell on the outside. Soft cashmere gloves (a gift). Smartwool glove liners over that. Heavy windproof ski gloves over that. Smartwool helmet liner. Full balaclava over that. A second balaclava in my saddlebag just in case. Oh, and a good face cream with lanolin (more wool!).
I know what you're thinking- and YES, all this stuff cost me a small fortune.But it will last me for many years because it's all well made and wool can last for decades if you take good care of it. Wool also doesn't smell at all when you get sweaty. (unlike polyester, which for me stinks after one ride).
It takes me about ten minutes to get all layered up to go out. But once I'm set, I can go biking for 2 1/2 hours at 28 degrees F and cloudy/breezy, like yesterday! I was TOTALLY COMFORTABLE. Some call me "brave" or "tough"....but I'm not brave at all, because I'm not suffering at all- it's easy to be tough when you are actually totally comfy!The worst thing is usually that my prescription glasses get too cold on the bridge of my nose- but I can take them off for a while and still see fine.
Another key factor here is that none of these items are bulky or stiff. They move with me and they breathe when I need it. I don't look bulked up. I can peel things off as I warm up and put them in my saddlebag. I'm always amazed at how much I wind up taking off once i warm up even when it's really cold. I think 25 degrees is about my lower limit with this getup. Some women here can bike colder than that, and I suspect they have even better layering clothes. I now beleive you can be biking comfortably down to 25 with the right clothes. I guess I could go colder if I used those chemical hand/foot warmers, but I'd hate to have to keep buying those and besides, Spring is here now- don't need them over 30 degrees!
Anyway, I hope that clarifies how "tough" I really am to bike in the cold weather.Perhaps it will encourage others to get a little "braver" and experiment, if they get TOO much cabin fever (and "itchy" legs?!- whoa!!) from not biking.
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Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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Lisa,
we have this weather, and it can happen anytime from November until July (I Kid you not) where it is DARK and rainy and cold. Granted, cold in January isn't the same as cold in July, but... our cold in July can be in the high 40's, low 50's.
The cloud layer is about 5 miles thick, and I don't care how much wool and
fancy bike gear you wear, it's very hard to leave your warm dry house
and go for a bike ride when the little cold water particles get you instantly wet as you go out to your car. Add a little wind to this mix and you might as well just go back to bed.
and then I do NOT want to ride.
Yes well that would be very much like riding in the cold rain- I won't ride in the rain if I can help it- nasty! Ridind when it's snow flurrying is pretty and fun though, as long as the road stays clear.
Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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