I would have to start training to even do a recovery ride. And I would have to own a cyclometer, HRM, and the unavoidable watt meter. And all that would tell me what I already don’t want to know. Ignorance is bliss until some teenager on a mountain bike gets by you and at that point you better not have a watt meter on your bike. Still, we have to train and we should do it scientifically, like @Teocalli here.
Yours in Cycling, Gianni
I have a problem with Recovery Rides. I understand them but I still have a problem with them. Let me try to explain.
First (and to all experts here – forgive me for a simplistic view of this) let me level the ground by clarifying the concept by using the 5 Training Zones model. In this model the Maximum Heart Rate Reserve (MHRR) is based on the value derived from the difference between your Maximum Heart Rate and your relaxed Resting Heart Rate. So for a subject of say 50 (not me) we have:
Age = 50
Resting HR = 48
Max HR = 174 (note there may be different opinions on this depending on where you look it up and whether you have actually had it measured scientifically)
Which gives:
The 5 Zone model then becomes defined by:
A buddy once equated these to the following for those who do not use a Heart Rate Monitor.
The basic concept behind a Recovery Ride being that when training or post a significant event (cycling-wise that is) you should plan in complete rides in Zone 2 within your training diary.
Simple enough? So what’s my problem? Well, if you ask anyone who knows me well whether or not I am a competitive soul they would probably fall over laughing. If I go out on a solo ride and see another rider up ahead I have to try to catch them. If I get caught then, after giving the rider due kudos, I have to try to hold position on them. Not wheelsucking but give them a respectful space and try to hold their pace. If I’m out on my vintage steed it’s a target to pass riders on modern rigs – almost like adding a badge on the top tube for each carbon rig notched off.
As I think someone else noted elsewhere, if I simply get blown away I just assume they have not gone, or are not going, as far as I am. Somehow it never seems to cross my mind that they may be 30-40 years (or more) younger than me and darned well should be going faster.
So you may now be getting the drift of why I have a problem with Recovery Rides. How can one simply cruise along and let people breeze past without feeling that they have notched you up as a slower rider – particularly if I am out on my carbon fantastic? However hard I try it simply does not seem to happen. I set out with the intention of a nice quiet ride and somehow still end up trying to attain warp speed and/or hammer up the steepest climbs on the route at max bore. A Recovery Ride just does not seem to fit in my psyche.
However, finally I think I may have come up with a solution. I’m going to have a jersey made with the following on the back:
RECOVERY RIDE PLEASE PASS |
Then again my condition may be so bad that my psyche may latch onto this in the wrong way. What would be the effect of someone breezing past you with the above on their back? Hmmm…
I know as well as any of you that I've been checked out lately, kind…
Peter Sagan has undergone quite the transformation over the years; starting as a brash and…
The Women's road race has to be my favorite one-day road race after Paris-Roubaix and…
Holy fuckballs. I've never been this late ever on a VSP. I mean, I've missed…
This week we are currently in is the most boring week of the year. After…
I have memories of my life before Cycling, but as the years wear slowly on…
View Comments
Surely one of the great things about riding a bike is finding some nice scenery, chilling out and absorbing the ambience. For recovery rides I head to the coast, soft pedal and enjoy the air and the view. I couldn't care less about what other cyclists are doing and I'm pretty sure they don't give a rat's arse about me. Why would you care? Do what you set out to do.
I do recovery rides as well.
Sometimes I ride with my VMH and let her set the pace, sometimes I spin on the 4.5" Kreitlers for active recovery.
Every now and then, I set off with hard work on my mind, then once out on the road I find that I just don't have any firepower in the guns (My body's way of saying "Welcome to your fifth decade."), so it becomes a recovery ride.
@frank
Related to this is a German phrase for it which I have no hope of recalling but the jist of which is: less but better. Its my view that this can be applied to many areas of life - although not all.
@geoffrey
I agree. Fiends who speed past in the drops are welcome to pass, regardless of the state of their or my kit or machine. On another day the roles may be reversed.
As the Japanese say: ten people are ten different colours.
I think it's vitally important to train "intuitively." The more refined your intuition, the clearer are the messages from your body and brain. The messages, of course, range from "Crush it now!" to "Sit up and flush the lactic acid, you fool."
Being old and therefore enlightened, I can hear and respond to these messages no matter how frequently they follow one upon another. Ten seconds between crush and flush? Five? It's no problem if one can train intuitively.
Great post. Glad to see I'm not the only one with these thoughts. Ill buy that jersey
Holy crap on toast. Now, I'm a "rule re-maker", I'll admit it, but a whole guest article on how to ignore Rule #71 ?
I wonder if Fronk will give me the same space to refine a few others ?
Not to mention that you would look like a total pretentious wanker with that sign on your back. Not pro, just slow. Graciously condescening to let you pass me today, old cock !!
Never mind Rules #78 and #34 too. All that math made my brain hurt.
@Ken Ho Mountain bike shoes and pedals?
@teocalli great article. I too have a problem with recovery rides. Its that my heart rate never stays in Zone 2. My resting heart rate is 55 (which I'm pretty chuffed with - in 2007 BC (before cycling), when I weighed 107kg, my resting heart rate was 93). My maximum heart rate is 191 (easily found, it is where my heart rate ends up on any gradient >10% longer than 1km). Problem is, when I start riding - no matter how easily I'm turning the cranks - the old ticker shoots straight to 150. It's not a fitness thing, as I'm pretty fit (broken collarbone aside, at the moment) and have put in lots of miles. It's another weird thing about my physiology. So I don't do recovery rides. Its a bit like stretching before/after rides... people who stretch get good... at stretching. To me its just wasted riding time.