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fatcyclist

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Everything posted by fatcyclist

  1. Cervelo: I'd be more worried for Michelle's sake. Jason is eyeing me in a skinsuit, talking about men's saggy butts, and admiring wooden flooring...
  2. When you're suffering up Suikerbossie in the 'Funride World Champs', how many of the girls do you notice?
  3. Not to mention that Zipp 404's also comes in a Clydesdale version for those 'larger than life' riders like me...about 100gr heavier and a rider weight limit of 300pounds... Alas, I don't see the point in paying 12k for a set of wheels
  4. fatcyclist

    Commute

    I've been commuting from Parklands to Kenilworth in Cape Town for the past few months after following the advice of fellow hubbers, and it's been generally pleasant. It takes around 20mins longer for a return trip by bicycle and helps quite a bit with training. Just 3 days commuting puts 160km's in to the training log. Minor incidents with taxi's and the odd car, but nothing to write home about.
  5. Francois, think George, York Street - Tour De Eden 2004
  6. Going through some past e-mails I found this article I mailed to people in 2004 and thought I'd paste it here for everyone to read... I can't remember who wrote it, or the exact web link --------- "Cycling is so hard, the suffering is so intense, that it's absolutely cleansing. The pain is so deep and strong that a curtain descends over your brain... Once, someone asked me what pleasure I took in riding for so long. 'Pleasure?' I said. 'I don't understand the question.' I didn't do it for pleasure, I did it for pain." Lance Armstrong, winner Tour de France 1999 - 2003 (now 2005) The history of cycle racing abounds with stories of endurance, will power and sheer courage on an epic scale. The capacity of bike riders to drive themselves relentlessly day after day through the pain barrier and way beyond makes them a breed apart. They redefine heroism in sport. The suffering is gratuitous, the mileage they cover Herculean, and both make a crucible in which a unique character is forged: an apparently cheerful indifference to the pain inflicted by bike and road, suffused with the transcendent desire to conquer both. The greatest battle is not physical but psychological. The demons telling us to give up when we push ourselves to the limit can never be silenced for good. They must always be answered by the quiet the steady dignity that simply refuses to give in. Call no man brave, say the Spanish, say only that on a particular day he showed himself brave. Such strength of character radiates from every bike rider who has shown the requisite courage not to yield, has won his dignity, day after day. The true test of any rider's mettle is the road. How much punishment can you take on a bike? You will only find out after you hear the voice in your head saying no, no you've had it, any more of this battering and you're going to weaken fatally, and yet, for some reason best left to God and guesswork, carrying on anyway. Every time that happens, into a savage headwind... on the sharp knocks of the Chilterns... the will-sapping hauls of the continental monsters, the experience is part of a continuum, the repeated battle against surrender. No crowds cheer us lesser mortals up the big climbs, but the mountains are open and mountains are rarely if ever finished with you. No matter how often you climb them, you never beat them: each time you start at the bottom, from scratch. Reputation will not take you up a climb. The physical battle has always to be repeated. Through every repeat, mental strength accumulates. The Tourmalet, lassoed by mist, 2000m up in the Circle of Death, where Apo Lazarid?s climbed off one day to wait for the others for fear of Pyrenean bears. The dreaded Mont Ventoux, Domain of the Angels. Col du Galibier, the Giant of the Alps, 'premier cru' to the 'vin ordinaire' of the rest. That's where you can follow the Tour, into the thin air, up the relentless hairpins, your tyres hissing across the tarmac catalogue of Tour riders who made the same journey. Suffering is one thing; knowing how to suffer is quite another. You look at the dizzying peaks and say to yourself: What? Up there? Mad notion... and the experience of the hardest most exhilarating cycling you can ever accomplish is on you. The great gauntlet on two wheels, the triumph of inner resolve over disbelief. For the mountains are the extreme case, where you really find out about yourself, in the scary realms of physical and mental exertion to the limit. Remote altitudes of geography, unplumbed depths in your spirit. Even local folklore recognises the weird forces at work on the cyclist chancing his fate against horrible gradients. Up here, they say, is where the black-hearted ogres of bad luck hang out: the Witch with Green Teeth and Hammerman, quick to pounce on any slippage in your resolve. Bogeymen personifying the mysterious factors which can freeze your nerve with the lonely prospect of failure. That's why we speak of heroism in cycling: it's elemental. This is the ultimate proving time. The spells of mind-numbing dysfunction when your head fills with disconnected trivia and only the wheels, still responding to the pedal stroke, like