I CAN'T BELIEVE SHE TOOK ME BACK
IT'S REALLY HARD TO LET GO of something we love. The fear we won't get it back is legit. Yet, the opportunity of enjoying something new...
... is real, and tantalizing.
The known vs the unknown.
Once we move on, that thing we left behind might...
- forget about us
- reject our return
- change and move on
... it's risky.
No, Surfergirl didn't leave me or vice versa.
But!...
... I did leave my beloved TMWC (Tuesday Morning World Championships) for another ride: Wednesday Worlds.
The main reason, and it's very valid, waking up at 5am and rolling out in the cold, dark, pre-dawn was leaving me almost worthless for work the rest of the day.
The lesser reason, I was thinking the blazing intensity of WW would be a better work out.
Well, a funny thing happened when a downloaded the Tuesday vs WW data...
- significantly more time above threshold and VO2 max
- much higher average and normalized power
- and, the best, all my pals were there
... to smack me in the face!
For sure, it helped that the sun was up when I rolled out.
And, I was putting down power on the road vs battling dust, rocks and terrain.
The fellas were all welcoming...
... probably because they knew they'd dump me up The Wall and send me home with a good lycra whipping.
Gawd, I've missed this ride and these awesome cats.
===
165.2
7 hours sleep
480 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 30 push ups, 10 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 30 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
84/83/-9 per Strava
What I'm reading: 7 Powers, The Foundations of Business Strategy, Hamilton Helmer
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
GIVE ME 10 WEEKS
HOW LONG DOES IT REALLY TAKE to get into top shape for an A race is a question we'd all like answered. For an Olympian, it might be years. For us...
... we might have a few months.
Or less.
Depending on when we sign up, and the vagaries of life.
But, let's just say we are fitter than most,
not as fit as some.
Then our focus will be...
- long climbs or power climbs
- slogs into the wind or a million turns
- finishing in ones and two or a ripping bunch sprint
... more on race specific training.
Given a good baseline of fitness, my general rule is...
- our bodies
- our equipment
- our travel and logistics
... it takes 10 weeks to really sharpen the saw.
For me, aiming for Leadville on 8.15.26, I've got time...
... but, no time to waste.
And, so it begins.
===
164.6
8 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level,
√ Upper Body: 60 push ups, 30 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 60 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
81/72/9 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: The Search, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE PREPARATION/EXPECTATION EQUATION
DECONSTRUCTING OUR RECENT PERFORMANCE is critical for improvement. The longer we wait, the foggier our recollection. Details we were sure of...
... become memories full of bias.
It's natural.
Who wants to remember what went wrong, when we can glory in all that went right?
Other than screwing up yet another sprint for the line, nothing really went sideways for me at BWR UT.
And, if I'm being honest, Billy tested my legs on the overpass coming into to town. Whether or not he knew it, and I stayed glued through the the pain...
... I was hurting.
There are a few things that went really right...
- The chef's pasta the night before at Chef Alfredo's, with Danny and Lisa, was delish and just what I needed.
- The AirBNB I found at the last minute - a 3-bedroom house was perfect and the beds wonderful.
- The 8:30 start was a little too late to skip breakfast, so I went with my gut and mowed down a couple of chocolate Entenmann's donuts, half an apple, and a couple of cups of my trusty mushroom hot chocolate.
- I picked up Skratch Super High Carb and ran 6 scoops in my 2-liter pack and another 3 in one bottle.
- To stay ahead of cramps, I ate a Salt Stick chews.
- For the bike set up,
- Ceramic Speed chain held up really well to all the dust, even after getting doused with cold water by Smitty at the final aid station.
- The tire pressure was pretty low, 22lbs in back 20lbs up front. I rimmed out a few times over the random chunky stuff while in a paceline. That's always risky. But, I also felt like I was much more comfortable than other competitors who dropped off the group over time.
... the last was mindset.
Preparation vs Expectation.
I came in pretty rested having spend the previous 2 weeks on my MTB in Park City.
Because of the altitude, it was difficult to put in hard efforts of any meaningful time. Hours in the saddle were solid, but even a lot of that was spent ripping down hill.
I'd give me preparation a B, which was fine for a B race.
Knowing that, my expectations were quite low.
Here's the point...
... poor preparation with high expectations is a formula for frustration and a crummy day on course.
Whereas...
... awesome preparation with low expectations always makes for a fun race and often surprising outcomes.

===
163.6
7.5 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level,
√ Upper Body: 100 push ups, 20 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 70 ATG air squats and 18 split squats with 50lbs
82/74/7 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
IF THINGS AREN'T ENDING UP as we'd like them to, the obvious thing to do would be dong something different. But, that can be a hard pill to swallow because...
... we're comfy and don't wanna change.
Hope isn't a strategy.
Or, a tactic.
So, even though I was hoping I'd be able to fend off the change with a few hundred meters to go at BWR UT, the mofo I'd been working with for the last 30 miles...
... stuck a shiv in my back.
There was nothing I could do.
Had no answer.
Surfergirl, bless her little beating heart, could see I was frustrated with myself and...
... accidentally twisted the buried blade.
What are you going to do about it?
I think it was an innocent, honest, loving, caring question due to the fact that she's seen me frustrated with something...
... then, draw up a solution and make it happen.
Truthfully, does it really matter if close out a racing effort by taking some cat on the line who I may never see again?
Not even.
What matters, to me, is that I execute the plan.
In this case...
... having something left at the end, to rip a fast finish.
The kool kids call that durability.
I call it having your shift together when it counts, which means I'll be needing to...
... wrap up long rides with sprints that sting.
===
164ish no scale
7.5 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/86/-3 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
ARE YOU EXCITED FOR THE RACE TOMORROW?
THE NIGHT BEFORE any race is not a normal night. No matter how practiced we are there's always something different to our routine. Sometimes...
... we just make it up.
Why not?
It might work,
or not.
Surfergirl keeps asking me are you excited?
I wanna say yes,
and I know I will be tomorrow...
... about a millisecond after we start.
Until then,
my energy tends to be low.
Not depressed low.
Hybernation low.
Lethargic.
Slothy.
Trying to amp me up, she asks...
... have you looked at reg to see who's going to be there?
That's the kind of thing that...
- if I glanced at it now
- the night before the race
- when I'm trying to chill and sleep early
... would def keep me up and tossing and turning.
No, that's not my agenda.
I prefer to...
- lose all hope
- ditch all desire
- punt all pretense
... and shut 'er down with my favorite pint.
===
164ish no scale
8.5 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
81/70/11 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
NOSTALGIA
WE ALL STARTED this endurance journey somewhere, likely not where we are today. Introduced by a friend, sometimes on purpose, others inadvertently. While we may change locales, and the friends become distanced…
… we’re still here.
In the game.
We may have the opportunity to go back to where it all started.
For me, it was…
- my roommate’s bike
- a finagled purchase of my own
- secrets of sprinting revealed by Bret, who raced track nationally for San Jose Bicycle Club
… in Provo, UT.
I rearranged my classes…
- to start as early as possible
- so I could ride every afternoon
- before cruising the library to cruise the cubicles in search of a “study” partner.
… because I had priorities to attend to.
Today I hit a climb I’d always wanted to check out, Cascade Springs, but it was a battered gravel road back in the day.
Now, it’s pristine pavement all the way up over 8000’
Followed by a plummeting descent that is as magical now as it was 40 years ago.
I’ve moved,
but, I never really moved on…
… and, I’m quite okay with that.
===
164ish no scale
8.5 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
81/68/12 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE TRUE PRICE OF FREE ADVICE
A WHILE BACK, I connected with the COO of a well-known bike brand. We were working on a collaboration at the time. I asked him for some...
... advice on what we're doing over here.
Today, we met for lunch.
Looked at from now to the end of the year,
the objectives I want to accomplish,
what I think is possible.
No different than...
- capabilities
- weaknesses
- peak seasonal events
... planning the race season with a coach.
After some yummy tacos,
and back of napkin calculations...
... we came up with a solid methodology to implement.
Like any great coach,
my friend made it so simple to understand...
... and gave me the confidence to go for it.
I was prepared to pay a minimum of $1,000.
In the end it could be way more expensive than that...
... if I don't take action.
It could cost me 100s of 1000s.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/77/5 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
ARE SUFFERING AND EPICCING TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN?
WE ALL KNOW that group workouts are torturous by nature. It's not a secret. Yet, we continue to show up beating after beating because...
... suffering loves company.
Alone, for most of us, is no good.
We won't see it through,
we'll ease up when we should be hardening up.
The bonds we end up forming are often unbreakable...
... we're in agony together.
Suddenly people who barely knew each other are fist bumping and ready for the next one.
What's the opposite bondforming experience?...
... when we're pushing geographic boundaries together.
Like today.
It wasn't the 90 minute climb topping out at 9160'.
Nope.
It was the 60 minutes of downhill...
- ripping through the trees
- sliding around gorgeous berms
- jumping rocks and roots and stumps
... feeling like we were cheating life.
Epiccing, like suffering, loves company.
We set off in search of adventures that will push beyond the comforts or riding around the block...
... the unknown and undiscovered beckoning to be shared.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/71/10 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
COOCOO FOR CLIMBING
IF WEIGHTED SQUATS are a lot better than air squats, is climbing a lot better than riding on the flats? And, if climbing is better...
... is climbing with a weighted vest mo' bettah?
Things one wonders.
And takes to extremes.
I remember backintheday, rolling out with 100oz hydration pack on my back and 2 large waterbottles filled with sand.
It seems so silly now,
almost as all the ruckers.
On a bike we can measure power.
So, we know.
We know we don't need to stress our backs with extra weight or stupid add ons...
... we can just pedal faster.
Velocity X Force - Power
Which taken a step further...
... climbing aint gonna train us any better than flats.
We gotta put out the power.
There is a caveat, if we like...
- climbing big mountains
- ripping punchy stuff
- pounding the flats
... our bodies will adapt and become more efficient at the one we love and gravitate towards.
Me personally?
I'm coocoo for climbing,
and bananas for bombing.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
80/63/17 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
HEAR ME OUT
SOMETIMES IT'S JUST PLAIN FUN to make fun of Velo, "powered by Outisde". Whether it's their clickbaity titles, AI drivel, or soulselling advertorials...
... there's at least one good laugh a day.
Here's my current favorite.
Stop Complaining About Sound, These Are The Best Headphones for Cycling
Roight!
Because decreasing our ability to engage with our surroundings when traveling 20+ miles per hour in our underwear on...
- trails
- gravel
- pavement
... is a great idea.
Genius.
Next up...
... Stop Complaining About Night Vision, These Are The Best Sunglasses After Sunset.
There is no best.
At best, assuming it's not clickbait or advertorial would be...
... These Headphones Least Worsen Your Ability To React To Danger When Riding.
Or, for the trailrunners...
... These Earbuds Reduce Getting The Shift Scared Out of You When A Bike Rider Has Been Saying 'Hey There' For 5 Minutes and Finally Gives Up and Passes You.
Now for you in the back jumping up and down ready to tell me to not be so closeminded...
... I hear you.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/72/10 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
>
POP TART POWERED, BEE STUNG... ATHLETE unINTELLIGENCE
SOMETIMES, we just gotta change it up. Do something different just fer fun. Go against...
... conventional wisdom.
I thought it had been a good week...
- 177 miles
- 17:26 hours
- 20951' of vert
... given I'd been knocked down by a 24 hour bug.
Mostly in the dirt,
mostly with friends.
Yet, every single ride Strava's Athlete Intelligence...
... scored it as recovery or recovery and endurance.
Apparently, the AI couldn't account for the fact this sea leveler was suffering at 7000-10,000 elevation.
Rolling out this morning...
- a few scoops of Envy
- 4 pop tarts
- 1 Carbs gel
... I grabbed what I had + 100 ounces of water.
While I hoped to put down some power, since all I'd done was "recovery and endurance" rides...
... I knew the truth.
Leaving with a simple plan,
ride until I ran out of food and water.
It was an epic day in the mountains...
... topped off with a bee sting in the gut a few miles from home base.
Memorable.


===
164
9 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/0 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE ADVENTURE
SOMETIMES, the road really is better than the inn. We realize that whatever we are aiming for may not be all that great, but...
... putting in the work gives outsized returns.
Gratitude blooms.
Like today.
My pal Charles charts out this loop...
- 32 miles
- 4700' of vert
- topping out at 10,000'
... which seems really cool.
Until we hit our first massive fallen tree and bushwhack around it.
Then, patches of snow,
too long to ride.
Followed Puke Hill.

