Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Get a Fit at Get a Grip

Where do I even begin to talk about the bike fitting and the awesome people at Get a Grip Cycles?

What is a bike fitting?

Let's start with what is a bike fitting and why it is important. When you get into serious road biking, typically you are looking at riding distances of 20, 30, 40, up to 100+ miles in a single ride. To make this as efficient as possible you get clip-less pedals/shoes which essentially connect your foot to a pedal so if you push down or pull up with your foot, you will be propelling the bicycle forward. Now imagine doing these long 4-8 hour rides, connected to your bike like your legs are pistons, and you can start to see how being comfortable and having the bike properly adjusted could be important.

Since I bought my Trek 2200 road bike in 2004 I have upgraded the pedal, bike shoes, cleats that connect the shoe to the pedal, bike seat, and so on. During all these upgrades I would make minor adjustments to try to make the bike "feel" more comfortable and "faster". Sometimes I tweaked the right thing and it would eliminate a small pain in my calf, and sometimes I tweaked it wrong and would end up with my hip hurting for 2-3 weeks.

The Get a Grip fitting

Now as I looked to embark on a 3,300 mile journey across the country, I decided to get a proper bike fitting. But where to go? Some shops do an hour fitting and charge 50-100 bucks. Some offer 3 hour fittings costing much more. I continued to ask around to some friends and online forums and one name kept surprisingly popping up: Get a Grip. A quick look at their site and I was sold.

I should mention how intimidated I was walking into this shop. You walk in the door and hanging on the wall was easily a bike that cost as much as my rent... for an entire year! This intimidation was quickly calmed by Kevin, who happily greeted me with a hand shake and a friendly "come on in and sit down." It was the kind of greeting where if you told him you were there to buy your first bike in 20 years, or an $8,000 Orbea road bike, he would have treated you exactly the same. It also helped that he walked me to the back to hang out in what felt like a bicyclist's dream lounge. We're talking fully stocked bar, plasma TVs showing the latest European races, and every biking, running, and triathlon magazine you could name.

But I digress from my fantasies of an apartment surrounded by bikes and biking apparel... back to the fitting story.

The fitting was probably the closest experience I've had to being treated like a professional athlete. The Get a Grip fitting is a 3 hour fitting that starts with a 1 on 1 consultation. There are many different ways to fit a bike depending on your goals, so it was great to just explain what I was trying to accomplish. The last thing I wanted was to be fit to a bike to do triathlon races. Kevin excitedly listened to every detail of my cross country trip and what was important to me as a cyclist.

Next the questions began. What feels right about the bike? What do I think is wrong with the bike? Why do I think those things are wrong? What have I tried tweaking to fit the bike properly? What is my physical history? Do I do yoga, pilates, or stretching? If so, how often? Do I have a history of sprains, broken bones, arthritis, and the like? Although I have been lucky enough to not have any of those (knock on wood), I thought it was great how Kevin still explained, in specific detail (we're talking vocab that I hadn't heard since biology in college), how they could adjust this part, or lengthen that one, to ease any chronic pains.

Next we got into measuring: both me and the bike. Kevin quickly measured my bike and jotted down some notes for later. Then we measured both my feet. Then my shoes to find out if I had the right size. At this point Kevin said if my shoes were wrong we'd stop the fitting so that I could get fitted properly for shoes. Additionally, if cost was problem, we'd just do the shoes and cancel the fitting. I found that extremely respectable! The idea that even after almost an hour of talking and measuring he wouldn't charge for any of the fit service, as to ensure I get the best shoes I could afford, is quite admirable. That kind of policy shows true character in the shop and that it puts the best interests of its customers, and the sport, above just selling/pushing products/services for a profit.

Anyway, once again, back to the story.

