Just two, possibly
three chances…
....to get under 21
minutes this season. As ever, it’s in
the lap of the Gods really and depends on getting decent weather but I’m giving
myself every fighting chance.
I’ve had a fairly
easy season really – started pretty late, haven’t raced a lot and haven’t
really trained an awful lot so I haven’t had that burned out feeling you get
sometimes this time of year.
So, with nothing
really to lose, I embarked on a ‘training camp’ which started pretty much
during the last open on the E2 a couple of weekends ago.
Lots and lots of
full-on turbo work and the odd gentle spin out on the MTB to try and keep a
little sanity and to stay limbered up.
The aim is to try
and induce one of my ’Day 10 Peaks’ - a
mysterious surge in form I get halfway through the second easy week after a big
smash of training. Had the last of my
big efforts last night in a TT so now, thank God, I can rest up a bit.
Absolutely knackered.
So, in 10 day’s
time, I have another date with destiny with the V718. It's a humungous field - over 300 riders. I'm second to last off at 15:59. Some bloke called Michael Hutchinson is away a minute behind me. I've heard he's quite good...
As a back-up, I’m also
riding the almost-as-quick F11/10 in Herts the next day. Fingers crossed.
I’m down to ride the fairly rapid local
B10/35 course on the Saturday but I’ve got a horrible feeling I’m going to be
stuck at work in Norwich
until gone 14:00 so it’s looking dodgy. I rode the B10/35 a few times in the
mid 90’s and always loved the helter-skelter type starting run down the
sliproad from the overhead bridge. Be gutted to miss it.
As for the
training, I’ve been riding blocks of 20 min threshold sessions on the turbo
mainly, usually managing 3 or 4 blocks before the drop in quality made me stop.
Rode my local club
10 on the Thursday feeling absolutely stuffed after a big turbo session the
previous day and was amazed to break my course PB by a few seconds on a very
windy night.
22:49. Get in!! |
On Sunday I only
managed 2 x 20 min blocks and was aware I was ridiculously choppy and uncoordinated
because I was so tired so just stopped before I injured something.
Forced myself out
on the MTB for a couple of hours on Monday and Tuesday going really steady and
started to feel much better.
Another steady ride yesterday was punctuated with a few miles off road around Fritton Woods and up
Sandy Lane
to try and remind me that cycling was actually fun. Hmmm, it can be, sort of...
Then home, chuck the TT bike in the back of
the car and off to Scoulton for the club 10.
I very nearly
missed my ride as I arrived at the ‘old’ start of the course to find it
deserted… then remembered the new version of the course that I rode a couple of
years ago. A slightly panicky blast back
to Hingham
found me at the start of the right course with a couple of minutes to spare.
Doh!!
3 – 2 – 1 – Go!
Very tired – max HR
was 158 compared with a normal ‘10’ average of 172. Felt very dieselly though –
my body decided it preferred pushing big gears for a change but I was going
alright. Another one of those knackered rides where pacing is a doddle – it’s
physically impossible to blow up!
22:09 which I’m
sure is a course PB (although I think I’ve only ridden this course once
before so that's cheating a bit) so got to be happy with that.
It’s made me again consider my ratio of training to resting and it’s
convinced me even more that I’ve been slightly ‘over-rested’ for large parts of
this season. But, and I’ll say it again, I’d sooner be too fresh than
chronically over-trained. That’s just a horrible place to be...
My aim was to ride
the Somerleyton club 10 again tonight but I’m just too knackered. To be honest,
that low max HR last night has made me appreciate just how wrecked I’ve made
myself. Time to stop now.
STOP.
Just
Stop Andy!
I’ll stay off the bike until
Sunday then see how I feel before I decide what to do next.
Apart from all the
hard work, I’ve also been doing some fun stuff. I was donated a Blackberry by
my daughter when she got her iPhone a few months ago and, being an old fart,
never really used it for anything other than phone calls and texts. I’ve been mucking about with it more and more
- hence the GPS cycle mapping thingy above. It’s also now made me realize why she got
rid of it! I want an iPhone!!
Been doing some
aero tweaks too…
Since I’ve been
going slightly faster, I’ve been a bit more aware of the air rushing around
me. Aerodynamics is often a very
counter-intuitive science and you dabble at your peril but an amazing
opportunity presented itself the other day and I just had to use it…
I remember camping
years ago and lighting one of those mosquito repellent smokey things. In the
light evening breeze, I enjoyed watching the smoke stream over my hand wind
tunnel style, seeing how it followed the curves of my fingers & changing
the angle of attack until my hand ‘stalled’ etc.
Anyway, on a windy
day last week I’d got all the doors and windows in the house open to try and
get rid of the smell of two wet dogs (swimming in the muddy Waveney – never a
good idea.) Couple of incense sticks lit
and… oh, that’s interesting – a perfect sideways stream of smooth smoke moving
through the kitchen. (You can already see where this is going, can’t you?!)
Yep, you guessed it
– bike and rider set up in the airflow with 'smoke source' on the end of a garden
cane and a video camera. DIY wind tunnel – Tada!
Thing is, you can
laugh but it was very enlightening…
Incense sticks soon
proved to be too feeble a source of smoke so I used one of Sue’s smudge sticks
which pretty much smoked the house out but worked a treat. Here’s an early experiment with my pointy aero
hat….
Good innit! Pretty smooth flow with the odd gust spoiling it but I suppose wind tunnel type smooth airflows don't exist on dual carriageways either!
Amazing the useful knowledge you pick up through life. When I was managing a huge factory years ago, a major bugbear was staff smoking in the toilets so I had the walls painted black so that I'd be able to spot which cubicle the smoke was emanating from. Hence the black blanket here - same principle!
Amazing the useful knowledge you pick up through life. When I was managing a huge factory years ago, a major bugbear was staff smoking in the toilets so I had the walls painted black so that I'd be able to spot which cubicle the smoke was emanating from. Hence the black blanket here - same principle!
Impossible on this
primitive MK1 setup to measure drag and the air is only moving at 5-10 knots but
it’s a useful tool for seeing where the turbulence is and seeing the route the that
the air takes. What I found was:
- The previously open tail of my pointy hat generates a lot of turbulence. Filling it in smooths the flow over my back a lot (although my head gets roastingly hot now!). I had read this somewhere and had intended to fill the gap in earlier in the season but never got around to it. Filled in now though!
- Pulling my elbows and shoulders in has two effects:
- The air splits further ahead and seems to stagnate & burble far less in the area between your elbows and face when the aerobars are as close together as possible.
- With the bars set narrow, there is far less burble of the air by my hip bones and it reattaches much sooner. I can actually feel this while riding now – the previous ‘tickle’ at the sides of my bum has gone.
I’m no expert but I
imagine this has something to do with the air damming up and decelerating under
your chest and belly then spilling out and mixing with the faster moving air
each side of you.
Very interesting.
Having the bars set
so narrow has made the bike trickier to ride but along with the slight drop in
saddle height I did a few weeks ago which allows me to stretch out on the bars
and straighten my back more, I’m convinced it has made me a bit more slippery. I
do fidget a lot on the bike but I’ve been trying my hardest to stay in a nice
tuck during races recently.
I reset my bars and
filled my hat in two rides ago and have set two course PB’s since despite being
knackered. Yeah, I know, I know, we’re probably looking at a marginal gain of a
second or two but it makes you wonder, doesn’t it? As with most things though, just
thinking you’re faster often makes you go
faster!
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