The view...
- The Great Salt Lake to the west
- Park City to the East
- Not a soul around
... stunning.
Somehow the goals seem weak, lacking...
... when beauty abounds.
If we'll just stop to look.
===
165ish, no scale
7ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/72/10 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHEN TRAINING ISN'T ACCORDING TO PLAN
THE BEST LAID PLANS can go sideways for a variety of reasons. I'm not gonna list 'em since I don't want to poison your mind and have you...
... manifesting awfulness.
'Cause I'm questioning just that about myself.
Did I manifest...
- 3 days off at I Do Epic
- riding with friends short on time
- puking my guts out last night after a miserable 70 minute ride
... or, is it just life?
Doesn't matter too much,
except part of my GrandMasterRipOnRaceDay plan...
... was a massive training week this week to make up for last week
and leave me slightly buried for BWR next week.
I consulted AI all night...
- possibly caused by using pure table sugar on my rides
- hydration via room temp peppermint tea
- a few Tums
... while Surfergirl laughed at me and secured the remedy.
Arose after 10 hours, feeling a lot better.
Energy seems good enough to day...
... to meet up with the local slayers.
The prudent thing would be to skip the meet up,
spin at most, or sleep...
... a proper adjustment.
But, screw it...
... I've got plans, too.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
80/57/22 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
HE'S A GENIUS
WE ALL HAVE, or should have, wish we had, that friend who can fix anything. Even though we've upped our skills over the years there's always that...
... next level repair.
We can't do it.
Like my SID fork, today...
- packing in on descents
- rebound slower than a sloth
- adjustment dials backing out and loose
... I was in a bind.
Turns out the great C Gonzer lives where I'm visiting,
racing pals from a decade ago.
Within about about 20 minutes,
he had it working nearly good as new.
How'd you learn how to do this?
I just really like working on my bikes.
That's it?
Well, I am a mechanical engineer by trade.
That's it...
- love what we do
- study the basics
- achieve mastery
... genius level work.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
80/57/23 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: Feeling Is The Secret, by Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
GETTING HIGH
TRAINING AT SEA LEVEL is no way to prepare for high elevation activities. Sure we have extra oxygen to go hard, which is always nice. But, it'd be even nicer...
... to be able to rip when high.
Which begs the question...
... why am I working so darn hard, putting out so little power?
Nah, that's obvious.
Kinda.
90 minutes into the ride today,
we'd been ripping up Big Mountain Pass (f'real).
Challenging?
Yes.
Wheezing?
Yes.
Gapped?
Indeed.
Here's the rill dill...
... even though the power is relatively low,
the breathing is labored.
Which presents a realhonesttogoodness truth...
- breathing too hard
- not thinking 100% clearly
- focusing on staying on pace
... it's hard to stay on top of the hydration and nutrition at altitude significantly above our normal.
We, me especially, gotta force it.
Another important consideration at high elevations...
... it's better to pace on HR than PWR.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/71/12 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: Feeling Is The Secret, by Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
SETTLING...
THE IDEA OF SETTLING, for most of us, is repulsive. We'd never do that because our standards are too high...
... or, so we think.
Because we don't know better.
Welp,
today I realized
I've totally been settling.
While we do have trails to ride near home...
- skinny single track with rain ruts
- weeds elbow high
- punch climbs
... it's nothing like Utah..
Today, outside of Kamas was incredible.
My pals, PViddy and TimmyV, had been telling me it was great up here.
But, c'mon...
- smooth, fast and flowy
- adorned with greenery and trees
- berms so perfect the suspension compresses as you no-brake it
... expertly engineered trials.
Waywaywaywayway better than my home trails.
Once we know we're settling the only question is...
... what are we gonna do about it?
===
165ish, no scale
8ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/61/21 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
A GOOD BREAK
TAKING TIME OFF can be restorative. Sometimes it's on purpose, other times its an unplanned forced situation. Either way...
... we're anxious to get back at it.
Like right now.
Being that I was committed to be all in at the biz conference...
... I skipped the last few days.
Including the typical epic Saturday.
Everything feels really good except my gut, which is feeling quite bloated...
... after lots of good food.
I suppose that's part of the anxiety, not...
- the drop in fitness
- the packed on pounds
- the connecting with the crew
... the sensation of being a caged animal.
Some might caution,
don't over do it.
A fair warning if working back from an injury.
But, this belly is yellin' at me,
get after it,
right now.
Can't wait to start shedding and shredding manana.
(I've got 10 days to turn it around before BWR UT)
===
165ish, no scale
78ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/63/20 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
>
AI DRIVEN?
AI could be all it's cracked up to be, if we can only learn how to use it to our benefit. But, new things can be...
... a challenge to learn.
Even scary.
One of the take aways on day 3 of I Do Epic was regarding AI,
and it got me thinking about racing...
... because as we say, Racing is life!.
My grand takeaway is AI's ability to deliver what we are looking for has much to do with regarding the prompts.
For example, knowing what you know about me...
... create a training program as if you were Javier Sola
Just like us at a race,
AI needs its head screwed on straight in order to deliver.
And a proper prompt is the starting point.
Making it human...
... what is the main prompt driving our training?
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/73/12 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WE CALL IT SPOOKED
THE UNMISTAKABLE ENERGY of the start line can be overwhelming for the uninitiated. We feel it the moment we arrive at an event, and when we line up the vibe can take us...
... from confident and courageous to literal shaking.
Plans melting.
Rather than the controlled missile launch we'd imagined, we are overcome by the complete chaos of undirected explosions.
And, that's okay,
until we want a different outcome.
On Day 2 of I Do Epic, we spent much the day in a massive barn learning how a master horse trainer teaches and guides the beasts with energy vs force.
Demonstrating the animal's sensitivity to each other in the herd as well as to us humans, as we approached and worked with the horses.
Thankfully, the inanimate endurance tools we depend on...
- bicycles
- helmets
- shoes
... cannot sense our moods or energy.
Can you imagine mounting a spooked bicycle?
I've often wondered how I am able to reach a place of calm and certainty with hundreds, sometimes thousands, of my "closest friends"...
... so close to losing it?
I don't have a good answer other than...
- a safe race
- an unleashing of the training put in
- finishing knowing there was nothing left in the tank
... experience and expectation.
But, the old cowboy did share one nugget that really resonated with me...
... We create what we anticipate.
===
165ish, no scale
8ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
87/84/3 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
START WHERE YOU ARE
TRAVEL BRINGS IT'S OWN CHALLENGES when it comes to maintaining our fitness. Will we have time, will there be space, do we have the equipment...
... will we even want to?
Have the energy?
When I signed up for I Do Epic Live in the hinterlands of Idaho, I figured we'd be starting early and ending late so...
- 27 hours
- 380 miles
- 27000' of vert
... I made sure I'd put in a large training block prior.
Taking a break made sense, but...
... a funny thing happened when I woke up.
I had two and half hours to kill,
while situated on the shore of the Snake river,
with a lovely and lonely gravel road echoing my vibe.
My original plan was out...
- a long walk
- a ton of push ups
- a million air squats
... a quick and glorious spin was in.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
89/97/-8 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
I WANTED TO STOP SO BAD
GETTING AFTER IT for a long period of time can be a beautiful thing, if we are in the right mindset and our bodies are prepared...
... and we're used to it.
Even addicting.
But, if our head's not into it,
our bodies not prepped,
it's been a while...
... quitting looks might tasty.
Like today.
There we were, riding up one of the most beautiful climbs in Utah, the Alpine Loop...
- few cars on the road
- perfect spring weather
- forever views up into the snowpack
... a coupla dudes riding a good fast tempo.
And, about 45 minutes in...
... I wanted to pull over.
Have a smoke, errr bite of my bar,
dip my toes in the stream.
It would have been so easy,
and lovely.
Which is why I didn't do it.
Because I know from experience pushing through these moments is...
... what it takes to finish anything strong.
Well, and the reward of a chocolate chip cookie at Sundance...
... would be that much sweeter.
===
165.8/12.7%
7ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
91/107/-17 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE OTHER CROSSTRAINING
IF WE'RE IN A RELATIONSHIP of any kind we're most likely going to be exposed to activities which don't perfectly align with...
... our primary objective.
Got it?
Yeah, we get it.
The thingaboutitis...
... it's usually more than okay.
Surfergirl loves to hike.
Any time we're roadtripping and I'm in a hurry to get to the beddown...
... she's plotting a once in a life time hike.
Like today,
just after 6pm
3 hours from our destination...
... we absolutely had to hike Kolob canyon for no less than 2 hours!
Yes, that's an explanation point because...
... old diesels need their beauty sleep
Her "reward" for this detour is me stretching out while she drives, which I'm pretty sure...
... she purposely fakes like she's tired and unnecessarily jerks the wheel so I'll get behind it.
While I have to admit the hike was outstanding, and served to remind me that I should do some regular hiking to prepare for the potential to be hiking at Leadville...
...it's pretty clear I have not properly trained her on driving in a relaxing and soothing manner nor bowing down to the needs of her old man's sleep.
===
165.8/12.7%
7.5ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
no Stretches
88/98/-9 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
>
BECAUSE I ASKED...
MEMORIAL DAY IS A BUSY ONE around here. All kinds of people out enjoying the day: runnin, bikin, swimmin, surfin, paddlin...
... things were chaotic.
I got a late start.
Preferring to get some work knocked and start prepping the van for our road trip...
... I slipped out just past noon.
There is a steep hill above a picturesque beach that attracts locals, nonlocals and everyone in between.
At the top, I saw an older woman lugging two chairs for her and her ancient father.
Normally, I'd just wiggle around them and the rest and go on about my day...
... but I remembered.
Hi there, can I help you with those chairs?
Oh, yes, please.
Leaned my bike on a palm tree.
Let's go down a little bit more, where it's a little flatter.
C'mon dad, over here.
This looks pretty good.
Thank you.
No problem.
How did you know we needed help, nobody else noticed?
Oh, I prayed I'd be useful today.
With that, I was off on a lovely tour of the southern part of our county...
... pavement, gravel roads and single track.
You're probably thinking Nice virtue signal Todd...
... to which I'll say, thinking of others is not my default or my strong suit.
I have to work at getting my heart to be fully functional.
===
165.8/12.7%
8.5ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
91/113/-22 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE RANDOMNESS OF PROGRESS
NICHING DOWN is a legit way to go about maximizing results. We study the experts, learn all we can, put it into practice. The goal is...
... supreme mastery.
But, is narrow and deep the only way to get it done?
The best way?
Personally, I think I've learned more studying endurance athletes and coaches from other sports than I have focusing on bike racing.
Maybe, probably, there is more literature and research available.
Here are a few of my favorites
- running - Born To Run, Christopher McDougall
- triathlon - anything by Phil Maffetone
- swimming - Total Immersion Method, Terry Laughlin
- natural fitness - Natural Born Heroes, Christopher McDougall
... because they introduced me to new ways of thinking about endurance and fitness.
Bringing in randomness to our experience...
- events
- people
- travel
... can deliver game-changing progress hacks.
If we'll just open our ears, eyes, hearts.
===
165.8/12.7%
7.5ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
88/99/-11 per Strava
>
AFTER TAKING SEVERAL READINGS
SIMULATING OUR 'A' EVENTS months in advance can be quite revealing, in bad...
... and good ways.
Once, isn't enough.
Every weekend is too much.
It's not a damned if we do,
damned if we don't situation.
More like a...
- damn?
- damn!
- hot damn!
... outcome.
With that in mind I turned to Grok to help me assess today's simulation because...
- what happens if I cut ballast?
- what workouts would improve my time?
- are there supplements that aid lung function at altitude?
... AI is damn fine when it comes to crunching numbers.

Because I'm a true and proud supernerd...
- 2 previous attempts in last 7 years
- body weight on those days
- power numbers as well
... I have the data, going back years.
I put Grok to work...
- I can improve
- I'm in a pretty good place already
- This is gonna be a heckuva lotta fun
... and came out with what I already sensed.
Grok thinks I can beat my previous PR,
which seems absolutely ludicrous...
... mainly because I have a lot of higher value things I want to accomplish this summer.
This is a typical use of AI for me...
- confirm/test/explore what's possible
- learn how to do things I can't figure out
- assist in leveraging my tiny helmet covered bean's processing power
... are you using AI to evaluate and make moves?
As the great Wille Nelson sings...
... After taking several readings I'm surprised to find my mind's (and body) still fairly sound.






















===
167/12.7% oof!
7.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
90/114/-24 per Strava went kinda deep today
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
IT'S A LONE WOLF'S WORLD
NO MATTER HOW MANY friends are planning to do the A event with us, regardless of how many weekends we link up to train together...
... the bulk of our efforts are alone.
Unseen.
By nearly everybody, except that neighbor who we pass by at the same...
... godforbidden time each dark morning.
We're on the hunt...
- miles
- skills
- fortitude
... for more.
And even when we do link up, if we're truly committed...
... we might breakup, or off.
For example, I'm committed to ride a spritely tempo between all the worthy climbs tomorrow...
... where I'll move into the bottom to mid-threshold.
Because that's gonna be my pace at the A race,
and I've really got to train it now,
to maintain it then.
So, yeah, 7 miles up the climb I'll probably be alone...
... just like I'll most likely be on raceday.
Which is why I'm working on this jersey to where in in Leadville.

Personally, I feel like an inspirational, personalized jersey is good for...
... a 1-2% increase in performance.
If you're of the same persuasion...
- super aero jersey
- amazing imported Italian fabrics
- no minimum order required, make just 1
... go here: https://pedalindustries.com/pages/start-a-project
===
165.6/12.7% (time to start trimming blubber)
8.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
85/82/2 per Strava (time to bump these numbers up)
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
13 WEEKS SHOULD BE ENOUGH
AT SOME POINT, the training for the A event has gotta get real. Sure we have our base miles just because we are base-ically addicted, but...
... that's not gonna cut it.
Gotta get specific.
As of this moment, I'm 13 weeks out from starting the Leadville Trail 100.
It'll be my 8th time.
While I know the drill, I also know...
... I'm nowhere near ready.
Haven't done an hour long climb...
... since I don't know when.
Haven't ridden over 5 hours since October.
Haven't ridden my MTB more than twice a week in ages...
... haven't
haven't
haven't
haven't
haven't.
Equally overwhelming and energizing...
... the challenge is elephant-sized.
And, I'm gonna attack it one mile at a time.
===
164.6/12.5%
8.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
86/89/-4 per Strava
>
STRETCH GOALS
STRETCHING seems to go in and out of popularity. When, how long, which moves are a essential...
... and that's not counting yoga and pilates.
Where to start?
That's a good question.
I'm no expert, which is why I check in with my physical therapy pal, Scott, from time to time.
Mostly when I'm miserable
or injured.
Which got me thinking.
The last couple of days my bike fit felt like it had changed...
... which is impossible, right?
Then, I thought...
... could my body have changed somehow?
Thinking back on my many visits with Scott...
... and how stretches had fixed various aches and debilitating pains.
It hit me like a ton of lycra!
I haven't been stretching regularly,
at all.
Got back at it this morning...
... dang, I'm stiff!
But, guess what...
... the bike fit felt back to awesome.
Stretch goals are the kind that have us reaching to our limits to accomplish what seems nigh impossible...
... I like setting those.
New/old stretch goal...
... stretch every night as part of my shutdown sequence.
===
163.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
680 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
86/91/-6 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHAT MASTERING THE BASICS LOOKS LIKE
THE VERY BEST PROS have mastered the basics. From techniques to tools, from sleeping to sprinting. They have it...
... all down cold.
How do we know?
Because at the very the very best are still practicing the basics...
... only the output is at a much higher level.
Duh!
Yeah, I know.
But, the real question is are we chasing...
- fads
- trends
- shiny objects
... or working diligently on mastering the basics?
===
163.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/83/1 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
FROM FLOOR TO CEILING
BUILDING FITNESS can appear to be a mystery to the uninitiated. For the reasons, holding onto it is illusive. And losing it...
... downright easy.
It's a shame.
If the unwashed simply established a floor...
- a minimum daily commitment
- built over weeks
- and months
... they'd find their ceiling to be nearly limitless.
Instead, they get the bug or come clean with their naked selves...
... and progress rapidly for a short season.
Get thrown off track,
and start over.
We know different.
Our floor maybe is simple as getting outta bed and kitting up...
... knowing it's easy to get out the front door at that point.
After that, it's just a matter of raising the floor...
... to see how high we can fly.
Things I think about while riding zone two for 2 hours...
... because that was my floor today.
And, I always ride on Mondays.
===
165.6/12.7%
8ish hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
86/90/-4 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
PRISONS WE CHOOSE TO LIVE INSIDE
>
HOW FAR SHOULD WE TAKE OUR BRO-SCIENCE?
ONCE WE FIGURE OUT the gear and products that work for our bodies, it's, honestly, just amazing. It fits. It works. And we stick with it...
... because we rip.
Easy.
We don't want to change.
That can be a problem if what we love goes out of stock or worse...
... out of production all together.
A few years back, when Wahoo acquired Speedplay they dumped my tried and MTB pedals.
The Frogs.
Had I known, I'd have purchased at least 10 pair of pedals and probably 100 sets of cleats.
To my horror, I logged on and learned the sadsad news.
No mas.
When I woke and realized I was out of my favorite carb mix today...
- water
- plain ol' sugar
- and Liquid IV for flavor and electrolytes
... well, yeah, I took a stab a making my own.
You should witnessed the...
- disgust
- concern
- warnings
... from the crew when we stopped to refill our bottles midride.
I shared my mix was 4 tablespoons of sugar...
- you're gonna get diabetes
- go into a coma
- die early
... I could only laugh.
Just what exactly do you think is in your favorite powder or gel?
I got the idea from an ultra-trail runner I follow on YouTube.
He'd wanted to experiment and discovered how sucrose...
- quickly absorbed glucose
- more slowly absorbed fructose
... breaks down in the small intestine.
It's a 1:1 ration,
most high end mixes are 1:.8.
Ever look at the ingredients of what you're drinking?
My 4 very level tablespoons = 50 grams of carbohydrate.
But, isn't that gonna kill ya?
It's about the same as a can of Coke,
or a couple of candy bars.
So, yes, it will absolutely...
- crush our health
- give us that orange with 4 toothpicks look
- and lead to all kinds of degenerative diseases
... unless we are ripping and burning it up.
That 50 grams is about 50% of what I consume per hour...
... when getting after it.
How'd it work over 3 bottles?
Flawlessly.
Gonna test full strength this week.
This is bro-science...
... so take it with a literal and proverbial grain of salt.
===
166/12.7%
8ish hours sleep
660 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/88/-3 per Strava
>
FIRST (TASTE OF) BLOOD
WE'RE LIKE WILD ANIMALS. Once we get the first taste of adrenalin, charging through the countryside...
... with reckless abandon.
We're hooked.
The thingaboutitis...
... we gotta get that first taste.
16 years ago, my pal Dr. Jeff couldn't keep from...
... slobbering all over me.
About gravel riding.
You would love it.
Seems kinda lame.
Trust me.
Tell me why.
Well, it'a a combination of two things you love: road and mtb.
And it's fun?
Oh yes!
It took me 5 years to finally see a signal...
- steel
- heavy
- leather bags
... a lonely gravel bike on sale at the local bike shop.
I thought it was radical to ride the tires at such low pressure...
- 38mm
- 60 lbs
- with tubes
... now I'm on tubeless carbon hoops, rolling 18 up front 20 in the back.
So much has improved!
For the first year or more I rode gravel alone...
... like a lunatic in the wild.
It took 5 more years till a few of us were getting together...
... and another 3ish to do what we did today.
Ruckus URBN GRVL group rides.
In town for the weekend, Jeff joined us for today's masterpiece...
... I'm not sure he made the connection on the impact he's had on us.

