Weight Loss from riding
#26
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My weight stays the same but I eat too much food and at times drink too much beer. The riding keeps things stable. I could probably lose 20 any more than that I would look scrawny and feel weak.
#27
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After a season or two of weight cutting you know how much to exercise and the diet dynamic. I ride 2 strong rides per week and several 3-5mi casual rides around town for relaxation. I recently returned to the hometown 3 weeks ago and committed to trimming the 195lb bod to my best riding weight of 165. After 3 weeks of riding and doing “pushaways” I have lost 10lbs. A good loss rate for me is 2lbs per week/10lbs per month. God willing I look forward to a fun spring and returning to spirited rides on the road bike. In the meantime, I’m gearing up for a long winter of snowrides on the neighborhood streets in the worst snowstorms...for fun.
OP, when you dress for the ride it makes it rather tolerable and you gain a sense of toughness to be out there when everyone else sits in the house. Git some!
OP, when you dress for the ride it makes it rather tolerable and you gain a sense of toughness to be out there when everyone else sits in the house. Git some!
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#28
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I had to pick up a couple new tubes as the ones I had have already been patched a few times. So today I go out for another ride and near the turn around point about 10 miles in I start feeling a thump-thump-thump thing at the rear wheel. So I stop at the turn around point and give the rear wheel the once over and, no, the tire isn't flat, but the sidewall is bulging out on one side. I realize there's nothing I can do about it and am 10 miles from my car so I decide to head back a bit more slowly. I get about 4.5 miles when the thumping gets worse so I decide to get off and walk it. I walk about half a mile when I come up with the idea of lowering the pressure and I do just that -- dropping to, perhaps, about 40psi from the normal 90-105psi they're normally set at. I then get back on the bike and riding even more slowly I'm able to get another 4 miles before the thumping gets bad again and I walk it the rest of the way.
The previous ride I had a pinch flat and had to walk it 4 miles back to the car and today I had a bead blowout and might have had to walk it 5.5 miles but lowering the pressure saved me 4 of those miles.
I guess it's time for new tires as both the current ones, Continental Vectran Breaker 700x23C, have several thousand miles and have been on and off the rims numerous times with all the flats I've had this year. So, this puts me dead in the water until I get some new tires and right now I'm thinking about the Continental Grand Prix 5000's in 700x25C -- a couple mm wider than the current shoes. I can get a pair from Amazon for about $90USD but would appreciate any feedback on alternatives with similar performance and maybe a bit cheaper. I should mention that my rear wheel has a Velocity Deep-V rim with 32 blade spokes to go along with an old but still functioning Powertap SL+ hub.
Brian
The previous ride I had a pinch flat and had to walk it 4 miles back to the car and today I had a bead blowout and might have had to walk it 5.5 miles but lowering the pressure saved me 4 of those miles.
I guess it's time for new tires as both the current ones, Continental Vectran Breaker 700x23C, have several thousand miles and have been on and off the rims numerous times with all the flats I've had this year. So, this puts me dead in the water until I get some new tires and right now I'm thinking about the Continental Grand Prix 5000's in 700x25C -- a couple mm wider than the current shoes. I can get a pair from Amazon for about $90USD but would appreciate any feedback on alternatives with similar performance and maybe a bit cheaper. I should mention that my rear wheel has a Velocity Deep-V rim with 32 blade spokes to go along with an old but still functioning Powertap SL+ hub.
Brian
Last edited by Raptor1956; 10-25-19 at 11:28 PM.
#29
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Great story...Great job!
My story is similar. I stepped on the scale at 230. A few yers ago I had exercised my way down to 170. Damn. 60 pounds. So I wondered what would motivate me to change my eating habits (I refuse to call it a diet) and exercise more regularly. I hate the gym. I hate running. When I lost before it was eating better and running 3 miles a day, religiously. Rain or shine. Took me about 4 months and it came off. I didnt want to go back to running as I hated it...so I decided a mountain bike would give me some motivation. It worked. On 9/1 I weighed in at 230. On 10/1, I was 205. I have hit a wall around 203, but I am pushing through it...looking forward to getting under 200 soon. I bike 2-3 times a week and the other days power walking, or treadmill at the gym with some weights mixed in. All this to help with the fitness to get better on the bike. Day 1 on the bike and 5 miles KILLED me. I'm up to 16 miles now and its a breeze. Hills and climbing though are difficult so I am motivated keep working on fitness to get better. Biking has truly lit a fire under me!
