This advice is aimed at the inexperienced cyclist who may have
taken up serious cycling in the past two years and has not yet completed
a Wicklow 200.
I don’t claim any specialist knowledge, other than I took
up cycling four years ago at the age of 37 and enjoy every minute
I spend on the bike!
With under 100 days to go you should by now have been building
base fitness and should be able to tackle spins of 40 to 50 miles
at a relatively low intensity. Your training should be geared at
building aerobic fitness and endurance.
This is done by building up the distance of your spins each week.
For most of us the weekend is the only time we get to do a long
spin. So aim to get out on Saturday for at least 4 hours. By aiming
for Saturday if you miss it because of the weather or a night in
the pub on Friday there is always Sunday!
Aerobic fitness is built by training at a speed that enables you
to still carry out a conversation. If you have a heart monitor use
it, and as a rule of thumb you should aim to keep your heart rate
at about 65% of you max heart rate. Again applying a rule of thumb
your max heart rate is 220 minus your age (so at 41 years of age
mine is theoretically 179).
Hills will obviously cause your heart rate to rise, however you
should get it back down into the correct zone as quickly afterwards.
Resist the urge to free wheel down hill. When you get to the bottom
and have to put in some effort you will find that you may have cooled
down and the legs may have stiffened slightly. Instead as you go
over the crest of the hill, put the bike in a high gear and keep
the legs spinning on the way down. I made this mistake on the descent
from Slieve Maan last year and it took me about 10 minutes to get
the legs moving smoothly again.
The evenings are getting brighter now and it is possible to get
out for a spin. Aim to do at least an hour twice or three times
a week. Two of these should aim to build power into the legs. You
will have to do a lot of climbing on the Wicklow 200 so you will
need to build power. This is done by cycling up hills in a relatively
high gear. Don’t be tempted to go for too high a gear, otherwise
the knees will suffer. Go into a high gear for 5 minutes, then go
back to one that is easier to spin. Give yourself time to recover
and then do another 5 minutes. Three or four such intervals will
help immensely. When doing these type of sessions give yourself
10 to 15 minutes easy spinning at the end to flush out lactic acid
from the muscles. You will also have to give yourself adequate time
to warm up before tackling the high intensity stuff. Unfortunately
as you get older it takes longer to warm up properly!
If you begin to feel unduly uncomfortable during these sessions
slow down and take it a bit easier.
Recovery between sessions is as important as the training itself.
Don’t do two high intensity sessions on consecutive days.
If possible fit in a low intensity session between the two high
intensity sessions. This gives your body time to recover between
sessions. It is this repair process that helps you to improve your
performance.
For
example the following regime provides a good balance between high
intensity and recovery.
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