===
165.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
6200 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
88/101/-14 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
STOP BEING MEDIUM
THERE'S A REASON so many of us struggle to improve. Especially the newest of us...
... doing all we can to hang on.
Never improving.
I heard it said so well and succinctly today by one of my fave running coaches, the great Fred Duncan.
The question how much work we can survive in one session, it's...
- hard
- easy
- hard, again
... how many high quality outputs can we stack over weeks and months and years?
If we aren't resting, active-recovering we can't go hard enough on our hard days to see any improvement...
... we become really excellent at medium.
And, stay there.
Which is fine, if you're into that sorta thing.
But, I know you're not.
Which brings up today's ride...
- 23 miles
- ave HR 93
- ave PWR 102
... we did the impossible.
I say impossible because it's nearly impossible to get a group of athletes together and not start pushing...
... we pulled it off by setting the tone ahead of time.
The BRO ride is a super easy conversational cruiser...
... because bros need bro time.
Before slaying it on the weekend.
If you want to do a deeper dive on Fred's post it's here: https://x.com/Fred__Duncan/status/2055274916199502322?s=20
===
164.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/75/8 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
ZONE TWO MUCH
ANYBODY CAN RIDE ZONE 2. It's easy. Zone 1 is easy. Coasting is easier. The trick is...
... to stay there.
For a long time.
The past few months I've been doing my Z2 on the mountain bike,
on kinda steep trails.
Not spinning,
a lot of torque...
... then completely off when descending.
Which is somewhat easier than what I did today...
- keeping on the pedals
- with high cadence
- limited coasting
... Zone 2 on mainly flat, with a few rollers.
Turns out 2:80 spend doing...
- 90 minutes Z2
- 31 min Z1
- 9 min z3
... is it's own kinda hard.
1261 calories burned ain't nothing.
The mental game to stay at a given pace and basically never stop pedaling...
... regardless of the terrain.
I know you zwifties are wanting to mock me,
and I'm totally down with how much harder
it can be on a trainer.
I get it.
The real point is this kind of training...
... is extremely effective at building physical and mental endurance.
===
165.2/12.4%
8ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/83/1 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE EMOTIONAL ROLLERCOASTER OF MID-WEEK RACING
MID-WEEK RACING has been around for ages and continues to endure because it's great training, fun to bring the community together...
... and get in some ripping intensity.
400 showed up to race Over The Hump last night.
A very healthy number of age group competitors...
... ready to battle.
I've missed the last two seasons,
so it was exciting to finally make it out.
I entered Elite 45+ looking to see how I'd rate.
Warming up,
I saw a lot of friends.
But, I was missing one.
My pal Eric was senselessly killed last year while riding his bike early in the morning, by a druggy.
After a decade of racing together...
- bro hugging each week
- seeing his babies grow up
- and turn into fine little racers
... there was a hole in my heart.
On the start line,
the energy was high,
the confidence eager.
We shot out.
I maneuvered leading into the first single track,
thinking okay this feels right.
There was only one solid climb,
20 minutes of redlining.
From leading,
to wheezing,
to 7th.
Ouch!
The downhill was a couple of miles long,
and it felt good - even PRd it.
Sliding out onto the double track,
I could see 5th and 6th,
and closed the gap.
Two of the three of us were pulling hard back to the finish line.
Just as we're about to hit the final single track before the finish,
we're caught by some of the guys we'd dropped.
At the same time,
we enter the tight turns we merge with the Beginners and Sport racers.
It's not pretty.
Some of us give the slower riders space,
others mob through.
I go from 5th to 8th.
Frustrated.
Upset about getting beat by the dude who wasn't pulling with us.
Finishing,
I stormed off.
Not my finest moment.
After a recovery drink and some spinning...
- reveling in my anger
- knowing it would motivate me
- looking forward to some specific training
... I realized how great it is to be racing.
Once I'd changed into my tshirt and jeans, I had time to reflect...
- we live in a free and prosperous country
- have the time and energy for mid-week racing
- I'm feeling 100% recovered from my TBI, while Eric is riding in the heavens and his family navigates life without him.
... and be extremely grateful.
===
165.2/12.4%
8ish hours sleep
590 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/83/1 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
CONSISTENCY IS BORING AND...
THERE'S BEEN A LOT OF CHATTER on the interwebs regarding what happens by simply being consistent. What is often left out is the biggest battle...
... which must be won.
Boredom.
That's what the naysayers are thinking as we head out into the morning sunrise doing the unfathomable.
Sure, it can be monotonous to do the same workout over and over.
But, we aren't newbs or drones and know how to counter that by mixing it up, and socializing with likeminded beasts.
With unholy motivation we focus...
... on the rewards.
Months and years later,
we're nothing like the person we started out as.
Consistency might look boring to an outsider, but...
... we know it's lethal.
===
165.6/12.6%
7.5ish hours sleep
710 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/-4 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
DANGEROUS ENCOUNTERS
THERE'S DANGER just crossing the street. But, people do it and a lot more because it's part of life. We, on the other hand...
... like to raise the stakes.
Ignoring the warnings.
For years, I have casually read the signs regarding mountain lions and rattle snakes on our local trails and all over the western US.
In the process I've...
- a close up encounter with a big cat
- run over many sunbathing snakes
- stared down coyotes
... had one real scare and many thrills.
The cat was the most shocking.
I thought I was seeing a large loping coyote way up the gravel road.
Not uncommon.
Keep going.
Kept seeing as elevation changed.
Rounded a corner only to see a giant cat perpendicular to the road.
Staring at me.
Didn't do what you're supposed to do...
- stand your ground
- make yourself look bigger
... back pedaled and ripped up a single track, braking to make the turn at the top.
Went back to that spot many, many times,
raced up that hill as fast as possible...
... never came close to needing to brake to make the turn at the top.
That my friends is living.
===
165.6/12.6%
7.5ish hours sleep
710 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/4 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
TIMING
TIMING IS EVERYTHING, and there is so much to be timed when it comes to racing. To time anything to perfection necessitates...
... starting very early.
Ultimately, requiring less energy.
We saw this today at the Giro.
The winning sprinter producing fewer watts than 2nd or 3rd place...
- 1480w
- 1870w
- 1580w
... making it look easy(er).
Because he timed his acceleration perfectly.
Not unlike sprinting for the line, the great Scott Adams stated...
... the secret to success is energy management.
Which helped me lean into doing my best and most important work early in the day when I'm most alert and creative.
What else...
- workouts
- relationships
- spiritual exploits
... can we improve with better timing?
===
165.2/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
680 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/87/-2 per Strava
>
BLAME IT ON THE DONUT
STAYING ON TOP OF THE RECOVERY is super easy to skip. Especially, if we are really on top of it...
... day after day.
We're rested.
When the opportunity presents itself to overdo it...
... we do it.
We think we'll be fine.
We aren't going to do die, but...
... we will be less than fine.
Like today.
After shortchanging myself on sleep two nights in a row,
getting talked into more than easy spinning,
skipping the hyper-ice sessions...
... all variables I couldashoulda controlled,
I suffered today.
The sting of ripping,
felt stale and suffocating.
When looked back on the data...
- on trails I've ridden
- raced up
- stomped
... I actually set some PRs.
The difference when between being fatigued vs fresh is stark...
... longfaced-droopy vs JUBILANT.
Eventually, I succumbed to the efforts,
pulling the plug halfway up a steepytechy...
... and limped to the donut shop.
Where, after a few moments and calories and water I miraculously...
... felt very fauxfresh!
===
165.2/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
6500 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
87/100/-13 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
BRO!
ALL RACING AND TRAINING ain't the way to do it. The ubersuccessful connect with others on a deeper level, it's the glue we need...
... to help us hold it all together.
Not the training and racing.
Life.
Some say getting out and getting after is...
... cheap therapy.
I won't argue with that.
Getting out, and away, for a conversational workout...
... can be life changing.
Lifesaving.
But, we already know that.
Most of our friends don't,
or don't make the time,
or have the friendship.
Which got me out on the road way earlier than I wanted to today,
because I knew my pal had been traveling a ton,
and could squeeze in a ride.
And got me thinking...
- early start
- easy terrain
- all bikes welcome
... why not create a BRO ride?
Details in the image.
(Surfergirl has had this going with the Trail Angels for decades).
===
165.6/12.6%
7.5ish hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/84/0 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
BEST EFFORTS OSCILLATE
DOING OUR BEST. We hear from the time we take our first steps, through our teens, into adulthood. Then we preach it...
... to anyone who will listen.
Because it works.
As the great Tony Horton used to say on the P90X videos...
.. do your best, and forget the rest.
It's a legit way to live, except...
... our best oscillates.
We can get better at our best...
... is there anything more exciting than knowing that?
I found a fun features on Strava today.
The Best Efforts Power Curve has a little box we can check and...
... Show Estimated FTP.
The last 6 weeks I've been pretty dialed.
According to the app I've raced FTP 10 watts.
The feedback is helpful.
Knowing we can improve...
... is a devine gift.
===
165.6/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
680 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
86/91/-5 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
GO BIG, PUNK!
THROWING THE GEARS TO THE BIG RING used to be much more of a thing. With the advent of 13-speed, not so much. Lot's of 1x drivetrains...
... making things simpler.
Better...
- lighter
- more aero
- cleaner look
... depends on the use case.
MTB started it all,
can't even buy one with 2x.
Gravel bikes are mostly there,
some 2x systems.
Road and TT have special use for 1x.
Track and BMX have always kept it clean and simple.
Anyway, there I was this morning doing my dawgawn bestest to try and recapture my PR from Jan 2026 on a segment called Pain Cave because...
... who wants to just cruse home after hammerin'?

And it dawned on me...
... back in Jan I forced myself to stay in the big ring all the way up the steeps.
Did it work?
Kinda.
Knocked 2:47 off of last week's tepid attempt...
... still 48 seconds off the PR.
I looked back at my scale logs...
... I'm 2 lbs heavier, .5% higher in body fat.
Then my weight training...
... I'm doing a lot more leg work Sunday and Monday.
Probably not a great way to prep for Wednesday.
Lastly I looked at time spent in Zone 4 or above...
... 48 min in Jan vs 49 min today.
I'll take another cracky at it...
- come in lighter
- more rested
- caffeinated
... attacking with punk blazing style.
Check 'em out: https://pedalindustries.com/collections/pedal-punk-collection
===
165.6/12.6%
8ish hours sleep
710 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
86/92/-7 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE SUPER SUCCESSFUL DIET THAT IS POTENTIALLY KILLING OUR POTENTIAL
THERE ARE A LOT OF SUCCESSFUL plans to decrease our extra ballast. Perhaps the most powerful is one that we rarely actually apply to getting lean...
... yet allow to dictate our ultimate potential.
Case in point.
Eat the same meal, day after day...
... we'll get sick of it.
Eat less.
Waste away.
Lose muscle.
It's just a fact.
Yet, we do that same thing...
- same group rides
- same strength work
- same A race targeted
... with so much of our activities.
The inertia against improvement is overwhelming.
We can't do more,
become more.
We stall,
or worse,
we give it all up.
And why not?
It's become boring.
However, who can blame even the most monk-like amongst us who pack on the pounds because...
... there are so many amazing food choices to be had.
These days, living in any kind of a city, even the smallest, there can be found really creative and fun dining experiences.
We can eat more,
yes, become more.
Maybe not the more we are looking for.
If we're really going to reach new heights...
- new groups
- new strength work
- new A races targeted
... we must mix it up.
PS this applies to everything: love, family, business, sprituality.
===
164.6/12.6%
8ish hours sleep
720 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/3 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHY COACHING IS MAGICAL?
REACHING OUT TO THOSE we think are in the know is pretty common practice. We can glean a lot. Getting serious about outcomes and...
... hiring a coach is next level.
#worth-it
I was thinking about this because last week I had two different people reach out to me about training questions.
Asking for my input.
Here's the dill.
For the most part a coach...
... isn't going to wave a wand and fix us.
What we're really paying a coach to do is...
... to tell us what we don't want to hear and hold us accountable.
It's rarely a question of knowing what to do.
Much more a question of willingness to do it.
And, ya know, when you're payin' for it...
... it does magically work.
(and, I heckuvalot faster than wingin' it)
===
166/12.7%
8ish hours sleep
730 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/87/-2 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
MASTERY OF THIS LAW = MASTERY ON RACEDAY
THERE IS AN UNDERAPPRECIATED MIRACLE all racers experience, yet often fail to recognize or implement in everyday life. If we did...
... who knows what we could accomplish.
Parkinson's Law.
Regardless of the distance or event...
... given a set of parameters,
a cohort of competitors,
we go faster.
Nobody signs up for a marathon with the idea of finishing...
... When I get around to it.
We laser in on the distance, time required, prep like mad...
... and execute.
Parkinson's Law...
... Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.
We know this because on the week of the A race...
... we magically get all our work down days early so we can travel and chill before the big event.
The gun goes off and...
... amazingly, produce heretofore unknown abilities setting PRs and often hitting or exceeding our goal finish times.
Getting our workdays wrapped up within 8-10 hours was burned into our brains through the school system.
It's a tough habit to break.
Accepting a reasonable output during those same hours is mollifying...
... but, uninspiring.
Dramatically shrinking the time to finish the race or project...
Massively expanding the output...
Defying Parkinson's law...
... should be our nature in all we do.
===
164.6/12.6%
8ish hours sleep
670 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/89/-4 per Strava
>
MISSLE LOCK
BEING IN THE DRAFT is such a wonderful feeling. We slot in and feel ourselves get sucked along at...
... a dramatically reduced effort.
It's slight at first.
Just like when we lose it...
... we slowly come uncoupled until suddenly we're on our own.
So it was on this morning's ride to the ride.
Me and my pals, jamming up the coast.
I bombed down a sizable hill in front,
shot up the other side,
they slingshot on by.
And the gap just starts opening wider and wider.
It was too early to be burning matches.
I made the prudent choice,
flicked my safety cover...
... and acquired missile lock.
It took 5 or so minutes of a measured effort, but then I closed enough to start to feel the draft...
... it's like the radar going from beeping to a solid tone.
Target acquired,
detonation imminent.
The rest of the ride would be much of the same...
... alternating attacks trying to drop each other.
I'd learned my lesson,
stayed locked and loaded the rest of the ride.
As a reward to ourselves,
we honed in on Parlor Donuts.

