There's a good, straightforward guide right here, on the TE website (thanks, TE!).
http://www.teamestrogen.com/articles/asa_century.asp
There's a good, straightforward guide right here, on the TE website (thanks, TE!).
http://www.teamestrogen.com/articles/asa_century.asp
I used the following schedule as a guide for preparing for my first century. I did not follow it to the letter but had a great ride on my first century so I do believe it works.
Hope this helps and have fun!
http://www.diablocyclists.com/RiderT...anHertlein.htm
should have tried the link before i posted it - no longer works. Rats for it was a great training plan. Sorry!
Last edited by makbike; 02-20-2008 at 03:06 PM.
Marcie
Hi Marcie....Too bad about the link, but thanks for trying! I googled the Diablo Cyclists just in case the training schedule was hiding somewhere new, but no luck. The little article about how to get faster was interesting, however!.....By the way, I don't know if you noticed, but the old link you posted now apparently takes visitors to an odd little two-entry "diary" that doesn't seem to have much to do with, rrr, cycling...!
P.S. Glad to hear your dad got through his surgery successfully today. ....Like many others, I'm sending healing thoughts in his direction tonight!
"If there are no dogs in heaven, then when I die I want to go where they went." (Will Rogers)
You might try this link. This is for the STP ride, which is a Sat/Sun ride of 100 pretty flat miles each. Maybe your training would vary a little if your ride is a one-day event, but this should have some good info for you, including a mileage build up.
http://cascade.org/EandR/stp/stp_mileage.cfm
"The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury
Last year I used the diablo schedule to train for my century, and the century ran very well. I'm disappointed it is no longer there, because i have another century coming up in June!
Here is what I am using this time - it is similar to the Diablo one:
http://www.maccfund.org/trek100/riders/train.pdf
Easy means, don't overdo it.
Pace means, at the pace you expect to do the century (so, if you want to do the century in 6 hours, for example, your pace would be +/- 16 mph... if you have a speedometer you can try to keep yourself in pace.
Brisk means above pace, heart is a-thumpin.
You can also change your rest days, move the schedule around a bit. I also cross-trained in there - did a day of running instead of cycling on an "easy" day, for example.
Best wishes,
Indi
I can do five more miles.