Thursday, May 29, 2008

Sunset Series 08 XC Race #1

DNF . . .
Well that could be my race report for my first XC race. The End ....
Two flats put me out of the race. It was not a long race, about 5.25 kms a lap, 3 laps, so a single flat will certainly hurt your placing. No results yet posted but my guess from the sheet a la course showed an average lap of around 25 minutes for my category(40-49). I had brought 1 tube and a patch kit. Next race I will bring 2 tubes. At least if I get a second flat I will be able to ride back to the car instead of doing the long walk after pulling out :(

Quick Bio. I turned 40 this year. 5'4" and about 145-150 lbs. In the last 8 years I slowly gave up all my sports(Hockey(ball,ice,roller), broomball, and Slo-Pitch) due to starting a family and building a house. About 4 years ago I started commuting to work. It is about 40km round trip. I was doing the ride summer and winter in the snow and this is how I got interested in MTB'ing. I have always been very competitive in sports so the commuting was keeping me in shape but I was missing the sporty part. So I started riding with some beg/interm rides last summer and ended the year riding with some very experienced riders. This is how I got on a team, or gang. I did one race in August, which was a 24 hr solo effort, just to see what its all about. I'm hooked and signed up for two 24 solos this year.

I was looking forward to doing my first XC race all winter. I even got rollers and did a little training for about 6 weeks before I got the damn flu bug.It was about a week before the first O'Cup. I was off work for about a week. It was like having a 7 day headache along with every muscle in my body aching with fever. I lost about 10 pounds and I am only normally around 150lb (5'4"). Of course I managed to get the cough they said is common to have for 1-2 weeks after the flu which, heeding the advice of friends and forum members, caused me to skip O'Cup #2. It was probably a wise choice for many reasons. So last night ended up being my first race.

Race Recap

I got to the race early, signed up and got my plate just before the big rush came. My licence came in the mail the day before even tho it was seeming to take forever. I took this as good
karma :) I had lots of time to check over the bike, get dressed, and warm up. I chatted with the guys on the team(or gang) and was very relaxed.

I did a warm-up of about 15 mins and then went to the start and lined up with the guys. It was a delayed group start of about one minute delay between groups. I think Sport was 3rd to go. I was very relaxed and sat near the back of the group chatting away with a couple teammates. There is a long steep climb to the single track so no need to bolt off at the start. Your fitness level will quickly be shown too all :) . The first 200 meters are fairly flat, the next 200 meter are around 9% grade and the last 200 meters before the single track are around 14-20% grade!
On the first lap I was feeling a bit of hurt and weak on this climb and my heart rate was between 170-180(180 my max,40 yrs). On the second and third lap I felt that I was going at least as fast as the first lap and my heart rate was almost 10 beats lower.

I feel that technically I am very good for only one summer of experience. There was no spot on the course that I didn't clear when not blocked by another rider stalled out on the good line minus one technical rooty, soft soil, rooty climb. I picked a bit of a bad line and my tire spun. It was the third lap and I was a bit tired. I know for next time I need to get more speed up for this section.

That said I learned quickly in the first section of singletrack that its not good to be behind riders in any tight, technical section. Can you say 'Log Jam!'. And I think the odds are good that the farther down the pack you are on a climb the more chance you have of getting stopped from a guy in front of you not clearing a section. This could simply be being out of steam from the climb to do that half rotation that always seems to elude you on a little steep, rocky section shortly after :). So I had to actually stop for 10 seconds and wait for a few guys to push up through a tight rocky section.

My first flat came about 15 minutes in. It took about 5:30 seconds to change. It was a real bummer to watch the couple guys on the team go that I figured where around my caliber. Would make for a more fun race and better gossip afterwords since we would be watching each other. I think by the time I got rolling again I was dead last out of all of the groups. The good thing was that I had lots of tight single track all too myself :)

I did find my calfs cramped a bit two times but went away once I had some sports drink. I usually ride with a pack with two bladders, one with drink and one with water. I have only one cage on my GT i-drive so I only took one bottle. I figured it would be marginal, but enough. I was planning on two laps according the guys and them saying the first race of the season would not be as long, but it was 3 laps. I will carry another bottle of water in my middle jersey pocket for next race an I am sure I will be fine.

