This is why I am a lucky fat bugger. I get to ride in a beautiful area every lunch time if I want.
Today.
And some Strava goodness.
This is why I am a lucky fat bugger. I get to ride in a beautiful area every lunch time if I want.
Today.
And some Strava goodness.
This weeks selection of videos from around the interwebs.
Good to see a pro give a bidon back to the team car and not tossing it into the woods.
Only watch this next clusterfuck if you want your blood pressure to rise. Bike Snob takes it apart here.
Want to know how to do a wheelie? 🙂 It just isn’t as easy as Dan makes it look.
And finally, episode 2 of Cyclismas’ new show, Road Reel is worth a look see.
In this episode of Road Reel, we’ve got Top Stories with Jonathan Vaughters outed as a “tweeter deleter,” Ramunas Navardauskas is more armadillo than honey badger, and Nike drops their Livestrong product line; Dave Smith catches up with Ladies Lotto Belisol rider Ashleigh Moolman Pasio in a new series called “Free Speed”; the Top Five Moments is back with Giro and USPro epic-ness, as well as fashion tips from Gianni Bugno and Brian Holm; Saddleblaze cycles Gran Canaria and has a ‘tuna-seepage’ moment on his crazy climbing; and we’ve got some performance cooking tips in “From the Kitchen to the Bike.” Thanks for watching, enjoy!
Have a great weekend and stay safe.
Early this morning I got a text message from my uncle to tell me my pa (grandfather) had passed away. He had been quite ill for about 4 weeks.
Having never lost anyone so close to me, I am numb.
My pa was a great man to me. To most people he was probably just an ordinary bloke who worked hard all his life and provided for his kids and grand kids. To me, especially as a kid, he was my hero.
I saw him last on Saturday. When I left, I kissed his forehead and told him I loved him. Only the second time I had been able to tell him. He squeezed my hand with the strength of a healthy man. I think that was his way of telling me he was tired of fighting.
He had managed to hang on so my nana and he could celebrate their 70 wedding anniversary. He was 9 days short of his 92nd birthday. I think he had had enough.
Cancer is a horrible thing.
The photo below is how I will remember him. Not as the shadow of his former self I saw last Saturday, but the loveable, tubby and cheeky little bloke I called Pa.
R.I.P. Tom Jolliff. 05/06/13.
There is a lot of talk of a break away league in cycling. It seems to crop up every now and then. It is either Voldemort Armstrong and Snape Bruyneel behind it or Jonathon Vaughters in conjunction with an oligarch would made his fortune farming turnips in Eastern Europe. There is usually a heavy dose of rhetoric decrying the UCI and promising bigger and brighter things in the future. These rumours usually last as long as a fart in an elevator and are just as welcome. Put up or shut up I say!
After reading a terrific article by Tom Reynolds on his blog, the seed was planted in the fertile soil that is my imagination. With about 6 hours in the car yesterday, I started thinking about it some more.
Then this morning, Tom and I started a twitter chat and before long @pelotoncafe was on board as well, suggesting we form our very own break away league. The Non Pro Cycling Pro Tour was born! About 90 seconds in an online logo maker and the logo was done!
What do we stand for? Well, I’m not sure, but I am hoping the very good readers of this blog can get involved in the comments section below and help out. What ideas would you like to see in a break away league? Here are a few of the things that popped up this morning on Twitter.
– Cameras on all bikes, some streaming live HD video to web feeds.
– No race radios. The riders could still have radios but they would be hooked up to the race director and the riders would get safety information only.
– Live GPS and ANT+ data fed to web pages so you could see power numbers, speed, heart rates etc etc of any rider.
– A revised yearly points system that spread the points across the peloton and encouraged racing. Points given for being in breaks, winning sprints and KOMs etc etc.
– A new head honcho, that would obviously be me. I would get to swan around the world watching races and being accountable to no one. (Ok, this isn’t a huge change from the current situation, but it would please me!)
– No power numbers available on bikes.
