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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
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    Northbay , California
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    61

    Is weightloss possible from riding alone?

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    Just wondering who has kept their calorie intake the same and decided to pedal off the pounds. I seem to be gravitating towards this choice, as I can't seem to stay with any regimen what-so-ever when it comes to my food. I love my food ! But, I am a very fit person under this 45 pounds and I am determined to work harder at the riding. I've been gradually increasing my miles from a ridiculously easy starting point, and can ride around 20 miles now (bought a cyclometer), but mountain miles. You all know how that goes... you sit on your bike and coast for half the miles, and chug in low gears for the other half. Anyway... I'm still gaining at this point, only riding once a week , but about now I think I'm ready to boost it to 3 days per week. Middle age apreciates gradual change.

    For me it's learning all over to bicycle commute for errands doing a Park~n~Ride, as well as putting in some distance training from home (everything a steep climb back) . My goal is to be able to bike commute with panniers to do lite errands, as well as ride a mountainous loop of about 65 miles. I'm giving myself a year-ish to achieve that goal while slimming down to a comfortable weight I can live with.

    Who can relate?
    Last edited by jayjay; 05-06-2008 at 01:41 PM.
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    My DH. he's lost at least 20 pounds since he became a serious rider. And that includes all the muscle he's built!

    He eats ice cream and popcorn many nights a week. When he's not riding, he cannot do that and keep his figure


    okay, okay, i lost 3 pounds from riding. but i don't have much to lose!!!
    Last edited by mimitabby; 05-06-2008 at 02:29 PM.
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Longmont, CO
    Posts
    545
    The hard part is eating the same amount when you're exercising more. My understanding is that women's bodies in particular are prone to demanding more calories to avoid losing fat (horrors!).

    But if you're exercising, you're building muscle, which is a good thing regardless =)
    monique

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Northbay , California
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    61

    Talking

    Quote Originally Posted by mimitabby View Post
    My DH. he's lost at least 20 pounds since he became a serious rider. And that includes all the muscle he's built!

    He eats ice cream and popcorn many nights a week. When he's not riding, he cannot do that and keep his figure
    Mimitabby ~ your posts read 8,888 !!!! Wow! that's nuts !

    but anyway, yeah, I've decided that my love affair with cooking and making delicious whole food from scratch is just something that's as integral as my need to be a lean mean riding machine. I guess I just start riding like crazy, and whatever ends up reading on the scale, ends up reading. I know I'll drop at least half this weight, if I keep to my training schedule... I have to!

    I have been hiking mornings with doggo for a couple years now, most days, (have slacked off in recent months due to sore feet and hips from weight gain !) and that doesn't seem to do squat for weight loss for me. I guess I was born to ride, so ride I'll have to get serious about. Thanks
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Hillsboro, OR
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    5,023
    I know tons of men who lose weight by just riding more. No diet alterations at all.

    On the flip side... I started riding almost 3 years ago now. In that time, I've GAINED 30 lbs and almost all of it during cycling seasons. I have a very difficult time controlling my appetite when I'm riding a lot.

    Ultimately, very few people can out bike what they can eat. Diet plays a HUGE role.
    My new non-farm blog: Finding Freedom

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Northbay , California
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    61
    Quote Originally Posted by bounceswoosh View Post
    (horrors!)...But if you're exercising, you're building muscle, which is a good thing regardless =)
    Monique, aint it true ! I've always had a lot of muscle, dont' think I can get much more! There's quite a muscular woman beneath my stack of spare tires. Thanks!

    ps. just curious... what does 'bouceswhoosh' and 'oooh shiny' really mean ? Sounds quite interesting....
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Northbay , California
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    Quote Originally Posted by GLC1968 View Post
    I know tons of men who lose weight by just riding more. No diet alterations at all.

    On the flip side... I started riding almost 3 years ago now. In that time, I've GAINED 30 lbs and almost all of it during cycling seasons. I have a very difficult time controlling my appetite when I'm riding a lot.

    Ultimately, very few people can out bike what they can eat. Diet plays a HUGE role.
    Well, that's discouraging !

    I can't help but think that the calories/burn ratio is just a part of the picture. Age, and lifestyle off the bike must count for something. I'm 46 and have been riding, and hiking, and gardening for most of my adult life, off and on... mostly on. I'm a mesomorphic build , never over 20 lbs overweight till I hit 40yrs... then with perimenopause, all hell broke loose. Now I'm just having to deal.
    Last edited by jayjay; 05-06-2008 at 02:12 PM.
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
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    14,498
    For a slightly different viewpoint - cycling is the most weight-loss-friendly exercise I've ever done, for the simple fact that I can maintain a moderate intensity for long periods of time. Running is just too demanding for me (and most people, I think) to do for the same amounts of time that would be considered a medium-length ride (2-4 hours). I almost always drop a pound or two when I increase my mileage significantly. (... but maybe I'm kidding myself and that pound is coming from the upper body muscle I'm losing from less time in the gym - anyway my pants fit better -)

    Plus, to me, terrestrial exercise really suppresses my appetite - I have to force myself to eat after a ride to replenish my muscle glycogen. (Swimming, OTOH, always makes me ravenous. )
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    Longmont, CO
    Posts
    545
    Quote Originally Posted by jayjay View Post
    Monique, aint it true ! I've always had a lot of muscle, dont' think I can get much more! There's quite a muscular woman beneath my stack of spare tires. Thanks!

    ps. just curious... what does 'bouceswhoosh' and 'oooh shiny' really mean ? Sounds quite interesting....
    LOL

    Bounceswoosh -- very geeky origin -- Back in the day, my Everquest character used to do the following when fighting:

    Weylin bounces!
    Weylin swooshes!
    Weylin (says) Pa Pa Pa POW!

