The Biking Thread

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I've been getting in between 7 1/2 - 8 hours of riding per week for the last 6 weeks, so my form is starting to show up.
The heat also showed up and it can mess me up if I try to push too hard into my red zone.
 
For you experienced guys (for example, @Tig ), a question. I now don't have my Thursday night group to really push me. In years past, I would do some rides at active rest type pace, some rides just as rides, and really push it on Thursday night, making that the focus of the week in terms of effort. Now, I don't have that outside motivation, and ride with guys that I mostly am stronger than. Any suggestions for reading, or a program/system to look out, for self coaching, self training? My theory in the past has been that all miles are good miles (I don't really have time to over train I don't think) but to make sure and get some miles in that are not just 80-95% all the time. I might want to be a bit more disciplined about mixing up pace for better training effect, but would like some help with a system for doing so. In the past, it was mostly on feel, or what I felt like doing that day, other than Thursdays, when it was flog the horse to keep up, and try to stay off the extreme rear of the dirt peloton.
 
For you experienced guys (for example, @Tig ), a question. I now don't have my Thursday night group to really push me. In years past, I would do some rides at active rest type pace, some rides just as rides, and really push it on Thursday night, making that the focus of the week in terms of effort. Now, I don't have that outside motivation, and ride with guys that I mostly am stronger than. Any suggestions for reading, or a program/system to look out, for self coaching, self training? My theory in the past has been that all miles are good miles (I don't really have time to over train I don't think) but to make sure and get some miles in that are not just 80-95% all the time. I might want to be a bit more disciplined about mixing up pace for better training effect, but would like some help with a system for doing so. In the past, it was mostly on feel, or what I felt like doing that day, other than Thursdays, when it was flog the horse to keep up, and try to stay off the extreme rear of the dirt peloton.
Since I avoid formal training and ride like my body tells me, I'm no help.

I usually ride hard on either a Saturday or Sunday with the warp speed racers and ride distance on Wednesday and/or Friday. Any other days are super easy rides just for enjoyment and recovery needs.
 
I'm no help either since I ride because it's good exercise AND it's fun. I ride solo exclusively (unless someone is riding near my pace and I follow them or let them follow me for a while). Since it's solo I can really only tell if I'm faster/slower when I get home and look at strava. Sounds like you might be much more of a competitive rider. I think if you have Strava Premium (I don't so not sure) you can get coaching from it based on your goals. Given your terrain I would think things like hill repeats would be good to get better/faster. For me that just sounds like work and I don't work and I'm too old to care if I'm the slowest or the fastest so long as I enjoy it
 
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I'm no help either since I ride because it's good exercise AND it's fun. I ride solo exclusively (unless someone is riding near my pace and I follow them or let them follow me for a while). Since it's solo I can really only tell if I'm faster/slower when I get home and look at strava. Sounds like you might be much more of a competitive rider. I think if you have Strava Premium (I don't so not sure) you can get coaching from it based on your goals. Given your terrain I would think things like hill repeats would be good to get better/faster. For me that just sounds like work and I don't work and I'm too old to care if I'm the slowest or the fastest so long as I enjoy it
Well, I am not THAT competitive. The group I used to chase was mostly above my ability level. I am used to being middle to back half of the pack, at least with those guys. I am more interested in keeping myself at a similar level of fitness, now that I can't use chasing them as the main event around which to build my week. I will use a combo of yours and Tig's advice, along with some stuff I have done over the years, keep it fun, go somewhat by feel, but make sure I vary my pace some, just to keep it fresh. Doing different types of cycling; commuting, touring/gravel, mountain biking, roadying around a little, just cruising around town or the neigborhood for fun, also helps in that regard. So really, just getting some longer easy saddle time, and some sprints, repeats etc. in on the right days should be good enough for this wally. Thanks for the thoughts!
 
Rode 30 miles and didn't eat nearly enough beforehand. Last 10 miles were total agony and starvation. Forgot how much fuel you need.
 
