After spending 4 years trying to rediscover
my cycling youth….
…I’ve found it, sort of. The big question now is – how do I hang on to it!!!
Okay, the megaloblastic anaemia thingy pretty much kept
the brakes on for 2 or 3 years so those early ‘comeback’ seasons seem a bit
irrelevant now but I don’t suppose it was wasted effort really. All miles in
the bank.
The dilemma I have is that I’d like to keep
this level of fitness / health for the rest of the season but I’m now worried
about either overdoing it and ruining it all again or not doing enough and
detraining. If I was going to cock it up
though, I think the latter option is the most favourable one – recent
experience has proved that taking big chunks of time off the bike isn’t actually
as disastrous as you’d be led to believe. In fact, for me at least, it seems to
work miracles.
I rode a TT on weds and felt great. Two days
off then out again for a fast ride (‘Tempo’ is what they call it I think) today
(sat) which I smashed once again. I rode a usual two hour route but based on
recent rides, I put an extra loop in to lengthen it a bit - even so I was back
in 1:54! Shouldn’t complain really I suppose!
Felt amazing again once I’d warmed up and the
Magnesium Citrate had kicked in, riding into a 12-15kt headwind in the big ring
with ease.
I made a point of tuning into myself as much
as I could and noticed a few things:
·
Resting pulse –
nothing remarkable when I woke up, just over 60. Not been especially low for a
while. I’ve always used this as a marker for fatigue but I wonder now if it’s a
bit of a red herring?
·
Possibly connected
to the above but I was ‘tired’ when I got up. Not sore, achey sort of tired but
a sort of ‘core’ tiredness that made me think twice about riding. In the end it
wasn’t an issue as I had a great ride.
I’ve noticed a few times that days when you get up feeling awesome don’t
always mean you are in for a fast bike ride and vice versa. There’s a subtle
difference between an ‘overdoing-the-training’ type of tired and a
‘busy-at-work-on-your-feet-all-day’ type of tired. It’s quite an important difference but I
can’t think of a way of easily spotting it.
·
The perception of
effort is quite a well documented feature of fitness / form / fatigue /
overtraining. Again, once I’d warmed up I was using big gears easily and felt
like a bit of a slacker sometimes because I felt I wasn’t ‘working’ but from
the HR and speed & size of the gears I obviously was.
·
Rapid changes in
HR. My heart rate is reacting like some sort of rev counter at the minute. What
I mean is that when I pedal hard it increases rapidly and freely. When I stop
at junctions / lights etc, it drops quickly, almost instantly. Take off again
and it’s right back up there straight away. There’s no lag, no delay, it tracks
my effort instantaneously. I know that’s
what it’s supposed to do but the way it’s doing it now is different!
I’m aware that the long block of hard
training and the enforced month long lay off due to illness is pretty much a
classic overload / taper sort of cycle which may explain the ‘peak’ I’m
experiencing. But after a WHOLE MONTH
off? Why haven’t I massively detrained? Or perhaps I have and there’s more to
come? Dunno….
I dabbled with periodised training a couple
of years ago but didn’t really get a lot out of it because I was still
handicapped by deformed red blood cells.
I did the classic 4 week programme – 3 weeks of increasing load then a
really easy week repeated every 4 weeks.
What I did notice was that I’d have a minor ‘peak’ not in the first week
after the rest week but in the second training week, ie about 7-14 days after
the last day off. That’s kind of similar to what’s happened lately.
Interesting.
Unfortunately, I have a habit of turning
everything I do into a scientific experiment but this has really got my
attention now! As regards how much training to do to keep things going, I’m
going to try for a couple of 2 hr tempo rides a week and try a TT every now and
then. I’ll be particularly watching the points above, especially the ‘perceived
effort’ and ‘rapid response HR’ ones as they’re the easiest ones to spot. If
things start drifting back to how they were, I think that’ll be my body’s way
of telling me I’m doing too much.
As for monitoring if I’m doing enough, well,
the TT performances should tell me that!
Fingers crossed….
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