After the measuring, we found my shoes were actually good enough to move forward (Props to Cycle Smithy for doing a good job on that). Next up it was time to measure flexibility. Kevin tested how far we could stretch my leg in a few directions, similar to a pedal stroke, and found I was quite flexible. Yay to the 15-20 minutes I spend every night stretching. It paid off in more ways than I knew. The interesting thing we did find out here was that I have posture issues, and because of this my right leg appears to be a few centimeters longer than my left. This is something that's probably been causing me seat and leg pains on my left side for years and could easily be corrected when adjusting my cleats/shoes later.

Now it was time to put all the measurements together. Kevin adjusted one of their fitting bikes to what my bike currently had as its measurements. I hopped on, Kevin loaded up the computer, and displayed on the plasma TV in front of me was a digital graph of my pedal stroke, cadence, power output (wattage), and more. With a little resistance on I was doing about 80-90 RPMs and pushing about 100 watts. It felt like it took a little effort to hit those numbers.

I got off the bike and Kevin did the first round of adjustments: bring the handle bars in closer to the seat. This would take the weight off my hands/neck/shoulders and all me more comfort in breathing as my torso would be straighter. He also brought the seat forward to start to put my knee at an optimal position over my pedals. I got back on the bike, started pedaling and guess what: the numbers were all ready way up. I easily spun into 100 RPMs and cranked out 150 watts.

The fitting continued with adjusting the seat by a centimeter, the handle bars by a few centimeters, moving my cleats a millimeter at a time, and so on. I believe in the end the computer was displaying 180 watts as my output and I was spending less effort pedaling than when I first got on the bike!

The final part of the fitting was taking all the new adjustments/measurements from the fitting bike and tweaking my bike to match. I lucked out that we only had to swap out my stem in order to match everything. I was happy to shell out the extra $40 for the new stem, knowing how big of a performance gain I would get from the bike.

The last thing I should mention is that the second, third, fourth, etc. fittings are free to ensure I get the perfect fit before my ride this summer. Again a true display of character to go the extra mile to make the customer happy, effecient, and comfortable!

The Results

I finished just over 200 miles from my first fitting and must say I am amazed at the results. My average speeds have gone up easily 1.5-2.0 miles per hour and most of the pains I had during 4-5 hour rides are gone. I do have some new complaints, but now they are knit picky ones like: can we move the seat back a millimeter to minimize friction in my sit bones, or adjust my cleats a millimeter to take pressure off one part of my foot so I don't get numbness in my pinky toe after 50 miles of steady riding.

Want some numbers to back up the claims? Last summer, after some extensive training I did a flat course 100.10 mile ride in 5 hours, 54 minutes, at an average speed of 16.9 mph. This past Sunday I did a hilly 100.97 mile ride in 5 hours, 26 minutes, at an average speed of 18.53 miles per hour. What was number 1 complaint/limiting factor in Sunday's ride? My lungs! Everything else I could have pushed hard and faster, and I owe it all to the bike fitting I got at Get a Grip!

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Tuesday, June 3, 2008

May Training

May was a hell of a month (in a good way), so let's get to the details

Training

Training for May was fantastic. The weather started warming up. Weekend rides got longer. Charity rides were coming up making for the perfect short term goals to shoot for while doing the long term goal training for the Big Ride this summer.

I also have to give a quick shout out to Jay my new riding buddy. Up until the Easter Ride in April I was doing all my training by myself which is fine, but hard to push the pace while on those 60, 70, and 80 mile rides. Jay and I have been riding together for most of May and the company is very welcome. It definitely helps miles fly by when you have someone to talk to, take a pull into the head winds, or just vent to about how much it hurts to sit in the saddle for another hour. Many thanks to Jay for the company and bearing with my craziness when I suggest sprinting out the next half mile or picking up the pace to drop a random rider on the lake front.

Bike Fitting

A HUGE highlight from May is the bike fitting I got done by Kevin at Get a Grip Cycles at their Fulton Fit Studio. I'll have a longer posting about the fitting and minor tweaks/fittings in a soon to follow post, but for now let me just say it has made a world of difference in my performance. My "aggressive" seat position that I thought would make me faster was all wrong and the new "relaxed", or rather correct, position has me averaging easily 1-2 miles per hour faster. To all my fellow cyclists out there, take it from a self proclaimed know-it-all: you can NOT fit a bike yourself. Once you come to terms with that go visit Kevin and the crew at Get a Grip!