the cogwheels in your brain's clock, seem to have any logic about them. Mechanically you mutter: if the road goes on, so can I. As Brian Robinson, first Briton to finish the Tour de France (1955) said to himself: I looked at the other guys and thought, they're the same as me - if they can do it, I can. Good reasoning because there's no ducking the argument. It's simple: I can't go on. I must go on. I will go on. And through the bleak period when your wandering mind gets obsessed with the idea that you're finished oh, it happens - you persist and you are learning the core lesson of cycling, just as every true rider learnt it: on this road, in this duress, you live in the moment with all your force, in the intensity, the fullness of the moment. Do you know a better definition of exhilaration? Riding up the Col de la Core one blistering hot afternoon (First Category, Pyrenees) I was passed by a string of Fran?aise des Jeux riders. As their last man went by, dangling off the back, he gave me a wave Courage. We all suffer. Keep going. But if something hurts so much, how can it be enjoyable? At the point where physical stress begins to take you beyond what you imagine to be endurable, you enter new territory of understanding, an expanded psychological landscape. The camaraderie of the hard road is as much in sharing that insight as in the laughs you have, riding in good company. The bike is the perfect vehicle to take you down those secret corridors of illumination. The pleasure comes when you grasp just what has happened inside your head and spirit. It doesn't stop when the bike stops, when you reach the top of the col or peel off at the end of the ride, so tired you can hardly think or stand straight. That's where the pleasure begins. The self-knowledge. Behind glory lies the misery of training, the slog of getting through bad days, the torment of going at less than your best and the absolute conviction that giving up is never an option. Herein lies the heroism of this beautiful sport the inner revelation that makes the cyclist impervious to ordinary weakness because every ride he has ever made exposes him to that defeatist voice; he has known it, faced it and conquered the fear of it, again and again and again.
  7. HAHAHAHAHAAHHAAHAHAHAHAHAHA You just made my weekend!!!!
  8. Whats an orgasm?
  9. They didn't weigh Magnus Backstedt's bike! Unfair!!!!
  10. I've got the Xaero Lite's (not the deepsection rims)... Got them through Icycling, so just PM him and he will give you details of shops that stock them in Gauteng
  11. Yeah...I train on a pair of Campy Vento's (the new 2006 model), and race a set of Spinergy's - both very affordable wheelsets...and ask anyone that knows me, I used to break spokes regularly..
  12. It's a thing of beauty...smileys/smiley32.gifsmileys/smiley32.gifsmileys/smiley32.gif There goes my 13th cheque smileys/smiley5.gif
  13. uploads/fatcyclist/images/2006-07-11_151121_commute.jpg Thats my poor commuting bike. Small crack in head tube (not dangerous for normal riding), old Wobbler (sp?) rear wheel, old Campy Chorus 8spd groupset and other cheap parts...it works well enough smileys/smiley2.gif
  14. Just dress in layers...the best is knowing there is a warm shower at the end. This morning it was around 11'C, so I had a undershirt, cycling top and bib shorts. Thermal leg and armwarmers, a long sleeve cycling top and as a outer layer, one of those bright green Velotex rain jacket things. Believe it or not, I was sweating when I got to the office. Rather be a bit warm, than cold!!
  15. Roll the clothes up the morning before the ride, and as soon as I get to the office, I take it out and hang it on a hanger while I shower. Seems to hold up well. Don't fold it, else it creases. Part of the advice the guys on the hub gave me. Pity two cold fronts coming in tomorrow and the day after, so next commute will only be Friday. At least it's some training smileys/smiley9.gif...also using MTB shoes and pedals to make walking a bit easier to and from the gym area.
  16. Just a thank you to everyone that posted advice on commuting a while back. Managed my first commute to work this morning. Did get a puncture 5km's from home, but that was the only incident. Two front lights (one flashing, one solid beam) and lots of rear flashing units makes you surprisingly visible to cars!! It was a rather nice feeling getting to work and stepping in to a hot shower with 30km's already in the legs for the day (especially after 3 weeks of flu and one course of antibiotics). Now hold thumbs I make it home safe smileys/smiley36.gifsmileys/smiley36.gif
  17. My immune system het a 'knock' gevat, toe kry ek a viral infection. Was gister by die GP en kry toe 10 dae se antibiotics en streng opdrag om nie aan die fiets te raak voor Saterdag nie. smileys/smiley5.gif
  18. Aaaag dankie nellie! Wardeer dit. Ja, braai klink goed.. Nou moet ek net gesond word sodat ek weer kan begin oeffen smileys/smiley11.gif
  19. Get the thicker neoprene style booties. They work quite well.
  20. Ksyriums, carbon fibre and Dura Ace.... Naah, keep it thanks smileys/smiley2.gif
  21. You better bring some lube to the next crit, because you will need it you skinny bugger! smileys/smiley36.gifsmileys/smiley36.gif
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