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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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Sunday, f'in 6am Sunday

This is the over all ride to the race, the Tour Da Chicago Prologue TT, and return ride. Considering the slacking I've been doing, this day was a pretty big eye opener. I tried doing the race on about 4 hours of sleep, no breakfast, and basically all around no race preparation. Like getting up at 6am wasn't tough enough without compounding all that on top.

The results definitely confirmed this sloppy attitude. Although I knew I wouldn't do great, and actually set a goal not to be in the bottom 10, I was still disappointed with how I performed. I'll post more details in a race report to come later.

Overall race stats:

Total Riders:
81
Placement:
58th
Time:
83:29
Route:
~23 miles

Sun, Jan 13, 2008 - 36.80 mi [Cycling]
36.80 mi in 02:24:15 hours at 15.31 mi/h on Trek 2200. [Cycling] Ride down to 37th st, Tour Da Chicago prologue TT race (~23 miles), ride back home.

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Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Utah Day 2 (Ride 2)

Saturday began with much doubt as to what I should do for the day. Prior to arriving in Utah, I had found out about a century ride in Heber City (about an hour from Salt Lake City). As a companion to the usual posted route map for a century ride came an elevation mapping of the route which had me worried in one specific part: a steady 1-2 mile climb of around 900 vertical feet. Top this off with very cool weather, the threat of rain by late morning, and that it was 5 am (and I had only gotten 4 hours of sleep) I had serious doubts about attending such a ride.

After some pacing around the living room and a debate between the lazy, wanting to sleep in angel on my one shoulder, and the sadist, wanting to hurt ourselves on the bike devil on the other, I realized that if I were to sleep in I'd probably wake up right when the rain was starting and end up wasting a day. So I was off to Heber City.

The charity ride was for bike2bike.org and the people running the show were fantastic. Worried about over or under dressing for the weather (at the start it was about 40 degrees, but would be up in the mid 60's in a few hours) I found out each rest stop had bags that you could put your registration number on so that you can shed layers as you go, and pick them up at the end of the ride. This worked out great as I found the right level of layers by the 2nd rest stop.

I should take a moment to make a side note on the first water stop. It was the site for the olympic biathlon and we got to take advantage of this by biking down to the shooting site and doing a little target practice with some pellet gun rifles in the prone position. This definitely made this ride stand out from any other charity ride I'd done in the past, and probably from any in my future career.

Back on the bike I found quickly found myself at the foot of the beast of a climb that I had been worrying about since the start of my vacation. To add to the drama, I found myself at the foot of the climb with a few riders as we waited for a green light to cross the street and begin our climb. I quickly talked with the other riders that had been waiting and asked for any last minute tips. Low gears, grind away, and think of a happy place were the suggestions I received. Green turned the light and we were off. I dropped to third gear and began my climb. After a few feet I quickly learned first gear and a high cadence was the way to go. I buckled in for the long haul and was surprised to find that i was catching on others that had already been climbing the hill before us. I made it to the the rest stop near the climax of the hill to find some beautiful views.

Top of the hillJordanelle State Park

It was at this point I also found that I LOVE climbing. I always thought I was terrible at it, but apparently with the sadist devil on my shoulder cheering me on I found I had the mental strength to not only climb but push myself to pass others as I did so. The devil kept shouting things like "pain is weakness leaving the body", "if that 50 year old guy in front of us can do it, why can't we do it faster?", and "if we stare more at the ground, and can't see the horizon, it looks like we're on flat land."

Heading down the descent of this monster climb, I found a new fear: 30+mph descents on a flat tire. Lukily I held the steering steady so I could slow down to pull over and fix my wheel. With the help of the SAG driver to watch me fix my flat, I came to realization that my front tire was shot. It had an actual puncture in it that was causing anything remotely sharp to jet in and kill my tube underneat. The driver offered me a ride but also told me that the coming miles to the lunch stop were pretty clear with little descents. I decided to take another spare tube from him, and tough it out.

I got to the lunch site luckily with no more flats and found Bob, the ride organizer there with the big SAG truck full of bicycle goodies. He checked out my tire and helped me out with a replacement. Also thanks to Alicia, the massage therapist, who lent me her pump when my little one couldn't get the job done. With a good meal in my belly and a reliable tire on my wheel, I was ready to push on with the ride.

Unfortunately the weather was not going to cooperate with the rest of my good fortune. The winds were picking up and the support folk talked of reports of rain coming from farther north into the ride. Talking with some other riders we all thought it was wise to just cut the ride short and head back home. My legs, lungs, and heart were ready for the 65-100 miles, but my logic was winning the fight. Thoughts of 30-40 mph descents in cold rain on wet roads just wasn't what I had in mind for my vacation. Even the sadist angel agreed.

Heading back I found myself on some long flats with some mighty strong headwinds. I tucked in and tried to provide a draft to Alicia and a few riders who voted me to take the lead. Apparently the lunch crew decided I must have brought the winds with me from Chicago. I, of course, was more than happy to oblige and pull them along as long as they could keep up. At one point I think I was actually smiling as I pictured myself on the Lake Front Trail in the evening winds after a work day.