Health

Apparently May in Chicago means full blown allergy season, which also means I'm semi-sick all the time (yeah I know, what else is new). The good part of this is I can test out training strategies at some of my sickest points. What I learned:

  • Always carry a peak flow meter to measure my asthma/lung capacity
  • Always carry my inhaler in case the above numbers drop
  • Biking and snot rockets are better for me than laying on a couch with kleenex
  • Drink lots of fluids; even more than usual

Nutrition

The plus side of getting sick is I get to talk to the doctors about my weight and nutrition plan. In November/December I weighed around 151-153lbs. I'm happy to say with all the training I'm actually up to 153-155lbs. I did the math again recently (end of May) and I'm easily eating 3000 to 3500 calories, depending what day and what mileage I did the day before, and upwards of 5000 calories for after the 80-100 mile rides. I've never loved food so much in my entire life.

Fundraising

Donate now to the American Lung Association! So apparently I don't have as long to raise my money as I thought. I've raised close to $2,200 but still have a long way to go to the $5,500 mark which I need by August, or the difference will come out of my credit card.

The Stats

I've been tracking all my training at MyCyclingLog.com so why not show off some stats for the month of May?

Total Ride Time:
31:39:03
Total Miles:
532.25
Average Speed:
16.45
Total Rides:
19

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Sunday, April 27, 2008

Hello? Is this thing on?

"Hey, are you still doing that ride this summer?" "What's going on with your blog?" "Have you done any training since February?" "Are you going to be ready by June?"

Those are just a few of the questions I've gotten over the past few months since I haven't made time for blogging about my training. I apologize for keeping you all in the dark, but know it was for good reason. What reason would that be? Well, I've been kicking my butt on the bike and really didn't set aside the energy to write about it.

So let's catch everyone up:

Training

Training is going great! If you notice, I now post my weekly goals to the right side of this site. I've been pushing 150-170 miles for the past two weeks, and am looking towards the 200 mark this week.

The Rides

While some of my stories of doing rides around town might only appeal to those that are into cycling, I have some good ones including a great charity ride, meeting some new cycling friends to ride with, chasing a dog with sunglasses through down town Chicago, getting chased by a ~80-100 lb farm dog (yeah, that's probably karma right there), and a weekend of fighting wind gusts of up to 35 mph.

Don't worry though, that's just a tease. I'll be posting more complete stories later.

Health

Remarkably, cycling seems to cures what ails me. Although I appear starving all the time (ask my coworkers/lunch crew) I'm actually feeling really well. Even the one or two times when I felt a cold coming on I was able to bike through it. The result was only having to take one extra day off the training week I wasn't feeling well.

Nutrition

I eat A LOT now. I did the math once and usually hit 2500-3000 calories, sometimes nearing 3500 calories on days after doing 60+ mile days. I really haven't checked my weight, but don't seem to be losing any pounds. I look a lot leaner in my upper body, but my legs are becoming tree trunks. I figure it all evens out.

Fundraising

Ok, this one is slacking BIG TIME. I've been so focused on riding that I forgot I need to raise 5 grand by end of June. I'll be drafting a fundraising email this week. However, if you are reading this and want to donate now, please visit: www.seejoeride.com/donate

So I think that's it for now. Now that the training routine is down, I can start to schedule time for blogging, fundraising, and maybe even a party or two.

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Thursday, January 17, 2008

Must... get... motivated...

I finally got my ass back on the bike and LOVED it. I just kept imagining how I felt during the time trial on Sunday, which motivated to push through any winds and hills/highway over-passes. I really need to kick this exhausted/lazy feeling after work, so this was one step in the right direction.

