Sunday, February 20, 2011

Where have I been?

Thanks to a new acquaintance I've been reminded that I have a blog. And people attempt to read it. So here's why I didn't post after Rhinelander last year (and haven't posted since):

I did some serious training for the Wausau race in early June. I'll do a report on that later and then link to it here. Training was going well, but I needed some better base mileage to keep the pace high throughout the entire race.

The solution: a road trip with Kathleen to Colorado to visit friends and train at elevation. Big miles in the car to get some big miles on the bike. We rode in Breck, in Aspen, and then in Boulder.

Riding back to where we were staying in Gunbarrel, just outside Boulder, we rounded a bend in the road. My coach Aaron led, I was in the middle, and Kathleen was on my wheel. A four-inch piece of metal blew out my front tire while we were doing about 30mph and I hit the dirty blacktop on my left side.

Kathleen flew over me and landed on her head. Aaron turned around to stop traffic (fortunately there was a break in the flow of cars), and Kathleen pulled me out of the road. I quickly regained my senses (though I was never unconscious), but Kathleen's condition deteriorated. The EMTs arrived in 3 minutes (no joke), and by the time they had Kathleen strapped to a backboard, I was able to stand.

Once at the hospital, Kathleen was diagnosed with a pneumomediastinum (and a separated shoulder, but that was to be expected). Basically, she had a pocket of air in the tissue of her neck and mediastinum caused by the rapid expulsion of air from her full lungs when she impacted the ground.

All I had was some serious road rash (the left side of my left leg, hip to ankle) and eventual swelling. Some of the most astounding pain I've ever been in was experienced while scrubbing out my road rash in a hotel in Boulder.

So we packed it up, packed it in, and drove back to Wisconsin. I didn't ride a bike for two months.

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Race Report WORS #2: Rhinelander

Here's the quick and dirty:
Tires: Bontrager XR2s front and rear. The course was partly dirt roads and partly super rough technical singletrack. Lots of pumping and body-english. A five-mile stretch of singletrack with little to no passing room. Tons-o-fun!

Things that went better than they did in Iola: I nailed the leadout and stuck with the group. I didn't crash, my nutrition was spot-on (1 Hammer Gel per 45 minutes), I felt good on the power climbs, and I paced myself pretty well for a 2-hour (25 mile) race.

Things that didn't go so well: This was a 2.5-hour (33 mile) haul. Ouch. After 27 miles I felt a little low in the gas-tank, and when my group started attacking at 4 miles to go, I wasn't able to keep up. Losing 5 spots in the last 15 minutes was frustrating.

However, I did manage 30th ,which felt pretty good. I'm starting to wrap my head around the way these kids race, and I know what I need to do for next time: Long mountain bike rides.

Tuesday, May 4, 2010

Race Report: Iola: WORS #1

May 2nd was my first cat 1/Pro XC race. I didn't get the result I was hoping for, however, I learned a lot.

When Don called "Go" we hauled out of the start chute faster than I'd imagined we would. I hung in mid-pack for the first lap and even managed to get into a group I could comfortably ride with.

I definitely didn't have the climbing legs these guys did, but I stuck with them through the first few burner hills, and into the sweet singletrack. We rode together for one lap. I was sliding corners and 3-pointing turns to make passes where I could. I was probably in the 40s in terms of positioning.

Then I crashed on lap 2. I don't know how I did it, but I planted my front wheel into a stump or something, and went over the bars. My back landed on something hard, which I soon learned was a tree stump. My group soon left me dazed and out of breath. My back hurt.

Although it took a moment, I got back on the bike and caught onto the second group that was passing. It took about a lap to get back into my groove, and then another lap to feel like I could race.

I bridged up to my previous group, back still hurting a bit, and latched on. Unfortunately, that was when the attacks started. A few guys started going off the front and I was dumb enough to attempt to go with right after I had bridged up to them.

Pop.

Soon I was at the back of the group, and losing a few spots here and there. It was the last lap and we were catching lapped traffic. I missed a few opportunities to pass. I got stuck behind some lapped traffic. I didn't go aggressively when I should have.

