Weight Loss Club
#2402
Capt Hook
Join Date: Mar 2013
Location: 100 Acre Wood
Posts: 60
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I went from 210lbs to this mornings weight in at 152lbs. I'm 5'8", male and I lost all this weight from cycling and eating better. I've been riding for one year and I was a runner before becoming a life-long cyclist. It's great to see all of these other success stories- keep shedding the pounds off my fellow brothers and sisters of two the wheel contraptions!
#2404
Member
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Costa Rica
Posts: 28
Bikes: Surly Troll w/ Rockshox Recon Race front shock
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This is a great thread, very informative and inspiring. I'm just getting started but after reading some of this thread I'm convinced that I can lose the 90 lbs to 100 lbs I need to lose and change my life. I'm 6'0 but weighed in at 292 a couple of weeks ago. I retired in Jan. at 50 so have plenty of time to work out. I just need to get off my ass and start exercising like all the good people I'm reading about here. I've lost 10 lbs since starting just by cutting down the eating a little and walking an hour three times a week. I'm starting to lift weights a few times a week but really need to get back on the bike. I dropped my bike at the local bike shop this morning to be tuned up so I can start riding again. It'll be slow going on the bike as I live on the side of an extinct volcano and right now am breathing hard just walking up the hills.
#2405
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Lake Claire, GA
Posts: 802
Bikes: 2008 Giant TCR Advanced
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I really bulked up this winter with no riding/ running/hiking and few colds put out of commision Jan-Feb. I've been paying dearly for it this spring, but the body is repsonding well to the surge of activity lately. Just want to get in on the process here to get back to real fitness.
Weighed in at 187 in late December, but likely tipped 191-193 during the peak of inactivity this winter. I'm 5-11.
Recent updates, started regularly commuting to work ~ only 5 miles per day.
Picked up 60-150 miles per week since the group rides started back. Also found a neighbohood club that has regular Saturday rides of 65 miles. But Has 3 or 4 tough week day rides that the vary. Strong group.
Current weight check 181.
goals:
July 4th 50min 10K
July 26 Half Dome Accent ~16 mile hike
July 29 Mt Whitney Accent ~ 22 mile hike to 14500 ft. 6100 ft accent
Mid August - Enter first Cat 5 Criterium Race. To gain race experience, but would like to really improve my fitness but this time.
Goal weight 165 -170
Next is fine tuning the food intake. Eating less seems to have worked so far but as I pick up the miles and effort I'll need to experiment with better choices. It will be a sacrifice of convenience and nutrition.
Weighed in at 187 in late December, but likely tipped 191-193 during the peak of inactivity this winter. I'm 5-11.
Recent updates, started regularly commuting to work ~ only 5 miles per day.
Picked up 60-150 miles per week since the group rides started back. Also found a neighbohood club that has regular Saturday rides of 65 miles. But Has 3 or 4 tough week day rides that the vary. Strong group.
Current weight check 181.
goals:
July 4th 50min 10K
July 26 Half Dome Accent ~16 mile hike
July 29 Mt Whitney Accent ~ 22 mile hike to 14500 ft. 6100 ft accent
Mid August - Enter first Cat 5 Criterium Race. To gain race experience, but would like to really improve my fitness but this time.
Goal weight 165 -170
Next is fine tuning the food intake. Eating less seems to have worked so far but as I pick up the miles and effort I'll need to experiment with better choices. It will be a sacrifice of convenience and nutrition.
#2406
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Lake Claire, GA
Posts: 802
Bikes: 2008 Giant TCR Advanced
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Update wt check this AM was 179.5
I really bulked up this winter with no riding/ running/hiking and few colds put out of commision Jan-Feb. I've been paying dearly for it this spring, but the body is repsonding well to the surge of activity lately. Just want to get in on the process here to get back to real fitness.
Weighed in at 187 in late December, but likely tipped 191-193 during the peak of inactivity this winter. I'm 5-11.
Recent updates, started regularly commuting to work ~ only 5 miles per day.
Picked up 60-150 miles per week since the group rides started back. Also found a neighbohood club that has regular Saturday rides of 65 miles. But Has 3 or 4 tough week day rides that the vary. Strong group.
Current weight check 181.
goals:
July 4th 50min 10K
July 26 Half Dome Accent ~16 mile hike
July 29 Mt Whitney Accent ~ 22 mile hike to 14500 ft. 6100 ft accent
Mid August - Enter first Cat 5 Criterium Race. To gain race experience, but would like to really improve my fitness but this time.