Probably the best highlight of this ride was drafting off a car heading north on Clark. They seemed very confused and nervous to see me doing around 24mph following behind their car. This is also probably the first time I pushed myself to a max of over 25mph all winter!

Ride Stats:
Wed, Jan 16, 2008 - 15.86 mi [Cycling]
15.86 mi in 01:01:55 hours at 15.37 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] 34F, feels like 27 with wind chill. Winds from S at 8mph.

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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Thu, Jan 10, 2008 - 15.19 mi [Cycling]

Thu, Jan 10, 2008 - 15.19 mi [Cycling]
15.19 mi in 00:59:24 hours at 15.34 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] Indoor training, workout 1 interval routine
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Sunday, January 6, 2008

Cramming in last minute miles

This was my first long ride in well over a week and first real ride since the flu bug I caught last week. I was happy to see the temperatures finally above freezing, and my lungs were ready to try to catch up on my lack of riding/mileage from earlier in the week.

To get the miles in I figured I'd try to do the xXx racing team's route up to Highland Park. I deviated a little but made it almost all the way up before the weather turned pretty awful. On my way home I decided to add some more miles by also shooting pretty far out west through Skokie. Then I finished up by doing my midnight ride route down into the west loop, then the loop, then back through River North/Gold Coast back home. I also realized I was making great time out in the 'burbs. I didn't realize how much the stop and go riding in the city ruins my average speed stats. In the 'burbs I was at around 17-18mph, compared to 13-14mph in the city.

Ride Stats:
Sat, Jan 5, 2008 - 44.61 mi [Cycling]
44.61 mi in 03:04:22 hours at 14.52 mi/h on Trek 2200.

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Friday, January 4, 2008

Nice slow strokes

I think I'm finally shaking this shitty virus I've had for the past week. Since my lungs were still pretty shot I figured I would do some indoor training on fluid pedal strokes. I found a really good interval work out for doing mostly single leg riding to work on my stroke. Basically it's 30 seconds 1 leg, 30 seconds both legs, 30 seconds other leg, 1 minute both, and repeat 10 times. Then it's followed by some low gear riding to keep the pedaling steady.

Stats and Notes:
Fri, Jan 4, 2008 - 11.74 mi [Cycling]
11.74 mi in 01:04:14 hours at 10.97 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] Indoor pedal stroke training while recovering from illness. Pretty easy on the lungs, resembling difficult on legs for maintaining pedal stroke.

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Friday, December 28, 2007

Soup Fairy

Maybe it was holiday cookies. Maybe it was the 5 days off from riding. Maybe it was cold I picked up coming back to Chicago. No matter what the reasoning, it was a pretty rough ride.

I didn't stay on top of my asthma meds, going without them for about four days while gone for the holidays, and I definitely woke up this morning with my lungs telling me they weren't happy.

Despite all that, I decided to take a ride tonight. I told a friend I'd play Soup Fairy bring her soup since she's sick too. I'm sure she didn't expect it to be in a can and dropped off at her door at around 1am. Either way, the Soup Fairy delivered some campbell's chicken noodle, which, now that I think about it, will probably be frozen in the morning. It's the thought that counts right?

Back on the bike I headed south to do my usual night loop. The winds were picking up and the cold of the wind combined with my head cold did not mix too well. I was able to complete most of the ride (cutting out a few blocks down in the Loop) and actually finished feeling relatively strong.

Time for some food and sleep. I still have 36.60 miles to complete by Sunday.

Stats:
Thu, Dec 27, 2007 - 13.62 mi [Cycling]
13.62 mi in 00:55:52 hours at 14.63 mi/h on Ross Fixed Gear. [Cycling] Midnight ride. 32F, with a wind chill of ~26F. There were some heavy winds picking up coming out of the east/southeast.

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Saturday, December 22, 2007

"Hey you got shit on your back",

"Hey, you got shit on your back!", yelled a guy in a passing car.
"Really?" I replied.
"Yeah!" yells the guy as their car tries to speed off.

