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birthday ride ?
According to the clock of life, I should be 59 today; however according to one of those "biological age" sites- I'm 49. Among today's events work, usual household chores and cavorting - time got short for a birthday ride. It was windy, cool, a touch rainy and nearly dark when I got to 49, decided that I had ridden my age. Did I warp the system?
PS. I had pie instead of cake. |
Since you look at two 'systems' for your age, you need to add them together to figure your ride length... or maybe you need to average them... or maybe you need to do the higher... or maybe you need to do the lower... I think that the fact that you rode on your birthday is what matters!
train safe-- (and happy birthday:thumb:) |
And my biological clock says I am 18.
That will make it nice for my birthday in November. |
My wife insists I behave like a two-year-old. That's really going to affect my birthday ride length if we start accepting non-chronological systems.
Nap time. |
My next one is 59-congrats on the birthday and hope you go flat free for the year.
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Birthday rides are just a ride on your birthday so at least you got a decent ride in- but beware. Winter is coming and you still have to ride your ACTUAL age. Don't fancy that on a cold wet and windy day that I am sending your way.
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Just turned 64 (haven't ridden my age this year). Out of curiosity I googled one of those quizzes and got a biological age of 47. But I had to cheat by picking the food groups I knew they would overweight rather than the low carb I actually eat.
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Originally Posted by martianone
(Post 14691748)
Among today's events work, usual household chores and cavorting - time got short for a birthday ride. It was windy, cool, a touch rainy and nearly dark when I got to 49, decided that I had ridden my age. Did I warp the system?
PS Where in Vermont are you? We spend a lot of our vacation time in northern Vermont. |
Yes, you screwed up the system for all of us. ;) Happy belated birthday. It's nice to ride on your birthday if you can, but it's also nice to ride the day after your birthday, and the day after that, and....
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my 50th was in Scotland, on a long bike tour, my 65th is next month, in Oregon, not on tour.
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Originally Posted by gevad
(Post 14693750)
The cavorting is the culprit. Get that out of your daily routine, and I'm sure that next year you'll have no problem at all acting your age and doing a proper birthday ride! :)
PS Where in Vermont are you? We spend a lot of our vacation time in northern Vermont. ps, my wife helped with the cavorting |
Originally Posted by martianone
(Post 14695884)
live in sthe NEK, where do you summer ?
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I was born September 1, 1956. That means I turned 56 last Saturday. I rode 56.4 miles on Saturday, and the Buckeyes of The Ohio State University, my alma mater, scored 56 points that day. Recognizing that the lottery is a tax on the mathematically impaired, I decided not to play 56 in the lottery last Saturday and, not surprisingly, it didn't come up.
Riding your chronological age in miles on your birthday (or the closest possible weekend) is the rule. Break it, and you might be sentenced to rooting for Michigan. |
When I turned 56 I did double my age. Thought it would be a good goal for future birthdays. Realized that riding that far bores me. Now, if I ride on my birthday, that's great. If I don't, that's great too. I'm more interested in making sure that I just get to the birthday than actually doing anything on it. There are 364 other days to think about. They should all be celebrated.
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