Tuesday, January 31, 2012

Bonus Ride in January


How can you pass up a near 70 degree day in January? I didn't. I was back on my home territory for the first ride of the year. Down the Parkway bike path to Route 123 and then along its bike path to Occoquan Regional Park. A short stop for liquid refreshments, and then back home along the same route. I use this route for a lot of my training, I can add mileage by repeating the Route 123 segments to add another 20 miles. The park has rest rooms and water available, but you pay for the facilities by climbing the hill as you exit the park. It seems that nothing is free. Bike paths are generally safe, but you have to be careful when you are riding against traffic. A driver in a car waiting to turn right, may have all their focus on traffic approaching from their left, and not see you at all approaching from their right. Unless you make eye contact, assume they don't know you exist.

My indoor training has been going well, didn't miss a weekday class until today

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Training Advice

It didn't take long for some good training advice to arrive. I thought I would share it with anyone following my journey or contemplating one of their own.

Joel,

I saw your training plan this morning - looks great, a nice gradual build up.

Couple of thoughts from what I learned from my endurance training that may be helpful:

· Make sure to have a cool down week (or two) before the start of your trip; this will give your muscles a chance to recoup before you start your big journey. I'm not sure when your trip actually starts but let's say it is two weeks after your 240-mile week. Following the 240-mile week you may want to consider a 180-mile week two weeks out and then a 100-mile week the week before your trip.
· Consider doing very short (~10 miles), very very low intensity (not letting your HR get above Zone 2) rides (or spins on the trainer/spin bike) on days you are not doing long rides; this actually helps prevent lactic acid from remaining in your muscles from the long rides. It sounds counter intuitive that you would ride/spin on a "rest day" but it helps to flush out the remaining lactic acid and better prepare your legs for the next long ride.
· On your long rides, try to do the majority of the ride in Zone 2; this is the fat burning zone (Zone 3 burns more carbs/sugars). And on endurance rides (what your trip across country will be) you'll want your body to burn more fat than carbohydrates as fat takes longer to burn that carbs which will increase your daily endurance on the bike. At first riding for 50/60 miles in Zone 2 will feel like you are moving at a snails pace, however, over the course of your training you will build up speed while being able to remain in your Zone 2. Be patient with this, but one day (several months into training) you will realize that you are cooking and still remaining in Zone 2.
· I would highly recommend getting your personal HR zones calculated.This is very important as people can vary dramatically - the stuff that is on the Internet is very general and may be off for your body by 10 beats or more which can absolutely negatively impact your training, especially if you decide to follow the previous bullet point. You can get this done for around $100 and will make a very big impact on your training, especially as you are diligent with tracking your numbers (which is great). However, I would not just go to the local shop to get this done. I would shop around and seek out a shop that is very well versed in this stuff (often triathlon focused shops because their customers tend to be on training programs that require HR zone workouts). Often these are folded into packages where you find out your VO2 max, etc.
· Nutrition is key for long rides. If you don't eat right and drink right long rides will be painful, not fun and can rough up your body.But eating and riding is not always easy. You should be finishing one tall water bottle per hour, and the longer the rides it is more important that what is in your bottle is not just water - you'll need things like electrolytes, carbs, proteins (which help with muscle recovery), etc. I used a company that made custom powder specifically formulated for me - which I dialed in over the course of a month or so of using it - each batch I would talk to the owner and tell him about my rides, how I felt, etc. They were able to adjust protein levels (I had some bloating from too much protein), adjust carb levels and all the other needed nutrients down to the mg (and can even adjust the flavor level - weak to strong - to none). The powder contained everything I needed (and was still as thin as water when mixed) so on 7-8 hour rides I literally never ate anything just drank which makes digestion easy. I'm not suggesting that this is the only way to go but may be helpful as you venture out on long rides where eating solids can be difficult after a while. And it is relatively inexpensive as you consider the cost of bars, gels, goo, etc. We can talk more about this if you want.
· Finally, have fun with this. When it's not fun then it becomes work. With that said, do ride on super cold days, in light rain (when it gets warmer) when you have a scheduled ride days. On your trip cross country you'll have to ride in all conditions regardless, therefore, best to condition your body to this now. If you have the right gear, riding in all types of weather isn't bad at all (only the first 15 minutes until your body warms up!).
Hope these insights help. There was a lot of trial and error on my part and help from a professional coach to understand the value of some of the items that seem counter intuitive.
Happy to talk through any of these bullet point if you'd like.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Training Plan

I guess I can't just show up in Oregon untested and out of shape. I need to have a scientific plan to get ready without over doing it. OK, the plan is to be riding outdoors in March and scale up the miles from one hundred a week to two hundred forty the week before leaving for Oregon. I hope to be on the road at least three times a week. We will see how hard core I can get, when we have a couple inches of snow on the ground when March rolls in. Twenty five hundred miles should get both my legs and butt in shape for the trip. Check back to see if I am being overly optimistic on my ability to stick with the plan. If you have a better idea, please let me know.

Week Ending Goal Ave Day Mon Tue Wed Thur Fri Sat Sun Total
1/8/2012 SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  SPIN 
1/15/2012 SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  SPIN 
1/22/2012 SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  SPIN 
1/29/2012 SPIN  SPIN  SPIN SPIN SPIN 
2/5/2012 SPIN  34 mi  SPIN SPIN SPIN   34mi
2/12/2012 SPIN  SPIN   SPIN  SPIN  SPIN
2/19/2012 SPIN   SPIN   SPIN  SPIN  SPIN  
2/26/2012 SPIN   SPIN   34mi  34mi   SPIN    68 mi
3/4/2012 100 33.3 34mi  SPIN  SPIN  34mi  34mi  102mi
3/11/2012 110 36.7 SPIN  SPIN  38m SPIN  38mi  38mi  114mi
3/18/2012 120 40.0 40mi  SPIN  40mi  40mi  SPIN  120mi
3/25/2012 130 43.3 30mi  41mi    71mi
4/1/2012 140 46.7 50mi  50mi 
50mi  150mi
4/8/2012 150 50.0 35mi  50mi  50mi  34mi  169mi
4/15/2012 160 53.3 53mi  34mi  53mi  140mi
4/22/2012 170 56.7 57mi  57mi  57mi  171mi
4/29/2012 180 60.0 60mi  34mi  34mi  60mi  188mi
5/6/2012 190 63.3 66mi  66mi  66mi  198mi
5/13/2012 200 66.7 66mi  47mi  66mi  50mi  229mi
5/20/2012 210 70.0 70mi  70mi 70mi 210mi
5/27/2012 220 73.3 82mi  30mi  79mi  191mi
6/3/2012 230 76.7 80mi  80mi  80mi  31mi  271mi
6/10/2012 240 80.0 80mi  31mi  80mi  31mi  80mi  302mi
TOTALS


2733mi


ACA Blue Ridge Bliss 2010