Hill climbing

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thefollen

Veteran
Not a chance LD... 2 laps and I'm bored. I do variations and use the cut through towards the 'Ballet school' to spice things up, heh. Check it out, my exciting route, this arvo: http://app.strava.com/activities/71199501

Cracking time there. Haven't tried a clockwise timed lap yet. Traffic (and Police) permitting, you can absolutely smash it down Sawyers!

Went down it last week on a ride coming back from Box Hill, very good fun.
 

phil_hg_uk

I am not a member, I am a free man !!!!!!
I do like the hills, but at the moment there are many days when I could manage a flat ride but a hilly ride would finish me off!


All in good time Colin :thumbsup:

I was aiming for 1000 miles in july and that would have been double my best ever mileage but I can live with 660 miles.

I had to have a few days off the bike as my legs were starting to hurt and then the rain came back :cursing: and of course it is getting dark earlier now as well which is a pain, but if you consider I had only done 898 miles for the rest of the year up to the beginning of july it isn't too bad.

I have just changed my tyres to Pro 4's and with that and me been much fitter I have added 1mph to my average speed, also my new custom built wheels will be here next week so they should help a little bit as well.
 

oldroadman

Veteran
Location
Ubique
There are two basic kinds of hills, short and sharp (say, under 1km) and longer steadier gradients. Of course long and steep can happen as well!
But, on short sharp ones a slightly higer gear and out of the saddle may be best, depending on how fast you want to go, longer ones sit in the saddle and turn at a good cadence using an appropriate gear and changing when you need to maintain the cadence. Leaving it on one gear can be a painful mistake.
All that said, if the steep hill in RP is a problem, start steady on a lowish gear, settle into a cadence, and change gear to maintain it. Little tip, once over the creat, keep the cadence going and change into higher gears, push even harder. This will hurt but the speed will come up almost immediately and allow you to settle into a decent pace which helps recovery from the effort.
Everyone is right, climbing brings fitness up fast, as does interval training. Long steady rides are teaching your body to sit on the bike for extended periods and burn fuel efficiently.
Pro training is long rides (5 hours or more) with periods of intense effort, either climbing hard or some intervals to work on fitness as well as stamina and conditioning. And not too much food to encourage weight loss, something that will improve climbing more than anything alse. See Messrs Wiggins and Froome as good examples of the extreme end of this.
 

earth

Well-Known Member
If you find a hill difficult find another hill - a bigger one!

Whether you manage the bigger hill or not, the first one will become easier.
 

Sittingduck

Legendary Member
Location
Somewhere flat
Cracking time there. Haven't tried a clockwise timed lap yet. Traffic (and Police) permitting, you can absolutely smash it down Sawyers!

Went down it last week on a ride coming back from Box Hill, very good fun.

Aye, Sawyers with the usual tailwind is nice when there isnt much traffic or five-0 lurking at Sheen RAB. I saw one lurking at the top if Broomfield yesterday which seems a pointless spot and one had chased and caught a mamil by the hot dog stand at Spankers hill... the mamil looked like he was happy to argue his case, pointlessly imho.
 

DWiggy

Über Member
Location
Cobham
I try and keep calm on a hill, don't over think it, keep your breathing steady and spin those legs in an easy gear works for me!
 

phil_hg_uk

I am not a member, I am a free man !!!!!!
I try and keep calm on a hill, don't over think it, keep your breathing steady and spin those legs in an easy gear works for me!


I have started using a gear slightly higher than I think I need, for instance there is a big hill that I do on my normal evening ride and where I used to do it in granny gear I tried it in the middle ring the other day and actually found it slightly easier once I got into a rhythm at a good speed. My head was saying "are you bonkers doing this" but my body was going for it.
 

Mickthemove

Über Member
I had my first experience of hills on the Cheshire Cat a month back and could not believe how tough a proper climb could be!( i walked most of them), since then i am obsessed by the buggars and have done ditchling beacon, monsal head and mam tor and this weekend will attempt the cat and fiddle! I know that some people could push the bike up quicker than i go but the pleasure a hill gives me at the top is worth it! BTW i have only been riding for 9 weeks and weigh over 120 KG(was 133) and the wrong side of 44 years old
 
OP
OP
Cuchilo

Cuchilo

Prize winning member X2
Location
London
I go Anti-Clock, that way i get to ride down the hill you're struggling with. (not much help I know :dry: )
I tried that way around today after going clockwise and going up the hill twice as fast as normal .... I wont do that again ! Anti clockwise is a lot easier but you could have warned me about the turn as you go down that hill :ohmy:
 

tug benson

Survived the Tour O the borders 2013
Location
Alloa
I can`t really attack on hills, i just really go at my own pace, if i feel ok then i`ll get out the saddle and push a bit, i do cycle a lot of hills but i don`t have very good times on them, being a bigger lad it isn`t about times with me, it`s about just getting to the top of the bloody things
 

jdtate101

Ex-Fatman
Now this is a proper route profile if we're talking hills (or mountains in this case!)

Hills.png
 

Mickthemove

Über Member
Snake pass today! The thrill at the top was stunning, although I failed on a pile of 16-18 percent climbs out of little valleys , it will just may me go back and try them again when I have lost the extra little person I seem to carry with me up the hills! (4 stone of redundant blubber)
 
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