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Riding our age.
I'm all for this riding our age thing we do here but I have a minor poblem with it. The older I get the longer the rides. We should come up with a formula similar to the one used to find your max heart rate. That way the older we get the easier it will be to "ride our age". Maybe let the younger ride longer miles to bank towards their older years. What say ye.
P.S. Please let us be quick as I have a brithday coming up soon. ;) |
I'm hoping to ride double my age this year and hold onto that distance for as many years as possible. I may not achieve it, nor for long, but I'm not lowering my expectations until frailty forces me to.
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For my 60th I rode the first of what I hope are many 'Birthday Centuries'. I consider it practice for the 100th in a little under 39 years from now.
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Four years ago my wife rode (averaged) her age (52) for 70 consecutive days to cover 3650 miles. She did not think riding her age was such a big deal;)
When I was younger, I used a formula for running my age. I would run 1 mile for each year until age 50; then I would subtract 1 mile for every year over 50. Unfortunately, I was injured in an accident when I was 49, and could no longer run; so I never got to the point where I could subtract miles. Fortunately, it was the event that got me back on my bike with a passion. |
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This is heresy! Next you'll want donuts to replace pie!
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Originally Posted by Digital Gee
(Post 13912323)
This is heresy! Next you'll want donuts to replace pie!
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Originally Posted by Digital Gee
(Post 13912323)
This is heresy! Next you'll want donuts to replace pie!
Perhaps I shouldn't mention this, but when you're running for your life to escape the zombie apocalypse, what would rather carry: a bag full of Krispy Kremes, or some stupid apple pie? I rest my case. |
I can be bought. For $1 per age year. I'll ride your age for you up to age 120. After that, it's $1.25 per year of age. :D
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I was going to ride my age for my 51st in April, but I already exceeded that goal a month ago. Hadn't ridden a 60 mile day since I was 25 and it actually felt easier than I recall it being then. Pretty happy with that.
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And what's wrong with donuts? :) Unless of course it has no hole, then it would be a danish.
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Well, actually doughnuts would be a better thing up here in the Great White North bas there are probably more Timmies than pie shops. But all this talk about pies and doughnuts is taking away from the question that I posed. I know it doesn't take much for some of us(self included) to be led astray in our thoughts at our great age but let us solve or come to a amiable conclusion to the question before getting into a great debate over pie and doughnuts.
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What was the question? Oh yeah.
Originally Posted by overthehillmedi
(Post 13912066)
I'm all for this riding our age thing we do here but I have a minor poblem with it. The older I get the longer the rides. We should come up with a formula similar to the one used to find your max heart rate. That way the older we get the easier it will be to "ride our age". Maybe let the younger ride longer miles to bank towards their older years. What say ye.
P.S. Please let us be quick as I have a brithday coming up soon. ;) |
http://i170.photobucket.com/albums/u...e-facepalm.jpg
Riding ones age is too easy...anyway... HTFU.:D |
Sorry, but I simply reject the whole idea of formulas and equivalences and such related to ride distance, whether in reference to age rides or comparing different activities like road riding vs. mountain biking or flat vs. hills or riding vs. running or actual riding vs. trainer riding.
Just keep it simple. Ride your age. If it gets to be too far to ride, for example, 75 miles in a day, switch to 75 kilometers (46.5 miles) or 75 yards or 75 feet or 75 minutes. Just do 75 of something to celebrate your 75th birthday. |
Originally Posted by Hermes
(Post 13913817)
Riding ones age is too easy...anyway... HTFU.:D
;) |
I agree we should stay on topic, but another issue has just surfaced - donuts or doughnuts?
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Originally Posted by Digital Gee
(Post 13913863)
I agree we should stay on topic, but another issue has just surfaced - donuts or doughnuts?
Would they go down smoother with a carbon fork? |
Originally Posted by BluesDawg
(Post 13913832)
Sorry, but I simply reject the whole idea of formulas and equivalences and such related to ride distance, whether in reference to age rides or comparing different activities like road riding vs. mountain biking or flat vs. hills or riding vs. running or actual riding vs. trainer riding.
Just keep it simple. Ride your age. If it gets to be too far to ride, for example, 75 miles in a day, switch to 75 kilometers (46.5 miles) or 75 yards or 75 feet or 75 minutes. Just do 75 of something to celebrate your 75th birthday. |
Originally Posted by overthehillmedi
(Post 13912066)
I'm all for this riding our age thing we do here but I have a minor poblem with it. The older I get the longer the rides. We should come up with a formula similar to the one used to find your max heart rate. That way the older we get the easier it will be to "ride our age". Maybe let the younger ride longer miles to bank towards their older years. What say ye.
P.S. Please let us be quick as I have a brithday coming up soon. ;) - Luis |
Ride your age or golf your age? That is the question.
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How about furlongs(660 feet) per fortnight (two weeks, I think)?
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I am reminded of one of the legendary figures in California cycling who was around when I first started riding seriously. Ed Delano, aka "Foxy Grandpa," must have been in his 70's or 80's back in 1972 when I rode with the Berkeley Wheelmen. Even then, he was still in many of the bike races, and I remember he was once asked if he liked doing the longer road races. His reply, "the longer they are, the better I like 'em!"
Luis |
Aging is 90 percent mental, of course the other half is physical.
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Originally Posted by lhbernhardt
(Post 13914069)
Simple. Just go metric. About time you Yanks went metric anyway and joined the rest of the world (not to mention your own military!). I thought you guys fought the Revolution to get away from the British Imperial System! And you even had those Frenchies helping you, and they INVENTED metric!
- Luis Seriously, I wish we did switch. I teach part-time at the local community college, in the evenings in the geography department and the first lecture is usually on S.I., (Système international d'unités). They have to do a homework assignment using a freeware conversion program that I give them. Then, for the rest of the semester, I use S.I. instead of our screwed up system. Congress tried to get us to switch in the mid 70's, but did not have the sand to force us to transition. The general public rebelled. Back when the United States was the big gorilla on the planet, we could get away with using out antiquated system. I predict that in the next few decades, as our influence in the world wanes, we will finally conform, if just to stay competitive with the new economic powers on the planet, (e.g., India, China, EU). I hope I live long enough to see it happen. I still don't have a good grasp on temperatures, but the other stuff is pretty easy ... and logical. - - - Last birthday, I was able to ride double my age. A double metric century was a bit over 120 miles. My goal is to ride double my age, (in miles), until I am physically unable to do so. |
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