    ... so then some of my in-game friends started calling me bounceswoosh, and it kinda went from there.

    "oooh shiny" is ... hrm ... just me trying to capture my adoration for bike parts and, well, frankly, all things material. But especially bikes; I see a bike and I'm fascinated like a crow finding a shiny object.
    monique

  10. #10
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    Oct 2007
    Location
    Northbay , California
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    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    For a slightly different viewpoint - cycling is the most weight-loss-friendly exercise I've ever done...Plus, to me, terrestrial exercise really suppresses my appetite - I have to force myself to eat after a ride to replenish my muscle glycogen. (Swimming, OTOH, always makes me ravenous. )
    WEll, this one is *very* encouraging ! Come to think about it, I recall the years I was riding lots (32 to 40) I really could eat, and I kept a moderate BMI. I also agree with you that the distance riding is an appetite suppressor, it seems one can hit the threshold of longer aerobic with cycling, which must wrench the stomach.
    Last edited by jayjay; 05-06-2008 at 02:33 PM.
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Northbay , California
    Posts
    61
    Quote Originally Posted by bounceswoosh View Post
    LOL

    Bounceswoosh -- very geeky origin -- Back in the day, my Everquest character used to do the following when fighting:

    Weylin bounces!
    Weylin swooshes!
    Weylin (says) Pa Pa Pa POW!

    ... so then some of my in-game friends started calling me bounceswoosh, and it kinda went from there.

    "oooh shiny" is ... hrm ... just me trying to capture my adoration for bike parts and, well, frankly, all things material. But especially bikes; I see a bike and I'm fascinated like a crow finding a shiny object.
    I see, wow, very interesting. Crows and raccoons ! Raccoons are known to grab something shiny and not let go... sounds like some of us cyclists.
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    VA / DC Metro Area
    Posts
    624
    I've lost some weight from riding without really making significant adjustments to my diet but the scale hasn't budged in a while HOWEVER I am back to wearing older, smaller clothes so that has to account for something, right? Food and I have a torrid love affair. If I could find a jersey that said, "I ride to eat!" I'd be ALL OVER that one.
    "She who succeeds in gaining the master of the bicycle will gain the mastery of life." -Frances E. Willard
    My Cycling Blog | Requisite Bike Pics | Join the Team Estrogen group at Velog.com

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Edge of Colorado Plateau
    Posts
    701
    Well, my experience with cycling and weight loss is this...

    I pulled my bike out after ten years of not riding. My husband and I started at the same time. I was 140 or so and knew I needed to loose the weight. So on I went to my bike. After work we would do something like 6-10 miles. everyday or so. Then on the weekends, I would go for a longer length ride with no particular specified milegage. At the time, I did not have a cyclometer so I went by how I felt and how my body changed. In a few months I ended up loosing 10 or more pounds.

    I have been very active my whole life as well. Now I am reaching 40! Yikes. So I make an effort to ride, or hike, or somesort of exercise as best I can do with school, work, and some sort of family life. The exercise part has been a struggle!

    Red Rock

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Northbay , California
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    61
    Quote Originally Posted by F8th637 View Post
    I've lost some weight from riding without really making significant adjustments to my diet but the scale hasn't budged in a while HOWEVER I am back to wearing older, smaller clothes so that has to account for something, right? Food and I have a torrid love affair. If I could find a jersey that said, "I ride to eat!" I'd be ALL OVER that one.
    I'd buy that jersey too, and it would have a big slice of chocolate cream pie on it, with a steaming cup of espresso..... rather like a WayneThiebauld painting ! I can picture it " I brake for food " and the jersey sponsor pix can be all those lovely pastry, desert, & coffee companies like Hostess, Peet's Coffee, Ben & Jerry's Icecream, etc....

    YUM! Lets get a team, and train together nationwide as The BonBon Babes !!!
    Last edited by jayjay; 05-07-2008 at 05:13 AM.
    Saving Myself ~ One Bike Ride At A Time

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Rhode Island
    Posts
    1,365
    Last year this time I weighed 140 lbs and intended to lose 15. I did that but at the same time started cycling more seriously. After I lost the 15 I ramped up my cycling to train for a century and by the time of the century I was 135. Over the winter I kept riding and eating about the same. Now I am 140 again, but my body is definitely different. My legs are muscular and my rear doesn't "seem" fat, although I am back to wearing 8/9 pants because the 5/6 pants that fit me at 130 stopped fitting over my upper legs, which are more muscular now. It seems like the newer fashion pants - the skinny pants - don't work on my bicycle legs at all.

    But I am happy with the weight because I know a lot is muscle and it's really all about if you're happy with what is in the mirror. And I am. Plus I eat whatever I want. Let the scary-skinny girls wear the new fashions. I'll be voluptious and strong in my 8/9 bootleg jeans.

    I can do five more miles.

 

 

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