– Special NPCPT stickers on all bikes in the peloton at a very reasonable $49,000 each sticker.
– Black knicks only, unless you are the lantern rogue, then it is white knicks. (Suggested via Tom, who needs white knicks for calling them shorts!)
Now it is over to you valued reader. What would you like to see as part of the Non Pro Cycling Pro Tour? Let me know in the comments below. Any that the NPCPT board (read, me) ratify, will be added to the list.
I simply had to make this video after meeting “James” a very enigmatic man who has taken it upon himself to collect one bicycle from each developmental epoch for future generations to enjoy , a kind of time capsule if you will !
FROM STEEL: The Making of a Soulcraft from michael evans on Vimeo.
Process: Woodgrain Bike Frames from Etsy on Vimeo.
Thanks to @tinea_Pedis and @adamphelan
What an epic stage last night was. To add to the atmosphere, many fans walked for hours to see their heroes finish in the falling snow.
And check out what Dan Lloyd is riding in the preview of the stage.
Thanks to GNC for the excellent videos.
Compare and contrast.
This from last nights uphill ITT. Fabio Duarte gave it his all, and then gave some back.
And then you have Di Luca, who came in 10th, 3rd at the time he crossed the line, looking like this at the finish.
It is enough to make you, well, Fabio does it best…
It seemed a little strange at the time. I even said so in this tweet.
Di Luca looking pretty relaxed at the end there. #giro
— norbs (@norbs) May 23, 2013
It is all a bit shit to be honest!
As any man of my age knows, the words “rubber gloves” will usually bring a grimace to the face and an involuntary tightening of the sphincter. So when I saw The Sufferfest had released a new video called Rubber Glove, I wasn’t exactly looking forward to it. A saw David posting on Twitter and Facebook about how he was putting it together, screen shots of the video editing software with stuff all over the place. I still wasn’t thinking of getting it. Then it was released. Still nothing was compelling me.
Until.
Any bloggers that like to write a review of our new FTP test video, Rubber Glove? Of course, that means doing an FTP test. Gulp. #GetGloved
— The Sufferfest (@thesufferfest) May 20, 2013
@thesufferfest What sort of review? A Norbury special or do you need something a bit more fair dinkum?
— norbs (@norbs) May 20, 2013
@norbs Norbury specials are our favorite, dude!
— The Sufferfest (@thesufferfest) May 20, 2013
Well if anything is going to motivate me it is giving my ego a tickle. Hello PayPal. Goodbye a few measly dollars. Hello Rubber Glove.
Gulp.
A little about Rubber Glove. It isn’t your normal SufferFest video. This is basically a test to work out your FTP. Now before your eyes glaze over and you go back to Angry Birds, FTP just means Functional Threshold Power, not Finger To Pooper, as Rubber Glove may suggest. If you wear a cardigan and sport a generous beard, refill your pipe and check out this link to learn more.
Now it has been a while since I visited the SufferCell. There have been some health issues for family members and mates, so I haven’t had the bike time I usually would have. Also, the electronic gizmos in the SufferCell had had some issues. The 7 year old MacBook Pro had started blowing smoke from its undercarriage and as any technician will tell you, unless you can grab that smoke and get it back in the machine, things are pretty much stuffed.
So now the SufferCell has some new digital whizzbangery and we are back in business.
After some technical misunderstandings with Windows 8, it was go time.
You have a few minutes of gentle rolling the legs over before you start the gradual increase in tempo that is the basic warm up. Now I was doing the warm up and was finding it quite a challenge. The SufferFest video was telling me I was supposed to be at 5/10 effort. TrainerRoad however was demanding I should be pushing harder. WTF?