Goal weight 165 -170
Next is fine tuning the food intake. Eating less seems to have worked so far but as I pick up the miles and effort I'll need to experiment with better choices. It will be a sacrifice of convenience and nutrition.
Weighed in at 187 in late December, but likely tipped 191-193 during the peak of inactivity this winter. I'm 5-11.
Recent updates, started regularly commuting to work ~ only 5 miles per day.
Picked up 60-150 miles per week since the group rides started back. Also found a neighbohood club that has regular Saturday rides of 65 miles. But Has 3 or 4 tough week day rides that the vary. Strong group.
Current weight check 181.
goals:
July 4th 50min 10K
July 26 Half Dome Accent ~16 mile hike
July 29 Mt Whitney Accent ~ 22 mile hike to 14500 ft. 6100 ft accent
Mid August - Enter first Cat 5 Criterium Race. To gain race experience, but would like to really improve my fitness but this time.
Goal weight 165 -170
Next is fine tuning the food intake. Eating less seems to have worked so far but as I pick up the miles and effort I'll need to experiment with better choices. It will be a sacrifice of convenience and nutrition.
#2407
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Lake Claire, GA
Posts: 802
Bikes: 2008 Giant TCR Advanced
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This morning wt check was 180. Not bad considering the travel schedule and lack of riding. This coming week should make up for lost time on the bike.
It's starting to look like I'm putting in a solo effort here. I hope everybody is not getting fat now that the weather is nice.
It's starting to look like I'm putting in a solo effort here. I hope everybody is not getting fat now that the weather is nice.
Last edited by Vlaam4ever; 05-14-13 at 01:17 PM.
#2408
Bike ≠ Car ≠ Ped.
Consider this: my weight in late summer 2009 was 235+. I was down to 205 by the following April, and for the most part, I've stayed below 200 since late summer 2010.
#2409
Senior Member
I'm 5' 9" and weighed in at 178-lbs at the end of last month. Down from 215-lbs, weighed at the end of last summer. My new year's resolution for 2013 was to slim down to 160-lbs. and I seem to be right on track for that goal. All I've done is ride or walk at least two miles everyday and cut out most junk food from my diet.
#2410
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Lake Claire, GA
Posts: 802
Bikes: 2008 Giant TCR Advanced
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I have a 70 mile and a 40 mile club ride this weekend hoping for a wt nuetral weekend and a nice drop in weight next week as the body recovers. Should work well with no travel and no work dinners.
#2411
Newbie
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Posts: 9
Bikes: All-City Space Horse, Schwinn Suburban
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Anybody mind if a noob joins in? 6'2" male here.
Weighed in last Friday at 239. This is a far cry from my biggest (~300) several years ago, but still up from my thinnest (205 in 2010). I bounced back to about 215 and kept it there, more or less, until I broke my collarbone this January and ballooned up to my current weight.
Would like to get down to the 205 mark again, if not surpass it. Looking forward to the challenge, and reading through this thread for tips and inspiration!
Weighed in last Friday at 239. This is a far cry from my biggest (~300) several years ago, but still up from my thinnest (205 in 2010). I bounced back to about 215 and kept it there, more or less, until I broke my collarbone this January and ballooned up to my current weight.
Would like to get down to the 205 mark again, if not surpass it. Looking forward to the challenge, and reading through this thread for tips and inspiration!
#2412
Legs; OK! Lungs; not!
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Coral Springs, FL
Posts: 2,096
Bikes: ''09 Motobecane Immortal Pro (Yellow), '02 Diamondback Hybrid, '09 Lamborghini Viaggio, ''11 Cervelo P2
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Despite what you may have read or heard, an "Atkins" type low carb high fat diet has worked wonders for me.
In 2002 I was 195 (5'11) and diagnosed with male breast cancer. I decided then that while I could not control my genes, I was going to try to control all the factors that I could. A wise man once said "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." So I was going to do as much as I could different than I had.
In reality not too much changed until 4 years ago when I started riding. After a year I was down to 175, but still had a gut and could not get down lower. I had falled prey to the "Hammer Nutrition" falacy that we need all those carbs to perform. Face it guys, few of us are elite pro level athletes that really might even need that stuff. But we are all wanna be posers, so we believe it will help us "be like them."
Despite 150 - 180 mi of riding a week I was stuck at 175, still had a gut, and my BP and Cholesterol were going north. I had joint pain at night and stiff joints in the morning. My drs wanted me on BP meds and Statins. I needed to do SOMETHING DIFFERENT.