===
166.2/12.7%
7.5ish hours sleep
710 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
noLower Body: ATG squats and split squats
87/103/-16 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE EPIC SUMMER TRAINING
WHELP, IT'S THAT TIME A YEAR when most of us have/will have/should have/ better have something to train for this summer. Otherwise...
... what's the point of living?
Going all summer without a goal is just okay.
So, let me just tantalize you with something insane,
dare I say the best gravel ride in SoCal.
Dana Point to Big Bear...
- about 50% gravel
- 50% of the pavement is bike trail
- leaving from the sand, summiting before sunset
... qualifies as epic.
Kinda far,
120 miles.
Kinda climby,
14,409'.
Kinda memorable,
nothing like gittin' 'er done with friends.
This will be our 5th year/6th running (2 attempts in '21).
The basic layout is...
- dinner at my place Friday night
- 5am official start on Saturday
- dinner in Big Bear
... leaving just before sunrise, finishing before sunset.
Click on it to see videos and pics.
I'll be posting more.
Put it on thy calendar: 10.10.26
Check my stats... we weren't killin' ourselves, click to go to ride.
===
166/12.7%
8ish hours sleep
610 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/80/3 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHAT IS STRONG?
WE HEAR IT said of others. We make the comment ourselves, too. It seams so natural until we think about it, that it's...
... being said of endurance athletes.
_____ is riding/running/swimming strong!
Huh?
We're mainly scrawny.
So what does Strong mean then...
- big fitness?
- big muscles?
... things I think about while zonetwoing out.
If it's just a muscle thing, does it mean because they are actually stronger...
... it's just easier for them to generate X than it is for the rest of us?
If it's a VO2 Max thing, does it mean they aren't any stronger...
... it's just not as taxing for them at X effort as it is for the rest of us?
Truthfully, this conversation with myself when I was doing...
- all out 10 second sprints
- atg weighted squats
- box jumps
... throughout the week.
===
166/12.7%
89ish hours sleep
750 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 80 push ups, 20 pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 80 ATG squats and split squats
84/86/-2 per Strava
>
DAMNED IF...
SOME WORKOUTS are better than others. There are those when we just don't wanna do. And those when we're really feeling it...
... that c'mon LFG feeling.
What to do?
Or not.
Like today.
We'd already hit it pretty hard...
- bursts up in the 600W range
- plenty in the 400s
- rest in 300s
... not sure that qualifies as overunders.
At the end of that hellish 35 minutes,
we head directly to a segment called Pain Cave.
I didn't want to do it,
already feelin' smoked.
Told BBB I was just gonna cruise it.
But, you know how that can go.
I looked down and I was doing 380 watts up the final push and you were disappearing.
Since he said that, I thought maybe it wasn't a bad effort.
Numbers don't lie.
24 min today vs 20 min in January (a PR).
What's the benefit of doing it then?
I'll tell ya...
... to get fired up for next week.
LFG!
===
165/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
610 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: 20 push ups, 5 pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
yes Lower Body: 80 ATG squats and split squats
85/89/-5 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>

THE RIDER WHO DARES GREATLY
SOMETIMES IT HELPS TO PUT THINGS IN PERSPECTIVE. We see our heroes, the pros with big contracts, the local pros with endless free and amazing gear...
... and then there's us.
Doing our best.
Tight budgets.
Family to clothe and feed.
Pressed for time in every direction.
Then, when we are mocked for our endeavors,
chastised for our dedication,
misunderstood.
It can hurt,
if we let it.
But, we don't because we know...
... without our health we are nothing.
So in honor of the great Teddy Roosevelt...
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the busy and committed man stumbles, or where the doer of deeds could have done them better.
The credit belongs to the man who actually crosses the start line...
whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood.
who strives valiantly,
who errs,
who gets dropped again and again...
because there is no effort without error and shortcoming;
but who does actually strive to do the deeds, who knows great enthusiasms, the great devotions; who spends himself in a worthy cause;...
who at the best knows in the end the triumph of the podium,
and who at the worst, if he fails,
at least fails while daring greatly,
so that his place shall never be
with those cold and timid souls
who know neither victory nor defeat.
Dare greatly my friends...
... it matters to those who look up to you.
---
Comment on the post here: https://pedal-r.mn.co/spaces/12740042
---
164 lbs
7 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + more
10 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

DO YOU KNOW THE MATH FOR SUCCESS?
LOOKING BACK ON THE BUSINESS YEAR is always a little more fun after the Christmas rush. The investments in inventory and ads start to pay, just like our fitness...
... it's simple math.
The problem is figuring out the equation.
The basics are:
- Increase Sales
- Reduce Expenses
No body argues that...
... but they sure as heck do argue this.
Weightloss basics:
- Increase training
- Reduce calories
It's not always + and -,
sometimes it's + and +
Fitness basics:
- Increase training
- Increase recovery
Sometimes it's just a feeling
Stress basics:
- Definitely gotta do that!
- No.
I use the last one a lot when I'm feeling overwhelmed or over committed...
... If it ain't Definitely gotta do!,
it's No.
---
165.6 lbs (uh, oh)
8.5 hrs
Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pushups, pullups, squats
10 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

BABY STEPS TO BEING STRONG
IF YOU HAVEN'T ALREADY STARTED, you've most likely started thinking about it some sort of cross training to do now that it's dark and cold. Great!...
... being strong pays dividends on and off the bike.
You're not alone,
and there's no need to over think it.
There are 3 basic must exercises, but I'll bet my helmet most of ya are over thinking squats.
I was reminded of this yesterday at the park with our grandsons...
... if you're around toddlers, just watch.
They don't bend down to pick things up...
... they lower down by doing an air squat.
All the way down,
@$$ to the gr@$$.
Whether or not you invest in weights start here,
air squats.
How many?
Well, here's my formula.
It starts with pullups. For every pullup you can do, do 3 times as many pushups and 3 times as many squats.
5 pullups -> 15 pushups -> 15 air squats
Like a toddler,
do these EVERY SINGLE DAY.
How to remember?
Well, I have an inexpensive pullup bar I purchased a garage sell decades ago. It resides in my bathroom's door jamb. When I go to take a shower...
... I knock out one set of all 3 exercises.
We're busy,
We want to ride,
not change clothes and drive to gym.
This takes 5 minutes, and will astound you with...
... how weak you are
and how strong you will get.
Want bonus points?
My pullup bar is in the bathroom so any time I'm going to the bathroom...
... I'm knocking out a set.
Something quick.
3 pullups, 9 pushups, 9 air squats.
1 pullup, 3 pushups, 3 air squats
4 pullup, 12 pushups, 12 air squats
Nothing magical, just mixing up and getting on with life.
At the end of a typical day I've knocked out 10s of pullups and 3 times as many pushups and air squats...
... in no time.
Add the other accessories like dumbbells, jump box, sled, nodic curl fixture over time...
... this is a lifelong pursuit, not a sprint.
---
165 lbs
8 hrs
1 set of pushups, pullups, squats
10 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

THIS IS NOT A CHEAP COUNTERFEIT
THE GENTLEMAN AND I met up some dirt today. It was perfect after a few light rains in the last 48 hours. Tacky, ripable...
... hero dirt.
Is there anything better?
Maybe fresh, new asphalt.
Or, a real gravel road.
Stringing together a bonanza of trails, some well-know to us and some completely knew, it occurred to me that some of today's dazzling tech...
... is just a cheap counterfeit.
We were IRL.
Not VR glasses,
on a stationary bike leaning over,
with a fan giving the sensation of speed.
This was the real thing...
- My arm was bleeding after being stabbed by unruly shrubbery.
- More than once, I felt the strain of the knobbies giving way and regaining their perch as we carved down the steep stuff.
- Hard-earned sweat dropped onto my lens, then sizzled in my eye
... and we were loving it.
But, the best was the ol' lady heckling us as we battled a loose, 25% pitch...
If it isn't 90%, it's not a real climb.
It was like a cackle from with Wicked Witch of The West.
We ride bikes.
They can go fast.
You will likely get hurt...
... and have a great story to tell about a lesson you learned,
in real life.
---
164 lbs
6.5 hrs
0 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + more
10 minutes recovery
20 minutes reading + Journaling

THE OFTEN OVERLOOKED BENEFIT OF A GOOD TAPER.
AS WE WIND DOWN THE YEAR, few of us are racing. Personally, having backed down the miles I'm feeling really fresh and spunky, which reminds me about...
... what I love about tapering.
Sure, there's the reduced miles and training and all the good feelings that come with that, but there's something else and if we're doing it right...
... is a huge benefit.
Because all the fatigue is leaving our bodies we not only start to feel really good, we have time to reflect on how we got here...
... all the work we've put in.
The result is where once we were tired, questioning out motivations and our capabilities....
... now we are confident.
Confidence is key to...
... ripping on raceday.
---
Comment on the post here: https://pedal-r.mn.co/spaces/12740042
---
Did you know PEDALindustries/riders are eligible for race reimbursement?
Check out here: https://pedalindustries.com/pages/pedalindustries-riders-gear
---
164.1 lbs
7.5 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + more
10 minutes recovery
120 minutes reading + Journaling

DO YOU DO THIS, AND IS IT WEIRD?
I'M TAKING A FEW WEEKS OFF, by that I mean I'm riding with absolutely no agenda and only if I feel like it. Three days so far this week, and I'm noticing a trend...
... I'm getting really good at my timing.
I have no reason to do this.
No coach in my ear,
No schedule.
Monday I decided I had time for a quick hour on the bike.

Tuesday, I passed on the traditional TMWC and as the day went on I was dying to get out. I thought I'd go our for 90 minutes and just rip it up for fun.

This afternoon, after grinding straight from 7am to 4ish I really need a mental break and two hours seemed about right.

There are a couple of trends there.
- Longer rides each day
- Riding at sunset
- Predicting ride time
Which I think is kinda weird...
Why am I so bent on ending at just the right?
How am I getting so accurate on ride time?
Is it just a product of playtime on the bike?
... are you as weird as me?
On a related note...
... I never seem to care about hitting a certain mileage on a ride.
It's all about time because miles can vary so much with terrain and weather conditions...
... the body does need a certain amount of time in the saddle to be fit.
Good thing I don't really care about that right now.
---
Comment on the post here: https://pedal-r.mn.co/spaces/12740042
---
Did you know PEDALindustries/riders are eligible for race reimbursement?
Check out here: https://pedalindustries.com/pages/pedalindustries-riders-gear
---
164. lbs
7.5 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + more
10 minutes recovery
120 minutes reading + Journaling

MY STORY
MY STORY
I grew up on southern California.
From an early age, I loved riding bicycles. I wasn’t great. My friends were faster, more skilled. But, I loved it. I loved riding, and I loved learning tricks. Jumping, skidding, wheelies.
Once we could all drive, we got into surfing. Saturday mornings went from riding around town to waking up next to the shore and jumping in the water. I wasn’t the best, my friends had more talent and guts. But, I loved it. Riding the waves, learning the tricks and hanging out with my buddies.
I went away to college and fell in love with the mountains. Saturday mornings were spent up high. Hiking and skiing. I wasn’t the best, my friends had more talent and guts. But, I loved it. The solitude, learning tricks and hanging out with my pals.
One day a roommate brought home a road bike.
The next day, I rode it 6 miles.
The day after, 12 miles.
I was hooked.
When I moved back to Southern California, I did some racing on the road. It was a lot of fun. I wasn’t the best, my friends were all faster. But, Ioved it. Being in the zone in a crit brought me peace and happiness. I worked up to a Cat 2.
Kids came.
I quit racing.
Mountain bikes were a thing. I got one and loved it. The skills from my BMX days with the fitness from road racing. We got a little group going on Saturdays. I was better than most of my friends – some had fitness but no skill, some had skill but no fitness.I did a few races, when I could.
In '99, my friend Jeff challenged me to do Leadville. 100 miles, off road, at 10,000-12,500’ above sea level seemed insane. I trained for it as best I could. The skills were there, but the actual workouts were a mystery to me. I rode a lot and watched my heartrate. Looking back on it, I’m amazed I finished at all. My goal the first time was to keep my heartrate just under 180 beats a minute.
I went 3 years in a row, and each year cramped and limped across the finish line.
Because I’d cracked the magical 9-hour mark, and received a big belt buckle, I figured I knew what I was doing.
I didn't have a clue.
About that time, my friend Kevin challenged me to go under 9 hours at age 60. I was 39 at the time, and busy with work and family. It seemed so far away, and it was. This turned out to be one of the greatest blessings in my life because it was always in the back of my mind. It reminded me not to get too out of shape.
I was riding less and less, spending Saturdays with the kids on motos or surfing. If we were in town, I’d get up early and be home by 830 ready to play with the littles.
That changed.
They got older, wanted to do their own things. Went off to college.
I started riding more regularly, and reconnecting with the community.
In the early 2000s, Super-D burst onto the national scene. Promoters took the long DH of an XC course and timed it. Talk about an event tailor made for me: short, I wasn’t too fit or light; fast, I was used the moto speed; technical, and still pretty handy on my MTB.
I won back-to-back National Championships.
The key?
I did way more prep than anybody else, pre-riding the courses. Most showed up in baggies and pads, I showed up in a skinsuit with moto goggles and an aero helmet.
My 20 year goal, was getting closer.
I started to think about that date with destiny… sub-9 at 60.
Around 2012, I went back to Leadville and clocked 8:30. That marked 4 tries. 3 between 8:28 and 8:38, 1 at 8:20. I felt good about my chances of cracking 9, and figured I’d go back one more time between then and 2022.
A year or two later, our oldest got into road riding and racing, I followed him. Bought a road bike, started to get back into some light racing. It was the funnest two years of training I ever had.
He moved back to Southern California and returned surfing.
At that point, I started this incredible journey.
I had the time, kids were gone.
I had the curiosity, how to go faster than ever at Leadville?
In 2019, I went back. I’d learned a lot over the years about my body, about training, about bike set up, about going fast.
I decided to go for a PR.
It all came together, and I went 8:15. I was completely blown away. How did I just go faster than ever, at 57 years old?
The next 3 years, I studied more, tinkered more, learned more. I developed a philosophy of how to pull it all together and have a truly great day on the bike.
In 2021, I did the Leadville Stage Race with the solitary goal of qualifying for the Silver Corral. This would allow me to start with pros and other incredibly fast races. In a race with 1000s, starting position matters.
With the start assured, I was now ready to put it all together.
And, I did.
I started to feel so good in early 2022, I wondered could I do another PR… at 60? I believed I could, if everything was perfect on raceday: my body, bike, preparation, and the always iffy weather.
I set my sights on a truly absurd goal: sub-8 hours.
Only one person over 60 had ever accomplished that, and he was an ex-pro who had the race outright back when I did an 8:20. He beat me by an hour that day.
The day came in 2022. Everything, and I mean everything, went perfectly.
7:57.
I was stunned, my friends shocked.
But, was I really?
No.
I had cracked the code to ripping on raceday, and I knew it.
It started with the simple idea of exploring what is physically possible for me?
What am I capable of?
I’m fascinated by that question… in all areas of life.
Now it’s time to share the keys to mastering ripping on raceday.
---
164.1 lbs
8 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery
120 minutes reading + Journaling

