1.6km to the mile.
0.625miles to the km.
Get out your calculator.![]()
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So many great answers already while I was sleeping
but again what´s 100k or 200k compared to 100 mile/km ride?
So now I can tell that I'm going to do a 3/4-century (70 km) and a 5/4-century (134 km) in June and that's about all the organized rides back here. Riding in Finland is cool because there are not that many cars or people and the bike roads are usually kept in pretty good condition and they are all over the place. Finland is pretty flat country but we do a just a couple or decent hill even in my hometown. The riding season for me at least is from mid-April to mid-October. Rest of the year is too snowy.
thanks for the clarifications to everybody
Oh btw peloton is a Finninsh word as well! I got a bit confused since here it means fearless.
Do or do not - there is no try. -Yoda
1.6km to the mile.
0.625miles to the km.
Get out your calculator.![]()
Drink coffee and do stupid things faster with more energy.
In the states....Originally Posted by RoadRaven
100k = metric century
100m = century
Just keep pedaling.
Laura, if you need to do a metric to imperial conversion you can get google to do them. Go to http://www.google.com and in the search field typeOriginally Posted by LauraPaura
and google will give you an answer.100 kilometer to milesYou can do this for most measurements. I use it quite a bit when I'm cooking and having to change portion sizes.
You can also just say "I'm doing a 70k".Originally Posted by LauraPaura
Also, when talking centuries, if you're in the US, typically they're 100 miles and to differentiate between 100 kilometers you'll here the term "metric century" instead.
Believe it or not everyone, peloton is also an English word. From the Oxford English DictionaryOriginally Posted by LauraPaura
The etymology of the word, however, is FrenchOriginally Posted by Oxford English Dictionary: Peloton, n.
It looks like the very base root of the word comes from a small body of soldiers. Someone probably, at some point, said that the group looks like a peloton of soldiers and the saying stuck.Originally Posted by Oxford English Dictionar: Peloton, etymology
Mel the mad OED user![]()
Sigh. I'm so jealous!Riding in Finland is cool because there are not that many cars or people and the bike roads are usually kept in pretty good condition and they are all over the place.
Life is Good!
That's right. The word was originally a French root, and still technically exists in the English language. However, the form we're all more familiar with is "platoon".Originally Posted by Melody
And this is what you get for a degree in linguistics - Trivial Persuit wins, mostly.
Aperte mala cm est mulier, tum demum est bona. -- Syrus, Maxims
(When a woman is openly bad, she is at last good.)
Edepol nunc nos tempus est malas peioris fieri. -- Plautus, Miles Gloriosus
(Now is the time for bad girls to become worse still.)
No kidding! I have a friend in Toijala who has been griping loudly about not being able to ride....sounds like the snow has hung around there longer than usual this year...he's been going completely loopy waiting for clear roads and trails.Originally Posted by LauraPaura
Finland's a fascinating and beautiful country, though. One of the places on my must-visit list.
~Sherry.
All vintage, all the time.
Falcon Black Diamond
Gitane Tour de France
Kuwahara Sierra Grande MTB
Bianchi Super Grizzly MTB
Where, pray tell, is this boudair to which you refer?Originally Posted by RoadRaven
And where do I find the other consenting adult? All ready and waiting there?
All you need is love...la-dee-da-dee-da...all you need is love!
The derivation of SAG is unknown - so it's wahtever you want it to be.
We've had a few peole look at us funny when they ask "why did I suddenly lose all my energy? What is that?" and we say, "You're bonking..." Then there was the time we were talking about how long it had been since the last time we bonked...
Just to elaborate on the "clipless" pedals...Even though you are clipped in to the pedals the system is called clipless. Toe clips were the norm before clipless....so pedals without toe clips were called clipless.
Now that I've switched from clips to clipless, I've started referring to pedal styles as "toe-cages" and "cleats" and "flat pedals" cuz I just can't keep it straight otherwise.![]()
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"If Americans want to live the American Dream, they should go to Denmark." - Richard Wilkinson
heh heh heh I like that one too.Originally Posted by RoadRaven
A few years ago I read an article in a cycling magazine that had the theory that bonking would teach you valuable lessons about nutrition.
The cover had the headline 'Bonking: why everybody should try it once' - you have no idea how funny that is to a kiwi - I think I still have that magazine somewhere
Originally Posted by madisongrrl
I've also heard a 100 mile century referred to as an imperial century. Not very frequently, but enough for me to cram another random fact into my brain.
I thought SAG stood for Support And Gear, but maybe the acronym source was an afterthought ...?Originally Posted by annie
Meanwhile, here's another vocabulary question. What, in web forum parlance, is a "troll"?
Half-marathon over. Sabbatical year over. It's back to "sacking shirt and oat cakes" as they say here.
What's a "hardtail" bike?
Run like a dachshund! Ride like a superhero! Swim like a three-legged cat!
TE Bianchi Girls Rock