Little did they know I was enjoying the sarcastic commentary and wanted to continue. So I sped up to around 22mph and knocked on the guy's window. Startled he rolls it down. "Did I surprise you? You look like you just shit yourself. Hey, enjoy the car ride, I'll see you guys further down Fullerton if you can keep up with me." I say as I speed up and weave past cars and a red light to get a head start. They never caught me.

What a great ride. I didn't sleep more than 5 hours last night, but needed to do about 33 miles to finish my weekly goal. To my surprise it was above 40F today so I geared up and headed out to play in the sloppy roads of black winter slush. The first 10 miles was rough on the lake front (damn head wind), but then I got my rythm and kicked butt. Due to some construction I ended up back on the city streets. If it weren't for the construction I would have never had such a lovely conversation with the pass car above.

Stats:
Sat, Dec 22, 2007 - 37.87 mi [Cycling]
37.87 mi in 02:26:05 hours at 15.55 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] 44F, with wind chill 37F. Winds from the south at 14-16mph.

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Thursday, December 20, 2007

How much lubrication is too much?

Wed, Dec 19, 2007 - 11.77 mi [Cycling]
11.77 mi in 00:50:42 hours at 13.93 mi/h on Ross Fixed Gear. [Cycling]
Posted from My Cycling Log

So I went for another out side ride, pushing the limits of how much slush I can ride in. Temperatures were around 34F, 27F with wind chill. I just got done lubricating the chain on the fixed gear and noticed what could have been too much slack in the chain as I headed out. Up until 7 miles into the ride, things were going ok. Whie heading up Southport I hit some traffic which caused me to ride through a bunch of slush (why can't the plowes also plow the bike lanes??). Apparently the mix of slush and well lubricated chain caused it to pop off and for me to go from fixed riding to no riding in half a second. A quick fix in front of a bar (the girls by the window told me they enjoyed the spandex show) I was back on the road and heading home.

I really could have ridden another 5-10 miles. I was feeling great. Unfortunately I was too worried about another chain issue, so I decided to cut the ride short and spend the extra time eating and fixing the bike.

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Sunday, December 16, 2007

Sat, Dec 15, 2007 - 10.02 mi [Cycling]

Sat, Dec 15, 2007 - 10.02 mi [Cycling]
10.02 mi in 00:40:28 hours at 14.86 mi/h on Ross Fixed Gear. [Cycling] Finished up the remaining miles for the week. Since it was so few miles, I did a four minute warm up, then some on/off single legged riding. I would do a quarter mile with just my left leg, then a quarter mile with both legs, then a quarter mile with just the right, then both again. I repeated this for 4 miles, then a 2 minute cool down.

For a short ride, it was a pretty good workout. After the first 2 reps on each leg I noticed a more consistent pedal stroke and was able to keep a higher cadence on the last mile rep for each leg (average of around 73 rpm). I'm definitely going to add this into my weekly workout for future training.
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Wed, Dec 12, 2007 - 20.53 mi [Cycling]

Wed, Dec 12, 2007 - 20.53 mi [Cycling]
20.53 mi in 01:19:43 hours at 15.45 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] It was a great night in Chicago. Most of the salt was off the roads and temperatures were about freezing. Official temps: 34F, feels like 27F with wind chill. Body temperature was really good and I may have finally figured out the glove situation. Aside from the great ride, I also had a nice surprise when I ran into Annie in Lakeview. All in all, a very good, and much improved ride.
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Wed, Dec 12, 2007 - 20.53 mi [Cycling]

Wed, Dec 12, 2007 - 20.53 mi [Cycling]
20.53 mi in 01:19:43 hours at 15.45 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] It was a great night in Chicago. Most of the salt was off the roads and temperatures were about freezing. Official temps: 34F, feels like 27F with wind chill. Body temperature was really good and I may have finally figured out the glove situation. Aside from the great ride, I also had a nice surprise when I ran into Annie in Lakeview. All in all, a very good, and much improved ride.
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Monday, December 10, 2007

