Advice on Hills? - A Newby's General Appeal
Posted: Sun Aug 23, 2009 2:39 pm
I had a gratifying ride this morning. But if Dave Spiers hadn't hung back and verbally pulled me up some of those Oldfield hills, I would have been dropped and missed the Interurban sprint.
I recognize I'm only 4 weeks in and I should expect a struggle, but the hills are consistently killing me every morning. I can mostly keep up going flat or downhill, but hills are where my work's cut out.
So this is a general appeal for any and all advice, ideas or thoughts on how *you* get over a hill.
I'm looking for input on everything: managing speed approaching and during a climb; body positioning (when to stand up and how?); positioning within the group; bike setup; psychological framing or mental attitudes etc.
When I stand up on the pedals, I feel like a goose trying to flap across the barnyard and get enough speed to fly over the farmyard fence -- I often feel my calves threatening to cramp and it ultimately seems to tire me out as much as staying seated. I can't help but feel I'm doing something wrong -- or maybe it's just part of the painful adjustment from casual commuter to road monkey.
So thanks to Dave today for being a great clubmate and thanks in advance if any of you pros elect to respond to this post.
If you would like to offer a pithy little comment about improvement on hills starting with replacing one's ancient, concrete-injected, steel bicycle, now's your chance...
I recognize I'm only 4 weeks in and I should expect a struggle, but the hills are consistently killing me every morning. I can mostly keep up going flat or downhill, but hills are where my work's cut out.
So this is a general appeal for any and all advice, ideas or thoughts on how *you* get over a hill.
I'm looking for input on everything: managing speed approaching and during a climb; body positioning (when to stand up and how?); positioning within the group; bike setup; psychological framing or mental attitudes etc.
When I stand up on the pedals, I feel like a goose trying to flap across the barnyard and get enough speed to fly over the farmyard fence -- I often feel my calves threatening to cramp and it ultimately seems to tire me out as much as staying seated. I can't help but feel I'm doing something wrong -- or maybe it's just part of the painful adjustment from casual commuter to road monkey.
So thanks to Dave today for being a great clubmate and thanks in advance if any of you pros elect to respond to this post.
If you would like to offer a pithy little comment about improvement on hills starting with replacing one's ancient, concrete-injected, steel bicycle, now's your chance...