Juggling between work and cycling
#1
Juggling between work and cycling
Hey guys/gals. For those who work ALOT, when do you find time to go ride? Recently I have been knocking down between 50-65 hours a week and its hard to find saddle time. Iwork weekends too. If I do get saddle time, I am too exhausted to ride anyway.LOL. Riding before work isnt an option for me really because I wake up at 5:00AM. Maybe alot of you do most of your riding during the weekend?
#2
Senior Member

Joined: Jun 2013
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From: location location
Bikes: MBK Super Mirage 1991, CAAD10, Yuba Mundo Lux, and a Cannondale Criterium Single Speed
I'm lucky enough that there are a couple of riders at work, and we have flexible schedules, so we can finish up early a couple days a week and get out for an hour or 2.
#3
My longer rides are on the weekends with the shorter ones during the week. I try to hit the road by 5:30- 6:00 to get the miles in and still have time for the family. Also I dont have to be into work to early so that helps.
#4
aka Tom Reingold




Joined: Jan 2009
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From: New York, NY, and High Falls, NY, USA
Bikes: 1962 Rudge Sports, 1971 Raleigh Super Course, 1971 Raleigh Pro Track, 1974 Raleigh International, 1975 Viscount Fixie, 1982 McLean, 1996 Lemond (Ti), 2002 Burley Zydeco tandem
If I take, as a "given," that I must exercise in some way or another, then I find that riding my bike to work and back saves time. If commuting by car takes 30 minutes and commuting by bike takes 45 minutes, I get a 45 minute workout for the "time cost" of 15 minutes. That's a lot better (and less stupid) than driving to a gym to work out.
But with those hours you're working, it's tough to do anything but work, sleep, and eat. I hope things lighten up for you soon.
But with those hours you're working, it's tough to do anything but work, sleep, and eat. I hope things lighten up for you soon.
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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
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Tom Reingold, tom@noglider.com
New York City and High Falls, NY
Blogs: The Experienced Cyclist; noglider's ride blog
“When man invented the bicycle he reached the peak of his attainments.” — Elizabeth West, US author
Please email me rather than PM'ing me. Thanks.
#5
Yeah, its been pretty rough. LOL. Sometimes when I get home(after sitting in traffic), I will try to go for a quick ride. But I try to get out on the bike before 8PM. After 8PM, forget it, im beat and ready to hit the bed.
#6
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
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From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
Recently I have been knocking down between 50-65 hours a week and its hard to find saddle time.
Time spent commuting can often be swapped for time riding. If it takes me 45 minutes to ride to work but 20 minute to drive, I can get 90 minutes of riding in at a net cost of just 50 minutes a day disregarding any "aha!" moments that occur while riding that have a huge impact on work. I also noted that if I'd ridden in the morning I didn't really need to warm up before I could go hard in the evening.
Riding before work isnt an option for me really because I wake up at 5:00AM. Maybe alot of you do most of your riding during the weekend?
Last edited by Drew Eckhardt; 08-06-13 at 08:01 PM.
#7
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
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From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
When I worked 60 hours a week I had plenty of time for other things like flying airplanes, building stereo speakers, cycling, etc - working 5 days a week and sleeping 8 hours a night gives you an average of 4 hours for other things during the work week.
I didn't have time for TV though. After a while I realized it had been six months since I'd watched anything and cancelled my satellite subscription.
This disregards the wisdom of working more - studies show that after a while you end up with less productivity than you have just working 40 hours a week.
https://skeptics.stackexchange.com/qu...ess-productive
Last edited by Drew Eckhardt; 08-06-13 at 10:20 PM.
#8
Power meter + trainer.
60 hours/week is my "regular". Sometimes I get up to 70-75 hours. I work afternoons-evenings so I pretty much cannot get up in the morning. I need at least 6 hours of sleep. I invested in a trainer and a Powertap wheelset to continue training late at night.
It sucks not being able to ride outside but with those 2 things you get a quality training.
60 hours/week is my "regular". Sometimes I get up to 70-75 hours. I work afternoons-evenings so I pretty much cannot get up in the morning. I need at least 6 hours of sleep. I invested in a trainer and a Powertap wheelset to continue training late at night.
It sucks not being able to ride outside but with those 2 things you get a quality training.
Last edited by KantoBoy; 08-06-13 at 10:20 PM.
#9
Senior Member
Joined: Aug 2013
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From: SF, CA
Bikes: Cervelo S5, Marin Gestalt X11
I work 40 hours, coach gymnastics 12 hours and need to spend some time with my wife! I wake up early 2-3 days a week to swim, run 3 days a week after coaching, and still have 100 miles available during the week just for commuting. Mornings are spinning/efficiency, ride home from work is sprints/intervals, ride to coaching is threshold for the first half (expressway) and accelerations for the second half (stoplights). Weekend is for a 3 to 5 hour ride on day and either a ride or long run the other. Sometimes I do an after-riding-home ride. That's about 20 hours per week of training plus 52 hours working. Then I have an hour or 2 in the evening to eat dinner and wind down, and the weekend afternoons for fun. And I'm horrible at managing time.
#10
Back about 10 years ago, I spent a couple years working up to 60 hours a week, year round, and taking night classes (often with quite a bit of homework) from September to April. And yet I was logging 9000+ km/year.
My commute was 13. 6 km/day 4 days a week (the 5th day I had to take the bus so I could bus to the college immediately after work to take the night classes). That adds up to 54.4 km/week for, say, 40 weeks of the year = 2176 km.
Plus, as soon as the sun shone longer in the evenings, I'd add a little bit extra to about 3 of those commutes ... anywhere from about 8 km to 40 km depending on how I felt.
Plus, I rode a lot on weekends. Metric centuries, centuries, and longer rides most weekends from the end of March to about the end of October.
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#11
moth -----> flame