Rode 30 miles and didn't eat nearly enough beforehand. Last 10 miles were total agony and starvation. Forgot how much fuel you need.
Uggh. Gotta hate post (EDIT) BONK riding to survive back home. Eating before big efforts, and eating during, is tricky. I need to eat enough, but not much volume in the last hour or hour and a half before a big effort, then I have a hard time with solids during a ride, and tend to rely on some sort of sport drink and water. Obviously, I am not an ultra athlete.

@Theodore . Fixed it now. It was supposed to be post bonk riding and not post bike riding, which doesn't make any sense.
 
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I rarely eat before a morning ride. I usually just drink some juice or a little tea. While on the bike, I'll eat after an hour in and then as needed. If rolling, I'll eat a gel. If stopping for a break, I'll eat a tasty Lärabar.

I've never put much faith in those special pre-ride hydration drinks but tried some from a free sample before last week's Friday and Saturday rides. I lost 30% less weight from sweating on both rides compared to similar rides without it.

On the bike, I alternate drinking from one water bottle and one sports drink bottle. I freeze up to 2/3 the night before to keep the fluids cold longer. Your stomach absorbs cold liquids faster than warm.

Of course, my summer rides are extremely hot and humid. For instance, this week's 7 AM start times are at 77-78 F with a feels like temperature of 82-84 F. By 10 AM, the feels like will be 93-94 F!
 
On the bike, I alternate drinking from one water bottle and one sports drink bottle. I freeze up to 2/3 the night before to keep the fluids cold longer. Your stomach absorbs cold liquids faster than warm.

When I am out long enough and/or hard enough for some sport drink, I do that. But my mountain bike doesn't even have a bottle cage (except near the bottom bracket) so mostly I drink water, and maybe have some cliff bites or those sharky things or some exercise candy with electrolytes in it. If I do do a sports drink, I like one with some nutrient. Usually a lemon/lime and not too much in the mix. I get some powdered supplements from a company called Reliv, and they make one that works for me. Not all do.
 
Yeah, sports drinks are like saddles. What works for some is terrible for others. I remember Cytomax feeling like a rock in mu gut!

A couple that I ride with started up a sports nutrition drink business and their stuff works really well for me. It is usually without flavor so I mix in a little Gatorade for taste.
https://shop.vitenutrition.com/
 
Yeah, sports drinks are like saddles. What works for some is terrible for others. I remember Cytomax feeling like a rock in mu gut!

A couple that I ride with started up a sports nutrition drink business and their stuff works really well for me. It is usually without flavor so I mix in a little Gatorade for taste.
https://shop.vitenutrition.com/
That's funny you said that! I tried Cytomax based on glowing recommendations. It made me want to barf if I was pedaling hard. After that, it was nausea in a can. I kept that expensive can around for years before finally throwing it out.
 
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I find the eating thing some what interesting. I probably don't eat enough but outside of one ride I recall I never have any energy issues. For a typical Sunday ride of 45ish miles I have a bowl of cheerios in the morning before walking the dog and when I get back I go riding. I'll sometimes bring a fruit and nut bar (about 130 cal) sometimes not and ride with 52 oz of water. Depending on how hot it is the water will be about 60% done before the last couple of miles and I finish it off before going home. On a real hot day I'm usually finishing it before the ride ends. My last long ride (63 miles) I did the cheerios thing as well as bring 3 of those bars. I did stop at about 35 miles for some additional water and a biobreak. My average speed was 16.4 mph which is pretty much average for me over most longer distances with that kind of elevation (about 3000:wink:. I've talked with people who say they eat ~250 cal ever half an hour.
 
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Dig, if you will, some pictures.
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33 miles. Put the feed bag on beforehand so no issues other than terrible roads and tired legs towards the end. Kind of wish I was more excited to be back on the bike but it's like I never stopped.
 
#flatpride We do have a ton of creeks and a couple rivers in the county that you're sometimes forced to cross over and over again because of the straight roads. Not going to stop to take a picture when I need the momentum though. :embarrassed:
 
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