Lisa
My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
My personal blog:My blog
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I've done plenty of mashing in my granniest of granny gears. Some of the places I ride are similar to the area around Lisa's home. I *try* to spin up in the beginning of a long or hard climb, but I could never be spinning at 100 rpm! My usual cadence is around 80-85 and I am sure I get down to 50 or 60 on some of the 15-20% climbs around here. I just did one of those on Sunday and on the hardest part, I was mashing and praying I would make it. Like Lisa, my average goes way down on those kind of rides and I don't care. When I saw your average, Mr. Silver, on a century with 8500 feet of climbing, I was astounded. I can make it up those climbs, but I am simply turning the pedals over and not thinking about anything except getting up the hill. Trying to go fast on steep grades just isn't going to happen for me. I can and have improved my climbing speed on shorter or less steep climbs, but at a certain point, I can't do more. I just don't have the strength.
At one point, I almost got a compact double. Shortly after that, I got my new bike and ended up changing out the 11-25 to an 11-27. I am really glad I have a triple...
If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers
It is never too late to be what you might have been. ~ George Elliot
My podcast about being a rookie triathlete:Kelownagurl Tris Podcast
Back to the original question. is it mashing if you are in your lowest gear? No.
and does cadence have anything do with mashing again? No.
Only time I would consider "mashing" is if you are only pushing down the pedals, forgetting to push forward at the top, sweeping your foot backward at the bottom and pulling up on the back side, then ITS mashing.
Your cadence could drop to 30 but if you are putting energy into the pedal most of the way around then its not mashing.
On a steep hill, I will stand up and allow my body weight to push the pedal down; but, I do use my other leg to pull up on the pedal. I skip the pushing and sweeping when I stand up so my muscles can take a short 10-20 second break. sometimes bit longer. And sometimes I do add the pushing part. My lowest gear combo is ony 39/26?? on the road bike (tt is 39/21 or 23) so when the hill gets to be 12% or more I have to stand.
Standing does use up more of your energy but sometimes its necessary to recover your regular pedalling muscles. or if the hills are too steep for your gearing.
not to fear, you are pedalling just fine.
Smilingcat
Well said, Mistress Cat
It can absolutely "feel" like mashing when you are trying to get up the hill, but in your lowest gears, its not.
I mash in races - particulalrly in time trials, I am trying to teach myself to spin cause it should be better on my body, but I mash cause at the moment thats faster - big chain ring, big gears, powering along at a relatively slow cadence.
I also mash in races with hills, where I try to get over a hill climb without dropping into low gears so I can increase speed rapidly as I crest and start to descend. Its a grind, but it works.
Headwinds always make me feel like I am mashing - sometimes I am, sometimes I am just trying to go forward in my lowest gear![]()
Hmmm...I never ever understood it that way...so, I guess that makes me feel better.
Ironically, my knees hurt at a higher cadence, so I've felt "strange" for feeling like I needed a slower cadence...but also consider that my legs are pretty strong which I think favors slower cadence IMHO
If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers
My partner was told by many his cadence was too slow - so he tried real hard to "spin" more - but he just ends up making his knees hurt. So has a slower cadence than many of those he races against, but thats ok - he won a national title and a gold medal last year and aims to defend it this year with the cadence he uses.
Many will say to use a high cadence, and logically it is the right thing to do - particularly if you want to increase speed... but ultimately, you need to find the cadence and style that fits you best.
That's my excuse too! I hit a 20%+ grade the other day and briefly considered moving closer to my family in Indiana and Illinois.
I ride with a guy who insists that the only way to get stronger is to push up these monster hills in his big ring. He looks like he's about to topple over and is usually slumped over his bars by the top. I love spinning right past him...
I hate it when it looks like I'll have a good average speed and the hills mess it up.
Mr. S, do you need a new battery in your cadence thingie?