Well, I did a totally bad thing at the first of the year...I went riding too hard when I shouldn't have. The main thing...you get the idea, I went too hard too much too early. When I was supposed to do base training, I wanted to cheat a little bit, I did sprints and intervals all of January and February, then by the end of February, I was all burnt. I tried to go on rides, my legs, mostly the quads, hurt. Even after I try to not ride and rest for 3-4 days, I just couldn't recover, my legs were still in pain, and I've lost interest in biking. On my ride on the 1st weekend of March, I stopped and said, "that's it, no more riding for a while". I'm talking weeks. That night, I've read some information on the internet about overreaching and overtraining. Usually, to recover, it takes 1-9 weeks to feel good again. I was hoping this was going to take me at least a couple weeks. After 2 weeks, I wasn't fully at it yet but I went to Moab anyway and did a couple rides, actually, I felt pretty good and felt rested so I rode really good. I was surprised. Then now I haven't ridden since then, except a few easy spin rides, and I got a race this Saturday and I think I am ready. I am doing two laps this time, total 15 miles. This should be good because right now, all I feel like is riding. I haven't really done any hard rides all of March except two little rides in Moab last week which turned out really good. I hope for the same this weekend at the race. Next year, I hope I don't make the same mistake like I did this year. I should be doing just endurance riding in Jan., Feb., and some of March, then do hard intervals. Last year, winter of '09 and '10, I did it right. I did base training for a couple of months and lifted weights at the same time, then I felt refreshed by March for some hard efforts. I did have a good season last year, except I should have tapered down in the middle of the summer and built it back up. But all well, I learn every day. That's life I guess. I've learned in the past few years, nobody can have a perfect training season, there's always ups and downs. That's good, because those kind of things can give you challenges to live for. Friday, April 1, 2011
Rest is important...but sometimes it takes longer than you think...
Well, I did a totally bad thing at the first of the year...I went riding too hard when I shouldn't have. The main thing...you get the idea, I went too hard too much too early. When I was supposed to do base training, I wanted to cheat a little bit, I did sprints and intervals all of January and February, then by the end of February, I was all burnt. I tried to go on rides, my legs, mostly the quads, hurt. Even after I try to not ride and rest for 3-4 days, I just couldn't recover, my legs were still in pain, and I've lost interest in biking. On my ride on the 1st weekend of March, I stopped and said, "that's it, no more riding for a while". I'm talking weeks. That night, I've read some information on the internet about overreaching and overtraining. Usually, to recover, it takes 1-9 weeks to feel good again. I was hoping this was going to take me at least a couple weeks. After 2 weeks, I wasn't fully at it yet but I went to Moab anyway and did a couple rides, actually, I felt pretty good and felt rested so I rode really good. I was surprised. Then now I haven't ridden since then, except a few easy spin rides, and I got a race this Saturday and I think I am ready. I am doing two laps this time, total 15 miles. This should be good because right now, all I feel like is riding. I haven't really done any hard rides all of March except two little rides in Moab last week which turned out really good. I hope for the same this weekend at the race. Next year, I hope I don't make the same mistake like I did this year. I should be doing just endurance riding in Jan., Feb., and some of March, then do hard intervals. Last year, winter of '09 and '10, I did it right. I did base training for a couple of months and lifted weights at the same time, then I felt refreshed by March for some hard efforts. I did have a good season last year, except I should have tapered down in the middle of the summer and built it back up. But all well, I learn every day. That's life I guess. I've learned in the past few years, nobody can have a perfect training season, there's always ups and downs. That's good, because those kind of things can give you challenges to live for.
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1 comment:
yea, rest takes just as long as it takes to get the job done which is rested{end of job}
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