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Thread: Petrified

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    24
    Emily,

    That's hilarious. You do sound like you were a lot like me. How encouraging. Wow...and now you're an athlete and have a "stable" of bikes. So maybe my pale, soft and curvy, bookish, slightly asthmatic, 5' tall self can sneak up on a little athleticism, too...

    Thanks,

    Miranda

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Nebraska
    Posts
    1,192
    RE: brainiacs and bicycling.

    DH is a bicycle commuter and the computer dude at his place of employment. He comments that he just THINKS better on those days he rides (most). Or to put it another way, he feels the bike makes him smart and the car makes him dumb.

    And wasn't it the ancient Greeks who believed that a person should have both a fit body and a fit mind? (You just can't go wrong quoting the ancient Greeks...)
    Give big space to the festive dog that make sport in the roadway. Avoid entanglement with your wheel spoke.
    (Sign in Japan)

    1978 Raleigh Gran Prix
    2003 EZ Sport AX

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Albuquerque, NM
    Posts
    3,099
    and we've hooked another one! actually Miranda not only do I think you can do - I'm betting you will and it won't be enough!! You'll also realize it isn't the miles anymore it's the time.....miles are just numbers! I did my first 35 miles on a "comfort" bike with big tires and heavy as an ox so I KNOW you can do it. It sounds like quite a few of us are asthmatic - including me. I just make sure I take my meds and if my asthma starts to bother me I just slow my pace down until I can get my breathing back in control!!

    Good luck and we want to hear a full report!!


    PS: welcome to the board!! if you get a chance there's a thread under the open titled "getting to know you"! Gives you a chance to meet us and tell us something more about you!
    Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, champagne in one hand, strawberries in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming: "Yeah Baby! What a Ride!"

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Posts
    31
    So, Miranda, what'll it take to get you to change your login name? Or at least add a big winking smilie to it? Because I really think that once you get out there and start logging the miles, you're going to find that you're a lot sportier than you ever suspected you were!

    I'm another one who managed to think of myself as a total spaz for a lot of my life -- not only did I get picked last for every team; not only did I duck and cover every time a ball came at me in gym class; I thought for years that I was so physically messed up that I couldn't even ride a bike, thanks to having given up my faithful high school vintage roadie for a very cheap and ill-fitting knee-bashing one-ton mountain bike at around the time they first got really popular.

    When I hit my 30s (and an unrelated career crisis), I took up fencing and really found my inner jock for the first time ever; when I started to get serious about beating a bunch of fast, aggressive, 20-year-old guys, I realized that my aerobic fitness was crap. Since running made my knees scream, I took another look at bikes, and found that with a lighter and properly-fitted bike, I haven't had a single twinge that wasn't related to falling off.

    I promise you, you're going to be able to do your 35 miles and then some. If you can handle the big city on your old one-speed Schwinn, you're already a better athlete than you realize. You just need to believe it.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    24

    "Petrified" update, and yes, more questions

    Thanks so much for the support. It's made a huge difference. I've found that I actually am getting pissed off when something comes up in the evening to keep me from riding...that's new for me. I'm determined to get in a longer ride this week-end, even if it is "Hot as Hades".

    Yes, I think I'll change my login name if I do the 35 miles and I'm not completely hating life while I'm doing it. That would mean I've transformed into "Newlysporty".

    (And btw, this forum is keeping me sane during a mind-numbingly boring week of temping, where I have absolutely nothing to do but obsessively learn about cycling and read the news.)

    So...I picked up my friend's bike yesterday (my loaner replacement for the vintage Schwinn). She can't tell me much about it, because she never rode it much. I haven't had a chance to ride it yet, because I still have to adjust the seat for me. This is what it is: Dolce Sport, Specialized A1 Max...I think that's what it said on it. It seems blissfully light and bouncy, and the handlebars are really padded. My friend complained that it mushed her girl parts painfully, though, because you have to lean forward so much with a racing bike. That's one of the reasons she never got into riding. I'm hoping I can adjust the seat to avoid too much painful "mushing" up front...right? It does have that ergonomic cut-out seat, but she was talking more about, well, the clitoris area.

    What's really intimidating about this bike is that there are no numbers on the gears. There are just tiny little levers that barely come out of the handlebars. Now, I know it's been a long time since I've been on a 10 speed, but didn't they used to have numbers to mark what gear you were shifting to? And why would you get rid of those numbers, making it more mysterious? How am I ever going to learn how to shift this thing? How can you see what gear you're shifting to?

    Also, these pedals don't have clips, but they do have the little straps that go around your shoe. Are there any little tricks to managing these?

    Obviously, I just need to take this bike out to a safe place and get to know it, but any tips you guys can give me ahead of time would be great. Besides, I won't have anything else to do all day...

    Thanks!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    socal
    Posts
    1,852
    this may be your friend's bike:

    http://specialized.com/bc/SBCBkModel...v18orij.j27007

    as they didn't do a sport for 2005.. i'm assuming it's a 2004...

    i ride a 2004 dolce elite... i enjoy it... unfortunately i bought it at supergo so they didn't exactly get me on the right size (i'm pretty sure i needed the next size smaller... in hindsight)

    i've ridden a TON of miles on that bike! and i've done a ton of centuries and metric centuries and a lot of climbing! i'm sure, as long as it fits you fairly well.. that you will love it!

    you'll learn to shift.. and quite quickly, i'm sure! the only thing i had ridden prior to getting my dolce was a kmart bike that didn't shift for sh.... well.. you know! you'll figure out after a few tries which side does the front rings and which side does the back... and before you know it.. you'll be shifting like a pro!

    you don't really need to see which gear you are in... you'll be able to see which on in the front just by looking down.. the rear one.. you can tell when you shift if it got easier or harder.... that's all you really need!

    have fun!

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Asheville, NC
    Posts
    680
    A thread on clipless pedals i thought was very good...

    http://forums.teamestrogen.com/showt...ighlight=clips

    as corsair said...another one hooked!!! we will be looking for your report!
    I am a nobody; nobody is perfect, and therefore I am perfect.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Brooklyn, NY
    Posts
    24
    Well, I think I'm riding to Coney Island and back this week-end (which is about 12 miles each way, I think), assuming there aren't too many thunderstorms. I'll let you guys know how I fare...

 

 

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