Joined: Dec 2007
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From: SF Bay Area
Bikes: 18 Tarmac SL6, 11 CAAD 10-4, 07 Specialized Roubaix Comp, 98 Peugeot Horizon
Good lights and get in some riding first thing. I mix up the commute and ride from home at 5:15 some mornings to catch the ferry to my office. Other days I drive in and get some intervals in before I start the work day. I find it gets exponentially harder to keep my calendar clear later in the day if I don't ride before everyone else shows up at the office.
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#14
well hello there

Joined: May 2005
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From: Point Loma, CA
Bikes: Bill Holland (Road-Ti), Fuji Roubaix Pro (back-up), Bike Friday (folder), Co-Motion (tandem) & Trek 750 (hybrid)
Hey guys/gals. For those who work ALOT, when do you find time to go ride? Recently I have been knocking down between 50-65 hours a week and its hard to find saddle time. Iwork weekends too. If I do get saddle time, I am too exhausted to ride anyway.LOL. Riding before work isnt an option for me really because I wake up at 5:00AM. Maybe alot of you do most of your riding during the weekend?
Walking up at 4:00 am seems crazy.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
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Two wheels good. Four wheels bad.
#15
Commute to and from work by bicycle.
I did it about 5x on casual Fridays. I hate the feeling of being sweaty in an office environment.
#16
Senior Member
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,341
Likes: 326
From: Mountain View, CA USA and Golden, CO USA
Bikes: 97 Litespeed, 50-39-30x13-26 10 cogs, Campagnolo Ultrashift, retroreflective rims on SON28/PowerTap hubs
Power meter + trainer.
60 hours/week is my "regular". Something I get up to 70-75 hours. I work afternoons-evenings so I pretty much cannot get up in the morning. I need at least 6 hours of sleep. I invested in a trainer and a Powertap wheelset to continue training late at night.
It sucks not being able to ride outside but with those 2 things you get a quality training.
60 hours/week is my "regular". Something I get up to 70-75 hours. I work afternoons-evenings so I pretty much cannot get up in the morning. I need at least 6 hours of sleep. I invested in a trainer and a Powertap wheelset to continue training late at night.
It sucks not being able to ride outside but with those 2 things you get a quality training.
#17
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Joined: Jul 2002
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From: Sacramento, California, USA
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac, Canyon Exceed, Specialized Transition, Ellsworth Roots, Ridley Excalibur
Take a look at the Commuting forum. Plenty of folks have solved the lack of showers problem.
#18
I used to ride to work, but can no longer do that,.... because I live too close now. Honestly for me, I try to get in a ride during the week if I can, which usually means getting up ridiculously early and going for a ride before I go to work. But with the work I do, and the pressure that comes with it, I mostly ride in the weekends. I am trying to get back to 3 days a week, but it has not been easy. I have been jogging more often to still get a work out in just 30 min.
#19
None of the places I've commuted to have had showers.
Use baby wipes ... or paper towels and water.
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Rowan
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#20
I work 40 hours, coach gymnastics 12 hours and need to spend some time with my wife! I wake up early 2-3 days a week to swim, run 3 days a week after coaching, and still have 100 miles available during the week just for commuting. Mornings are spinning/efficiency, ride home from work is sprints/intervals, ride to coaching is threshold for the first half (expressway) and accelerations for the second half (stoplights). Weekend is for a 3 to 5 hour ride on day and either a ride or long run the other. Sometimes I do an after-riding-home ride. That's about 20 hours per week of training plus 52 hours working. Then I have an hour or 2 in the evening to eat dinner and wind down, and the weekend afternoons for fun. And I'm horrible at managing time.
#21
I suppose I can find time in the morning, as long as I am hitting the bed early.
#22
Ha ha ha ha ha
Joined: May 2005
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From: Gold Coast; Australia
Bikes: 2004 ORBEA Mitis2 Plus Carbon, 2007 Cannondale Bad Boy Si Disc, 2012 Trek Gary Fisher Collection Marlin WSD 29er Aldi Big Box (Polygon) 650b
I use my bike to commute Monday to Saturday as others above have mentioned, and ride the mountain roads Saturday from 6am to 8.30am before work, shower, then commute to work, getting there by 10am. Sunday I ride the mountain roads for about 90 km from 6am, getting back home in time for lunch and spend the afternoon with my family. Life is great.
#23
Senior Member

