If we liked breathing stale, recycled air, we’d all take up a sport like wrestling or indoor fly-fishing. But we love the feel of a gale on our faces. We cherish the smell of cow manure filling our nostrils with its almost tangible grittiness. We hold scared the privilege to breathe in diesel fuel while doing hill repeats up l’Alpe d’Huez.
But such whimsy is not for every day. Occasionally, we find ourselves faced with the prospect of an hour of solitude upon the wind trainer or rollers, where our sport is transformed from a glorious experience of powering ourselves along with only Nature for company to one where a ride of 30 minutes is barely tolerable, 45 seems like a lifetime wasted, and 60 minutes is more than most of us can even consider enduring. 60 minutes on the trainer at a leisurely pace or a 4 and a half hour death march up a barren, heat-riddled climb? I’ll take the 4 and half hours every time, thank you very much.
We all have to do it, and there are even some redeeming qualities to be had. You get better at Rule #5, for one. You develop a more magnificent stroke, for another. Whatever the redeeming qualities, we all have our way of coping. Jeff in PetroMetro returns with his view on how to make it suck just a little bit less.
Yours in Cycling,
Frank
—
Either due to life-threatening weather or poor scheduling of life’s lesser priorities (see Rule #11), we Velominati spend a little time each year riding indoors. Whether one enjoys a ride on rollers or a trainer, and no matter if one methodically spins (as all good recovery ride specialists do), grinds out intervals, or practices ways to improve one’s magnificent stroke (scrape the mud off your shoes, scrape the mud off your shoes…), death-by-boredom is always a possibility. I’m not one to go for videos, or read books, or hook up to a computer. Call me old fashioned. I like to meditate on the V with only the voices inside my head screaming for mercy from the pain of a complete lactic acid meltdown.
Or, sometimes I like a little music.
Back in the Dark Ages, I used the yellow (sweatproof) Sony Walkman to play my favorite homemade training cassette tapes. But in our modern days of inexpensive digital storage, and with the brilliant invention of the “shuffle” command on my iPod Nano, I have some seven hours of musical motivation to keep my indoor sessions lively and loud.
I thought I might start a little conversation regarding favorite training tunes. Now, I know ALL of my fellow Velominati strictly adhere to Rule #62 when riding outside. And of course, we prefer strict adherence to Rule #9, but, as I stated above, shit happens.
While I have eclectic taste, I don’t fancy Al Green, Buck Owens, or Duke Ellington when loving a Rule #5 beatdown. No. I tack to the loud and fast. My preferences are punk and “classic rock”. (It was just rock when I first heard it.) So here’s a little flavor of my indoor training selection, in no particular order.
Hate to Say I Told You So“”The Hives””from the album “Your New Favourite Band”
Tick Tick Boom“”The Hives””from the album “The Black and White Album”
American Idiot“”Green Day””from the album “American Idiot”
The Rock Show“”Blink 182″”from the album “Take Off Your Pants and Jacket”
I Fought the Law (Live)””The Clash””from the album “The Clash: Live at Shea Stadium”
Batman Theme“”The Jam””from the album “In the City”
Communication Breakdown“”Led Zeppelin””from the album “Led Zeppelin”
The Real Me“”The Who””from the album “Quadrophenia”
Rock Around the Clock“”Ten Pole Tudor””from the album “The Great Rock’n’Roll Swindle”
Of course there are many, many others. But I offer these few picks-to-click to perhaps start a little discussion and get some musical ideas for my next indoor shopping spree at the V and Dime.
A-Merckx
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And I would like to say (irrelevantly) I hate Windows 8.
New sufferfest drops on September 15. I'll be getting it, 64 sprint sections but i'll use it for CX training:
http://www.nonprocycling.com
@motor city
Scratch that, 2 new sufferfests drop on the 15th. They have made a 2 hour climbing movie called 'it seemed a good idea at the time'. footage looks like its all from this years frozen Giro.
I'll be getting both.
Didn't want to further pollute the Saleté Sacrée thread with more roller talk, so instead I'm dredging this one up. Anyone have experience on the floating rollers like the E-motion? Is the feel really any better than regular rollers? Is standing pedalling less scary? I was thinking of trying to build this imitation version for the winter http://www.instructables.com/id/DIY-Free-Motion-Cycling-Rollers/
Hmm, wonder what one of these with cobbled rollers would be like? http://www.pinkbike.com/photo/8706840/
What are the benefits of floating rollers supposed to be?
I can't see how standing pedalling would be any less scary if the bike starts moving backwards and forwards as well as side to side. The fact that I can't stand on my rollers is because I'm not smooth enough out of the saddle. Or does the backwards and forwards float prevent the bike from popping off the rollers that would otherwise be a risk if you're not smooth enough?
@Chris
I can get out of the saddle on the rollers for very short periods but not at full or even moderate power. I am guessing these rollers allow you to crank much harder out of the saddle. I don't really see the justification for the added cost though.
@Chris Yeah, not sure. I get out of the saddle every ten minutes for a solid 1 to 2 minutes while riding rollers to give "The Boys" some blood and comfort and I can push it pretty good while standing on my non-floating Kreitler rollers.
Maybe it is supposed to make it even more difficult and force you to be an even smoother rider?
@Buck Rogers If you've got the smaller diameter Kreitlers, I suspect you've probably got a bit more resistance going on. I think I find it hard out of the saddle as the lack of resistance make smooth pedalling harder.
I got the latest sufferfest offering recently, it's two hours of climbing based intervals so so low cadence high effort stuff. Only problem is that even at 53 x 11 I can't get 8/10 intensity at 65rpm. I'm going to have to borrow one of Tony Martin's dinner plates.
@Chris Yeah, I have the smallest diameter Kreitlers that you can buy. I think that they are the 2.25 inch ones. They say that they are "crazy hard resistance" but I have no problem and I am NOT a Cat 2 quality rider by any stretch. Not sure why they sell them with that supposed caveat.
@Chris The main benefit to floating rollers is they are more forgiving, like shocks on a mountain bike. The downside being they compensate for bad form. I prefer the resistance of the small diameter rollers, like @Buck Rogers has. The best thing I ever did for my pedal stroke was learn to ride a fixed-gear on rollers - definitely couldn't hide any sins there.