I caught a few people in the second lap. One was a team member who I figured would do well. Turned out he flatted in the warm-up and fixed his flat at the car, but missed the start. He passed me while I was fixing mine. He was aout to call it quits when I came by. I stopped to kick his butt in gear when he told me the story and that he lost his tire irons at the car. I gave him my set, told him to change the tube and try and catch me! I don't need irons for the Kenda Karma DTC's I am running.

I passed a few more people on lap two, but I was pretty sure they were not my class. It was on the start of the climb on the third lap that I saw some people that I new where in my class. I tried not to get too excited to catch them at this point. I knew I was reeling them in and had a whole lap to go. I was feeling pretty good at this point. It's a nice feeling to see you are catching someone and confident that you are gonna do it. I think I was hurting more on the climbs with no one in site feeling like I was at the back of the pack :(

After the first climb is a technical rocky singletrack section, the a little bit of double lane switchbacks to a fast but rough singletrack section. After this you have one more nasty fire road climb(small gravel and sandy, so bit loose, but energy sapping). You are almost at the top of the mountain by then. The kicker here is you turn back into the singletack to another really tough and steep climb for about 200m. If you went to hard on the fire road you would be in serious trouble to climb this section. Lots of rocks and roots so you need that bit of power to clear the bigger ones.

I passed one person on this fire road section and pulled up to the wheel of two other guys at the turn in of the singletrack climb I mentioned. The second guy hit a root and stalled and I passed him here. The guy ahead of me turned out to be pretty good technically and was pretty fast on the downhill technical stuff. I held his wheel out of the singletrack climb but I wasn't sure if I should do a sprint pass here or wait. I decided to follow and we went down some steep rocky sections in the open hill and back into the woods for some fast downhill singletrack. I was keeping about a 10 bike length lead on the downhill in case he went down and I figured I would close that gap back in the woods. He seemed to pull away a bit, as I said I under estimated hill climbing ability with technical skill. Oooops! I was determined not to let him get away so I kinda let it a bit loose to to close the gap. I knew there was a small rock drop coming(can you say endo!) that split into two for about 5 bike lengths. He went left and I went right with wreck less abandon and made the pass. After this I pulled away from him. I wondered if he was pushing himself a bit harder than he should cause I was on his wheel?

It was getting close to the end of the race and I was feeling great. I knew the end was coming so I was really starting to push it. Then Psssst! Another front flat! WTF ! ! I was pisssed. I decided to run out of the last of this singletrack as it opens up to the open ski hill and lots of room to change the tire. I ran bit more into the open pushing the bike while fighting in my mind if I should just run with the bike to the finish or fix the flat.

I decided to fix the flat. It was a real bummer to be there on the open mountain, right in front of the chalet with people on the balcony, trying to put a patch on a tube. Again I had people start passing me. I think the first person to pass me was my teammate who had fixed his tire after all. I don't think he would have caught me as I was less than 4 minutes from the finish(gotta get a dig in haha). Seeing Iggy go by did lift my spirits for a few seconds as I tried to pump up the damn tire I patched. I couldn't get it to pump up. I could hear the air leaking out. I pulled the tube out and could see that I didn't let the glue dry enough and had the patch on the edge of the double snake bite flat. A few more riders went by and the guy that I figured was in last place goes by saying "at least I'm gonna beat somebody". Oh I wanted to get my tire pumped so bad at that moment ! ! ! But alas my tire was phsst'ing away with every stroke of the pump. IT was at this point I hung my head down, stuck the flatted wheel back on the bike and walked off the course. At least I only had 100m or so to walk to the chalet.....

Well I got a DNF for my first XC race. But I have to say I really enjoyed it and plan to have lots of fun racing the SS series this year. Evey other weds. Next race I will bring two tubes and will be running a bit more pressure from the start to hopefully avoid any flats in the first place.
My average lap times without flats I figured would be around 27 minutes a lap using data from my GPS. I found out I was not the only one to flat. Our fastest guy got a flat his first lap on Mens Expert. Had some fun chatting with the guys after over a beer and a burger. I think they keep points from 4 of 7 races so all is not lost !!!

