Knowing when to say "when"...
#1
Thread Starter
Banned.
Joined: Sep 2003
Posts: 6,016
Likes: 1
From: Home alone
Bikes: Trek 4300 X 2. Trek 1000, Trek 6000
Knowing when to say "when"...
I'm freakin tired. On today's ride I was so tired that I started to understand what the term "bonk" means. After 3 years of riding and almost 20,000 miles (most of these on mountain bikes on unpaved roads) I've been tired, but i dunno if i've ever been THIS tired. I have been busy working on the house the last week almost non stop and of course I've continued to ride every morning, as per normal.
Last night i knew I was pretty wiped but I really wanted to get a road ride in this morning because it was a holiday and because it was so nice. I should have listened to my body, because now I feel like hammered ****.
The constant work on the house and all the normal miles has left me in a pile. I will rest in the morning and not ride and hope I am spry again by the next day. But for now I am simply wiped out! Anybody else have trouble knowing when to say WHEN?
Last night i knew I was pretty wiped but I really wanted to get a road ride in this morning because it was a holiday and because it was so nice. I should have listened to my body, because now I feel like hammered ****.
The constant work on the house and all the normal miles has left me in a pile. I will rest in the morning and not ride and hope I am spry again by the next day. But for now I am simply wiped out! Anybody else have trouble knowing when to say WHEN?
#2
I run out of time before anything else gives out. Still, on days when I'm tired to start with, I'm more apt to have stiff muscles the next day, and this after roughly comparable rides. Psychologically tired, I can understand, but stiff. . . ?
__________________
Some people are like a Slinky ... not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you shove them down the stairs.
Some people are like a Slinky ... not really good for anything, but you still can't help but smile when you shove them down the stairs.
#4
Senior Member

Joined: Oct 2003
Posts: 1,941
Likes: 1
Originally Posted by Portis
I'm freakin tired. On today's ride I was so tired that I started to understand what the term "bonk" means. After 3 years of riding and almost 20,000 miles (most of these on mountain bikes on unpaved roads) I've been tired, but i dunno if i've ever been THIS tired. I have been busy working on the house the last week almost non stop and of course I've continued to ride every morning, as per normal.
Last night i knew I was pretty wiped but I really wanted to get a road ride in this morning because it was a holiday and because it was so nice. I should have listened to my body, because now I feel like hammered ****.
The constant work on the house and all the normal miles has left me in a pile. I will rest in the morning and not ride and hope I am spry again by the next day. But for now I am simply wiped out! Anybody else have trouble knowing when to say WHEN?
Last night i knew I was pretty wiped but I really wanted to get a road ride in this morning because it was a holiday and because it was so nice. I should have listened to my body, because now I feel like hammered ****.
The constant work on the house and all the normal miles has left me in a pile. I will rest in the morning and not ride and hope I am spry again by the next day. But for now I am simply wiped out! Anybody else have trouble knowing when to say WHEN?
Bonk is a physical condition due to lack of sugar.
Burnout is part physical, part mental. You recover by taking some time off, but it generally takes a lot more time than you'd think to get back.
__________________
Eric
2005 Trek 5.2 Madone, Red with Yellow Flames (Beauty)
199x Lemond Tourmalet, Yellow with fenders (Beast)
Read my cycling blog at https://riderx.info/blogs/riderx
Like climbing? Goto https://www.bicycleclimbs.com
Eric
2005 Trek 5.2 Madone, Red with Yellow Flames (Beauty)
199x Lemond Tourmalet, Yellow with fenders (Beast)
Read my cycling blog at https://riderx.info/blogs/riderx
Like climbing? Goto https://www.bicycleclimbs.com
#5
Resident Old Fart
Joined: Sep 2004
Posts: 1,295
Likes: 0
From: Tallahassee, FL
Bikes: Douglas Precision Ti
We did 64 miles yesterday and I was nearly sick at the end of the ride. I was really feeling like a wuss until I found that several folks on the ride had bonked.
No more long rides like that without a meal stop for this old dude. Forty-five miles is about all I can do on Clif bars and GU.
No more long rides like that without a meal stop for this old dude. Forty-five miles is about all I can do on Clif bars and GU.
__________________
Wag more, bark less
Wag more, bark less
#6
Senior Member
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 14,277
Likes: 3
Gas stations are lovely places. I took a 60 mile ride in the foothills yesterday. After running low on water and most of my energy being gone I hit a conoco. butterfinger..... yummy
Worked great.
Anyhow, bonking is quite annoying. I have only done this once and could barely move. It took my 90 minutes to ride 5 miles. Never again!
I think I had a partial bonk a few weeks ago. After sprinting home my hands were shaking so much it took me 10 minutes to make a PGJ sandwich. However, that could be something entirely different. *shrugs*
Burn out just takes time to get over. It happens to me from time to time.
Worked great.
Anyhow, bonking is quite annoying. I have only done this once and could barely move. It took my 90 minutes to ride 5 miles. Never again!
I think I had a partial bonk a few weeks ago. After sprinting home my hands were shaking so much it took me 10 minutes to make a PGJ sandwich. However, that could be something entirely different. *shrugs*
Burn out just takes time to get over. It happens to me from time to time.