GIVE ME TREACHEROUS OR GIVE ME DEATH
I HAD A CHOICE TO MAKE TODAY: take the fire well-worn fire road or the hard packed clay with varying depths of gravel strewn across it. One I could ride blindfolded...
... the other could leave me folded in cement ditch.
I didn't hesitate.
The treacherous gravel was much more appealing for the simple reason it would require more skill...
- The slippery feel of the moving gravel
- Proper modulation of the brakes as the road curved
- Quick identification and adjustments as the gravel depths changed
... and honing those skills will lead to massive efficiency on raceday.
For the same reason, I rode the very challenging singletrack on Saturday.
I'd much rather deal with the obstacles at my own pace, build up my skills by myself, than face them for the first time, in a crowd, at speed...
... in a racing situation.
But, that's just me.
---
164.4 lbs
7ish hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups, pushups, squats and nordic curls
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

HOW TO RIDE FOREVER
WHY ARE SOME OF US RIDING FOREVER, and others for a season or two? Are there basic laws that if applied would keep us all endlessly fascinated with this beautiful sport...
... do they apply elsewhere?
I think so.
I'll take me for an example, because... yeah, decades in the saddle.
- I left surfing for cycling because of certainty. The waves are so fickle, the roads and trails always deliver.
- The thing I love about riding and surfing is variety. All the places to ride, all the skills required to be proficient.
- When I started racing, I loved the recognition of moving up the ranks, getting on podiums, and now Strava cups and KOMs.
- There is so much connection between my regular riding pals as we log the miles and share what is going on in life.
I've heard it said, if we can consistently deliver on 3 of the 4 qualities above...
... we will create an addiction.
So, here's the question:
Where else can we apply this?...
- lovers
- customers
- family
- teams
- ...
specifically, who needs...
- certainty
- variety
- recognition
- connection
... from us?
If we're losing teammates, or worse...
... it's a pretty easy fix to touch the people that really matter.
Another amazing lesson learned...
... JRA (just riding along).
---
164.9 lbs
8ish hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups, pushups and squats
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

DO WE NEED TO BRING BACK THE TOUR DE DONUT?
IT'S BEEN A MINUTE since our last Tour de Donut. I know why we haven't repeated the silliness, because it just doesn't jive with the trend in massive carb consumption while racing...
... it was too much.
Maybe we did it wrong?
It was easy to string together 10 stops over the course of about 80 miles,
we live in a donut mecca.
According to the latest trend, Pro Tour racers are consuming 100-120 grams of carb an hour. The science and the results prove this new twist on nutrition vs the old-fashion way.
That is about 4 glazed donuts, and I can verify...
... a donut every 30 minutes was too much.
But!... since I'm 99.999999999% sure we did it wrong,
I'm considering a second attempt.
How'd we foul it up?
We simply weren't riding that hard, and it actually got worse as the sugar caught up with us and nearly put us into a collective coma.
The more I think about it,
the more a second attempt seems prudent.
In the name of science and athletic excellence a Tour de Donut must be reenacted...
... this time we must sprint from shop to shop.
Think of the strides we'll make for humanity.
Think of how smart we'll look powering down a bear claw,
while power away from the bunch...
... oh, the sponsorship opportunities!
Who's in?
https://pedalindustries.com/products/tour-de-donut-speed-jersey
---
163.8 lbs
8ish hrs
no strength today
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

ABOVE THE NOISE AND CONFUSION
FIVE OR SIX OF US WERE SUPPOSED TO MEET UP TODAY. Instead, it was just me and Smiles, and he had to be back early. The trail, which is quite rugged...
... was unusually deserted.
We climbed for well over an hour before seeing a single soul, at which point we parted ways.
I climbed on, up and through a near-empty campground...
... the next singletrack was a place known for cougar encounters.
It was too pristine,
too sacred a morning,
to be concerned about...
... what could go wrong miles from help?
The final mile and a half gains 1000', with pitches well above 20%.
I could hear a few propellor planes in the distance.
Other than that,
silence.
I laid my bike down,
grabbed a tasty crepé,
and sat on a metal bar meant to keep traffic on the gravel road.
No need to hurry,
It was difficult to leave.
I was glad nobody else made it,
the solitude was cleansing.
These days, it can be so difficult to rise above the noise and confusion and here I was...
... far above the illusions that tug us daily here and there.
And, I had a thought.
What if I tried something different this coming season.
Rather than block out Saturdays from some brutal group ride, or racy MTB PR-chasing throwdown...
... what if I dedicated more time for adventures?
I'd still get the hard efforts in the day before with structured workouts.
Gotta hit those highs.
But, rather than a couple of times in the offseason...
... most of my Saturdays would be filled with adventure.
Scoping out new single track on the MTB,
discovering new gravel routes...
... driving to the start of something new vs rolling from home for the same ol' ride.
Would I have more blissful moments like today, accompanied by the inherent risks of new territory and riding alone?
Can they be manufactured,
forced?
Would I lose fitness?
Would I lose the racer's edge?
Something to think about as I take some time off before ramping up for the new season.
---
164.5 lbs
7 hrs
Pushups and Pullups
20 minutes recovery
20 minutes reading + Journaling

WE KNOW WHAT IT IS, THEY THINK THEY DO
WHATEVER THE BIKE RACE, what we see is totally different from what a casual observer sees. First, the TV cameras always make the inclines, jumps and corners...
... look way easier.
Even if the casual observer gets beyond that, they are missing something more important that we have.
Context.
Because when you've done the same thing,
or tried to do it and failed...
... you know what it takes.
Is the video of Tom Pidcock blasting by other pros down a mountain at 60+ mph, along the side of a cliff with no barriers thrilling?
Yes, for sure.
Anybody can appreciate that.
But, until you've suited up in colorful, aero underpants,
put on a pitifully lightweight plastic half-shell helmet,
"protected" your hands in ultra-thin leather gloves,
ridden on tires as wide as your thumb,
at anything over 50 mph...
... you have no freakin' idea of the incredible,
skills and reflexes required,
or courage summoned.
But, we do.
Most of us have done something like that at least once.
For some, once is enough.
For others, it's never enough.
And, when we see Pidcock calm and relaxed and loving it,
we can actually imagine what it would be like.
Our hearts might race,
or our palms sweat.
We know how freakin' crazy it is.
We have real-life context...
... and that's a darn fine thing to have regarding anything.
---
163.8 lbs
8 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

A FRIENDLY REMINDER REGARDING PIGGING OUT
I WAS DOING GOOD, solid ride with the posse, recovery drink, quick shower, walk a couple of miles on the beach with family. It was all according to plan...
... until we got home.
Smelled all the goodness.
Saw all the snacks to hold us over...
... and completely lost my mind.
It started innocently enough,
chips, salsa and a
game of chess.
Crushed my son-in-law...
... celebrated a rare victory with mini peanut butter cups.
That was it,
chip tooth and sugar tooth fully activated.
Hours later, as I was polishing off two slices of pie (gotta find out which is tastier) my son said...
... Don't worry dad, it's just one day.
He's right,
but here's the thing I want to share.
When we ride more and eat less,
the math of weight loss,
our energy drops.
Other than my belly feeling abnormally full,
I feel great...
... and I'll probably feel great riding tomorrow.
So here it is..
... if you want to drop some blubber,
do it now.
Not in the season when we're trying to train hard,
set big PRs,
and race.
We need good energy to rip on raceday.
It's just one day,
and there will probably be several more this year,
the rest of the coming days I'll be monk like so I can...
... roll into 2024 in fighting shape.
---
161.7 lbs
6.5 hrs
no weights
10 minutes recovery
20 minutes reading + Journaling

AWARDS FOR NEXT YEAR'S WORLDS
EARLIER THIS MONTH we held the unOFFICIAL Tuesday Morning World Championships. As usual, we had the age group winners, and for the first time I announced a Most Improved Rider of the year...
... but, all week I have been lamenting I didn't add more callouts.
Like:
- Dr. of Animation - for that cat who charges week after week
- El Suckador - for the one who just will not, unless mocked, pull through
- The Therapist - you know, the one everyone wants to talk to
My motivation is this:
- Reward the rider who keeps the ride lively and pace fast
- Shame that sucker into pulling through
- Acknowledge the person who makes the ride always lovely
The idea being, that if it was an annual award, cats might be thinking about it during the year...
- I sure hope I in the running for Dr. of Animation,
or Most Improved
or The Therapist - I sure as heck hope I'm not called out for being a wheelsucker
Whadaya think?
Got any suggestions to add... add 'em here: https://pedal-r.mn.co/posts/awards-for-next-years-worlds
---
162.7 lbs
7 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + more
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

NOW YOU'VE DONE IT!
You signed up for the big race,
or to go for an outrageous PR goal,
or you’re attempting an insane challenge, just finishing would be amazing.
I get it.
It’s scary.
It’s also the most exciting way to live…
… and train.
These quests give our training a purpose for a season, usually a year (I’m working on a 10-year quest).
But…
… it is more than that because we know when we are fit we do all of life better.
And, that is the cliff's edge we are all on.
How do we be true to what matters (family, career, faith, community, friends, commitments) and still Rip On RaceDay, our self-selected date with destiny?
That is our quest.
To be true… and rip.
It is why we are here.
- To share and learn what works and doesn’t
- To stay motivated and be held accountable
- To buoy each other when discouraged.
To arrive at the start line ready…
… to cross the finish line completely satisfied, knowing we did all we could do.
That is winning.
That is ripping on raceday.
Does that resonate with you?
---
164.3 lbs
7 hrs
no strength exercises
0 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN TWO AWESOMENESSES HOOK UP?
IT'S HAPPENING! I'll take full credit for this, because it's true in my mind. Two of my favorite race promoters are hooking up. Not like that!...
... hooking up a killer week for us.
In the desert.
This winter.
Arizona.
I'm taking credit because last year I did my part to get these two lovers, not like that!...
... who promote for the love of sport,
and hope to make a profit.
Sage, you really outta team up with BWR next year for a desert showdown.
Oh, yeah.
Michael, wouldn't it be cool to put something together with Cactus Cup?
For sure.
Now, what you might be wondering is why the heck would I do that?...
... because it's gonna be awesome.
- I love the desert in the winter, so pretty!
- I love the idea of finding out who's got the skills.
- I love stage racing, and this is taking it to the next level.
Michael coined the phrase, Duel In The Desert...
... we all loved it, because that's what it is.
A duel to see who's got skills: dirt, road, singletrack, and recovery.
How's it work?
Lowest combined time of BWR Wafer and Cactus Cup 40 mile XC course...
... will be crowned King or Queen of the Desert.
Why is it so rad?
Because these are legit courses.
- Cactus Cup is 40 miles of 100% single track
- BWR is unroad, a road race with serious skill challenges
I can't wait.
Sign up and race deets here: https://thecactuscup.com/duel-in-the-desert/
Oh, and each registrant will receive one of these...

Kings & Queens will get one of these...

If you're thinking of going, let's meet up.
You can RSVP here: https://pedal-r.mn.co/posts/45749547
---
164.7 lbs
7.5 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + more
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

DO YOU REMEMBER YOURS?
AT DINNER WITH THE FAM TONIGHT, I asked What was your most memorable Christmas gift? The kids are adults now, I was curious what they'd answer. I knew exactly what mine was...
... the moment the words left my mouth.
What surprised me however,
was Surfergirl's answer.
My bike, it definitely wasn't new, and I didn't care. It was freedom, we'd roam the streets of Kailua, and all to go the donut shop on Saturday mornings.
That surprised me.
Not the donuts,
that tradition lives on.
Not the pre-ownedness,
it was humble times for the inlaws.
I've asked myself a million times...
What did she see in me then,
What does she see in me now,
... maybe she saw a kindred roamer?
Because, I was doing the exact same thing on my Stingray I'd painted dozens of times...
... roaming the streets and dirt lots with my pals on Saturday mornings.
Still am.
Oh, my favorite Christmas gift?
The red Schwinn Le Tour I drooled over when my mom's boyfriend took me to Fullerton bikes. I imagined myself flying up the hills and traveling great distances...
... shocked me to see it with a bow.
Wish I'd kept it.
...
Our first grandchild has mastered the pre-owned Stryder bike his parents found on FB and is getting a pedal bike this year...
... who's more excited?
---
164.8
6 hours (not enough)
no strength exercises today
20 minutes recovery
120 minutes reading + Journaling

I'M DRY, BIKE IS FILTHY
THE PLAN WAS TO LEAVE AT 7AM. Pesky clouds and rain wouldn't clear as predicted. The group text kept pushing a later start. At 9:20...
... I finally got on the road.
Can I just point something out for you who like to gather....
... please RSVP.
Multiple people I enjoy riding with missed the ride because I had no idea they were coming and I didn't add them to the text chain.
I could do better,
and RSVPing would help a brother out.
Anyway....... I really like the rides we do this time of year.
A lot more chill.
A lot more conversational.
Just base miles,
good times.
Which reminded me of one of my training break throughs from 2021...
... back to back hard days during the week,
long tempo on the weekend
the rest zone 2.
Which... has nothing to do with the title of the post.
But, this does.
When the bike comes back filthy, it's a good indication we had the guts to brave the elements.
We kind of did today.
Wet roads can be slippery,
and lead to a lot of flats.
Since we missed the rain and the roads were drying and perfect by the end we also missed the soaked socks, soggy shoes...
... my least favorite consequence of riding in the rain.
Thanks to the great Steve B for sharing his secret...
... why his bike looked amazing and mine didn't.
He uses SC-1 from Maxima.
Tell us what you use, click here.
---
164.5
7.5 hours
pushups, pullups & squats
10 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