Joined: Jul 2002
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From: Sacramento, California, USA
Bikes: Specialized Tarmac, Canyon Exceed, Specialized Transition, Ellsworth Roots, Ridley Excalibur
I used to ride to work, but can no longer do that,.... because I live too close now. Honestly for me, I try to get in a ride during the week if I can, which usually means getting up ridiculously early and going for a ride before I go to work. But with the work I do, and the pressure that comes with it, I mostly ride in the weekends. I am trying to get back to 3 days a week, but it has not been easy. I have been jogging more often to still get a work out in just 30 min.
#24
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Joined: Aug 2012
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From: Medford, MA
Bikes: Nishiki Bel-Air, Brompton P6L, Seven Resolute SLX, Co-motion Divide, Xtracycle RFA
Ignore the people who are implying you have plenty of time -- everyone's non-work responsibilities (and sleep needs) are different. I don't have to work weekends, but I do have other things to do on them along with riding. Commuting has been the only way I get serious saddle time, and I've managed to put together a one-way commute (the other way is public transit), because I can't get up any earlier than I already do, and I'm a cranky zombie in the morning. That's not going to change, so I don't try to make myself ride then. If I can just get out the door and onto the bus with my folding bike, that's good enough. Then the ride home, I let myself, if exhausted and stressed from work, just cruise. Generally in those cases I cruise for a mile or two and then feel great and open the throttle and really ride, with a whole bunch of options route-wise to add some hills; occasionally I feel like crap all the way home, so I just poke along the almost-all-downhill way and enjoy the fresh air. Basically, with so many responsibilities, keeping riding from ever being a chore is important. It's a reward, not work. Yes, that's playing a mind game, but it works for me.
Additionally, I got rid of my car, so errands are generally bike-based as well. Slow, but miles.
Pair all these junk-ish miles with some focused interval or hill training in the few places in your schedule when you'll actually feel fresh.
If you have showers at work, even if you can't ride as your commute for some reason, get a beater bike, lock it at work, and ride at lunch. You'll be more productive after lunch for it.
Additionally, I got rid of my car, so errands are generally bike-based as well. Slow, but miles.
Pair all these junk-ish miles with some focused interval or hill training in the few places in your schedule when you'll actually feel fresh.
If you have showers at work, even if you can't ride as your commute for some reason, get a beater bike, lock it at work, and ride at lunch. You'll be more productive after lunch for it.
#25
Hey guys/gals. For those who work ALOT, when do you find time to go ride? Recently I have been knocking down between 50-65 hours a week and its hard to find saddle time. Iwork weekends too. If I do get saddle time, I am too exhausted to ride anyway.LOL. Riding before work isnt an option for me really because I wake up at 5:00AM. Maybe alot of you do most of your riding during the weekend?