Mon, Dec 10, 2007 - 11.84 mi [Cycling]

Mon, Dec 10, 2007 - 11.84 mi [Cycling]
11.84 mi in 00:50:13 hours at 14.15 mi/h on Ross Fixed Gear. [Cycling] Not the greatest of rides. Couldn't get a great rhythm and body temperature. It was also wet and salty out with threats of ice, which kept me from going too fast since I was relying on one front break for stopping power. It was great to get outside though and ride.
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Sunday, December 9, 2007

Sat, Dec 8, 2007 - 12.21 mi [Cycling]

Sat, Dec 8, 2007 - 12.21 mi [Cycling]
12.21 mi in 00:49:23 hours at 14.83 mi/h on Ross Fixed Gear. [Cycling] Indoor fixed gear training.
Posted from My Cycling Log

So I had to finish up the last 11.83 miles for the week and since I couldn't get it all done earlier in the day, I decided to just push through by putting the fixed gear on the trainer, watch Under Seige on tv, and hope to coast through the miles. It turned out reasonably well and even got some extra mileage in.

Lessons learned today: don't take 4-5 days off between rides, and make sure to not skip meals.

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Sat, Dec 8, 2007 - 10.78 mi [Cycling]

Sat, Dec 8, 2007 - 10.78 mi [Cycling]
10.78 mi in 00:45:13 hours at 14.30 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] What a horrible ride. I couldn't make it through the full "Workout 1." My legs started getting weird pains around 8-9 miles, my heart rate was super high, and my asthma didn't like the exercise either. I think the main problem was lack of eating dinner the previous night, and not enough food today prior to the ride. Staying out late the night before and drinking massive amounts of caffeine probably didn't help either.
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Monday, December 3, 2007

Mon, Dec 3, 2007 - 14.00 mi [Cycling]

Mon, Dec 3, 2007 - 14.00 mi [Cycling]
14.00 mi in 01:01:16 hours at 13.71 mi/h on Ross Fixed Gear. [Cycling] Outdoor. 9pm 28F, feels like 24F. Wore AmFib tights, regular shorts, shoe booties, base layer, jersey, wind breaker and felt great. I never felt over heated or cold, so it was definitely the perfect combo. I still need to figure out the glove situation. The base gloves with lobster claws still is too sweaty. For head wore baklava with ski cap. It worked out well.
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Thursday, November 29, 2007

Thu, Nov 29, 2007 - 14.60 mi [Cycling]

Thu, Nov 29, 2007 - 14.60 mi [Cycling]
14.60 mi in 01:00:00 hours at 14.60 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] Indoor training: Workout 2
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Mon, Nov 26, 2007 - 14.48 mi [Cycling]

Mon, Nov 26, 2007 - 14.48 mi [Cycling]
14.48 mi in 01:00:44 hours at 14.31 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] Indoor training: Workout 1
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Wed, Nov 28, 2007 - 10.85 mi [Cycling]

Wed, Nov 28, 2007 - 10.85 mi [Cycling]
10.85 mi in 00:44:00 hours at 14.80 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] Outdoor Training: 6:15am, 27F, feels like 16F
Posted from My Cycling Log

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Thursday, November 1, 2007

Utah Day 4 (Ride 3)

This day was rough. I woke up to cold and rainy weather and highs of about 48 degrees. Having to hit up the bike shop to get another spare tube and a rear tire replacement, I decided to pick up a wind breaker. This was the smartest thing I could have done. 48 degrees at base level means it is easily 38, if not 33 degrees at the peak of mountains I would be climbing. The sales people at Contender Bikes in Salt Lake City are amazing. I explained to one guy what I would be doing and he helped me get all the gear I would need to ensure no more flat tires on descents, and how to keep warm. I forgot, if it's 50 out and you're flying down hill at 20mph, the weather really feels like 30-40 degrees.