In may of last year I decided to try something different. I went Low Carb, High Fat. It seemed counter intuitive, and the first few weeks were difficult (Atkins Flu!) but after that my strength and stamina returned and I felt great! The pounds started to melt away as my body, now relying on fat metabolism for most of my energy, started eating away at all the stored fat. My BP and Cholesterol dropped. My wife, upset a first by my new eating habits, joined me.
We now eat LCHF and are never really "hungry" like we got when we needed our carb fix. Now we snack on nuts, cheese, and various low carb fruits and veggies. I'm now 160, and she lost 19 lbs and looks like the super model I married 40 years ago.
I've now turned my attention to Triathlons and have completed 4 sprints, all with AG Podium finishes. I'm now training for Iron Man Augusta 70.3 in September.
Drop the carbs. You don't need them. They are killing us.
In 2002 I was 195 (5'11) and diagnosed with male breast cancer. I decided then that while I could not control my genes, I was going to try to control all the factors that I could. A wise man once said "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." So I was going to do as much as I could different than I had.
In reality not too much changed until 4 years ago when I started riding. After a year I was down to 175, but still had a gut and could not get down lower. I had falled prey to the "Hammer Nutrition" falacy that we need all those carbs to perform. Face it guys, few of us are elite pro level athletes that really might even need that stuff. But we are all wanna be posers, so we believe it will help us "be like them."
Despite 150 - 180 mi of riding a week I was stuck at 175, still had a gut, and my BP and Cholesterol were going north. I had joint pain at night and stiff joints in the morning. My drs wanted me on BP meds and Statins. I needed to do SOMETHING DIFFERENT.
In may of last year I decided to try something different. I went Low Carb, High Fat. It seemed counter intuitive, and the first few weeks were difficult (Atkins Flu!) but after that my strength and stamina returned and I felt great! The pounds started to melt away as my body, now relying on fat metabolism for most of my energy, started eating away at all the stored fat. My BP and Cholesterol dropped. My wife, upset a first by my new eating habits, joined me.
We now eat LCHF and are never really "hungry" like we got when we needed our carb fix. Now we snack on nuts, cheese, and various low carb fruits and veggies. I'm now 160, and she lost 19 lbs and looks like the super model I married 40 years ago.
I've now turned my attention to Triathlons and have completed 4 sprints, all with AG Podium finishes. I'm now training for Iron Man Augusta 70.3 in September.
Drop the carbs. You don't need them. They are killing us.
#2413
Bike ≠ Car ≠ Ped.
bobthib, you might enjoy reading this:
https://eatingacademy.com/how-a-low-c...ic-performance
https://eatingacademy.com/how-a-low-c...ic-performance
Aerobic base– defined as the point at which you transition to more than 50% of your energy being derived from glycogen instead of fat. The higher this number (i.e., the higher the level of exertion) the better, because it means you can “spare” more glycogen for when you need it, and use as much fat as possible energy.
- Prior to ketosis – I hit this point at a heart rate of 104 and a VO2 of 1,630 mL/min (about 500 calories per hour of energy consumption).
- Post ketosis – I hit this point at a heart rate of 162 and a VO2 of 3,690 mL/min (about 1,100 calories per hour of energy consumption).
#2414
Banned
Join Date: Dec 2010
Location: West Coast of Wisconsin
Posts: 660
Bikes: 2011 Surly LHT 2005 LeMond Zurich
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Despite what you may have read or heard, an "Atkins" type low carb high fat diet has worked wonders for me.
In 2002 I was 195 (5'11) and diagnosed with male breast cancer. I decided then that while I could not control my genes, I was going to try to control all the factors that I could. A wise man once said "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." So I was going to do as much as I could different than I had.
In reality not too much changed until 4 years ago when I started riding. After a year I was down to 175, but still had a gut and could not get down lower. I had falled prey to the "Hammer Nutrition" falacy that we need all those carbs to perform. Face it guys, few of us are elite pro level athletes that really might even need that stuff. But we are all wanna be posers, so we believe it will help us "be like them."
Despite 150 - 180 mi of riding a week I was stuck at 175, still had a gut, and my BP and Cholesterol were going north. I had joint pain at night and stiff joints in the morning. My drs wanted me on BP meds and Statins. I needed to do SOMETHING DIFFERENT.
In may of last year I decided to try something different. I went Low Carb, High Fat. It seemed counter intuitive, and the first few weeks were difficult (Atkins Flu!) but after that my strength and stamina returned and I felt great! The pounds started to melt away as my body, now relying on fat metabolism for most of my energy, started eating away at all the stored fat. My BP and Cholesterol dropped. My wife, upset a first by my new eating habits, joined me.
