I used to run that yearly and do road cycling as a sideshow. Fun times!
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I used to run that yearly and do road cycling as a sideshow. Fun times!
Sent from my SM-G960U using TGR Forums mobile app
Your dog just ate an avocado!
Ha! I don't entirely disagree, but I have pretty good road biking options from my house vs. needing to drive for MTB. Also, I've gotten in the habit of renting fancy MTBs when I visit the inlaws in Bend. Now I'm spoiled and don't want to ride a bike I could afford to buy. Oh yeah, and I'm a shitty mechanic and all I ever need to do on my road bike is oil the chain and adjust brake cable tension. I look at the discussions about suspension maintenance on Sprocket Rockets and quietly back away.
Just don't do what 90% of my road racing friends do and just stop all of it because you're not competitive. Find endurance-related goals, but keep goals and enjoy biking for biking sake while feeling fit.
Thanks for the advice! Most years I do less mileage than that (in the PNW, so our road biking season is only about 5 months), and I never thought bone density would be a concern, but maybe I need to rethink. I do hike and a little strength training (body weight exercises), but I need to get more serious on the strength training front.
Agreed! There are still lots of interesting rides to do - I've been wanting to tour Trappist breweries for years, and closer to home, we have the Oregon Timber Trail, which is a pretty inspirational goal. I just miss the days when I could hop into pretty fast road rides and hang with the lead group without having done much training.
Definitely. Weights, or, seriously, just walk a lot. We were made to walk, but, nobody does any more. NYC residents and suburban commuters into the city are actually much fitter overall than the rest of America because they wind up walking at least a few miles a day. I started going downhill when I left my job there and started driving back and forth to my seat in a cube for ten years. My right leg was getting weak and atrophied, even with the biking.
Oh I carry 35-40 pounds on multi day hikes doing 10 miles a day sometimes in the summer. I know exactly what it does. Probably would have put on 60 pounds post tobacco if I wasn't playing soccer, hiking, skiing, skateboarding, yard work, etc..
As already touched on.. Use it or lose it. Yes, our endurance and strength, along with benefits per hours training goes way down with age. But, I can still do 60-70% of what I did in my 30s. But, only because I stay active year round.
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
gonna be 48 here soon and will be restarting basic fitness
[after (2) spine issues in 18mos]
again
pretty sure i'm not old yet, right?
Calling BS on this. And, I know about the walking, lived on Long Island and worked in Manhattan a couple times a week in the late 80s..
Lived south of MPLS St Paul in the 80s. I think the uphill and downhill involved in the walking or biking around that area may be why it's more effective than the NYC area.. which is mostly flat. In fact, all of those cities above have lots of hills it seems..The top 10 fittest cities are:
Arlington, Va.
Seattle, Wash.
Minneapolis, Minn.
San Francisco, Calif.
Madison, Wis.
Washington, D.C.
St. Paul, Minn.
Irvine, Calif.
Denver, Colo.
Portland, Ore.
https://www.usatoday.com/story/life/...st/1151487001/
Go that way really REALLY fast. If something gets in your way, TURN!
Feel ya man, 25 has been rough
Time to throw in the towel?
Ned Overend is my spirit animal.
Do you weigh more than you did 5 years ago? How much do you drink, how well do you sleep?
I'm still a couple of years from 40 but am lighter and fitter than I've ever been. Cutting back a little on beer has probably made the biggest difference. I sleep and recover a lot better and dropped a few pounds. It's kind of still surprising because I'll do workouts and expect to be tired the next day or two but then can still go out and ride pretty hard.
This ^^
I'm a type II diabetic, I did have a gut was 5'8" 175 which is overweight according to the BMI , so I lost 15-20 lb at age 50 by portion control/ quitting sugar and my a1c went down 2 points, from there I did gain 2-3 lbs when the craft brews opened up in town last year but sugar levels are still pretty good for a type II
IME age 50 was my last chance to do something about my health & fitness, I was retired at 49 got pretty fit and had lots of time to play thru my 50's but at 60 + i am noticing a bigger difference in drive and energy levels, also experianced ED and needed topping up
This year I don't really fit in my whitewater play boat cuz my legs are too stiff and I'm thinking of giving it up after 36 yars cuz I just can't be bothered anymore
getting old sucks but it beats the alternative
so anyhow if you see Alice tell her i'm ready to go
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
Endurance shouldn't be a problem in your 40's. You're losing agility and speed but endurance should still be near peak.
TRT for the win![]()
"In a perfect world I'd have all 10 fingers on my left hand, so I could just use my right hand for punching."
my buddy the ultra runner looked in the bar for the event signup and said hmm pretty young room
cuz most of the guys at ultra's are 50 or 60
before I became a has-been my best edurance was at 56 when i had trained to ski for the 24 hr event
Lee Lau - xxx-er is the laziest Asian canuck I know
I think the biggest kick in the nuts about getting old and fat is that in your 20's if you carried around a 30 pound weight all day you'd lose a shitton of weight through osmosis or something. Now I carry an extra 30 and have to do an hour + of cardio a day to maintain current status.
Live Free or Die
OK whippersnapper, I think you might be surprised by the drop off from, say, 38 to 44 - I know I was. Come back in 6-7 years and let us know how it's going ;-)
Relative to average Americans, I'm in pretty good shape, but my ass is dragging compared to me at your age. I've gotten better on diet since my 30s - my wife and I take 2 or 3 days to get through a bottle of wine and I'm eating pretty well - lowish carbs, very little sugar, not much junk food. Gotta get better on the training side of the equation.
I know it can be done: in my late 30s, I went toe to toe with a guy who had to be in his mid 60s or better - we were cycling, wound up together partway through a big hill climb, and it got competitive, with both of us going all out. He edged me out at the top by a few feet and told me his power meter had him at over 400 watts on the final pitch. I am nowhere near riding like that today, can't decide if that guy is more inspirational or discouraging.
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