Thor, of Germanic mythology, wielded a hammer. Such was his effect that they named a day after him!
Cyclists call riding fast and hard \”putting the hammer down\”. To me that sounds like a sudden, final sprint, when a rider abruptly surges ahead of the others in a dash for the finish line. On the other hand, I\’ve also come across the expression \”hammer away\”, which sounds like riding hard and fast for hour after hour.
How good am I at \”Thoring\”? I\’m not sure. I\’ve never really tried to see how much of a sprinter I might be, and I can\’t ride full gas for very long. Low anaerobic endurance, I guess. Or maybe my legs aren\’t as strong as I like to think they are!
Maybe my \”force intervals\” count as hammering? Here\’s what I do: I keep shifting into harder and harder gears until my cadence is down to about 50 rpm; then work to push the cadence to 70 rpm; anywhere from 10 seconds to a minute or even a bit longer. It sure is hard on my legs! Sometimes my quads start to burn as soon as I begin the effort.
The purpose? I\’m trying to develop better force (aka strength) so that my cruising speed will improve. Hey, that\’s kinda funny. HAMMERING to BUILD strength. Sounds like carpentry, doesn\’t it? But I hope Thor doesn\’t decide to start tossing his thunderbolts while I\’m out there hammering away.