The rain stopped around 2 or 3pm, so I headed out to East Canyon to climb the mountain Todd showed me the day before. It was a chilly ride with only some spots of the mountain still getting sunlight, but it was a great climb: 6 miles of grueling uphill battle.

Climbing almost 1500 vertical feet in 6 miles made me really feel like I accomplished my vacation goal: climb a mountain well enough that I feel prepared for the mountains next summer.

I also got some great pictures on the descent. Stopping to take pictures also gave me an opportunity to warm up since the 20-30mph downhill speeds really had me shivering.

Photos

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Utah Day 1 (Ride 1)

In regards to next summer's Big Ride across the country, biking in elevation and climbing serious mountains has to be among my top concerns. Some how climbing overpasses in the flat lands of Chicago just cannot seem to quiet these thoughts. Therefore in lieu of the normal vacation of relaxing on a beach I decided to visit a friend in Salt Lake City, UT to conquer these exact issues.

The plan for the trip was pretty simple: arrive with my bike, set it up, bike, bike, maybe take a day off, bike some more, head home.

I got in late Thursday night to a warm welcome from Todd and some great dinner chili with him and his girlfriend. After a great meal (Todd I still need to get that recipe) it was off to the garage to put together the bike. Having been my first trip traveling with my bike I was surprised to find I packed it well and the hard case had held everything together. By far the best protective investment for my cycling investment. The rest of the night was spent shooting the shit as I worked and tweaked my bike and Todd worked on his (motorcycle, not bicycle).

Friday morning I was up surprisingly early, probably around 8:30 am Utah time. To all those that know me, if I don't have to be at work, I'm usually not awake until noon. I guess the anticipation of training was too much to let me sleep in. I light breakfast and I was out on the road. After a few blocks I would have to stop as I realized I still had tweaks to make from the previous night's reassembly: increasing the angle in the seat, leveling off the handle bars, re-centering the lines of the saddle, and so on.

It wasn't long before I found my first climb and my first taste of what it is like to train in elevation. Normally when riding I may feel a tightness in my chest as I find my lungs out of shape, or a muscle cramping in my leg muscles as I find I am pushing them to new boundaries. Instead this time it was burning in my lungs as I took the deepest breathes possible. As for my legs, they would feel fine until after a steep climb. Then it was not a matter of muscle tightness, but rather the feeling of muscles that were not well rested. In both cases, it was obvious it was a lack of oxygen to my lungs and working muscles. Oh the love of elevation!

I found the best solution was to ride myself to near exhaustion for an hour or two, then rest for 30-60 minutes. I repeated this for the rest of the day and by dinner time was climbing with much greater ease. The final total of the day was ~40 miles.

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Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Return to the Long Branch Trail... but not really

Fullterton west to Elston. Elston north to Long Branch Trail. LB Trail until ... no bike path? Yeah, apparently about 5-7 miles into the path they started repaving efforts which means I'd be going off road. No tred + loose gravel means no Long Branch Trail for me. Once I hit Harms road by the equestrian farms (are they farms?) I decided to pull a U-turn and just try to head back to the city. Harms Road to Lincoln Ave to Western and I was back to civilization. I knew I was back in the city when I started getting run off the road by the CTA buses... ah home sweet home. It was Western to Damen, then Damen to Chicago ave to the Lake Front Trail.

Side note: there was 15-18mph winds coming from the south. Since I was heading south into the city I thought this was great training for Utah. When I stopped at a light to talk to some other cycling couple, they didn't share in my enjoyment.

Once I hit the Lake Front Trail, it was a quick cliff bar break and back on the bike to keep hitting the southern winds. I made it all the way to 63rd then headed back. All in all, a great ride, and probably the first ride over 40 miles since the century ride in July (I've been such a slacker before this blog).

