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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    Don't worry about the extra layers, I read on the Enchanted Circle you can drop them off at one of the rest stops! I am sure they have an organized way of tagging them. Oh and everyone is right, don't let the jitters get you too wound up. Before our first MS150 (probably the most nervous I have ever been) I hardly slept. I paid for it by being sick the following Tuesday. I slept 16 hours.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Shelbyville, KY
    Posts
    1,472
    Ride your ride not the crowd of people you will start with.

    If it is chilly in the a.m. try arm/leg warmers for they don't take up a lot of space and can easily be peeled off as the ride progresses.

    Drink lots and snack along the way to keep your energy reserves fully stocked. Don't be afraid to eat a good lunch at the lunch stop. Don't hang out at the store stops or SAG areas for too long either.

    The last 20 miles or so are the worse so find someone to ride with so you can talk and make those miles click by quickly. If you can't find someone to ride with sing all your favorite tunes.

    Most importantly, have fun and enjoy they day for riding your first century is a huge event so celebrate it along the way and treat yourself to something really yummy at the end of the ride.
    Marcie

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    2,059
    Quote Originally Posted by makbike View Post
    Don't be afraid to eat a good lunch at the lunch stop.
    Lots of great advice. All I would add here is to know yourself and your history with your intestinal tract. I cannot eat a normal lunch at all on big rides...for me it has to be a little all the time, or I get really upset stomachs.

    Definitely figure out, though, how to get enough fuel into you.

    ETA: Is it an intestinal tract? Or track? I guess it is not a tract, like a tract of land! LOL
    "The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury

 

 

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