We now eat LCHF and are never really "hungry" like we got when we needed our carb fix. Now we snack on nuts, cheese, and various low carb fruits and veggies. I'm now 160, and she lost 19 lbs and looks like the super model I married 40 years ago.
I've now turned my attention to Triathlons and have completed 4 sprints, all with AG Podium finishes. I'm now training for Iron Man Augusta 70.3 in September.
Drop the carbs. You don't need them. They are killing us.
In 2002 I was 195 (5'11) and diagnosed with male breast cancer. I decided then that while I could not control my genes, I was going to try to control all the factors that I could. A wise man once said "Insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting a different result." So I was going to do as much as I could different than I had.
In reality not too much changed until 4 years ago when I started riding. After a year I was down to 175, but still had a gut and could not get down lower. I had falled prey to the "Hammer Nutrition" falacy that we need all those carbs to perform. Face it guys, few of us are elite pro level athletes that really might even need that stuff. But we are all wanna be posers, so we believe it will help us "be like them."
Despite 150 - 180 mi of riding a week I was stuck at 175, still had a gut, and my BP and Cholesterol were going north. I had joint pain at night and stiff joints in the morning. My drs wanted me on BP meds and Statins. I needed to do SOMETHING DIFFERENT.
In may of last year I decided to try something different. I went Low Carb, High Fat. It seemed counter intuitive, and the first few weeks were difficult (Atkins Flu!) but after that my strength and stamina returned and I felt great! The pounds started to melt away as my body, now relying on fat metabolism for most of my energy, started eating away at all the stored fat. My BP and Cholesterol dropped. My wife, upset a first by my new eating habits, joined me.
We now eat LCHF and are never really "hungry" like we got when we needed our carb fix. Now we snack on nuts, cheese, and various low carb fruits and veggies. I'm now 160, and she lost 19 lbs and looks like the super model I married 40 years ago.
I've now turned my attention to Triathlons and have completed 4 sprints, all with AG Podium finishes. I'm now training for Iron Man Augusta 70.3 in September.
Drop the carbs. You don't need them. They are killing us.
The stories keep coming and are becoming difficult to ignore. There should be a ketogenic rider sticky
#2415
Senior Member
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: Lake Claire, GA
Posts: 802
Bikes: 2008 Giant TCR Advanced
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I read that a pound of fat is approximately 3500 calories. Not sure I can cut this many calories from my weekly intake, so I may have been a little aggressive with my goal of 1 pound per week. I dont plan to change course since, just because I had a set back. So this week will be a re-focus week.
#2416
Bike ≠ Car ≠ Ped.
Two weeks have gone by and I've stayed at 178. I logged 140+ miles each week but I'm having trouble shedding the weight lately. I'll really need to focus on keeping the miles up and carefully watching the food intake.
I read that a pound of fat is approximately 3500 calories. Not sure I can cut this many calories from my weekly intake, so I may have been a little aggressive with my goal of 1 pound per week. I dont plan to change course since, just because I had a set back. So this week will be a re-focus week.
I read that a pound of fat is approximately 3500 calories. Not sure I can cut this many calories from my weekly intake, so I may have been a little aggressive with my goal of 1 pound per week. I dont plan to change course since, just because I had a set back. So this week will be a re-focus week.
#2418
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2013
Location: Plano, TX
Posts: 171
Bikes: 87 centurion ironman expert, 86 team fuji, 90 litespeed tachyon, 87 bridgestone rb2
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great job everyone, im barely starting to ride and the reason is that i enjoy riding, i dont enjoy most other exercise. Time to get fit, im 5'9" and last time i weighed myself(start of biking last week) was at 195 lbs, my goal is just to be healthier and probably get down to 170, i felt great at that weight years ago. ill weight myself again at the 1 month mark.
#2419
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: Naperville, IL
Posts: 29
Bikes: 2013 Raleigh Misceo 2.0
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Two weeks have gone by and I've stayed at 178. I logged 140+ miles each week but I'm having trouble shedding the weight lately. I'll really need to focus on keeping the miles up and carefully watching the food intake.
I read that a pound of fat is approximately 3500 calories. Not sure I can cut this many calories from my weekly intake, so I may have been a little aggressive with my goal of 1 pound per week. I dont plan to change course since, just because I had a set back. So this week will be a re-focus week.
I read that a pound of fat is approximately 3500 calories. Not sure I can cut this many calories from my weekly intake, so I may have been a little aggressive with my goal of 1 pound per week. I dont plan to change course since, just because I had a set back. So this week will be a re-focus week.