A short reclimbing of the previous beast and some more headwinds on the highway back to Heber City, I was done with what turned out to be a fantastic vacation ride.

Total miles: ~51

Additional Photos

Top of the switchbackLooking back on
the switchback
Storm rolling in
MountainsPart of Monster Climb

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Wednesday, August 1, 2007

My First Century

Biking with Beanzie

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Returning to the wonderful farmland area of DeKalb, IL I was amped to make my second attempt at my first century ride, after my first attempt being rained out last month. This time the weather gods were on my side and gave us a gorgeous day for riding; full of sunshine and temperatures in the mid 70's.

After a quick registration and picture of me and my bike (thanks Pooja), I was on my way. The first miles flew by as I was averaging around 19mph through the rolling hills. I was doing so well I did not stop at a rest stop until around the 30 mile marker. I planned to do a water refill and continue just eating Clif Bars, but to much surprise, what did I find at the food table? Halloween size Sweettart candies. All I could think was how fate wanted me to be on this ride... and high on sugar.

Back on the road I continued making good time. Around the 45 mile marker the paths split for the 100 mile route versus the 64 route. This was when I lost all contact with human kind. Having recently passed a half dozen riders, I looked back to see everyone turn right for the 64 mile route. In continued on my way, focused on the century. After all, I had not come to socialize, but to conquer the elusive century ride in DeKalb.

After what seemed like an eternity of riding alone in the monotony of corn fields, I finally saw two riders up on the horizon. Finally I could break from the routine thoughts of singing the same 2 songs in my head; I could chase and pass more riders. Yes, I'm that competitively driven even during a long charity ride.

A little before mile 70 I stopped at a rest stop to try eating a bagel and refilling my water and Gatorade bottles. I found the men's restroom to be accidentally locked from the inside and was able to help out the folks running the rest stop by picking the lock with one guy's credit card. As happy as the guy was that I could get the door open (apparently they'd be charged to have the park department to come open it) he seemed leery to ask how I learned such a skill. I just smiled and said "a lot of fraternity pranks in college."

The next 10 miles sucked. Apparently, I found my lungs' breaking point with my asthma and couldn't seem to ride faster than 12mph (I was still averaging 17-18mph at this point). It was about this time I also realized I had forgot to put on sunscreen and had just ridden 4+ hours in the morning sun. I took it easy until the next rest stop so I could really relax, stretch, and get some real food in me. Damn you Willy Wonka and lack of cycling nutritious candy. It was also in this stretch that saddle soreness kicked in. The giant tar-filled cracks in the country roads didn't help this ailment either.

Mile 80 I stopped at the allocated rest stop and refueled. I called Pooja to give her a head's up that I would be finishing in about two hours, given my recent drop in pace. I also had a quick text message conversation with Hales, who informed me of all the fun I was missing at the beach. As I ate my PB&J bagel, I fantasized about just laying out in the sand and sun. I shook this image off as it wouldn't help me get through the last 20 miles, which I assumed would feel like the longest part of this ride.

Back on the bike, and on the road, I found that PB&J bagels were God's gift to cycling. I had found my second wind and was back on pace. I finished up the last 20 miles in less than an hour and a half, so I got to just veg out as I waited for Pooja to show up and give a ride back into the city.

All in all it was a great ride. I looked like a candy cane afterwards with my tan but got my first century under my belt and had a great time. On the ride home, after giving a quick summary of the ride, Pooja asked, "So when's your next one?" I'm not sure if she was joking, but I pulled out a pamphlet and asked "What are you doing late September?" I'm hooked.

Final Ride Stats

Mileage:
100.10 miles
Time:
5 hours 54 minutes
Avg Speed:
16.9 mph

Photos

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Sunday, June 24, 2007

MS Ride

MS 150

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Considering I'm writing this about 2 months after the event, I'm going to just skim through the highlights, as the details are now fuzzy.

  • First attempt at a Century (100 mile) ride
  • First supported ride (meaning they have mechanics on stand by, food/water rest stops, etc.
  • First ride for charity
  • First time riding my road bike in pour weather conditions
  • Non-stop rain for 4 hours out of a 4 hour 45 minute ride
  • When the course advisor says "caution: the railroad tracks are slippery, walk your bike", you should listen to him. Otherwise you crash. 2 months later I still the remains of that bruise on my shin
  • When riding in 60 degree weather with at 18-20mph, you have to keep your body temperature up to negate the self induced wind chill
  • Eat lunch on the "warming bus" to keep body temperature up
  • Having the extra 25 mile loop shut down because people were falling and breaking bones on rail road tracks (see above point)
  • Being sad, yet relieved to only have to do 75 miles in the rain
  • Seeing the smiling faces of everyone at the finish line
  • Feeling like I had unfinished business in DeKalb because of only doing 75 miles

Final Ride Stats

Mileage:
75-77 miles
Time:
~4 hours 45 minutes
Avg Speed:
N/A
Max Speed:
N/A

Photos

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