Hello everyone, as a new member thought I would answer this thread rather than just say hi
Six years ago, I lived about one mile from work and just over a mile from the town centre. I smoked 20-30 roll-up cigarettes a day (and had done for nearly 20 years). I drove everywhere, admittedly I lived in a flat and didn't have anywhere to store a bike, but still, walking would have been no trouble.
Got made redundant, moved to a new area and job. My new home came with a place to store a bike and was less than two miles from my place of work, for whatever reason I made a conscious decision to get a bike. I had not ridden a bike since I was 18 and got my first car.
I got a Claud Butler Hybrid with suspension forks, so I could go on and off road to get to work. I only cycled to work and back, about three miles a day and to the pub sometimes. Say 20 miles a week. I still smoked, sometimes while I cycled; yes I know.....please stop shaking your heads, so did not get any fitter or do any great distances and always avoided hills.
I stopped smoking in February 2008, took up walking regularly a year later and in August 2009 walked up my first mountain, Scafell Pike.
So the dreaded weed was conquered and my fitness was returning, Last year I got an itch to get a road bike, I kept looking at those Boardmans in
Halfords but couldn't bring myself to buy one. Then in the end of season sale in March, I cracked and bought one and set myself two goals for the year end:
- Cycle the 100 mile round trip to my Dad's house in Northwest London and back over a weekend at an average of 15 mph and
- Cycle up to the top of Watership Down, north side.
After getting my bike, it was a shock to discover that although my average speed increased for the same amount of effort, it was still hard work. I honestly thought I would be flying.
Time to put in some miles, my first long run of just over 30 miles took 2.5 hours, I had trouble with some of the hills and had to stop to regularly to catch my breath and take on water and nobody warned me about the cramps.
Two months, 300 training miles and a waiste size reduction later I did the same run in 1 hour 50 minutes. The next weekend I cycled to London and back on separate days at an average of 15 mph, one goal down.
I still can't cycle up Watership Down, either my lungs give out or I cramp up, but I haven't tried for a couple of months and my fitness is definitely on a different level. I now think nothing of cycling 30 to 40 miles on the Hybrid, when I fancy a little off roading on a distance ride, 'Old Clunky' as I now refer to it must be more than twice the weight of the Boardman.I hate punctures and have 700x40c Marathon Plus ATBs (1.1kg each) on the Hybrid, the Boardman is fitted out with lighter weight Ultremo DDs, did I mention that I really hate punctures
.
I hate being categorised as a MAMiL but if the SPD-SL shoe fits.....rest assured my road bike will not be going on
ebay in a few months time. When the weather turns I will simply do my miles on the Hybrid and pick up speedy longer distance road riding again next spring.
Now if I can just cycle up that damn hill, my skills as a jedi, sorry roadie, will be complete, at least for my current home county. Whilst on another walking holiday in the lake district this year I was looking at those hills with a cyclist's eye. There is no way I will ever be fit enough to get up "The Struggle".
Given the above, lets go back six years again, why didn't I cycle? because I did not know any better, cycling as a form of transport or leisure activity did not cross my mind once. It took a change in circumstances, a conscious decision and a desire to change.