I have a few questions.
1.) What happens when you blow up?
I ask this cause my heart rate was in the 170's(MAX 180) on the climbs. I don't mind holding it there but was wondering what would happen if I gave it a bit more on the first climb and held it closer too or at my max HR on this climb. I think I could get in front of several people this way but don't want to do it only to get passed again or slow people in the singletrack ahead cause I am toast.
2.) How do I get to be a better climber?
Maybe 10 hours a week to train max, including 3 hour MTB technical, hilly group riding Sundays(intense for me)


Cheers,

Thursday, March 20, 2008

Still Snowing!

Well we are nearing the end of March and we are still getting snow. We are very close to beating the record snow fall of 1972. We are second place right now. Worse part is we've not had one huge storm to get close to the record, but rather snows a bit every day it seems.

Now with the sun getting stronger the roads in town dry out pretty fast. My country roads are still messy and my dirt road I live on is now starting to be one slick' o' mud. I have been riding indoors cause I'm to lazy to clean the bike afterwards. Its easier on the rollers for me these days.I have been renovating the basement so been busy.

I think the hardest part of the training is getting enough sleep. I haven't been riding or sleeping enough of late but cracking down starting this week.
I think I am going to try the Ontario Cup races this year.
http://www.tinyurl.com/yrxeq8
The first race is only about 6 weeks away,April 27, 2008 - Mansfield. Looks like I will not be as ready as I would have hoped to be but going to train hard the next 5 weeks and taper the week before. Hopefully there will be a few others that haven't gotten it together either. I would imagine most people doing these races are at least semi-serious racers. My goals for the beggining part of the season will be not to be DFL. After a few races I will see how tough these races really are and if this will be my goal for the year or if I have a chance of finishing in the top 20 and accumulating some points !

My main goal would be to podium at Hot August Nights as a solo rider. This would be tough but I think if I train hard I might just have a shot at 3rd. I guess it depends on who shows up.
I just turned 40 so not racing with the younger crowd. Its not that the 40 plus crowd is easy, its just that the field is not nearly as big :)
Cheers for now,
Paul

Friday, February 29, 2008

Another Indoor Day

Bit late entry here. Did another 45 mins on the rollers on Wed. evening.
I need a super silent set of rollers. Not because I care about the noise, but because as soon as everyone else in the house hears the rollers everyone comes to bug me. Not that I don't mind chatting while I am on the rollers, but having a 6 year old running around trying to exercise too I feel is a bit distracting and dangerous. Even our dumb little dog comes around.
My legs felt a little heavy at first but seemed ok once I warmed up for about 5 minutes. I did another 45 minute session with about the same numbers as Mon. session. 21km/hr average with HR average of 136.
My butt was still a bit tender with the new seat and the long layoff off the bike. I figure this will be my biggest limiting factor for doing longer roller sessions. I can see me doing an entire hockey game no problem, plus the playoffs are coming:), just as long as my butt can stand it.
Later,
Paul

Tuesday, February 26, 2008

Training on the Rollers

Did a workout on the rollers. Started out with about 10 minutes of easy rolling fiddling around with a few things. This was my first session with my HR monitor on the rollers.
I did another 45 minutes while watching the Sens get SMOKED by the Leafs 5-0. Wasn't the most inspiring thing to work out too ! I averaged 21 km/hr and an average HR of 138 for the 45 minutes. Using the wattage chart from Kreitler I am guess-ti-mating I did about 100 watt average. One of these days I will have to try out a watt meter to see how far off I really am :)
I haven't had a chance to go to the shop to pick up my bike with the GPS wireless pickup for cadence and speed. I just realized that my GPS has workout programs already built into the unit. Its a Forerunner 305. I'll have to try make it to the shop this week. http://phatmoosecycles.com
I am guessing if use the training program from the Garmin Forerunner I should do pretty good for a first year rookie training on my own.
I tried a new seat as well. I am not sure I liked my seat position. I think it was a bit low. Will adjust a bit higher for next session. The seat is a Sell San Marco with carbon steel rails and is the lightest seat I have ever owned. It was not the most comfy but not bad. I haven't ridden really since November so a week or two will be needed to harden up the butt.
Hopefully will get another workout Wed or Thursday.
Cheers,
Paul

