Tomorrow is the Bikefest Century ride. It's in Hillsborough, NC so it's a local ride put on by a local group. The organizers are really fantastic people and they put together a great ride through some beautiful scenery. Last year I attempted the metric century and put up my only DNF for a mechanical failure. The onsite mechanic was a disaster. Like everything during Ironman training, I must always pick the longest possible distance.
So 100 miles with 5000+ feet of climbing it will be. Blerg.
This will be my second century ride. Most people would look forward to, train for, and celebrate the arrival of the big day. My target is IMFL, where I will have to ride much farther than the 112 miles of tomorrow, and follow it by running a full marathon. Still the century ride deserves it's due respect. If you don't train for it, you'll get mostly what I got my first time riding a century.
That ride in particular shook my core. It disturbed me so badly mentally that it took 6 weeks before I could even clean my bike. I had a real weakness exposed. There are only 85 days until the Ironman, now is not the time to take 6 weeks off from cycling because my ass hurts.
I have to keep telling myself that last year I didn't properly train. No rides over 60 miles, no consistent riding at all, I was 30 lbs heavier and averaged about 5 mph slower then than I do now. Now I'm riding very consistently, much faster, much stronger, have greatly increased my aerobic capacity, and I think I've built up a much higher tolerance in the general "ass" area.
Hey, sitting in that saddle for 5 - 7 hours isn't supposed to be comfortable. Lubrication is my friend.
When I did the Big Deuce a few weeks ago, it was my first time putting 2 miles in open water. I had no idea how I was going to do in the race or how I would feel when I finished and got out of the water. I trusted my training, went out there and gave it my best shot. I finished in the top half overall men, and had plenty of energy left to go get on the bike. Couldn't have asked for a better swim.
Tomorrow could have the same promise or the exact opposite. It's supposed to be 88 degrees and partly cloudy. We start riding at 7:30 am. I will either finish with enough energy to run a marathon or throw my bike in the lake. All I can do today is trust my training and my own strength.
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8 comments:
best wishes for a good ride
I'm sure you got this. I've done about a dozen centuries. Go out easier than you think and rally near the end. Practice nutrition and hydration for the real race.
I have the Philadelphia Gran Fondo on Sunday. When I signed up it was 102 miles with about 3k climbing so I thought it a great training opportunity. They've adjusted the course so now it is 108m with >7k climbing. Not to worry because the weather is supposed to be rain with periods of thunder and lightening.
If I do good, confidence for Panama City will increase.
Have a great ride - it *HAS* to be better than last year! I am prety sure you have it this time :)
Good luck tomorrow...and
"Hey, sitting in that saddle for 5 - 7 hours isn't supposed to be comfortable. Lubrication is my friend."
Lubrication is a very good friend to have. :)
Hey Good Luck on the Ironman, savor every last second, the day flies by!
Good luck with your ass tomorrow!
omg. 100 miles and 5000ft of climbing. That's gonna hurt, but I know you'll do great. Besides you'll be out there with a bunch of other people doing the same thing. I love cycling events so much!
The first time you do a century, it's memorable. Wait! EVERY time you do a century, it's memorable.:)
I am behind on blog reading, so I know that the next post will be a recap of how it went. I hope it went well for you. 100 miles is just hard for me to wrap mymind around. I get tired DRIVING 100 miles (yes, I hate driving and am a total baby about it).
My butt hurts after 30 minutes of biking... Granted, I haven't built up the arse resistance you have and I don't wear fancy biker shorts... so I am sure I could tolerate more if I conditioned my body! Just not 100 miles...
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