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At 2.5 miles, your ride IS the warmup, and what you may do before depends on the time you're willing to commit to the idea.
OTOH- one way to reduce strain as you ease into the ride, is to spin gears lower than you would otherwise for the first few minutes of your ride. I'm not talking about going crazy, just one or two gear steps lower. You'll have to experiment to find how much and how long, but I estimate that a few minutes should be enough, though I wouldn't be shocked to find out that you had to do it for 90% of the ride. |
I wake up, drink some coffee, hopefully take a dump, jump in the shower and then walk the dogs for half an hour before embarking on my ride.
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A warm up for a 2.5 mile ride?
Never done warm ups, not even on 100 or 200 mile events. But then I'm only 82 years young and still pedal 100 miles a week. Heck, if you need to warm up, what do you do for a cool down? |
Originally Posted by FBinNY
(Post 17863757)
OTOH- one way to reduce strain as you ease into the ride, is to spin gears lower than you would otherwise for the first few minutes of your ride. I'm not talking about going crazy, just one or two gear steps lower. You'll have to experiment to find how much and how long, but I estimate that a few minutes should be enough, though I wouldn't be shocked to find out that you had to do it for 90% of the ride.
As others have mentioned, stretching in the morning won't help. I wouldn't want to sprint without at least a 10 min warmup. |
Originally Posted by zonatandem
(Post 17864063)
A warm up for a 2.5 mile ride?
Never done warm ups, not even on 100 or 200 mile events. But then I'm only 82 years young and still pedal 100 miles a week. Heck, if you need to warm up, what do you do for a cool down? |
A cup of hot coffee is enough to warm me up. I agree with stretching during long rides and after. But before rides, never.
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:) I knew that my question would have people laughing at me - I appreciate that 2.5 miles is a very short ride. I tried the other route in my car today (had to attend a telephonic meeting during the commute, and car has bluetooth) and I was pleasantly surprised. The city did some work on some roads recently, and they have marked out bike lanes and sharrows on the alternate route. So it looks like I won't have to sprint as much on the new route - and I'll heed some of the comments in this thread anyway.
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Originally Posted by treadtread
(Post 17859139)
That's what I've been doing, and it doesn't seem to be working for me. Maybe I just need to slow down a bit and not keep sprinting from stop sign to traffic light - I've identified an alternate route that is longer but should be slower, will try it out tomorrow.
For 15mi runs with the Marines, the warm up was the first 5 miles of the run, stretching was done after the cool down. |
Originally Posted by alan s
(Post 17864176)
A cup of hot coffee is enough to warm me up. I agree with stretching during long rides and after. But before rides, never.
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Originally Posted by rmfnla
(Post 17866503)
Same for me, except I have two cups...
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Originally Posted by jfowler85
(Post 17868045)
All this coffee talk is making me want to pee.....on your bike.
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Update: the new route is 3.5 miles one way, and much less stress. Has a bike lane most of the way, and fewer stop signs and traffic lights. I was feeling a bit stupid - why did it take me so long to try this route? And then I remembered - I had tried it before, but a new hospital was being constructed and that made the route undesirable (debris along the side etc). All that is over now, and the ride is much more peaceful.
So like many of the traffic related threads on the commuter forum, this ends with a find-a-newer-longer-route solution :) |
:thumb:
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Originally Posted by highrpm
(Post 17859411)
I've been exercising daily for more than a decade now, in the evenings. I run on the treadmill one day and lift weights the alternating day.
In the morning, when I first wake up, I do a walk up and down my basement stairs ten times. This is the only warmup that I do before riding the bike, and I think it makes a difference since I never feel stiff or get cramps or anything. |
Originally Posted by rmfnla
(Post 17868566)
Stay away from my bike...
Or do I? |
Originally Posted by jfowler85
(Post 17878842)
I kid, I kid.
Or do I? Funny thing - I was thinking of this thread on my way in - the newer route is so much easier - longer with fewer stop signs. I was nicely warmed up just before the last mile, and when I had to sprint to catch a light, I found myself cycling at 24 mph without any strain. .. I just feel a little duh! now, but better late understanding than never :) |
Originally Posted by treadtread
(Post 17868620)
Update: the new route is 3.5 miles one way, and much less stress. Has a bike lane most of the way, and fewer stop signs and traffic lights. I was feeling a bit stupid - why did it take me so long to try this route? And then I remembered - I had tried it before, but a new hospital was being constructed and that made the route undesirable (debris along the side etc). All that is over now, and the ride is much more peaceful.
So like many of the traffic related threads on the commuter forum, this ends with a find-a-newer-longer-route solution :) FWIW, I've been making more of an effort lately to stay in a lower gear for the first mile or so before ramping things up. Not sure if it's helping anything, but it sure doesn't hurt. |
Originally Posted by jfowler85
(Post 17878840)
Is your name either Hanz or Franz?
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Get a kettlebell and do some swings each morning. It will warm you up and provide other benefits as well. (Make sure it's not the plastic kind that comes in pink. Unless you have some physical issues, get a 35 pounder at least.)
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To a vehicle traveling 35-45 mph there's scant difference between a cyclist going 12 or 20 mph. I understand the feeling safer bit, but relative to the car neither will make you safer than the other. Go at a comfortable pace and go fast when you want to go fast. Also remember this ... the slower you go, the faster they get around you.
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I'd say slow down. No need to go fast, especially on such a short ride. I've been a bicycle commuter for 8 years and have never seen the need to "warm up".
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Another update, just in case this thread shows up in search results.
The back pain didn't go away with the longer, slower route, so I ended up getting an ergonomic evaluation (yes, there is such a thing) at my office. The lady who came took some measurements, concluded that the desk was the wrong height, monitors were at the wrong height and I needed to get a standing desk - one that allows me to alternate between sitting and standing. So I am typing as I stand right now, and my initial impression is favorable. If anyone is in a similar situation, just build your own standing desk with a stack of books, and see if that helps. If you have a laptop, you will need another keyboard and mouse to make sure that your hands are positioned correctly when the screen is level with your eyes. |
Originally Posted by treadtread
(Post 17902234)
Another update, just in case this thread shows up in search results.
The back pain didn't go away with the longer, slower route, so I ended up getting an ergonomic evaluation (yes, there is such a thing) at my office. The lady who came took some measurements, concluded that the desk was the wrong height, monitors were at the wrong height and I needed to get a standing desk - one that allows me to alternate between sitting and standing. So I am typing as I stand right now, and my initial impression is favorable. If anyone is in a similar situation, just build your own standing desk with a stack of books, and see if that helps. If you have a laptop, you will need another keyboard and mouse to make sure that your hands are positioned correctly when the screen is level with your eyes. |
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