Daily Ride Stats

Mileage:
61.12 miles
Time:
~3 hours 40 minutes
Avg Speed:
~16mph
Max Speed:
~25mph

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Saturday, September 15, 2007

Week Ending SEP 15 2007

I haven't had much time to post my training rides, however this past week I biked to work two days and did one decent length ride after work. The mileage this week is a rough estimate due to an accidental computer reset and using my fixie for work. It's a shame because my after work ride was easily averaging 18-19 mph, in part thanks to some guy wearing a Team Pegasus jersey who I took turns drafting off of when I was too tired to pulling into the southern head winds.

Weekly Stats

Mileage:
~50 miles

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Week Ending SEP 8 2007

Weekly Stats

Mileage:
0 miles

Note: I was away at a work conference in San Jose all week so there was no real option for biking

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Saturday, September 1, 2007

Week Ending SEP 1 2007

Weekly Stats

Mileage:
56.24 miles

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Thursday, August 30, 2007

Fixie Practice Part 2

Went out for a fixie ride to the planetarium to meet up with Pooja and practice track stands and skid stops again. That got shot down by the Bears game, so we ended up meeting up at the MCA instead. I must say the slick kind of tiling they have in front of the MCA is great for practicing skid stops. I actually got 2 or 3 good ones in before I felt bad for leaving rubber tracks in front of a museum. Oh well, maybe they'll see the art in it?

After some more talking, I raced Pooja and her car (slacker) over to Johnny Rocket's since I didn't eat dinner yet. After a huge burger and fries I was WIRED and ready to bike for another few hours. Unfortunately it was around 11pm, so I headed home.

Daily Ride Stats

Mileage:
~16 miles
Time:
N/A
Avg Speed:
N/A
Max Speed:
N/A

Labels:

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Testing the asthma

My asthma's been acting up big time this week. Sometimes to help show it who is boss I'll kill myself on the bike. Apparently the combo of my bad bronchial tubes, the 90+ degree weather, and humidity had other ideas. I did about 10 miles before I had to stop and try out the new inhaler the doctors gave me after my first century ride. Two puffs and about 5 miles later I was cycling on cloud nine. It was like a giant lung reset button and I'm now in love. I ended up punching out 40+ miles and only stopped because it was getting too dark.

Daily Ride Stats

Mileage:
40.24 miles
Time:
2 hours 28 minutes 46 seconds
Avg Speed:
16.2 mph
Max Speed:
26.5 mph

Labels:

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

Fixie Practice

Been a slow training week. The rain finally seems to be letting up so I took the fixie out for a joy ride with the intention of practicing track stands. After not finding a good parking lot, I went for a little ride that turned into about 26 miles.

I finally found a decent spot to practice after asking some of the bike cops about any empty lots. They first gave me a funny look, but then realized I wasn't a threat when I said I just wanted to practice track stands where most people won't see me fall or mess up. One even gave me some useful tips on getting started. The key is to not freak out if you go backwards.

All in all a great riding day. Add in the ~8 mile round trip to work, and I've got 34 miles on today.

Daily Ride Stats

Mileage:
34 miles
Time:
N/A
Avg Speed:
N/A
Max Speed:
N/A

Labels:

Saturday, August 18, 2007

Sprints to the Planetarium

After a long work week and feeling rather agitated, I decided the only solution was one of those rides that just leaves you too tired to care about the stresses of the world.

After getting dropped off by Pooja, I told her I'd race her (she was driving) to the planetarium. Granted I had to change and get my gear on, so I knew I had no fair chance of winning said race. But that was enough incentive to get me to do a good spring work out from my door to the planetarium.

I did the ~6 mile sprint (with a few slow spots due to pedestrians on the lake front) in under 20 minutes, topping out my max speed at 27.9 miles an hour. After not having any warm up, and not really riding in about 2-3 weeks, this was a weak performance, but a great kick in the butt to stop slacking off.

Final Ride Stats

Mileage:
12.4 miles
Time:
46 minutes
Avg Speed:
16.4 mph
Max Speed:
27.9 mph

Labels: