Saturday morning Jenn asked if I wanted to ride out in the Varina area as a nice change of scenery from the now traditional Saturday morning ride for her and her teammates. After meeting up with Dale, John and the Masta of Spin, we headed out from the boat landing through the battlefield. I was really hoping the tree color would be changing through the battlefield as it always really pretty through there in the fall months.
The ride went relatively uneventful except we did have to wait a few minutes at a railroad crossing up near the airport. While we waited we watched a handful of planes take off over our heads before deciding to just turn around and find another way around. Out and backs are the worst rides ever in my opinion but thankfully I was able to recall a way back without having to backtrack all the way to the cars.
Last night, Jenn and I headed out to Westcreek for our Tuesday night workouts. Jenn ran for 40 minutes while I took laps around the Creek. Nothing really of note from last nights ride except it was terribly unseasonably humid and my burps tasted like jalapeno cheese dip.
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Friday, October 22, 2010
Where does it go?
Where oh where does the time go to? It doesn't feel as if it was over two weeks ago since I last wrote a short blurb of nonsense. Two things have happened since. The first being more saddle time and the second being the days are getting much shorter. In order to get the rides in, I have been riding home from work this week. I was successful in making that happen 3 of the 5 days I worked this week. There would have been a fourth day but mother nature finally agreed that Richmond smelled funny and needed a good shower.
Yesterday, I decided I was going to take the long way home which meant a climb up Old Gun. It also meant I was going to have to dig out the lights as Monday's ride home ended with me racing the moon.
Below is the map and details from the long route. My legs felt pretty good except on Old Gun. The climbing legs and lungs just aren't there yet. I hope to be making that ride more and more throughout the next couple of months. Cold air and climbs are sure to feel good.
Yesterday, I decided I was going to take the long way home which meant a climb up Old Gun. It also meant I was going to have to dig out the lights as Monday's ride home ended with me racing the moon.
Below is the map and details from the long route. My legs felt pretty good except on Old Gun. The climbing legs and lungs just aren't there yet. I hope to be making that ride more and more throughout the next couple of months. Cold air and climbs are sure to feel good.
Thursday, October 7, 2010
Stretching hurts
Ever since I can remember I have never been one to enjoy stretching exercises. Even when playing organized sports growing up with a coach standing over top of us, I would fake the stretch because it always felt as if I tired faster when I stretched. Even to this day when I see other people stretching before exercising I wonder how it is they do it and often enough they wonder how I don't do it. Today I came across a study recently published in the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research which says that static stretching does more harm than good. Here is the article which was written for Wired on the subject.
Seems that most everything your high school gym teacher told you is wrong. Well, at least when it comes to all that start-of-the-class stretching.
A recent spate of studies shows that when it comes to warming up before exercising, phys ed instructors didn’t do us any favors by having us to go through a series of calf extensions, hurdler’s stretches and the like.
The latest salvo against stretching comes from a study published in the September issue of the Journal of Strength and Conditioning Research, which found that static stretching before a workout lowered runners’ endurance and made their body less efficient. While previous studies have illustrated the effects of stretching on anaerobic activities, this was the first one to show the effects on runners.
The study took 10 fit middle- and long-distance runners (all male) and had each of them do the same run on two separate days with a 72-hour recovery period in between. The researchers divided the run into two 30-minute parts, with the first testing for caloric expenditure and the second assessing endurance. One day a participant did a stretching routine before running; on the other, he simply sat quietly prior to his workout.
During the first interval, participants ran at 65 percent of their VO2 max, keeping a constant pace. The researchers found that when the runners stretched before the workout, they burned, on average, 5 percent more calories during the run than when they didn’t stretch. Because they burned more energy to run the same distance it indicates their bodies performed less efficiently after stretching. For the second half, participants were told to run as far as they could on the treadmill for 30 minutes. When the runners didn’t stretch, they went 3.4 percent farther than when they did.
Despite the rising tide of evidence that discredits the benefits of static stretching, the perception remains that it’s necessary to do prior to working out. “Just asking runners, they seem to think stretching would enhance performance,” said study co-author Jacob Wilson, an assistant professor of exercise science and sports studies at the University of Tampa. “The thought is that if you can loosen up and you feel looser, you can perform better.”
But looser isn’t better. “When you’re lifting a weight, most of the damage comes when you’re lengthening the muscle, and it’s similar when you’re stretching,” Wilson said. “You’re stretching the muscle and you do get microtearing and you’re making the muscle less stiff too, so you’re not able to store and utilize energy as well.”
We’ve grown up believing stretching wasn’t just about improving performance, but about injury prevention as well. However a 2005 meta-analysis of past stretching studies found that it didn’t meaningfully reduce soreness or injury.
Yet the effects of stretching go beyond muscles, tendons and ligaments. When we do our toe touches or hurdler’s stretches, “we lose neural control, and that’s important because neurologically, before an event we want the muscles and nervous system to be able to fire the muscle in a smooth sequence,” said Phil Wharton, a leading strength and flexibility trainer whose roster of athletes includes Lopez Lomong and 2004 Olympic silver medal-winning marathoner Meb Keflezgighi. “That diminishes when you’re holding position.”
Wharton has forsaken static stretching altogether for the athletes he trains. Instead, he uses active stretches, which are range-of-motion exercises designed to warm up the muscles and joints prior to a workout and improve flexibility when used after exercise. But he cautions that people should proceed carefully when working the active stretches into their routines.
“People think a little bit is good and so maybe a lot is better, but with range of motion it’s not the case,” Wharton said. “You need to use a progression and build into it slowly as your body warms up.”
Read More http://www.wired.com/playbook/2010/10/forget-pre-exercise-stretching/#ixzz11jxCFx4J
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Climbing the Crabtree
This weekend Jenn and I were able to get of town to celebrate our first anniversary. Time has really flown by as it is hard for both of us to believe it has been a full year already. We decided to stay in a bed and breakfast about 30 minutes south of Charlottesville. Saturday we climbed Crabtree Falls, the tallest waterfall East of the Mississippi River. Today we spent the day touring Monticello and then the rest of the day was spent at the Apple Festival up on Carters Mountain. Click the photo below to be taken to the magical world of all the photos ...
Crabtree Falls - 1st Anniversary |
Would you order Thai food from a place that looked like this while in Nelson county VA? We did and it put Richmond area Thai restaurants to shame. We watched as only the freshest ingredients were chopped and prepared to order as if we were making it at home. Best part is we have leftovers to bring home!
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