Stronger, Fitter, Faster


Getting into the gym, getting on the bike, and hopefully winning some races someday


Stronger

Twelve years behind a desk does things to your body. For the first time in ten years I've started hitting a gym 3x a week but that doesn't mean I can muster too many pushups just yet.

Fitter

Lose a serious amount of weight. This is definitely key to making everything else work, so I'll be focusing on dropping pounds to get not only into a healthy range of BMI, but to also increase my endurance and fitness.

Faster

Under the guidance of a cycling coach, I'm spending more time in the saddle and riding not just longer, but smarter. Power meters, training plans, and intervals will be the order of the day.



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6 posts from February 2009

NAHBS 2009


IMG_2823.JPG, originally uploaded by YiPsan bicycles.

I really wanted to go to Indy this weekend to catch the North American Handmade Bike Show. I attended last year in Portland and was amazed by the craftsmanship and design.

This year I'll be watching the NAHBS tag on flickr closely and remotely living vicariously through the photographs. One of these days I'll finally plunk down some money for a brilliantly painted and equipped rando/touring rig like this one pictured here.

Posted on February 27, 2009 in gadgets/bikes | Permalink | Comments (0)

Tour of California


Floyd Landis, originally uploaded by Neal's photo.

A few thoughts about the Tour of California:

Posted on February 18, 2009 in racing | Permalink | Comments (0)

Tearing and rebuilding

Getting back into the gym this week after a month long hiatus, I'm reminded of the last time I went to a gym regularly back in the late 90s. After a few months of dutifully lifting weights three times a week, I hit a lull in my enthusiasm for it because I felt like I was merely tearing my muscles up every other day, and recuperating when I wasn't working out. I was always sore and never felt satisfied or good about the work I was doing. I did very monotonous and repetitive routines and simply added weight each week to measure my progress.

Luckily this time around I have a trainer and he changes things up week to week and we barely focus on weight (I don't actually even know how much I'm lifting or pushing most times -- we just talk in relative terms of harder or easier). The difference between having a trainer varying workouts versus following a list exactly every day in the gym is night and day. I'm satisfyingly exhausted at the end of each workout and while I might be a bit sore during the in between days (not so sore I can't get hours of riding in), it's nothing like the robotic routine of tear, rebuild, tear, rebuild.

I never thought I'd say it, but I actually like working out now.

Posted on February 14, 2009 in gym | Permalink | Comments (0)

The dangers of being a roadie

Nice shadows on some hay grass When I was younger, the biggest danger of riding a bike was mostly about what I felt like attempting to do ("he's gonna jump it!!!") or if something happened while riding (like a crank arm breaking in the middle of a trick), but as I get older and ride mostly on public roads, the biggest danger is quickly becoming cars and trucks I share the road with.

Of course, it's not all cars and all trucks, it's mostly the one in ten thousand assholes that feel bicycles should not be traveling on roads, should not be in the flow of traffic, and should not cause them to slow down while they pass you. It happens every spring when the normally vacant farm roads I ride on become crowded on the first sunny weekend. You'll get someone yelling as they pass, or purposely making their truck backfire just as they go by. Sometimes, you get something even worse.

Sunday was something worse. A friend and I were at the tail end of a 90 minute easy ride, and we were riding side-by-side on an uncrowded road outside of town. A few people had passed that day, but this time it was out of the blue, and very close. Usually that's just a sign of a driver being inconsiderate and considering this was not only a full sized truck, but a dually my first thought was he was making a simple mistake concerning how wide the back end of his truck was relative to us riding.

The horn blast dispelled any notions it was an oversight or mistake. What seemed inconsiderate just turned into something aggressive and unruly. My first reaction to things like this is to throw up a hand to say "Hey! What the hell, dude?!" and my friend's first reaction was to throw his hand up, and motion it backwards. This set the driver off as we saw him slam on his brakes. Jeez, what the hell is this guy doing. Immediately, the reverse lights came on and a three ton dually truck is barreling towards us on a public road, backwards towards us. What. The. Fuck. Not wanting to get run over, I moved off to the side of the road and my friend did the same, riding right up to the side of the truck.

What follows was a flurry of swearing from the driver: "Motherfuckers... get out of my way.... motherfucking... didn't you see me coming... motherfucking faggots!" while my friend is yelling "Do you know what the law is? Do you know what the law is?" and after a few seconds I get my wits and start taking my phone out to shoot a picture of his license plate but after the "faggots!" hangs in the air, he slams the truck into drive and storms off.

