My name ain't "Boo".
Taste better the 2nd time?Scriffer said:
Bailed on the FTP test tonight. Wife made bacon and eggs for dinner. Big mistake to even try.
You should do the 5 hour Christine Mountain Climb to celebrate.TraditionsPD said:
Bike Delivery this morning. Happy Peloton day!
This.XpressAg09 said:You should do the 5 hour Christine Mountain Climb to celebrate.TraditionsPD said:
Bike Delivery this morning. Happy Peloton day!
Don't be so hateful to start out...XpressAg09 said:You should do the 5 hour Christine Mountain Climb to celebrate.TraditionsPD said:
Bike Delivery this morning. Happy Peloton day!
Some of them are just totally unrealistic about high standing cadences, and quite frankly it is not a skill you will need or use when riding outside. Different people are built differently and for most people, a standing cadence over about 75 is just not sustainable for more than about 20-30 secs for most people. Doing standing work with poor form is a great way to injure yourself, so when teaching spinning classes, I always encourage people to do standing work at a cadence they can sustain without losing their form. When I am in a class and they are asking for a standing cadence over 80 at some ridiculous resistance level, I either sit down and do the same cadence seated, or I just stand and do the work at the cadence I can sustain with good form.CFTXAG10 said:
I have been able to increase my ride time in short order which is encouraging. The only thing I am struggling with is keeping up with the cadence that is being called out when I get myself out of the saddle on a higher resistance on some of the climbs. Hopefully that will change over time as I get more into this thing. Loving it so far.
Also as a side note, did a ride with Robin the other day, and I am discovering my performance thus far has increased when the instructor is easy on the eyes
Good to know. Thank you!txags92 said:Some of them are just totally unrealistic about high standing cadences, and quite frankly it is not a skill you will need or use when riding outside. Different people are built differently and for most people, a standing cadence over about 75 is just not sustainable for more than about 20-30 secs for most people. Doing standing work with poor form is a great way to injure yourself, so when teaching spinning classes, I always encourage people to do standing work at a cadence they can sustain without losing their form. When I am in a class and they are asking for a standing cadence over 80 at some ridiculous resistance level, I either sit down and do the same cadence seated, or I just stand and do the work at the cadence I can sustain with good form.CFTXAG10 said:
I have been able to increase my ride time in short order which is encouraging. The only thing I am struggling with is keeping up with the cadence that is being called out when I get myself out of the saddle on a higher resistance on some of the climbs. Hopefully that will change over time as I get more into this thing. Loving it so far.
Also as a side note, did a ride with Robin the other day, and I am discovering my performance thus far has increased when the instructor is easy on the eyes
I almost always disregard whatever they say out of the saddle. I personally don't like going above 80, but prefer to keep it in the 70's. People might disagree, but I think anything about 80-85 out of the saddle is dangerous.CFTXAG10 said:
I have been able to increase my ride time in short order which is encouraging. The only thing I am struggling with is keeping up with the cadence that is being called out when I get myself out of the saddle on a higher resistance on some of the climbs. Hopefully that will change over time as I get more into this thing. Loving it so far.
Also as a side note, did a ride with Robin the other day, and I am discovering my performance thus far has increased when the instructor is easy on the eyes
This..txags92 said:Some of them are just totally unrealistic about high standing cadences, and quite frankly it is not a skill you will need or use when riding outside. Different people are built differently and for most people, a standing cadence over about 75 is just not sustainable for more than about 20-30 secs for most people. Doing standing work with poor form is a great way to injure yourself, so when teaching spinning classes, I always encourage people to do standing work at a cadence they can sustain without losing their form. When I am in a class and they are asking for a standing cadence over 80 at some ridiculous resistance level, I either sit down and do the same cadence seated, or I just stand and do the work at the cadence I can sustain with good form.CFTXAG10 said:
I have been able to increase my ride time in short order which is encouraging. The only thing I am struggling with is keeping up with the cadence that is being called out when I get myself out of the saddle on a higher resistance on some of the climbs. Hopefully that will change over time as I get more into this thing. Loving it so far.
Also as a side note, did a ride with Robin the other day, and I am discovering my performance thus far has increased when the instructor is easy on the eyes
this. and i usually choose the sit down option.txags92 said:Some of them are just totally unrealistic about high standing cadences, and quite frankly it is not a skill you will need or use when riding outside. Different people are built differently and for most people, a standing cadence over about 75 is just not sustainable for more than about 20-30 secs for most people. Doing standing work with poor form is a great way to injure yourself, so when teaching spinning classes, I always encourage people to do standing work at a cadence they can sustain without losing their form. When I am in a class and they are asking for a standing cadence over 80 at some ridiculous resistance level, I either sit down and do the same cadence seated, or I just stand and do the work at the cadence I can sustain with good form.CFTXAG10 said:
I have been able to increase my ride time in short order which is encouraging. The only thing I am struggling with is keeping up with the cadence that is being called out when I get myself out of the saddle on a higher resistance on some of the climbs. Hopefully that will change over time as I get more into this thing. Loving it so far.
Also as a side note, did a ride with Robin the other day, and I am discovering my performance thus far has increased when the instructor is easy on the eyes
My completely unscientific opinion is that higher standing cadence is easier for people who are very light overall or who have relatively skinny legs relative to their raw strength. Something about redirecting rotating mass, physics, something something The people I have seen who can easily do fast cadence (85+) standing are always built like Olivia. We had a girl who used to work at our gym who would come to the spinning classes and she was strong and in good shape, but her legs were very skinny and we jokingly called her the chipmunk on crack. She could easily hold a standing cadence of 90+.bthotugigem05 said:
Olivia does a ton of 80+ cadence out of the saddle, which I think works well biomechanically for her since she's shorter. I've pulled my resistance back lately to try and hit the cadence marks in the saddle more and I've found it really helpful, but generally don't go higher than the mid-70s our of the saddle.
fifyTraditionsPD said:
Just did workouts 1 & 2 back to back
30 min Beginner Ep 2 Ride - 253KJpelotons
20 Min Hip Hop Ride 190KJpelotons
#Calories2Burn
AggieOO said:fifyTraditionsPD said:
Just did workouts 1 & 2 back to back
30 min Beginner Ep 2 Ride - 253KJpelotons or whatever the units are called
20 Min Hip Hop Ride 190KJpelotons or whatever the units are called
#Calories2Burn
XpressAg09 said:
Also, are y'all doing the Pelothon? Seems like an interesting way to get folks to try new folks off the bike.
#BreakthroughCrew
XpressAg09 said:
Also, are y'all doing the Pelothon? Seems like an interesting way to get folks to try new folks off the bike.
#BreakthroughCrew