My story is similar. I stepped on the scale at 230. A few yers ago I had exercised my way down to 170. Damn. 60 pounds. So I wondered what would motivate me to change my eating habits (I refuse to call it a diet) and exercise more regularly. I hate the gym. I hate running. When I lost before it was eating better and running 3 miles a day, religiously. Rain or shine. Took me about 4 months and it came off. I didnt want to go back to running as I hated it...so I decided a mountain bike would give me some motivation. It worked. On 9/1 I weighed in at 230. On 10/1, I was 205. I have hit a wall around 203, but I am pushing through it...looking forward to getting under 200 soon. I bike 2-3 times a week and the other days power walking, or treadmill at the gym with some weights mixed in. All this to help with the fitness to get better on the bike. Day 1 on the bike and 5 miles KILLED me. I'm up to 16 miles now and its a breeze. Hills and climbing though are difficult so I am motivated keep working on fitness to get better. Biking has truly lit a fire under me!
Brian
#30
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There are cycling studies done on the effective results of a 5lb weight loss. Today I shaved 3 minutes off a ride on a course that I did 3 weeks ago being 10-12lbs heavier. Those 3 weeks were spent riding the single tracks on a heavier mountain bike. Today I rode the Cannondale Criterium on the flats and hills. I have always known you could feel a 5lb weight loss but today that was very noticeable.
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#32
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Thank you, you just passed the encouragement back!
Here is the link on weight loss vs performance. This is the stuff that makes riding so much more enjoyable:
https://www.bicycling.com/training/g...g-performance/
Here is the link on weight loss vs performance. This is the stuff that makes riding so much more enjoyable:
https://www.bicycling.com/training/g...g-performance/
#33
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Weight loss not so extreme
I fell away from biking 22 years ago when I bought a motorcycle. After completing my mid-life crisis, I sold the Harley about 5 years ago and became a true couch potato. This year I got back into riding (sans motor) and I have riden 1390 miles to date.
While I haven't lost a great deal of weight, I have trimmed down from 38" waist to 36". My pounds lost is only 8 pounds, but my face is slimmer as well as other parts. I have far more stamina and less of an appetite that I gained riding the motorcycle.
I've told others that the problem with riding a motorcycle is that the fresh air being forced down your throat makes you feel like you've done something, while in reality all you've done is sit on your arse. I'd love to get back into the 180's instead of my 194 that I am at today.
While I haven't lost a great deal of weight, I have trimmed down from 38" waist to 36". My pounds lost is only 8 pounds, but my face is slimmer as well as other parts. I have far more stamina and less of an appetite that I gained riding the motorcycle.
I've told others that the problem with riding a motorcycle is that the fresh air being forced down your throat makes you feel like you've done something, while in reality all you've done is sit on your arse. I'd love to get back into the 180's instead of my 194 that I am at today.
#34
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#35
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Brian
#36
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I fell away from biking 22 years ago when I bought a motorcycle. After completing my mid-life crisis, I sold the Harley about 5 years ago and became a true couch potato. This year I got back into riding (sans motor) and I have riden 1390 miles to date.
While I haven't lost a great deal of weight, I have trimmed down from 38" waist to 36". My pounds lost is only 8 pounds, but my face is slimmer as well as other parts. I have far more stamina and less of an appetite that I gained riding the motorcycle.
I've told others that the problem with riding a motorcycle is that the fresh air being forced down your throat makes you feel like you've done something, while in reality all you've done is sit on your arse. I'd love to get back into the 180's instead of my 194 that I am at today.
While I haven't lost a great deal of weight, I have trimmed down from 38" waist to 36". My pounds lost is only 8 pounds, but my face is slimmer as well as other parts. I have far more stamina and less of an appetite that I gained riding the motorcycle.
I've told others that the problem with riding a motorcycle is that the fresh air being forced down your throat makes you feel like you've done something, while in reality all you've done is sit on your arse. I'd love to get back into the 180's instead of my 194 that I am at today.