Sunday morning Colorado adventure


Oh yes, ’tis good to ride the bikes on real terrain. Today we had a good little adventure at Left Hand Canyon OHV area outside Boulder.

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P.Bike vs. P.All Mountain?


Hey Lee,

I may be selling my full suspension bike this year and I am considering going back to riding a hardtail. I’m pretty interested in the P.1 All Mountain after seeing it on the Specialized website. Have you gotten a chance to ride it yet? If so I would like to know how it compares to the other P.1 as a one-bike quiver.

By the way, Welcome To Pump Track Nation rocks! I start construction on my pump track my next day off!

Mahalo,

Keoni

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Testing the off-mountain training


It’s been the toughest but most awesome winter of my life. I did tons of work, finished two books and helped create and maintain two humans. That meant six months of training “off the mountain.”

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24 hours of pinned-ness

I’ve always wanted to do a 24-hour race, but I was afraid I couldn’t go that long without sleeping.

For the past five months, the babies have made me tougher and tougher.

I’m ready.

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Mastering Mountain Bike Skills 2nd Edition is done!

At least as far as my role goes. Whew! So much work.

I just sent in final edits. The book is looking good. Tons of new material. Now it’s off to the printer; the publisher says it’ll be available in May.

For more details, sample layouts and pre-ordering, check out:

> Mastering Mountain Bike Skills 2nd Edition

Pulling with both hands


Today I climbed 1,400 vertical from downtown Boulder to home. Pavement then dirt then snow. Finished in a flurry of flakes. Colorado style!

I had time to think about pedaling, and a new idea worked its way into my noggin.

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Optimal pedaling cadence: Riding 80?

Lee,

I was wasting time surfing the internet dreaming about snow/ice free trails when I found one of those 10 Trail Tips You Need To Master type articles on the Mountain Bike Action website (I’m not a huge fan of MBA, but I was killing time). The list was all of the basic stuff you always read (i.e. looking ahead etc.), but they also had one tip of “Riding 80” meaning riding at a 80 rpm cadence. MBA said, “80 is the most efficient cadence you can use to turn the cranks over,” and that “That is the perfect compromise between muscle force and aerobic power.”

I have never really paid attention to the cadence that I average on a ride, I just try to ride what feels best and pushes my limits. Do you think that there really is an optimum cadence for mountain biking, if so is it the same for every rider? Do think that actively setting/monitoring cadence goals during a ride will improve ability?

Thanks,
Dave

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Intervals on real terrain?


In Chris Q’s comment on The most effective intervals … ever?, he asked, “What do you think of intervals done on real terrain as opposed to trainer?”

Awesome question.

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Work: Good stuff today

Yesterday’s work really sucked. Today was better.

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Tires for Super D and regular riding

Our friend Rob is wondering about a few Maxxis options, plus you know I have a Specialized idea.

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Snow pump track (for bikes)


Our friend Stefan in South Tyrol used the specs in Welcome to Pump Track Nation to build a snow pump track.

He plans to build a dirt track this summer. As he says, he’s working out the kinks with a zero-cost material.

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The most effective intervals … ever?


I’m about to start Week 12 of a 12-week indoor training program. (Yes, it has sucked. Yes, it has been good for me.)

All this time pedaling in place has me wondering about how our bodies make energy for different length efforts — and, importantly, how busy people can make the most of their training time.

I’m sitting there developing aerobic fitness, which is great for hill climbing, but what about my sprint fu?

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