Welcome guest, is this your first visit? Click the "Create Account" button now to join.

To disable ads, please log-in.

Shop at TeamEstrogen.com for women's cycling apparel.

Results 1 to 15 of 18

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Traveling Nomad
    Posts
    6,763
    No riding today (rode yesterday) but a lovely 7-mile hike at a state park on this gorgeous day in central NC. It was coolish, breezy, and felt like fall!

    Emily
    Emily

    2011 Jamis Dakar XC "Toto" - Selle Italia Ldy Gel Flow
    2007 Trek Pilot 5.0 WSD "Gloria" - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow
    2004 Bike Friday Petite Pocket Crusoe - Selle Italia Diva Gel Flow

  2. #2
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    NY, NY
    Posts
    397
    75 mile organized ride (Golden Apple in Westchester County). Great ride but I really wasn't up to the "rolling" hills. Used the granny gear on my hybrid more on one day than I ever have before.

    This is also the longest I've riden since the accident in August 06. So feeling happy but also wiped out!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Looking at all the love there that's sleeping
    Posts
    4,171

    Multi-Sport Day!

    Today was my favorite kind of day....a multi sport day.
    DH and I started out the day doing the LBS sunday shop ride...I rode with the B-group, DH road with the A-group. I did 30 miles at 17.1 mph...a bit slower that the recent past, but when DH and I got up this a.m. at 7, it was 43 out! Time to pull out the knickers and arm warmers!
    But, the day warmed up to a pleasant 70-something. Beautiful blue skies and plentiful sunshine.
    DH and I then met up a little later in the afternoon with KaliDurga and DivingBiker of the DC/TE team and did a little bit of kayaking at Black Hills Regional Park in the Gaithersburg area of MD. DB had just bought a new kayak, so this was it's maiden voyage. By all accounts, it did very well (as did DB! ). It was a great paddle.
    Then...to top it all off in fantabulous fashion, DB and KD put on a wonderful picnic spread to celebrate a certain someone's 40th b'day <<cough, cough>>. Wow. It was great, and I just can't get over the wonderful folks I have met here on TE forums. Thanks, you guys. You rock.
    2007 Seven ID8 - Bontrager InForm
    2003 Klein Palomino - Terry Firefly (?)
    2010 Seven Cafe Racer - Bontrager InForm
    2008 Cervelo P2C - Adamo Prologue Saddle

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Perth, Western Australia
    Posts
    5,316

    other side

    I keep forgetting you guys drive/bike on the other side of the road, going the opposite direction.

    Gee i'm going to have fun the next time i have to drive in Canada.. I'll let Ian drive & i can navigate ...

    C

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Rhode Island
    Posts
    1,365
    Howdy,

    Yesterday was the last long training ride I did before My First Century (doesn't that sound like something you get from Toyz-R-Us?) next weekend. I mapped it out beforehand to include as many hills as I could, as My First Century will be a flat one.

    We started out at 7:30 and got out of the neighborhood and headed North for fifteen miles, over two long-grade hills. I kept the pace as slow as I could, considering it was 44 degrees out and I was wearing shorts, and desperate to get warm. My hands and feet and neck and legs were chilly on the downhills, to say the least. I had worn an underlayer under my jersey and I am glad I did. Mister Indy wore legwarmers and I am getting me a pair.

    Then we headed West into the hills of NW RI and crossed the border. This road was full of some nice little sharp rolling hills, so I got lotsa practice in a gear shifting issue I was having. The problem I was having involved going down a long hill, then immediately hitting a new hill. I wasn't shifting efficiently to deal with that. So I worked out a solution that I am sort of happy with and have those little hills to thank.

    We stopped at a scenic graveyard in Killingly, CT at mile 25 or so and had a banana. It was warmer at that point. Then we came down into Oneco and pulled off at a general store to check the maps. While we were doing that, a woman on a bike came up and started talking to us and asked us if we wanted to join their ride (going in the other direction.) We told her we'd join them some other time. She warned us of another hill coming up on our ride, "Oneco Hill." "Oh, you guys have to do Oneco Hill. Good luck." Heading off, I had a moment of dread thinking of this upcoming hill, and pressed on.

