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.
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:
<< Home
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.
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.
Post a Comment
<< Home