WE CAN ONLY IMAGINE...
Y'ALL ARE ALL OVER THE COUNTRY, ride all kinds of bikes at all kinds of different races and events and festivals, with wildly varying experience, talent and skill level. We can only...
... imagine your #1 goal for next year.
I'm crystal clear on mine,
are you?
Mine...
is a whole new challenge,
is yours?
will have me in 3 different states,
will you travel?
involves racing,
does yours?
I'll do with some of my pals,
how about you?
seems outrageous,
does yours?
will require some new bike parts, not a bike,
how about you?
is spread over 8 weeks,
yours?
includes a side race or two which could throw it all out of whack,
will you risk ruining recovery?
might include the support of Surfergirl,
will you have your own support?
deserves a special edition kit to fire me up,
have you ever done that?
could include heinous weather,
would you race if it gets ugly, cold, miserable?
I am so stoked about I decided to sponsor the prizes,
have you done that?
I really really really want to know,
and so does everybody else reading...
... do tell us here: https://pedalindustries.com/rip
---
163.4
7.4 hours
pushups, pullups & squats
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

HOW TO GAIN RESPECT IN THE BUNCH
WHEN YOU'RE NEW TO ROAD RIDING, or riding in a new area with a new group, it's superduper easy to feel dissed. Trust me, it's real and they know their doing it...
... because they don't know us.
We are an unknown,
a potential danger...
... a newb.
How to fix that:
- Be nice
- Be confident
That's it,
that's all you can do.
The dissing can come in many forms: cold shoulders, yelling at us, not letting us pull through, chopping our wheels, mocking us, etc...
... none of it is cool as far as I'm concerned.
As long as it's not dangerous, I mostly find it entertaining...
... even hilarious.
For example, at BWR UT this year, I was in the second group and we were closing on the leaders.
It was a hard effort, and I wanted to be as efficient as possible while still making it up to the front...
... I was spinning like a hamster wheel.
This tan, chiseled dude for a well-known team rides up and says...
... You're spinning too much.
Talk about a diss!
I just smiled, and said...
... Thank you.
We connected with the leaders,
flew out of town to the rollers.
I knew, having done the race before, that the rollers were deceiving and that there was a stout little hill at the end...
... then it was very fast double track for miles.
I let them go,
cleared the top on my own and did my thing...
... passing blown or unskilled rider after rider.
By the time we hit the pavement,
just in time to get in a paceline...
... I was back with the tan, chiseled disser and his merry group of graveleros.
We were rotating nicely,
his demeanor changed...
... Where are you from?
Yeah, we struck up a pleasant, friendly conversation.
Nothing changed.
I was the same rider.
- Nice
- Confident
After about 30 minutes of riding in a well-working paceline...
... we hit another challenging section.
I moved to the front...
... never saw them again.
It's always better, whenever possible, if we really feel it's necessary...
... to let the legs do the talking.
---
163.1
8 hours
1 Rip On RaceDay circuit + more pushups, pullups & squats
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

THE COST OF NOT REGISTERING
THE FIRST LINE OF MY BOOK, The Way of The RACER, has been quoted back to me more than any other. Every time I hear that line, I'm reminded of the day I shared it with Surfergirl...
... she didn't like it.
So,I knew it was good.
She doesn't know us (me and you) like I do.
Here it is:
Until you Register for an event, or the event, you are nothing.
Because that's just how it is.
And that, my fine young ripper, is the cost not registering.
Being a hopydreamy cat vs. a driven and...
... highly committed son of a shift.
No wonder Evan just picked up ten to give to his teammates for Christmas.
$8.95, include shipping: https://pedalindustries.com/products/the-way-of-the-r-a-c-e-r
---
163.8
8 hours
1 Rip On RaceDay circuit + more pushups, pullups & squats
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

WILL WE EVER SEE THIS CAT AGAIN?
THIS HAPPENS ALL THE TIME, and I fret for those who go this route. Cat retires (in this case) or gets laid off or starts working remote, and decides there is no need to
... meet at 630am when it's cold.
I get it.
But, most don't fully comprehend the danger.
'Cause here's what happens almost every time...
cat skips those cold mornings,
shows up in the Spring when it's warm,
gets shot out the back...
... decides the ride has somehow gotten too fast.
No, sucker...
You
have
gotten
slower.
Because...
You
have
skipped
the hard rides.
Oddly, this does not seem to happen to those who are laid up due to illness, injury, work, family or other more pressing matters because those cats...
... would be there if they could.
There's a difference,
in mindset.
When those cats come back,
they know what they're in for...
... but, I think it's more than that.
They never left,
in their heads their I'd be there if I could mindset...
... gives them the wherewithal to withstand
those initial kicks in the lycra when back
to the regularly scheduled drubbing.
Set your alarm clock,
set your mind,
dress warm,
stay fit.
Ain't nothing gonna replace meeting the gang at the corner at 630am.
... and before you tell me Zwift is the replacement... yeah, I know and I'm not worried about you. You get it.
The key is the weekly checkin,
heartrate revving ride,
chasing friends...
... weekly, all year long.
Still reading?
This is exactly why I have no intention of retiring,
that kinda thinking scares the shift outta me.
---
164.9
7 hours
pullups and pushups
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

SOME PEOPLE HAVE A SWEET TOOTH, I HAVE A...
THE FIRST THING I DO EVERY DAY: strip and weigh. Before anything else. Then I record it to look for trends. It's the only way to get a consistent reading of my weight...
... and instant feedback on yesterday's nutrition choices.
Today was not pretty.
It happens.
But, that's not important. I know where I got offtrack with my system, and I just need to get back on it.
Which dovetails nicely into this question from reader Michael S.
How do you determine what your ideal weight is ? I am 6 1 and a half and 177lbs . I could drop another 5 to 10 , but at my age (66) I am afraid I would drop muscle. I still race gravel and am competitive in my age group. I road 10K miles last year and will this year also .
Here's my answer, which is also part of Rip On RaceDay my system:
I’m 61, so I get it and think about it often.
First, to combat losing muscle I
- Lift weight every single day. Minimum of push ups and pull ups, almost always squats and Nordic curls, too… and do my Rip On RaceDay Circuit training 3-5 days a week.
- I have really upped my protein intake, shooting for 1 gram/lb of body weight – via meat, bars and shakes
Second, how much to weigh…
- I know I fly at 162 or less
- Currently shooting for 160, not there.
- We’re all built differently, but having a gut or paunch ain’t a picture of health so I figure if my tummy is flat or close to it, if I can see the abs more than the flab, that’s a good weight.
Hope that helps, tb
Now, about that system I'm bragging about...
... see that pic up there.
It's time stamped October, 2017.
Way before I created the system, back then I was happy to weigh 175...
... I'm appalled at today's weight.
Which brings up not my sweet tooth. That is in check. It's the...
... dawgawn chip tooth.
Not chipped tooth, but my kryptonite...
... tortilla chips and salsa.
It got fully activated over the weekend.
Time to get back on the system.
---
166
8 hours
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pullups and pushups
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

WE ALMOST HAD A TRAGEDY
A GOOD GRAVEL RIDE AROUND HERE is going to include some road, some dirt road, some doubletrack...
... and a tiny bit of treachery.
Kevin came close to a major mishap.
It was my fault.
Not guiding us down the narrow
singletrack on side of a small cliff,
or the sharp rocks at the bottom...
... that's normal.
I should have told the guys to give me some space.
Instead, I slammed on the brakes to walk over the unridable.
Charlie slammed harder.
Kevin rolled off the side...
... it could have been so much worse.
Luckily, he landed on the thick green bushes,
not on the backbreaking,
helmet shattering,
rocks.
But, there's a second lesson...
... one you need to know about.
He told us he'd purchased some Shimano "compatible" cleats, and turns out...
... they are compatible,
not identical.
Meaning, they don't release anywhere near as well as the o.e.m. cleats.
A lot of us buy from companies promising...
- compatible
- just like
- just as good
- we make the big brands products, too
... it usually works out okay.
Personally, I'll pay a few extra bucks to
... save the emotional energy of wondering if my gear will deliver,
when the stakes are high.
---
164
8 hours
push ups pull ups
10 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

WILL YOU PAY THE PRICE FOR FREE SPEED?
THERE ARE A TON OF WAYS TO GET FASTER. I've done most of them, and they all cost time and money. Mainly money, often lots of it. But, every upgrade, every gizmo, every coach we hire pales in comparison...
... to this free upgrade.
For most of us.
Some, a few, are already there.
Here's the thing... and try not to kill the messenger on this, okay?
We don't do it.
Don't do it full out.
Don't own it like we should.
It's FREE.
Maybe that's why?
No.
It requires a reframing for a few things in our brain.
When we do that, it's easy to access all the amazing free speed.
Replace this...
I could never forego eating sugar and bread, drinking soda and alcohol. It's too big of a sacrifice to give up.
With this...
I'm an athlete and would never sacrifice my health for poisons like sugar, bread, soda and alcohol.
The result?
Free speed by
- Being much leaner
- Sleeping much better
- Functioning at a much higher level.
- and, more.
I didn't say it would be easy...
... oh, wait I did.
We just need to reframe how we see ourselves...
... we are athletes.
If you don't hate me enough already for treading on our sacred poisons...
... do this:
- Find a mirror
- Take off your clothes - all of them
Take a look and if the answer is...
... Pretty good, a blind man would like to see that...
... then, take another look at that reframe.
I'm an athlete and would never sacrifice my health for poisons like sugar, bread, soda and alcohol.
---
I far from perfect...
... just an athlete doin' his best.
---
If you're just dying to tell me what an idiot I am for such sacrilege Click Here.
---
163.8
7ish hours
push ups pull ups
20 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling

DO YOU EVER GET BORED WITH RACING AND TRAINING?
ALTHOUGH I'VE BEEN AN AVID CYCLIST for many years, I haven't always been this focused or committed. Part of that was busy times raising family, getting career going...
... part of it was something else.
There's a pattern,
do you see it?
Boredom from road racing,
led to crits.
Boredom for business park crits,
led to MTB.
Boredom from MTB racing,
led to SuperD.
Boredom from SuperD,
let to motorcycles.
Boredom from not racing bicycles,
got me back into road.
Boredom from road,
back into XC.
Boredom from XC,
into gravel.
When we get bored the passion dies.
Here are some ideas:
- Try a new discipline
- Go to races in faraway places
- Make a public declaration of our goal
- Take chances on new tactics
- Test new positions
And so on.
Here's the dealio on that...
... most of us would rather let the passion die
vs. risk embarrassment of failure.
Now you do:
- Marriage
- Family
- Career
- Books
- Diet
- God
Enjoy the weekend...
... be spontaneous.
(I'm going to Taylor Swift movie with Surfergirl.)
---
162.8
7 hours
push ups pull ups squats nordics
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

WANTERS VS DOERS
OKAY, IT'S GETTING COLD and we have a few choices we'll want to make, but for most of us it's really two decisions. We can ride early, we can ride late, we can ride indoors or outdoors...
... we just have to decide.
Wanting isn't enough.
Last night, I left as the sun was setting and rode into the night. Now the problem with that is...
... it just keeps getting colder.
Tuesday, I left at sunrise and rode into the morning, which is nice...
... because it keeps getting warmer.
If it's really cold,
most of us go inside.
Those are a few of the choices we might want to do, but like I said...
... wanting isn't enough.
Wanting doesn't...
- get us out from under the covers
- get us out the door when it's dark
- get us on our bikes or in the gym
... deciding does.
Wanters,
want.
Deciders,
do.
Oh, the two choices I mentioned...
- pull on the bibs
- zip up the jersey
... it's easy to get out on the bike from there.
---
162.7
7 hours
push ups pull ups squats nordics
10 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

HE RODE WITH US FOR YEARS, BUT NOT LIKE THIS
ONCE YOU FIGURE THIS OUT, things become a lot easier. The problem is most of us don't, and those who do...
... don't like the reality.
We, me, crowned the great Ken L. as the most improved rider on our local legrippinglungsearing group ride.
It wasn't hard.
He's been killing it all year.
But, it wasn't always that way.
For years, he was like most of us...
... pack fodder.
Then something clicked,
and he became a slayer.
Which brings up my point.
It doesn't take that long to change the way things are...
... once we decide to make a change.
---
163.8
8 hours
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

unOFFICIAL TMWC '23 - RACE REPORT
TODAY WAS THE DAY so many of us targeted to crush our local ride, the annual unOFFICIAL Tuesday Morning World Championships. We fondly refer to it as Just a social ride...
... but, not today.
We rolled on time, 630am.
Normally, it's a gaggle of geese the first few miles...
... but, not today.
Previous winner, Nick Bishop, lit it up asap.
Normally, it's 25-30 stalwarts...
... but, not today.
Doubled out numbers.
Normally, the pace is consistent...
... but, not today.
Jumpysurgy.
Nothing was normal today, which makes it extra
- fun
- fast
- frenemyish
We hit a few timely lights, keeping us mostly in tact until the transition to the El Toro Bike Trail.
- 7 miles,
- no lights,
- no stop signs,
- lots of power climbing.
Normally, we are pretty burnt at this point...
... but, not today.
Which could only mean one thing...
... something abnormal was on the menu.
In the entire history of all the unOFFICIAL showdowns only 2 people have managed to...
... breakaway and stay away.
The great
- Robert Freeman broke away on the bike trail
- Bret Bylund went in the first mile
We'd already seen Nick take a swing at Bret's move...
... would someone be gutsy enough to try Robert's move?
Yes!
Young Rayan.
He goes when we first hit the trail.
I'm thinking, dang, wish he hadn't done that now I have to suffer.
We pull him back,
I suffer.
Within 60 seconds he goes again,
and is gone.
The gap keeps growing and growing.
Now I'm thinking, go Rayun go!!!!
I love this.
Few try it during the year,
nobody makes it,
hardly ever.
The pace lifts, and I know the 4ish minute power climb is gunna hurt.
It does.
Not enough for me to get a PR,
because I was dropped...
... still, faster than I'd gone all year.
Would young Rayun make it?
The leaders were over the top,
our second group not far back.
I thought we might catch.
Got close.
Then, the final corkscrew and finishing straight aptly named...
... Robert's Rage (and Robot's wheelsucking revenge)
Where the great, 2019 Champ, John Janneck flew outta the pack...
... caught young Rayun at the line.
So, epic.
So, valiant.
Congrats to the winners...
- Lori Hoechlin - Ladies
- Issac Gould - U20
- John Janneck - U35
- Matthew Rhodes - U50
- Ken Lynch - U65 (most improved rider of the year)
- Mark Christopherson - U100
... much thanks to all who participated in the 2023 unOFFICIAL TMWC.
If you're digging the kit, you can save 20%...
... with this promo code: TMWC2023
---
165.1 <- that didn't help
6.5 hours <- nor that
Push Ups Pull Ups Squats Nordic Curls
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