When I rolled across the line I thought I'd be DFL. I hadn't seen any other elite riders in a while and I knew I was off the back.

65th of 90 riders. My goal was top 30, which I did not get.

This race did, however, teach me a few valuable things:

1. Do more core work. Lots more.
2. Lose some weight. The fast guys are VERY lean, and you gotta get lean if you wanna be fast. That little extra on the core isn't doing anything for me.
3. Do more climbing. Hard climbing.
4. Eat less during the race. The 3 Hammer Gels were very filling. Time to try something with faster energy. Maybe Gu.

Tonight: a practice crit.

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Calm after a storm

Woah, hey, it's been busy!

Work has been super busy, which is good. It's also been really fun lately, which, combined with being busy, is really good.

Training has gone well, and I've been hitting the mountain bike trails since Spring has arrived early in Wisconsin. My first time out at Jim's trails I set a new personal record lap time. Ba-Zinga!

I'll have a new tumblr posting soon from the team blog.

We're at the dress-rehearsal point of the season. A few of us have done a race or two, and it's almost time to start the big show.

I might race a criterium if time permits. Otherwise, Iola will be my first race.

Either way, Trek Store Racing is kicking into full effect this year.

No time to blog; gotta ride.

Thursday, March 4, 2010

almost time to ride outside

This weekend it's supposed to get above 40. That means I'm going outside. Time to put the road tires on the road wheels and ride the...cross bike for a while. Maybe I'll put the CX tires on and ride some rail trails.

Noteworthy News:
-Geof says he's riding the Hater. I hope he can turn off his survival instinct.
-JHK and Irmiger have a company I would patronize were I to own my own home.
-Those kids my shop sponsors are having a pretty big deal race in a few months. I hope those other kids I used to hang out with will come make a good showing.
-My racing season schedule is coming together nicely. What I once thought was a restriction imposed by my job has proven to create a nice two-peak structure. I won't be racing between the end of June and the middle of August. I will, however, be training.

Current training:
Weight steady at 156.
Flexibility noticeably improving.
Power going up while RPE going down.
Diet maintaining. Volume control has been good. (Volume of food, not volume of my voice. It's like my caps lock button has been stuck on for the last week.)

Sleep has been okay. I've been going to bed at 11 and getting up at 7 for a year or so, and changing that has been a bit difficult. I'm trying to go to bed at ten and get up at 6. We'll see how that goes. Early morning training sounds like a lot of fun.

New challenge at the shop: The employee who commutes to work by bike the highest percentage of shifts worked between March 1st and September 1st wins a big fat prize. It's a good one, too. Right now I'm at 50%, but I'm only two days in. Today I'm going to bump that 50 up to 66.6.

Saturday, February 27, 2010

fortunate timing of a recovery week

I had a low training load week, which was good. I had a high-workload week at my job. I was tired and busy. Although my sleep pattern has been steady, I've felt tired. Perhaps the quality of sleep I've been getting is low. The last few days I've tried stretching and relaxing for at least half an hour before bed. So far it's been helping.

I can't wait to get outside and ride. New music has helped on the trainer, but I think I need to bundle up and do some riding once the temp gets over 30.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

the squirrels have gotten into my head

This update will be brief, and focused on clear evidence of how my fitness has been coming along.

Cardiac drift over a time of 1.5 hours has decreased drastically in the last few weeks. This means my base is where it should be.

Top-end, short-duration wattage has dropped, and mid-line, middle-time wattage has gone up. I'm a time trialist, not a sprinter, so this is also good news.

Flexibility has increased. I can, for the first time in my life, see abdominal muscles. This is hilarious, in some ways. Mostly because I'm not trying to get a six-pack, but a strong core. This is all due to greater time spent stretching and training my core.

Weight has been steady at 156, which is where I was at the low-point of last Summer. If I can, I'm going for 150, but that is a pretty low-priority goal.

I've added some more protein to my diet. Dr. Maria Stewart noticed my diet was lacking, which I missed.

I ordered my road bike last week, though it won't be here for a while, and I'm planning on doing my first spring rides on my CX bike. I also have a singlespeed 29er I'm excited to train on. I think it will help with braking efficiency and building some core strength.