    Well, I never saw this hill she was talking about. Sure, leaving Oneco, there was a hill, but if she wants hills, all she has to do is go to the bottom of my road.

    We continued on down one of the prettiest highways in Eastern CT, past cornfields and cows and wood and dale, and on a downhill averaged 25-28 mph according to the computer, which I don't always trust. Lunch was at the state forest with these wicked cool new composting potties. I was quite impressed. It is a beautiful picnic area, very well kept. There's a water pump there where I filled up my bottles but the joke is, if you do drink the water there, you end up somehow pregnant with your cousin's child. So I was a little hesitant.

    We continued on down and around back into Southern RI where hills 5-1 (in the top ten list) reside. I knew this because I planned the ride, and so I was ready for it. Having last week had so many issues at mile 52, I had swapped out my shorts for a thinner pair, prepared with plenty of good carbs in my system, and done neck and shoulder stretches all week in anticipation. I took it easy and up I went. Hill five. Done. Four. Now four is a hill with a hill within it. It goes up, levels out, goes up, and then comes down but then not ALL the way down - it goes up again and then down. In a car, this is where one can pick up 95 and so there are lots of exit and entrance areas and park and rides and the road is wide and busy. So you can't just putz along. That was a tough one but I did it. Hill 3 was nothing. Hill 2 lasted for ten minutes. It is a loooooong uphill leading out of Hopeless Valley. I also know this one as it is part of my shorter training route, but after 65 miles, it's a different story. I think it is three miles long or something. It's not that it is particularly steep, it just goes on and on. So I just went on and on. And the reward was a quick flight down into the hollow, and finally, up the last hill, the hill at my road, the F-U hill of all hills, with three switchbacks and a surprising last steep pitch that I usually think to myself, I'm gonna walk now. Well, I downshifted til there was nothing left, and I stood up. My legs felt like jelly, but I was determined to get up the hill. Finally, I was done with it, and got on the gravel road to home. Whoo hoooooo!!!!

    5 hours not including lunch.
    Av. speed 14-15. Av. speed on hills 8-10 mph according to Mister Indy. I didn't dare look.

    Today I feel like not getting on the bike. I might later.

    Indy
    I can do five more miles.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Southeast Idaho
    Posts
    1,145

    We are back from the hills.... Picts and new Pers. Best

    Well, the cabin is closed up snug and safe for the winter. We managed to sneak in a 24 mile ride with lots of climbing. It was a beautiful fall day - the trees are changing color and the forest smelled so wonderful. A feast for the eyes and nose!

    Some great things about this ride -
    #1- Dear Hubby went with me - he is catching the riding bug too - YES!!! He rode my "old" bike - Giant OCR 2 that I purchased in February. It is too small for him, but he is a toughie and really doesn't care. Man can he push my limits (both on and off the bike ) He is such a strong rider.

    #2 - New personal top speed - THIRTY THREE POINT FIVE MILES PER HOUR! Okay, that is huge for me. We didn't sustain it for long and were going downhill, MAN was that fun

    Anyhow, here are some pictures from the ride.

    The one of the fall quaking aspens is beautiful. We didn't get rained on the enitre ride, just had the threat of rain....
    Last edited by Flybye; 06-05-2008 at 02:09 PM.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Chicago
    Posts
    14
    55 mile group ride, then the cycling club picnic

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Location
    Southeast Idaho
    Posts
    1,145
    Quote Originally Posted by Regina View Post
    DB and KD put on a wonderful picnic spread to celebrate a certain someone's 40th b'day <<cough, cough>>

    Woops! I missed that one! Happy Belated 40th birthday. Another personal best for you, right???

 

 

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •