Wednesday, May 03, 2006

 

The First Century of 2006

This past Sunday I rode in the Nassau to Suffolk Challenge on the north shore of Long Island. The ride had options of 25, 50 or 62 miles (62 miles is a metric century, 100 kilometers).

My plan was to try for the century but cut off at 50 if I was feeling tired (the cutoff wasn't until the 46 mile mark). I set out alone but soon hooked up for the first 20 miles with a young rider I know from the 'hood. (Strong rider but, at less than half my age, I would hope so).

The course was hilly but nothing too terrible. A very good start to the training year. At the 20 mile mark, I took a 'nature break' but my companion rode on. Because there were so few riders and the course was long, I ended up riding alone for the last 30 miles; not ideal when you don't know where you are going. It puts a lot of pressure on you to make sure you don't miss any of the direction signs that are painted on the street.

At the cutoff, I was still feeling strong so I decided to finish the century. For this early in the season, I am in excellent shape. I felt a little sore at the end but nothing major. All in all, very pleased.

There are 6 months left before the ride. The only question is whether I will do the 300 miler or the 400 miler. At this point, I am leaning to the harder ride. I need to decide soon; registration starts next week.

Comments:
Good job! Can't seem to find an organized century in the Rockland County/Westchester/Northern Jersey/Connecticut area until July. I try to avoid NYC/Long Island like the plague.

My suggestion is to sign up for the 400-miler. You can always change later, but once the 400-miler is full (50 people)you won't get in. Also, it will give you incentive to train your butt off. That's what I'm doing.
 
All I have to say is that I am proud to read the posts of a fellow frum biker. Though I am a mountain Biker- which is a buit rarer than frum roadies- we will all stick together.
 
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