
Originally Posted by
Catrin
Thanks for this Indy - the other day I was riding with a couple of people and one of them told me that "soon and very soon you won't even notice that you are climbing a hill" - all I can say is he has to be a LOT stronger than I!
When I first started riding, I made the mistake (well, it felt like a mistake) of going to some CIBA rides down south and in doing the Hilly Hundred before I was really ready. I couldn't climb at all, and it was really discouraging. In time, however, my fitness improved and I kept at it. I also started riding with some people who taught me a thing or two about climbing. I did my first J.A.W.S. with one of them, and while I had to stop and start a number of times on a few of the worst hills, I did finish in one piece. The following year, I averaged almost 18 mph for that ride and was beating my mentor to the top of every hill (I don't think he was very happy about it). Now, our hilliest climbs are still easier than what LTR does on a regular basis, but I felt pretty pleased with my progress by local standards.
But in the interest of full disclosure, I have to admit that I haven't been working on it the last couple of years, and my climbing fitness has deteriorated quite a bit. I'd like to pick it back up, but it's challenging. As it is, we're already driving to mountain bike. To add even more drive-to-rides to our schedule likely isn't going to happen all that often. If we even had one hill near our house, I'd work on hill repeats, but my end of Johnson County is flat as a pancake.
Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.
--Mary Anne Radmacher