I definitely get pursuiter's cough when I race track, especially on low-humidity days. And I hear many others clearing their throats and making little tickle coughs, too. I don't get it as much when road racing, though.
I definitely get pursuiter's cough when I race track, especially on low-humidity days. And I hear many others clearing their throats and making little tickle coughs, too. I don't get it as much when road racing, though.
I definitely get it also when I push hard on a ride. It will happen after the ride for a few hours, but I have had it go for a couple days. It's mainly on the inhale and it makes me cough. I just figured it was because I was breathing so hard during the ride.
Thanks for looking into this! I also get a cough, particularly after a hard ride, or a century. I rode a charity ride yesterday, only 62 miles but several long hills, and I had the cough last night. You are right, it sounds like a smoker's cough, and sometimes I get a little hoarse also.
The bicycle is the most civilized conveyance known to man. Other forms of transport grow daily more nightmarish. Only the bicycle remains pure in heart. ~Iris Murdoch, The Red and the Green
Very interesting to see so many of us know this...
I wonder why there is so little about it in books or on the net...
I wish there was a way to stop the coffing (she coffs, a hard ride yesterday still lingering on...) but nothing I have tried (from this thread or from the chemist) seems to fix it...
Guess I will have to "wear" the coff proudly, as I do my interesting tan lines...![]()
Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
"I will try again tomorrow".
I, too, wonder why so little is said! I have had the exact same experience after both mtb and road rides, when I am either racing or "racing" to keep up with faster riders. I am breathing so much, so deeply, and so fast! I can feel it stressing my throat, just to pull in enough oxygen. Then I'll cough for the next two days. At first, it only happened after really challenging mtb rides...........I thought maybe there was something in the woods that was affecting me, like allergies. Then it happened after a couple of road rides, when I was pretty much struggling to keep up for the entire ride. I figured that all that breathing irritated something and I'd have to put up with it occasionally. Now I look at it as if it was telling me that I worked DA** mightily on a ride and so earned the cough. Don't LIKE it but as long as no real harm is done. plus the fact that it doesn't happen often, it's something that I can deal with.Originally Posted by RoadRaven
annie
Time is a companion that goes with us on a journey. It reminds us to cherish each moment, because it will never come again. What we leave behind is not as important as how we have lived." Captain Jean Luc Picard
Yeah... I've resigned myself to accepting that like an aching butt or thighs, the coff is another clue to tell me I have pushed my self hard...
I do get tired of saying to people who look sideways at me "its alright, I'm not infectious..."
Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
"I will try again tomorrow".
Just wondering - since everyone is in different parts of the world - is there an "air quality index" as part of your daily news forecast?
I know that this has been known to happen here (Toronto, Canada) to some folks, during a chase on those days - or just a certain climb - ... And they hadn't been aware of the index that day and later found out it was high. As well, it changes sometimes very rapidly from 'good' to 'poor' as the day progresses... Just a thought.
Surprisingly, there are smog alerts reaching out into the 'burbs and throughout vast stretches of country - it's not only in the city.
anybody else coughing as they read this? Suddenly I have a dry patch in my throat ... sheesh.
LOL, GooglieWooglie... now that you mention it... and I haven't been on a bike for two days...
ROFLMAO
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Courage does not always roar. Sometimes, it is the quiet voice at the end of the day saying,
"I will try again tomorrow".