IF IT'S WORTH DOING...
IF IT'S WORTH DOING, it's worth putting on the calendar. Things will come up, adjustments will have to be made. It’s a lot easier to manage the unknown...
... when we have a plan.
Here's how I work my plan.
In this order:
- Get a giant calendar.
- Hang it somewhere to see it daily.
- Fill in date nights, and getaway weekends.
- Add important family and friends’ dates.
- Block out birthdays and anniversaries.
- Gather all known, immovable work dates.
- Add all races of interest.
Do this in ball point pen, write lightly.
Then, I think about what I want to accomplish as an athlete…
… what 1 or 2, possibly 3, ‘A’ event(s) would be really fun to prepare for.
When I’m ready, after conferring with family, partners, etc… I’ll commit to the ‘A’ events.
In Sharpie, I’ll highlight
- Key events I plan to do
- Outlining the days or weekends
- The event name on the day it occurs.
The secret is to put in the stuff that really matters first...
... then everybody is on board with my one or two 'A' races.
Yeah, I still race a lot.
But, who cares of I miss a 'B' race,
if I'm not in tiptop shape?
Not me.
Not those that matter in my life.
Be true,
and rip!
---
165.1 (uh oh)
9 hours
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

WHAT TO DO WITH ALL THIS EXTRA LIGHT
WELL, IT' HAPPENED AGAIN. Even though we've voted it down, we are back on standard time which means...
... we have a whole lot more morning light.
If you wake up early enough,
which you will do automatically,
for the next day or 2.
For me, that presents a challenge.
The last few years, I've found I'm significantly more productive if I work first, then go out for an afternoon/evening ride.
The problem occurs, when the day is jam packed and I can't get out to ride until 5 or 6.
It's dark,
I need lights.
It's cold,
and will get colder.
Not ideal,
especially offroad...
... it can get a little creepy riding alone.
I don't know about you,
but it's really easy to cut the ride short, or skip it,
under those conditions.
I'm going to give the 5 hour workday another go. The idea, set forth in the book of the same name, is to get in and grind hard from 8-1.
No interruptions.
No breaks.
No food.
For me, that's probably not enough time to get it all done, but...
... it is enough to do the deep work.
Take a break.
Go back and do the meeting, managing stuff.
I'll need to get up no later than 530am to be locked and loaded to go to work. That is enough time to do the spiritual, mental, journaling stuff. Plus, the Rip On RaceDay workout. And, breakfast.
The key, of course, is to push all meetings out to 3-7pm.
I've tried this before,
and eventually I adjust to the time change and 530 becomes really early.
Not tomorrow.
Let's see how long it lasts.
---
164.2
8 hours
No weights
20 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling

RUMBLE
FIGHTERS HAVE THEIR ENTRANCE SONGS, stadiums blare fight songs, civil war regiments went to battle with field bands...
... they all have a purpose.
To send a signal.
The signal,
is to our brains
that it's time to rumble.
One of my favorite pre-race jams has no lyrics,
and sounds so menacing and raw,
it was banned from radio in '58.
Don't ya just wanna feel that way some times...
... that your training and focus is so obviously excellent,
without you saying a word...
... your competitors want you banned?
Crank up the volume -> https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFCpUZVyXgg
---
163.8
8 hours
No weights
10 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling

CRITICAL "RIDE" THEORY
TODAY WAS THE FINAL NOSCO RIDE. It was my 3rd time doing this brutally hard charity commemorating Mike Nosco, who lost his life riding his bike. Jack, his brother has...
... brought us one of the toughest and most beautiful "rides" for 15 years.
Like all great "rides", it's very friendly at the start,
somewhat friendly along the way,
horrendous and competitive,
and friendly at the finish.
There is never a winner,
because it's a "ride".
Then why all the battling,
deep digging,
suffering?
Because it's a "ride" with 500 other fit athletes,
most of whom are friends...
... and we all know how that will break down civilized society,
any and all determination to take it easy.
That pic up there is proof, after .5 miles...
... I"m off the back of the "ride" with my friends.
It got worse from there, as I fumbled with my phone, and tried to wolf down a waffle.
The few miles I spent pinned,
taking all kinds of risks...
... to catch my friends.
We'd all committed to "ride" together.
How bad was it?
Well, this bad...

Which led to this...

... which is pretty good,
since we were just out for a "ride".
Of course, since we weren't racing,
and it was a charity "ride",
there was only...
... one metric that mattered.
You know the one, right?
I mean, who the heck cares if you get some lame trinket,
a whole slew of PRs on Starva,
or even a big boy cup?
All anybody cares about on any "ride" is...
... did I beat my friends?

To my left, my cousin Todd,
in front of me, my pal Todd,
to my right, my pal Tod (the cooler spelling).
---
163ish - no scale today
6.5 hours - not enough
No weights
0 minutes recovery
0 minutes reading + Journaling

I GOT NO FIRE IN MY BELLY
THE FIRE TO CRUSH IT TOMORROW is out. Just a pile of ashes with some lingering smoke. It was a hot one for sure, starting small and burning a searing blaze for months...
... it was fun while it lasted.
No doubt, when I wake up and see 800 maniacs toe the line for the Nosco Ride...
... the embers will flare up for a bit.
That's not important.
What's important is to realize now is the time to merely think about how good that fire was, relive the memories.
In the coming weeks, I'll start to gather kindling...
... by laying base miles while riding aimlessly.
Once kindling is collected, I'll gather smaller logs to stack on top, creating a wide base on which to build...
... by doing fast group rides and a few 'C' races.
As I get closer to the 'A' races next Spring, the big logs will be added...
... by rocking the hardest group rides, and a few 'B' races.
With that powerful pyramid stacked solidly high, I'll add newspaper and gasoline...
... by tapering.
The day before the 'A' race, I'll grab the torch and aim it towards my massive bonfire in waiting...
... by doing some righteous openers.
Come morning...
... I'll blaze that first 'A' race course.
For now though, it's time to enjoy the memories...
... and let the remaining embers flare up from time to time.
---
163.8
7.5 hours
Push Ups Pull Ups Squats Nordic Curls
10 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

DON'T MAKE THIS HUNDRED GRAND MISTAKE
WE'RE ENTERING THE SILLY SEASON when so many bets are off. Not all, but most riders and racers completely lose their minds in the next 60ish days...
... and it starts with Halloween.
Of all the things I have in common with Surfergirl, this is one of my favorites...
... our love for the 100 Grand bar.
Before I get into the trick of beating sugar down and...
... laying waste to the cravings that derailleured my fitness year after year...
... I'll show you some proof that we are being conspired against.
In my inbox this morning was a seemingly innocuous email from an internationally famous event, putting forth their sponsor's message...
... one of my all time favorite examples of garbage thinking.
Off-Season Weight Training
This is just the kind of thinking that has, is, and will continue to ruin many an athlete.
Utternonesense!
And, it is evily timed with the aforementioned silly season.
The very idea of momentarily suspending our efforts as athletes with Off-Season...
... is a signal to our helmetprotected gray matter that we can ease off our athletic life.
We can,
and we can't.
We can back down the miles,
ease off the intensity...
... but, I say Every Day Is RaceDay for a reason.
Because the days stack.
We, you and me, don't lift weights seasonally...
... who wants to limit strength to the times we aren't racing?
We lift year round.
Which brings me back to the 100 Grand mistake.
I had one mini 100 Grand bar last night,
begged it from the neighbor kid,
and loved it.
Because I have been off sugary poisons for so long the pleasure was soon gone and forgotten.
However...
... if I'd followed my tastybuds initial dance with joy,
I would have had at least 5 or 10 more.
I would have gone to our kids today, to raid the grandbabies supply...
... which is exactly what I did when our own children were little and left for school the following day.
Can't let 'em eat all that candy,
can't throw it away either,
better eat it.
Sugar addiction fully reactivated and in control,
I'd steamroll with gusto into Thanksgiving,
hamnering hard at all Holiday parties.
I'd pack on 5,10, 15 pounds by January 1st...
... soothing myself with the the stupidity of it's off-season.
Don't do it.
Be strong.
Let the mothersinlaw, cousins, spouses, neighbors, children, parents, friends...
... mock us all they want.
As the great Eric Liddell said...
... God made me fast. And when I run, I feel his pleasure.
---
164
8 hours
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery
90 minutes reading + Journaling

YOU SURE ABOUT THAT?
WE'RE A QUARTER OF THE WAY into our 10th year in business. It's hard to believe. Not that we've made it this long...
... how fast time is passing.
Why are we still here?
- The initial drive to make kits?
- The invention of the RaceDay Bag™?
- My passion for helping people Rip On RaceDay?
Maybe.
It hasn't all been roses.
- The effort to develop HUNKR, hundred kilometer bike races was a massive fail.
- Covid, while the bike industry exploded, nearly killed us.
- I opened a retail outlet, and closed it 30 months.
- I've built and rebuilt the design team three different times.
In a race, when things don't go well...
... it's easy to quit.
We see our plans and dreams disappear in a cloud of dust or runaway peloton.
It sucks...
... the life out of us.
Maybe it's early in the race, and the thought of all that prep going to waste is infuriating.
Or late, the final miles, and there's so little left in our reserves.
We have one choice.
Quit,
or persevere.
If you're like me, and I'm pretty dern sure you are...
... persevere is the only response we know.
We lick our wounds,
and pedal on.
But, why?
For me, it's just a question of confidence.
I believe, whatever has gone wrong can be remedied and I can get going again...
... worst case, I'll learn something very valuable for the next race.
And, I think that pretty much sums up PEDALindustries.
Everything we make and do is designed with one thing in mind...
... will this give you, and me, more confidence for the next race.
What do good parents do...
... provide confidence.
What's the best thing we can offer a friend in need...
... provide confidence.
What is the overarching mission of most religions...
... provide confidence.
What do good books or other learning offer us...
... provide confidence.
What is the result of being in shape on and off the bike...
... provide confidence.
I believe in you,
and feel honored for your belief in us.
---
163.8
6ish hrs (rough night for some reason)
Push Ups and Pull Ups
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

THIS IS CRAZY
I CAN'T BELIEVE IT. Someone's gone mad. Could it really be true? Nah, can't be. They said it could never happen, but it finally did...
... USA Cycling put out a calendar for the upcoming year.
In October!
Can't tell ya how many times I've had to juggle and replan and straight up cancel my A race plans because the local UCI concession has waited well into the calendar year to post dates.
You say you don't care,
you're never going to nationals.
I say,
it matters.
Going or not.
If these clowns (too harsh?) can start posting their calendar early, all promoters will soon follow suit.
In fact, many already have.
They want our dollars.
We want their experiences and challenges.
The only way to make that exchange work is to allow people to plan.
Which reminds me of my longlostfriend Pete W., an original founder of Quiksilver and member of the Coffee Crew, who said...
The most successful people I know are planning their calendars not 1, not 3, but 5 and 10 years out.
Now, why would do ya think they do that?
---
161.8
8ish hrs
No Strength training today - race tomorrow
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

SOMETIMES THE TDF RACERS SEEM LIKE SUCH PANSIES
THE TEAMS AND RACERS are up in arms about 1 (one) gravel stage at next summers Tour de France. Why not? It's not like we want to see the best bike racer in the world...
... well, I do.
I sent my top spy to determine what all the fuss is about by interviewing an unnamed source.
What do you think about the gravel stage?
It's terrible.
Why?
Well, anything could go wrong.
Didn't a Tour de France stage winner just dominate and win the Grave World Championships, having never raced on gravel?
Yeah.
So, what's the problem?
Well, it's not fair.
How so?
Well, it's so dangerous.
More than sprinting bar to bar, through turns, at 40+ miles per hour?
No, not that.
More than bombing down the side of a mountain on a narrow road with zero protection and the potential of plunging to your death?
No, not that either.
More than charging through downtown streets, turn after turn, after a fresh rain?
Uh, nope?
More than racing across sections of Parix-Roubaix cobble stone?
I don't think even close to that.
You know it's only 19 miles of a 120 mile single stage right?
Oh, no, I guess I didn't know that.
Think you can handle it then?
Uhhhhh....
See what I mean, it's hard not to think of these guys as pansies sometimes...
... even though they are clearly insanely talented, and take outrageous risks.
What they are really saying is they aren't sure how it will turn out because it's new and different and could cause some chaos for the GC riders.
Guess what,
Buttercup?
None of us are sure tomorrow will turn out...
... we get up,
put on our pants,
and go to work hoping for the best.
---
Personally, I think this stage will be a lot of fun to watch. I hope a true slayer of all types of terrain like Pidcock or Van der Poel or Van Aert crushes it...
... in fact, those 3 racers in a crushing break up the road would be epicality.
Let's all hope for that.
---
161.8
9 hrs
No Strength training today
20 minutes recovery
180 minutes reading + Journaling

RACE REPORT: FILTHY FITTY
HOW DO YOU KNOW IT WAS A HARD RACE? It could be that I'm still super dehydrated, and not really hungry. That's common, this is novel: struggling to control the van's accelerator pedal on the way home...
... my shin was cramping so hard.
The promoter likes to start the gentlemanly riders after the Sport categories.
So, I pinned it from the gun and knocked nearly a minute off my previous PR, while...
... passing as many slower Sport riders before the single track.
I blew up our group and myself.
What can I say,
it felt good.
Me and my 2 frenemies, Bob and Todd, had a nice pace line.
I thought we were gone.
10 minutes later, the great Reggie Miller somehow latches on outta nowhere...
... what the?
I was so stoked for him. He has worked so hard to get good at this sport and he was on point. Really charging.
Super cool.
A fluke sidelined the tall guy when he sliced a side wall,
and lost 20 minutes.
Bummer.
At this point, Bob gapped us and Todd wouldn't pull through.
Teammates.
Can't blame 'em.
I was still feeling okay, but I could tell the legs were not battle hardened and I had to ride conservatively.
At which point, Todd floated up a hill and bridged up to Bob.
There is a real sense of luck when starting behind 300 sport riders. Sometimes you get a clean line through single track and sometimes you don't.
I did.
They didn't.
We were all together again.
It was brief.
Things got steep,
I got gapped.
It would have been easy for me to push too hard and stick with those guys. I didn't. Instead, I stayed right at the limit and banked on my descending skills to catch back up, which mostly worked.
I could see Todd, when I reconnected with Bob.
We rolled up on my pal Chris, who started with Experts. Normally, he throttles me, but he has taken some time off this year.
Jump on my wheel, Todd is just ahead.
Ok.
We can see Todd.
About then, freakin' Eric comes outta nowhere and blows by all of us.
Dang!
I got nothing.
Bob has less.
The last 20 miles was largely suffering,
cramps coming on and off,
power output dropping.
What could I have done different for this race?
Not much.
It's been a long year, and I've been dialing back the training and intensity.
The bike worked perfect.
I slept ok, not great,
which is unusual when I'm in the van.
I consumed 315 grams of carbohydrates,
coulda used 40 more to stay on 100/hour.
My strategy of going out hard at the start might not have been the best,
but, like I said...
... I felt good, and it was fun to control the pace.
When we got back to the Finish, I was able to connect with a bunch of my friends who I don't see often enough, as well as some Strava friends who I'd never met.
Our podium was filled with people I know and admire for the lives they lead.
Eric, won.
Todd, just behind.
Me, not just behind Todd.
Rob, rode super strong finished right behind me.
Bob, battled through some physical challenges that started a week ago.
Overall, I'd call today a 10.
PS... look at that pic, can ya believe we're all over 55, one dude is in his 60s... It's crazy if you compare us (and you're included) to our peers.
Keep riding my friends.
And do you pull ups and push ups.
---
162ish?
6.5 hrs
No Strength training today - race
10 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