Also, FWIW, I'd be willing to bet that the 140+ miles a week you're putting in (while very impressive, mind you) are most certainly frying your adrenals and sending your cortisol levels through the roof, making your body store extra fat (that's what it does in a stressed environment). I'd be willing to bet that a tweak to the diet and a reduction to your cardio-load would get you past your plateau
#2420
Recreational Commuter
Join Date: Apr 2006
Location: Central Ohio
Posts: 1,024
Bikes: One brand-less build-up, and a Connondale Synapse Carbon Ultegra Disc. A nicer bike than I need, but it was a good deal, so... ;-)
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After many years and many diets, working out like a madman, cycling as much as I could, I finally found something that has worked well for both me and my wife. Weight loss has been difficult for her because she's hypothyroid (Hashimoto's Syndrome) so getting her metabolism off of rock bottom is a battle.
It's called the Dukan Diet, and I know that this sounds like an ad for the blasted thing, but it really worked for us. You can pick up the book at a local library or on Amazon, and read through it. It made sense to us, particularly in that it builds in transitions back to a sustainable lifestyle.
It's essentially a low-carb, low-fat, lean protein diet, with a gradual staged transition to a balanced protien/carb moderate fat (sustainable) diet. It includes specific "go ahead and break the rules once a week" steps, and overall was pretty easy.
Since February, I've gone from 199 lbs and close to 24% body fat to 168 and 11% body fat. My wife went from 135 lbs and 32% body fat to 113 and 20% body fat.
It's called the Dukan Diet, and I know that this sounds like an ad for the blasted thing, but it really worked for us. You can pick up the book at a local library or on Amazon, and read through it. It made sense to us, particularly in that it builds in transitions back to a sustainable lifestyle.
It's essentially a low-carb, low-fat, lean protein diet, with a gradual staged transition to a balanced protien/carb moderate fat (sustainable) diet. It includes specific "go ahead and break the rules once a week" steps, and overall was pretty easy.
Since February, I've gone from 199 lbs and close to 24% body fat to 168 and 11% body fat. My wife went from 135 lbs and 32% body fat to 113 and 20% body fat.
#2421
Member
Join Date: Jun 2013
Location: TN/GA
Posts: 30
Bikes: Giant Revel 1
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ill get in on this thread, Im 6 foot even just under 200 pounds. Ive only been cycling a few days, looking for the proper diet plan at the moment, and just riding everyday sometimes am and pm. I have been told to not worry so much about the scale and weight as much as measuring actual measurments from problem areas? i dont think i have any specific area though lol. just looking to get back into shape
#2422
Senior Member
I've been riding casually, but will be looking to start a regiment to get me to my goal weight, which is currently 10kg away. I was close to it when I was running regularly, but after an injury I never got back into it and it doesn't help that I've gotten addicted to playing parking games and truck games while I was recuperating!
Last edited by RyderTheRider; 07-16-13 at 05:08 AM.
#2423
Queens Diamondbacker
Join Date: Jul 2013
Location: Kew Gardens, NY
Posts: 9
Bikes: 2013 Diamondback Wildwood Classic
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I'm a male, 6'1" at 293lbs - goal is around 210lbs by next year. I really want to make this work. Thanks for the inspiration!
#2424
just another gosling
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Everett, WA
Posts: 19,773
Bikes: CoMo Speedster 2003, Trek 5200, CAAD 9, Fred 2004
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bobthib, you might enjoy reading this:
https://eatingacademy.com/how-a-low-c...ic-performance
https://eatingacademy.com/how-a-low-c...ic-performance
Aerobic base– defined as the point at which you transition to more than 50% of your energy being derived from glycogen instead of fat. The higher this number (i.e., the higher the level of exertion) the better, because it means you can “spare” more glycogen for when you need it, and use as much fat as possible energy.
Implication: My aerobic efficiency improved dramatically (in the words of the person who tested me, “Like nothing I’ve ever seen before.”)
- Prior to ketosis – I hit this point at a heart rate of 104 and a VO2 of 1,630 mL/min (about 500 calories per hour of energy consumption).
- Post ketosis – I hit this point at a heart rate of 162 and a VO2 of 3,690 mL/min (about 1,100 calories per hour of energy consumption).
Implication: My aerobic efficiency improved dramatically (in the words of the person who tested me, “Like nothing I’ve ever seen before.”)
Last edited by Carbonfiberboy; 07-10-13 at 10:30 AM.
#2425
Bike ≠ Car ≠ Ped.
https://eatingacademy.com/why-i-decided-to-lose-weight
He's a triathlete in his late 30's (I think he turns 40 this year).
More stats are on the link I posted earlier; besides the aerobic base, he also posted before-and-after of 60% peak VO2, anaerobic threshold, and max VO2.