In my early days, the Sunday Club runs used to be all day rides, averaging about 90 miles
You make time. I work 12 hour shifts during the week. I often find myself questioning the sanity of doing all day rides at the weekends. But hey, I'd only be ruining my health / bank balance, if I wasn't out riding.Same here local ctc "fast" run use to be away 9.30 am and back by 5pm and usually cover anywhere between 60 and 110 miles oh to be a teenager again .
Fast forward to me in my 50's and like @Dave7 gradually building up the miles slowly and looking forward to doing a 50 mile watch the sun rise ride in a couple of weeks time , my amazement is where do people find the time to be out all day on their bikes every weekend if they work like i do
my amazement is where do people find the time to be out all day on their bikes every weekend if they work like i do
This ^^There's 2 days in a weekend.
Saturday for me is family stuff, Sunday is bike ride day. Though I do usually have 1 Sunday a month not riding.
I have to say that scheduling has been much more complicated this year with my imperial century a month attempt. A metric ton can be done and dusted in the morning pretty much (if I get up early enough) but an imperial is more or less much an all day job.
Not necessarily at my pace!Get out of bed earlier Squire. Can quite easily be back home early afternoon that way.
Not necessarily at my pace!
Mind you, now the FNRttC season has started I can squeeze my imperial 100's in on a Saturday morning. With a 100k head start before brekkie I can be back home early afternoon.
Get out of bed earlier Squire. Can quite easily be back home early afternoon that way.
Obviously proving you have done a ride is more of a faff than just riding it, unless it's around a track or fixed course.I'll never say never, but probably won't. I leave the house here and ride for miles, and track my rides with garmin or whatever for my own satisfaction and I don't need to get a receipt for stuff I buy in the shops.
You make time. I work 12 hour shifts during the week. I often find myself questioning the sanity of doing all day rides at the weekends. But hey, I'd only be ruining my health / bank balance, if I wasn't out riding.
There's 2 days in a weekend.
Saturday for me is family stuff, Sunday is bike ride day. Though I do usually have 1 Sunday a month not riding.
Note that GPS selective availability was switched off in (I think) 2000 so commercial GPS is definitely 21st century.I'm curious, can you think of a simpler way of doing this, assuming only 20th century technology?
Commercial GPS signal and equipment good enough (and small and light enough) to provide evidence of rough track cycled were available in the '90s (and being widely used on sailing yachts iirc). The selective availability meant that one could not rely on accuracy some of the time, but within 100m would have been good enough to 'prove' a DIY audax ride by GPS, were Audax UK to have been able to make the conceptual/pychological leap of faith 20 years ago. (Elements still struggling now, I think.).Note that GPS selective availability was switched off in (I think) 2000 so commercial GPS is definitely 21st century.
Commercial GPS signal and equipment good enough (and small and light enough) to provide evidence of rough track cycled were available in the '90s (and being widely used on sailing yachts iirc). The selective availability meant that one could not rely on accuracy some of the time, but within 100m would have been good enough to 'prove' a DIY audax ride by GPS, were Audax UK to have been able to make the conceptual/pychological leap of faith 20 years ago. (Elements still struggling now, I think.).