It’s official, I give up….
No, no, not cycling, but trying to understand
how my body works!
Not really ridden for a month but, with all
the sunny weather and everything, I felt the urge to get out a few times this
last 10 days or so. In fact 4 times. Had
a short local ride first time out of about an hour or so and felt, well, ‘rested’
if nothing else.
2nd ride was a brisk ride round my sporting 50 mile
route a couple of days later which, to my astonishment, I PB’d by over 15
minutes (To be fair, I was absolutely shredded when I got home, lying on the
lawn for a while & stuffing half a packet of Nice biscuits down me cakehole
to recover!)
Then a really hard 1hr 15 min blast three
days later around another short local route which I also PB’d by a considerable
margin. For the first time in what seemed like decades, I had that strange
feeling of going really fast on a useful heart rate but felt like I was hardly
pressing on the pedals at all. This was
last Friday.
At this point, I thought about entering a TT
asap to see how the form really was so I targeted the club TT on the following
weds evening, seeing as I had the whole day off that day.
No riding over the Bank Holiday weekend (work
– boo…) but a restrained 90 min steady ride at around 130-135 bpm on Monday morning
as a bit of a taper.
Spent my whole day off lying under cars
welding, then a quick shower to get the Underseal out of my hair and off to the
TT.
Knew it
was going to be a decent ride as soon as I got on Trigger and started pedaling. Had an easy 20 minute warm up (which didn’t
feel hard enough – turbo next time) then off to the start.
A very, very controlled start. HR 155 for the
first 3 minutes, legs felt crap due to poor warm up. Ah well. HR allowed up
to 160-162 for the next 10 minutes or so. Hard to tell how well I was going as
the course is a twisty, rolling, rural 5 mile circuit.
First lap in almost exactly 12 minutes. A
nice surprise!
I pressed the self-destruct button for the
last five miles and let the HR up to 172 and found myself going a couple of mph
quicker in places second time around.
Nine miles – tits out!
½ a
mile to go and my vision went funny – always a good sign! Big sprint to the
finish (which I’m not able to do that often) and over the line in 23:31. A
course PB by about 30 secs I think.
Again, I hadn’t thought I’d gone that hard
but I was a bit unsteady on my feet after the finish and had to have a few
moments, bent double, hands on hips, breathing out of my arse type of thing.
Yep, I’d gone flat out alright!! To be
able to do that to myself is quite a rarity – everything must be very healthy
in the old engine room at the moment.
I’ve always found that the perception of
effort during a ride is a good indicator of form. You don’t feel like you’re going that mad at
the time, it feels easy but your HR is telling you otherwise. It’s a great
feeling. I mean just brilliant.
I’d thought my season was a write off but now
it looks like my ambition to mount a late summer campaign is still alive and
well. The quest for that elusive 20 minute 10 is on based on that ride - It's still only my 2nd race of the year after all so I will get quicker.
Still too busy at work for a while to contemplate entering Opens (I’m
working a lot of weekends and would have to take leave to ride sat & sun
events at the mo), but should calm down end of June, July & August.
So, my pre-season has gone like this:
Oct & Nov - two really hard 3 hour rides
a week.
Dec & Early Jan – Really bad case of flu
/ cold. No riding for about 5 weeks.
Late Jan – Mid March – 5-6 hours hard road / turbo stuff a week.
Late March to Late April – Another flu / cold
thing. Nearly 4 weeks of no riding.
A regime to remember for next year I think! The key thing is undoubtedly all the time off the bike between big training blocks, although I obviously didn't plan it. Interesting....
To be honest, I’ve finally realised just how
little quality training I actually need to do. Those sporadic hard 6 hours a
week over the winter have given me a really solid platform to work from,
although I hated it at the time! I think even that might have been a bit too much actually.
In fact, I’m becoming convinced that a lot of
club racers like me do far too much training and spend most of their racing
weekends still knackered.
From now on, I'm letting my body decide my training and racing programme. I don't think 'me' is particularly good at it!
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