BULGARIAN SPLIT SQUATS DID WHAT?
IT'S COMMON KNOWLEDGE cyclists are super strong forwards and backwards, and weak as a salt cratered aluminum Fischer Hoo Koo Ekoo from the 90's when it comes to...
... side to side strength.
What can we do about that?
A lot.
Here are a few things I do in purpose, and one that seems to be reaping big benefits:
- Mix in side to side shuffles during light jogging
- Stand up paddle boarding
- Jumping jacks
Not the gnarliest of lateral strength building exercises but, not nothing.
Since I've done those things for a long time, I have to conclude that it was adding the...
... Bulgarian split squats which gave my knees all kinds of stability.
How do I know?
This is real sciency stuff.
While doing a towel change at the beach yesterday I noticed I wasn't wobbling and hopping all around like normal. I was much more planted and steady.
Then, I noticed it again when putting my socks on while standing up.
Is this proof?
No.
Why did I switch to this style of squatting from what I was doing before?
For the simple fact...
... I have reduced the strain on my back by 50%.
Also, they can be done with simple dumbbells.
They are super awkward at first and you'll be wobbling all over the place...
... then you'll be stronger.
According to my bro-science.
---
161.8
8ish hrs
No Strength training today - race tomorrow
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

SHOULD I GET MY KID A COACH?
WE'RE THINKING OF GETTING OUR 13 YEAR OLD a coach. So began a recent email asking for my thoughts. The short answer is Yes. But, Maybe is the...
... longer more thoughtful answer.
Coaches can be awesome when the timing is right.
Growing up, I had a tennis coach. Trust me, I needed all the help I could get. I was weak, undersized, and slow. The only chance I had was...
... improving my skills.
Our kids had coaches...
- Swim
- Track
- Dance
... as part of the teams they were on.
When they were small, I found it almost impossible to teach them how to ski and snowboard. I was proficient, yet clueless as to how to transfer the knowledge to a young child.
They did ski school, and I got in a few runs on my own. Win, win.
When we picked up motorcycles, my pal Larry knew everything and was very patient with us.
Coaches can...
- speed up the learning process
- teach proper technique
- help avoid injury
But, with this caveat...
... the kids love it, and want to improve.
Things can go off the rails quickly if...
- our kids aren't totally into it
- are being pushed too hard
- are doing it to please us
... I did the tennis thing, to please my mom's boyfriend. He loved me, I loved him. I didn't love tennis and never played after high school. It wasn't my passion, it was his and it gave us something to do and I loved him for it.
Did it matter that I never played again?
A little, because it was something we could bond over.
What we don't want, ever, is to get so wrapped up in our child's success that our passion overshadows our child's well-being. We see this sometimes, parents living through their children. It ain't right.
When our oldest got into road racing, we got him a coach.
She was perfect.
- Fun, crazy, inspiring.
- Set up his training program
- Helped him see what he was capable of
This time was, without a doubt, the most fun I've ever had training. We spent many awesome hours on the bike together talking about life and racing.
Final answer...
... if the kid loves it, do it.
Get a coach who is talented and knows how to have fun, with the goal to improve and be good at something
Remember, PRs > KOMs...
... and be prepared to get smoked, I loved that part the most.
---
162.5
8ish hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

IT DON'T COME EASY
THE SUN WASN'T UP YET. Soon the sky would begin to lighten, imperceptibly. For me, it was another reminder of...
... how long it's taken to figure much of this sport out.
It wasn't over night,
not a flash of inspiration...
... it has been pedal stroke after pedal stroke.
For example, in the early days of my fascination with really long distance racing, like Leadville 100, I battled mightily with debilitating cramps.
On raceday, I'd line up with fear knowing how much I'd soon be suffering.
I'd mark the hours, not so much the miles, counting them and pushing the dreaded pain as far into the race as possible.
From the anticipation of the day, to the passing hours, when they hit, and they always did, I'd be in the moment...
... just get me over this little hill, through the next mile, one more stamp on the pedal.
I learned to suffer, and that suffering could be dealt with and pushed through.
That's how it's been for me.
From leading all the way until 500 meters to go, and getting smoked in the sprint...
... to learning how to position myself for efficiency,
and occasionally be the last one to lead the race.
From blowing up my weight with each pregnancy (sympathy weight?) and overall neglect of my health...
... to chiseling it off, one pound at a time, over several years.
From busting chains and getting countless flats...
... to learning proper bike prep for racing.
Just like the lightening sky...
... light and knowledge come one mile upon mile.
Or, as the great Ringo Starr sang...
... You gotta pay your dues if you want to sing the blues.
---
164.2
8 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery
120 minutes reading + Journaling

RIDING WITH CLOGS AND SAVAGES
WE HAVE THIS WEIRD THING HAPPENING on one of our group rides. It can be frustrating for some. Not unique, just what happens...
... and I think we could do better.
It occurs over time, as riders figure out who's who,
and what they can each do.
Here's what happens, a few strong riders lift the pace of the group and it's game on.
- Cloggers float to the front, but never get there
- Hangerson stay at the back
- Savages just wheelsucking
The cloggers not pulling through, makes it difficult for capable riders to get into the action.
I'd refer to the Hangerson as Wheelsuckers, however, in this case they are often doing all they can do just to stay in the draft.
There is plenty of wheelsuckery going on as well...
... and some of these cats are savages.
Sucking
and sucking
and sucking some more...
... until, dropping all but the verymoststrongest of riders.
I say it's not unique, because it's just how life plays out.
Some are willing to risk taking the lead,
though failure is possible, even likely.
Some sit by and watch the leaders,
clogging the opporunities.
Some are hanging around,
just happy to be there.
Some let others do all the work,
then take the glory.
I say it's weird, because it's a training ride. We are all there to get in a great workout and try new tactics that we might use in racing.
Racing is totally different,
that is when we all need to be savage.
Not judging,
just observing,
and doing my derndest to lead when I can.
---
165
6.8 hrs
Pull Ups, Push Ups, Squats, Nordic Curls
20 minutes recovery
45 minutes reading + Journaling

I KNOW EXACTLY WHY YOU DON'T LIFT WEIGHTS
AFTER TRAVELING TO UTAH AND BACK, it was time to get back on the routine; which meant it was time to do the strength work. Four days had passed...
... and I felt it.
Oh, how I hate
lifting weight.
The inertia required to make that first move is astounding.
I didn't feel fresh,
I felt weak.
No wonder so few endurance athletes spend time doing resistance exercise.
It sucks,
compared to the joy of moving fast.
So, why do I do it?
Before I share that, the how might just be more important for you.
I lift weights daily.
Rarely does a day pass that I don't do the bare minimum - squats, nordic curls, pull ups, push ups.
The routine makes it easy.
For me, the weights come right after
the hour I dedicate to warming up my brain and soul.
The routine makes it safe.
No more sore or pulled muscles,
it's just normal everyday movement.
The routine makes it fast.
I get 8 moves done at home,
in a fifteen to twenty minute workout.
But, why do it?
Because it has revolutionized my pedal stroke,
improved my posture and bone density...
... I'm faster and more competent.
So, I pull on my socks,
put on my shoes...
... and get after it.
It's routine.
---
162.3
8ish hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

WHEN TO START TRAINING FOR THE NEXT 'A' RACE
HOW FAR OUT SHOULD WE START TRAINING for the next 'A' race? It's a good question, with several things to consider. Regardless of the variables...
... there are two answers.
Before we get to the correct answer, we have to consider:
- When is the next 'A' race?
- How important is it?
For example, my friend is an Olympian. He was limited to competing once every 4 years...
... there was nothing else that mattered to him.
It took him 14 years to qualify,
and, when he got there,
win 2 gold medals.
We are no different.
If that 'A' race is next spring, or in a couple of years, to be our best we should have...
... started years ago.
The next best time...
... is now.
---
162.7
7ish hrs
No strength training
0 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling

FLIPPING THE SWITCH
I WAS TRYING TO REMEMBER the first time I felt competitive. Not the feeling of having a chance to win. The one before that, of...
... wanting to win.
Not, the
Oh, look I won a prize kinda win.
Or the,
I beat grampa at cards kind either.
The other one,
the one for killers.
It was about the time I started playing tennis,
but, if didn't originate during those slow paced matches on the court.
I think I gor my first taste in 4th grade,
when the O'Malley twins pinned me down after school and pummeled me...
... just for fun.
I didn't think it was fun,
it hurt, and I cried as I walked home alone,
but, I was sure I'd be on the giving end next time.
I had to wait 2 years,
the 6th grade bmx shootout.
It was essentially an enduro race...
Starting at the top of a mile long city park,
launching on massive jumps we built,
over a huge, thickly cut grass field,
across a major thoroughfare (so dumb),
snaking through the junior high
sprinting onto the football field,
finishing on a giant double jump
... it was there that I learned to flip the switch.
I wanted that win so bad,
to beat my friends...
... to pay back the humiliations of being bullied,
the frustrations of my parents failed marriage,
of sucking all ball and stick sports.
I learned to put my elbows out,
to win.
It felt good.
So, when I saw the amazingly talented high schoolers battle it today, giving it all they had and not winning, but crying...
... I understood.
Sometimes, we just need a win.
It's okay to cry when the shift hits the fan.
It's okay to care about winning,
it's a life skill we need...
... to survive.
Those who learn it, will be fine,
those who master what it means to win...
... will master life.
---
163
7.5 hrs
No strength training
0 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling

I SAW SOMETHING AMAZING TODAY
I'D HEARD ABOUT IT, and looked forward to seeing it in person. The race director had kindly nudged and nudged and nudged me, until I drove
... 500 miles to see it for myself.
A miracle?
Close.
Why?
Because of this people.
How do you gather two thousand five hundred teenage racers, plus their coaches, family and friends in the foothills...
... for a mountain bike race?
Love.
Love for riding mountain bikes,
Love the kids who are racing
their hearts out,
Love for the volunteers...
... thousands of them.
Then, I pre-rode the 6 mile course.
It was tough.
Rocky.
Uh oh,
maybe they don't love these kids after all?
During practice racers were stacked up waiting to take a crack at the rocky climb.
Following that was some fast, flowy single track,
broken up with sections of razor sharp lava,
followed by low speed, large
granite boulder riding.
Tires would be shredded,
wheels ruined.
The evidence rolled by throughout the day,
plenty of banged up limbs
bikes being pushed...
... nearly all smiles.
A different kind of love,
that of being tested,
showing mastery.
Tough.
Love.
Credit Dallin Atack, the brains behind it all, for making it happen
What did I learn from this?
- Clear vision of what is going to happen
- Plenty of volunteers who care
- Excellent training
- Community
The secret is good feelings for each other.
Teams of 100 or more kids all lined up in neat rows,
lots of chairs and shade to hang out,
plenty of food being cooked.
This isn't just a race,
it's a lifestyle.
And, I love it.
---
163ish
7 hrs
no strength training
0 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling
Todcast:
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
https://www.instagram.com/pedalindustries
https://twitter.com/pedalindustries
https://www.youtube.com/@pedalindustries/featured

THE INCREDIBLE BEING OF WEIGHTLESSNESS
THERE IS A FEELING that most people never experience. I had it today. Many times. If only we felt this, not just once, but often...
... maybe there'd be a little more hope.
Weightlessness.
Not the kind during an Oh shift! moment.
Or, the butt puckering kind.
The kind that brings joy.
With the proper speed,
just right amount of lift in the whoops,
we are airborne, flying without a concern in the world.
It's a physical experience,
with a spiritual counterpart.
No matter what kind of pressures
I'm feeling or dealing with...
... they are gone when I'm weightless.
I learned of a tragedy that struck a friends' familiy,
the weight had become too much to handle for a young soul...
... how do we become whoops to those who need to take a load off?
That's not the right question,
everybody needs a whoop from time to time...
... how can we be better whoops to those we love?
---
161.7
6 hrs (early start to UT)
no strength training
0 minutes recovery
30 minutes reading + Journaling
Todcast:
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
https://www.instagram.com/pedalindustries

ARE YOU HEAD STRONG?
WHAT IF ALL THE TIME WE PUT IN, in the saddle, could be improved by spending a few minutes a day doing mental work? Would it be worth it? Would you do it, or...
... are you too headstrong?
Some people are saying...
... If there isn't a scientific study, can't be worthy of my time.
Ok.
But, for those who are open to new ideas...
... I think there are neuromuscular connections we often over look.
For example, pedaling with one leg clipped in using a very easy gear on flat or nearly flat ground will quickly identify any dead spots in our pedal stroke. If we have one...
... doing that exercise several times a week reaps huge rewards.
There was a time, when I'd do that for the first minute or so of each ride. 30 seconds, each leg.
I've blogged ad nauseam about the amazing results I'm having with these 4 exercises:
- Sled
- Nordic Curls
- Toe Raise
- Calf Raise
And, I can't overemphasize developing the discipline of looking only where you want to go, which I screwed up tonight and followed the wrong line into the bushes - pic above.
Here's the dill, to be head strong...
... we must allow time to do its thing and cement in the good practices.
---
162.3
8 hrs
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling
Todcast:
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
https://www.instagram.com/pedalindustries
https://twitter.com/pedalindustries
https://www.youtube.com/@pedalindustries/featured

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU PUT A D-1 ATHLETE ON A BIKE?
IT HAPPENS EVERY TIME. D-! athlete decides to get a bike. Goes for a ride. Likes it. Quickly advances to the fast group...
... and burns out.
And, I think I know why.
Maybe.
Today, G, who I met out gravel riding joined our peppy morning ride.
On his gravel bike with big knobbies,
finished with the bunch.
It was his very first group ride,
and this ain't an easy one.
On the way back to the start, he let out that he'd played college sports.
Figures.
What should I do to get faster?
Log a lot of easy miles.
Really, sounds counterintuitive. That's not how we did things in college, it was hard, hard, then harder.
Yep, my experience is most people ride too hard, so they can never ride truly hard on the hard days.
Was today hard?
Not really.
I'm gonna get a lot faster.
I have no doubt.
High level athletes are very competitive.
It's in their nature.
Easy to see.
The key is, and I hope I can be helpful, is to make sure it's fun. That's where the Zone 2, easy riding, comes in. Sure, there's immense cardiovascular benefits, but I think the mental side is every bit as important.
The advice I gave him, is no different than any other fit athlete
- Ride hard twice a week
- Zone 2 the rest of the days
Those are the big rocks,
we can get a lot more granular.
There's no need now, he's a busy dad and entrepreneur.
All work and no play,
makes Jonny a dull boy.
I'm sure G is going to redrum me soon (see pic above)...
... just hope it goes on for years.
---
162
7 hrs
No strength training
60 minutes recovery
60 minutes reading + Journaling
Todcast:
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
https://www.instagram.com/pedalindustries
https://twitter.com/pedalindustries
https://www.youtube.com/@pedalindustries/featured







