Crankarm
Guru
- Location
- Nr Cambridge
I'm probably going to upset a few here but cycling a piddling 12 miles one way compared to 20 miles with hills is a walk in the park. A daily 40 miles round trip is verging on hard work. It's easily doable but to do so you need to be meticulous with fueling, hydration and get quality sleep which doesn't leave time for much else. A good breakfast is a must. The saying, Eat a breakfast fit for a king, a lunch fit for a prince and supper fit for a pauper is pretty spot on. You want to have energy when you need it and get leaner and stronger at the same time pushing up you power to weight ratio. Eating refined carbs such as white bread or Mars bars gets you no where.
Eat a healthy balanced diet and keep hydrated. Just up your portions and see how you go. Get lots of quality sleep to aid recovery. When regularly cycling longer distances you have to factor in the time aspect you are actually on your bike. Some feel that they just don't want to spend 2-2.5 hours commuting each way to and from work and doing a full days work especially if you have a very active physical job rather than sitting on your behind all day. 2-3 days a week I drive half way then ride the remaining 17 miles one way (34-35 miles round trip). The other the 3 days I ride the whole way front door to work nearly 30 miles one way (60 miles round trip). Be prepared to be constantly eating and off days spent sleeping. But you end up very fit. Some days at lunch or early evening I have a meal carb loaded with pasta and a tomato wild mushroom basil sauce or similar. Then broccoli, beans and chicken or two pieces of fish. Beetroot, carrots, dried fruit and nuts, lots of chicken, fish, veg, fresh fruit and potatoes are all essential foods for your diet. Frijj chocolate milkshake, yoghurt and milk and muesli, maple and pecan slices and some times fig rolls. Porridge, yoghurt, bacon and eggs and beans, toast and marmalade (wholemeal bread) grapefruit juice, bananas are all good for breakfast which keep me going until lunch about 2pm.
Riding for longer and further more frequently you also need to spend a lot more time maintaining your bike. A clean fesh lubed chain offers far less resistance than one that is not which means you potentially expend less energy. Also work on your cycling technique to maximise your efficiency. Don't push heavy gears. You might need to either buy better components or a better bike (n+1), kit or accessories. You also spend a lot of time washing cycling clothes unless of course you like being dirty and smelly.
Eat a healthy balanced diet and keep hydrated. Just up your portions and see how you go. Get lots of quality sleep to aid recovery. When regularly cycling longer distances you have to factor in the time aspect you are actually on your bike. Some feel that they just don't want to spend 2-2.5 hours commuting each way to and from work and doing a full days work especially if you have a very active physical job rather than sitting on your behind all day. 2-3 days a week I drive half way then ride the remaining 17 miles one way (34-35 miles round trip). The other the 3 days I ride the whole way front door to work nearly 30 miles one way (60 miles round trip). Be prepared to be constantly eating and off days spent sleeping. But you end up very fit. Some days at lunch or early evening I have a meal carb loaded with pasta and a tomato wild mushroom basil sauce or similar. Then broccoli, beans and chicken or two pieces of fish. Beetroot, carrots, dried fruit and nuts, lots of chicken, fish, veg, fresh fruit and potatoes are all essential foods for your diet. Frijj chocolate milkshake, yoghurt and milk and muesli, maple and pecan slices and some times fig rolls. Porridge, yoghurt, bacon and eggs and beans, toast and marmalade (wholemeal bread) grapefruit juice, bananas are all good for breakfast which keep me going until lunch about 2pm.
Riding for longer and further more frequently you also need to spend a lot more time maintaining your bike. A clean fesh lubed chain offers far less resistance than one that is not which means you potentially expend less energy. Also work on your cycling technique to maximise your efficiency. Don't push heavy gears. You might need to either buy better components or a better bike (n+1), kit or accessories. You also spend a lot of time washing cycling clothes unless of course you like being dirty and smelly.