Tuesday, February 19, 2008

Second Roller Session

I was tired last night. Still under the weather a bit. I ate late at around 7:30. I was going to go to bed but decided to go measure the pressure in the tires of my road bike I tested on the rollers yesterday. Well I was running about 55psi on the rear and less than 30 psi on the front. No wonder I was having a bit of a tough time keeping speed up even in my low gear.
Max pressure for the tires I have on is 90psi so that is as high as I pumped them up. Of course I had to test them. Sure enough I was able to hold a bit higher gear.
I decided that I may as well do a 15 minute session as this would be better than nothing, even after just eating.
I found that my wrist got very sore very quickly. I had just thrown my seat on yesterday without any measurements. I'll put the new seat on tonight and try place the seat in the proper position. I will take some measurements and start some notes on position so future adjustments should be easier.
I got bold enough to start trying different hand positions. I even did half the session on the tri-bars. At first it was a bit hairy to change positions, and shifting gears was very interesting. I am getting the hang of it though :)
I ended up doing a 20 minutes session even though I was only going to try out the higher pressure in the tires.. I did 8.5 kms averaging 25.5 km/hr. I'll have to throw on the HR monitor next time. I also have a Garmin 305 but the pickup for speed and cadence is on the FS in the shop. Will have to wait to get that back to do some training sessions using the Edge 305.
Cheers,
Paul

Monday, February 18, 2008

New Rollers

Well I finally recovered enough from this cold to open up my new rollers from Cycle-Ops.
There was nothing to assemble. I just unfolded the unit, moved the front roller up a place to fit my old 89 Trek 400 and it was ready to roll :)
I had to search around for my seat to the road bike as I took the seat with me in case my butt got bad on the 24 solo run from Hot August Nights. I also had to pump up the tires, but only had my small pump available. I didn't get them up to 100 psi thats for sure.
I think I was probably around 60 psi.
Having never ridden any rollers before and all the talk about doing it in the hall had me a bit worried about the learning curve being long to be able to ride them. I am happy to say that after a couple of 30 seconds spins I felt that I pretty much had the hang of it.
I then did a 15 minute session. I was running a 42x26(lowest) gear and I was finding the resistance was a bit high. Didn't have my HR on so not sure my effort but probably in the 150 range (~85%). This means I can't go much easier than this. I suspect that low tire pressure is the biggest problem. I am also running 700Cx28 tires. My roads are so terrible and I also have a few kms of gravel to do to get to my house.
At any rate I am sure it has to do with the tires and tire pressure and nothing to do with the 40 year old motor that hasn't done any cycling or cardio stuff since November.
I hoping that the increased tire pressure will allow me to ride a bit easier. I think the resistance is a bit high right now for base miles.
Cheers,
Paul

Friday, February 8, 2008

Upgrade Night

I joined a MTB team this year. At least in my mind I am a racer on a MTB team...
I had ordered some rollers for my b-day on the 16th of Jan. They were at the shop for about a week now and I finally picked them up at our one night buy night at the Phat Moose (http://phatmoosecycles.com/) . I'm going to give then a try tonight.
I got the aluminum rollers from Cyclops.
http://www.cycle-ops.com/p-334-aluminum-rollers.aspx
I also picked up a few other goodies :). I ordered a Easton EC90 Carbon Flat Bar. Weight is supposed to be 99 grams! My current bar is GT OE Riser bar with 35mm rise and 7 degree bend. I think it may be steel so I should shed a bit of weight with this switch.
I was toying with getting a new fork but my budget is tight this year with some landscaping planned. I cracked and got myself a Fox F100RCL. The price was too good to pass up and I can always re-coupe my money this year if I resell it.
My current fork is a Suntour SR XCR LO, 100 mm of travel with rebound adjust and lock out. The Fox claimed weight of 3.38 lbs should shave a pound or more plus much better performance.
I was having problems shifting with my SRAM X.5 so I ordered a X.7 for a spare and a X.9 to run as the main derailler. MT GT i-Drive is my first bike with SRAM.
Cheers,
Paul