Our club rides aren't rated per se. For the weekend rides, we get a short description in our newsletter of the ride, e.g., "mostly flat with some rollers," which gives some indication of the terrain. The description will also note approximate ride lengths. For every weekend ride, there are short, medium and long (and sometimes extra long) routes. For instance, there might be 20, 35 and 55-mile options. The medium and long routes are usually SAGed. We get maps for the ride and the routes are Dan Henry-ed. Ride leaders do not do the ride, but instead man the SAGs and sweep the course by car, looking for anybody who might be stranded or lost. There is no set pace for these rides. If you're fast, you go fast. If you're slow, you go slow. However, you have to be prepared to ride alone because it's really easy for the group--even when it's sizable--to get spread out.
The club also offers "sociable," "breakfast" and "dinner" rides, where the reported pace is supposed to be slower, say 12-14 mph, and touring rides, where there is no SAG support or Dan Henrys. The intent with these rides is that everybody more or less ride together. Ride leaders are instructed to stay with the slower riders.
For our weekday "training" rides, the club indicates the average speed of the group, but these are pretty rough estimates. From what I can tell, most of the training rides end up having A and B (and sometimes C) groups. The As might average 23+ mph, while the Bs might average 18+ mph. The averages are vary as the season progresses, too. Because the routes are Dan Henry-ed, you can still just go at your own pace, but they're really intended to teach people how to safely ride in a fast pack.
Perhaps our club has it easier when it comes to grading rides in that Central Indiana is mostly flat. There's only a handful of rides--mostly in southern Indiana--that warrant a warning about being challenging. Other rides are judged more by length than terrain.
Last edited by indysteel; 04-27-2007 at 09:29 AM.
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