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ROADIE! 🚴‍♀️

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It's great to be on a road bike!

tommaso sentiero bike road spokeasy amazon bicycle bicycles shop store roadie pageAt last, I became a roadie. After taking part in the local Tour de Cure in April 2013, I bought my road bike.

I had chosen it several weeks earlier, but I decided to wait until after Tour de Cure to buy it. Something told me that there wasn’t enough time to adjust to it before the big day. That was a wise move, as it turned out. Switching to a road bike from a hybrid was a major change. In fact, I quickly discovered that a road bike is as different from a hybrid, as a hybrid is from a trike! My road bike is much lighter than my hybrid; and at first I found it quite twitchy. Indeed, it was rather scary.

I immediately noticed that, with a road bike, I felt like I was on top of the bike. With the hybrid, I felt like I was inside the frame. I guess the more erect position of riding a hybrid explains that one.

shimano crankset 50/34 spokeasy amazon etcetera shop storeAs to the choice of bike: I didn’t choose it for its brand; nor for its carbon fiber frame; nor for its compact crankset. I wasn’t even aware at time of purchase that the bike’s crankset was a compact! It’s probably most accurate to say that I happened to manage that particular bike best by sheer chance. Shopping for a road bike is tricky when you have no experience riding one!

Getting the hang of a road bike meant using the same exercises that I employed while adjusting to the hybrid when it was new: getting the hang of starting up and stopping; learning how to keep control of the bike when I tried to ride faster; etc.

A big challenge was learning how to manage a water bottle that was on the down-tube rather than the handlebars! That was a tricky one. Gunga Din wasn’t around to hand me my water; and at first I had to stop every time I needed a drink, which was quite an annoyance. 

And Finally -- A Road Bike Century! 💯

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Naturally it wasn’t long before I started hankering to do a century on the road bike; and on July 19, 2013, I did. Pedaling time was 7:56:38! I averaged 12.5 mph, which was good for me at the time.

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I began at 5 am. Not surprisingly, the day got very hot; and I sure could have used a cooling rag! At the time, unfortunately, I had never heard of them.

Indeed, my big ride ended rather miserably! I ran completely out of water about 1.5 miles before I reached the 100-mile mark; and then I had about two miles to ride to get home. I arrived there dehydrated; and for at least an hour felt too exhausted and sick to even move. That was NOT fun, and ruined any sense of triumph.

For whatever reason, eating was a problem on this ride. Nothing tasted good; what I did eat tended to stick in my throat; and it’s possible that I ate too little as a result. Between the heat and less caffeine than usual (admittedly I’m a Diet Coke fiend), I got rather headachy. I was glad that it didn’t rain, but I would have welcomed some overcast to moderate the temperature.

Maybe Someday 🗓️

feed zone cookbook spokeasy amazon reader's nook store shop another step forward blog post roadie pageI guess I was in too much of a hurry to do a century on the road bike. Advice to self: next time, don’t ride a century in July; not unless I’ve gotten fast enough to start at 5 am and be finished by noon. Of course I could plan my route to include breaks at home. But that feels like cheating!

I have yet to ride another century. Lazy, aren’t I? But my main motivation for doing my century rides was to see whether I could do it. And I can!

I would like to participate in an organized century ride; perhaps one in Fall, when the weather might have cooled off a little. Well, maybe someday!

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