Yeah, the "day off" is always going to be relative to what your typical day or week is like. I am sure you have recovery days and weeks built into your program, so taking it the day after a LSD recovery ride or in place of a shorter more intense leg workout is probably the best you can do for your situation. But since you are training pretty much all the time, it will still be an accurate representation of your fitness level that you can work with.
I see posts in the power zone pack facebook group where people are saying things like "I have been riding every day for the last nine months and my ftp has plateaued. What do I do?" What you find when they start answering questions is that they have been doing 30-60 mins of hard intense rides every day for 6 months because they were "maintaining a streak". Which is something Peloton rewards you for, but that I think they ought to modify, because it can promote overtraining in folks who don't understand the concept of recovery days. They are doing their FTP test the day after a hard ride, and are surprised when all their body wants to do is go exactly as hard as it has every other day for the last 6 months.
I think Peloton really has an opportunity that they are missing on to give people cues about that kind of thing. They have all of this data about how people are riding, and they could easily send out an alert saying "Hey, we see you have been riding really hard for the last X days (or weeks). Here is an article about the benefits of recovery in a training program, and here are some easy low impact rides you could use for that." The power zone instructors do a good job talking about it in their rides, but I think that message gets missed alot on the broader peloton community.
I see posts in the power zone pack facebook group where people are saying things like "I have been riding every day for the last nine months and my ftp has plateaued. What do I do?" What you find when they start answering questions is that they have been doing 30-60 mins of hard intense rides every day for 6 months because they were "maintaining a streak". Which is something Peloton rewards you for, but that I think they ought to modify, because it can promote overtraining in folks who don't understand the concept of recovery days. They are doing their FTP test the day after a hard ride, and are surprised when all their body wants to do is go exactly as hard as it has every other day for the last 6 months.
I think Peloton really has an opportunity that they are missing on to give people cues about that kind of thing. They have all of this data about how people are riding, and they could easily send out an alert saying "Hey, we see you have been riding really hard for the last X days (or weeks). Here is an article about the benefits of recovery in a training program, and here are some easy low impact rides you could use for that." The power zone instructors do a good job talking about it in their rides, but I think that message gets missed alot on the broader peloton community.