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You can definitely try interval training as you get comfortable riding ... If you’ve ever taken a spinning class, you can borrow some of the spinning drills. I used to teach spinning so I have a few others I can send you if you’d like.
The winter is really different for everyone. I tend to stop riding when it gets cold, and I have a trainer that I use a lot to stay in biking shape,
One thing I like to stress if your gunna use a bike to get in shape or lose weight is to ride in your lower gears, and spin spin spin those pedals. If you have to get out of the saddle to pedal, or cant get a fast cadence going, your riding in to high of a gear. The idea of this is that you want to burn fat, not build muscle. I guess the same idea works with lifting weights too, more reps of less weight, vs. less reps of more weight. Does that make sense?
1) get fitted properly (yes, you will pay $$ for this)
a) your position will probably change the more you ride. your bike won't get used to you but you will get used to riding it.
b) poor fit + high miles = bad stuff for your body a la repetitive motion injury.
2) ride daily.
a) start slow and short. this will give your body time to adapt to the "correct" fit.
b) the worst thing you could do is balls to the wall your first ride.
3) after 2 weeks start adding miles to your rides. 10% per week. remember, you need to give your body time to adjust. not doing this can lead to nastyness like patellar tendinitis, achy breaky backs, a sore ass, etc. e.g. A few years ago I increased weekly mileage too much/too fast and found myself having to get off the bike for 2 weeks while my body healed. 2 weeks off = going backward
4) until you get base mileage in I wouldn't sweat intervals, HR zones or anything else. back when I was a youngster I was told something like, "Feb 1st you start riding fixed gear. 500 miles 48x18, 250mi 48x17, 250mi 48x16. After that, you can ride your road bike." the point of this was to simplify riding and to get my body used to the bike again. there was no speed requirement. i just had to log the hours. i have no idea what your base mileage should be because I don't know what your fitness level is or how much you ride now. A really simply way score base miles is to ride 5 days a week 45 min a day from tomorrow until it gets too cold to ride. then go inside and refer to my next point ---->
which is:
don't spend $$$ on a trainer until you actually think that you're gonna have fun sitting in your basement or living room with a fan blowing on you while you have the tv cranked up way too loud watching Wild Chicago re-runs on channel 11 (seriously who needs to see Zoe Orgasma and his Barbie collection or the House of Wax episode again???) instead, spend the $$ on a gym membership. go lift weights** and cross-train. do high intensity intervals on the treadmill or elliptical (google HIIT). and while you're doing all of that smile to yourself because you're not me getting up at 5 am, sitting on a bike going nowhere, eating a bowl of oatmeal with protein powder in it while checking out the Reader's missed connections hoping that the really cute indie girl I smiled at decided to post something cute about my stupid tattoo and the way I blushed when she reciprocated the smile (. . . . . shutup, you've all been there)
**incidentally, if you happen to be a woman and fear getting "manly" by lifting weights, you won't. unless you're taking steroids there is no way you'll get beefy arms, a strong jaw and lower voice (i make no promises about chest hair). and please please please don't avoid the free weights. lifting free weights works your body in a way that machines never can.
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Oh yeah. According to the most newest and bestist exercising data blah blah blah. One needs to exercise about 1 hour daily to loose weight. (I'm not sure that I believe this BUT I did happen to read it on the NYT website---right next to the "PILLS TO MAKE YOU GET FIT" article) You also don't really start to burn fatty McFatFat off until after 20 min of cardio. Hmmm. also the whole aerobic vs anaerobic debate is BS. calories burned are calories burned.
Don't bother with the books like Chris Carmichael's 7 weeks to a Lance Armstrong Ride or Ride with Lance or Give $15.00 to Lance and Learn that There are No Secrets to Riding Like Lance. If you feel tempted to buy a book like that send the $15 my way (I want new bar tape anyways) and I will gladly call you every morning for a week at 5am to tell you that you need to get up, eat healthy, take your multi. and get your ass on your bike.
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hmm. i just scrolled down to see the posts below. i'd agree with most of what they say. the stuff I don't agree with is because I'm crotchety not cause they're wrong.
good luck. and remember a morning encouragement wake up call is only $15 away!!!
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