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View Poll Results: What's a hilly ride?

Voters
38. You may not vote on this poll
  • If I cross the causeway twice, I can climb 100 feet on any ride!

    1 2.63%
  • 50 feet per mile of vertical climbing

    3 7.89%
  • 75 feet per mile of vertical climbing

    9 23.68%
  • 100 feet per mile of vertical climbing

    17 44.74%
  • I fart in the general direction of any gear shorter than a 42x18!

    0 0%
  • Any ride with more than three climbs over 15% grade is hilly, regardless of total

    8 21.05%
Page 4 of 4 FirstFirst 1234
Results 46 to 48 of 48
  1. #46
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    St. Louis, MO
    Posts
    1,058

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    I didn't answer because my Garmin 305 doesn't do elevation well. And of course, all hills are relative based on mood and the length of the ride. However, I just learned something new. My "hill" workout with DH involves hills that are long--you know can look at it and tell it's gonna hurt. However, I learned in Michigan this summer that a small hill can bring you to a stop, if it's steep enough. They look harmless, then sneak up on you.

    My idea of hilly? The Ride the Rivers Century in St. Louis--specifically Calhoun County, Illinois. I have vague memories of wanting to throw brand-new bike in the ditch and lay down on the grass to cry but I made it!
    "Well-behaved women seldom make history." --Laurel Thatcher Ulrich

    '09 Trek WSD 2.1 with a Brooks B-68 saddle
    '11 Trek WSD Madone 5.2 with Brooks B-17

  2. #47
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    I am currently a flat-lander and I admit it. My definition of "hilly" is anything vertical other than the pipelines that cross the Mississippi River levee. In these parts, riding over a freeway overpass constitutes a hill. There's a section of the Miss River levee that has several pipeline crossings that roller coaster, then you ride down off the levee under some more pipes, and back up - it's all rather fun - especially if no one else is on the path and you can hammer it.

    On the MS-150, we ride in the "Florida Parishes" and into southern Mississippi, which has right and proper hills, which I suppose most of you would call "rolling."
    Beth

  3. #48
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Quote Originally Posted by cunninghamair View Post
    They look harmless, then sneak up on you.
    Quote Originally Posted by Vireo View Post
    while I love 10,000 feet of gain centuries I HATE short steep rollers. And while I used to say 5,000 foot centuries weren't hilly centuries I am now a convert.
    Ah, there's the validation I was looking for when I posted this poll. It's just hard on your legs to go from massive application of force on a climb, to spinning like crazy on a downhill, switch every 90 seconds, repeat, repeat, repeat.

    Really I had a bit of a revelation myself today. All we have in my immediate area are the short steep 'uns. Today a group of us drove a short distance for a budget tour in the next county over. There were a couple of pretty good hills, but there was also one that was long but not steep. Now that I look over my data, we gained 374 feet in 2.3 miles (that's in 114 m in 3.7 km ). The max grade on that hill was only 11%, and most of it obviously was much shallower. We all agreed that we could do that all day long. Interesting.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

 

 

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