When I got home 15 minutes later I threw on some sweats and drove around town to see if I could spot the truck and get the plate number, but after hitting the local hardware, farm, and grocery stores, I came up empty.

It sucks that this is supposed to become normal, and has become somewhat normal, happening once or twice a year both when I ride alone and in groups. Given that I'm riding thousands of miles on bike lane-free farm roads, there's no way to know when the next jerk is going to brush too close next to me, blaring the horn and who knows what this guy will do the next time he encounters some cyclists. It sucks that this happens to everyone, all the way up to Lance Armstrong (who has been hit by drivers at least a couple times).

My wife has always bugged me to get an ID bracelet for these kinds of worst-case scenarios. I find the idea kind of macabre, basically making my own toe tag for when I die, but I'll probably end up getting one soon.

Posted on February 9, 2009 in stories | Permalink | Comments (2)

Pairing a Garmin 705 with a powertap ant+sport hub

Garmin

After a few weeks of waiting, my ant+sport upgrade for a 2008 Powertap SL hub came in and Seth and I applied the patch and got the green light. I couldn't seem to pair it with my Garmin 705 bike computer though, until I followed these steps:

The secret seemed to be clicking off the power box button and making sure the back wheel was spinning (hold the front brake, take the rear off the ground and give it a good tug on the cranks). Before I did this, the "Restart Scan" button seemed to do nothing but kick me back to the ant+sport menu.

I took a quick spin and the data looks pretty accurate. I'll now have good deep data for my rides and I'm looking forward to seeing how they play out.

Posted on February 4, 2009 in gadgets/bikes | Permalink | Comments (0)

Riding in Kona, Hawaii


Riding the queen k highway, originally uploaded by mathowie.

About a year ago I started planning a winter vacation, with two weeks in Hawaii. Originally, I never intended to do much riding while there, but as the date drew closer, I started to do a little research. It all started with Lance Armstrong getting on twitter a couple months ago, then endlessly gushing about riding on the big island near Kona. He posted notes and photos from rides and a few weeks later Bike Hugger was there as well and published a handy guide to riding there.

Weighing the options

Bringing my own bike over seemed like an expensive option, with a bike box going for about $300 and airlines charging anywhere from $50-100 each way to transport a bike. Shipping a bike to the big island was about $200 each way, and shops generally wanted about $50 to reassemble and repack on each end.

Finally I looked into renting bikes but talked to a handful of shops and didn't think they'd have much to offer. A few days into the trip my wife noticed I was lethargic and complaining of stiff muscles and suggested checking for bike rentals again to stretch out and get some exercise. 

Thanks to a recommendation from Byron at Bikehugger, I ended up at Bike Works, which had a wonderful carbon/dura-ace Cannondale in 63cm that fit better than my personal Cervelo (it had a nice long head tube that positioned the bars just perfectly). The staff were responsive, helpful, and knowledgeable. Other shops I interacted with either didn't give much information over email or seemed kind of wishy-washy. I ended up renting the bike for a full week and it came in under $250 for this high-end bike (two friends that joined me on the trip got a nice high end Cervelo and a mid-range Cannondale).

Where to ride

Since I stayed along Alii Drive, the sort of main drag of Kailua-Kona, I started all my rides there, but quickly ended up riding up and down the Queen K highway, which happens to be the same route that Ironman Triatheletes take every fall, so it's smooth, safe, and fast (when you're not riding into a stiff headwind). I frequently saw other cyclists and about half of them were riding pretty crazy ~$10k time trial machines. I typically rode some hills along Alii Dr., then I'd go for 30-60min north and ride back home. The first day the wind wasn't too bad, but subsequent rides were often pushing only 13mph into the wind on the way to the Kona Airport, then cruising in the 25-27mph range all the way home. I didn't get a chance to climb any volcanoes nor did I get to hit the big Saturday morning group ride (my main server was hacked just as I was waking up to get ready for the ride), but overall, I'd say for riding a road bike in Hawaii, the big island area around Kona has plenty to offer, and it doesn't hurt that it was sunny and 80F every single day I was there for two weeks.

Posted on February 2, 2009 in travel | Permalink | Comments (1)

Me racing cyclocross
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