I have done a FTP test previously using TrainerRoad, so was using my previous FTP, 267 watts, as a benchmark. I had gotten used to what certain power numbers felt like and the effort and heart rate that roughly lined up with those numbers. There was definitely something amiss. To hit the numbers at 5/10 effort, my heart rate was at 165. Way too high. I can only guess at what was happening. Was there a different power profile for the JetBlack Z1 Fluid trainer in the latest version of TrainerRoad? Had I mistakenly chosen the wrong trainer? Had I set the wheel circumference wrong? Or was I just a fat old man who had lost some fitness? I hoped it was the first option. I suspect it was the last.
The long warm up finished and I was struggling. This gave me some relief.
Now it was quite cool in the SufferCell, about 13C when I started, so I hadn’t bothered to turn the fan on. Before the real hard graft had begun, I was back to being the human sprinkler. I was sweating like a Gypsy with a mortgage. I look at the video and there is a leggy blonde mocking me by cooking an omelet whilst on a set of rollers!!! It is Siri Minge from Team HiTec and you can see it here.
Nothing like seeing an attraction young lady to give a suffering man a boost. Now was no time to be sucking the gut in and puffing up the chest. There were more efforts in store. Four nasty one minute bursts of high cadence to loosen the legs up.
I struggled through these four sets of high cadence hell. I might have gone too hard. When I start to spin these fat stumps of legs up, I start to feel all pro and can’t help myself. I think a mirror might be needed in the SufferCell just to show me who I am. No time for contemplating my ever deepening navel, the time had come.
The Sufferfest is good enough to suggest a steady first five minutes, then 10 minutes of hard effort and the last five minutes just emptying the tank, going as hard as possible. I took no notice of the first 15 minutes. As can be seen from the TrainerRoad graph below, the first 15 minutes was a fight to keep the power at the same level. The final 5 minutes though was sheer hell. I would rather have Andre the Giant snap on a rubber glove and give me a prostate exam. I felt like an octopus climbing Everest wearing an anchor as a hat! That was an actual thought I had, which will give you some idea of were my head was. My heart rate was as high as it has been for some time.
As I gasped for air using lungs that felt like I was a 5 pack a day smoker, the SufferCell time warp started happening. Only 3 minutes left. I pedaled harder for at least a minute. I looked up. 2:50 to go. What!! I was now a sloth in slow motion. My left knee was giving me grief. No, make that my right knee. 2:30 left, pedal. Actually, both knees were sending messages north to knock it off. And then I got cranky at the slow moving space time continuum and went harder.
I couldn’t work out why the beat of the already high paced music seemed all out of whack. Then it dawned on me. That was my pulse I could hear. 50 seconds left. Push you fat lazy bastard! I managed to throw everything at it and finally that lovely sound that means you can ease off poured like a burst of ear candy from the speakers and I was done. Cooked. Wasted. Shagged. Rooted. Knackered. You name it, I was it.
I looked at the screen through eyes stinging from sweat. 3 minutes of recovery before I could get off this damned bike.
3 minutes of trying to convince my blood pumper to stay in my chest. 3 minutes before TrainerRoad spat out my new FTP number. 3 minutes to wonder why?
I knew it wasn’t going to be an improvement on 267W from the last test. I was hoping for it to be over 200W. Pop!
235W FTP according to the test. I felt nothing. I was too damned tired to care. I wrapped the towel around my head and got off the bike. Well, I tried to get off the bike. That bloody octopus had dropped the anchor onto my shoe. I couldn’t lift my leg over the top tube. Three attempts before I was clear of the bike and sitting in a pool of my own sweat on the floor with a dog licking my arm.
So another SufferFest video is complete.
It is a lot different to the other ones I have done, in that you sort of know what is going to happen. Does that make it less effective? I don’t think so. As a test, it is a great tool to give you a number. If you don’t have a power meter or virtual power as I do, it takes you through the best method to record your numbers and calculate them at the end using either power or heart rate. I think it is a terrific tool, despite the pain.
You can click the images below for a better view of them.
Thanks once again to Cell Bikes and The Sufferfest for the trainer and videos.
I would love to hear your thoughts in the comments below.
Thanks for reading.
Check out these screen caps.
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