What Forty Miles Looks Like

Posted on May 18th, 2009 by ryan
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It’s a Sunday. I traded training days this week–instead of doing my long ride on Saturday and my midlength ride on Sunday, I did my midlength ride on Saturday and I’m doing my long–this time, 40 miles–ride on Sunday morning. It’s also a day when I want to go to Sunday morning service (starting at 9 am) and I have a couple of other commitments, meaning there’s just one time to get this ride in: 5 am.

What does this ride look like?

It starts off the night before, really–a bit of bike maintenance, laying out clothes, freezing water bottles (one of my routine “tricks”–the water melts over time, and stays cold longer, although by the end of hour one, it’s pretty much just “road” temperature), and considering what route to take. And making sure to get to bed early enough to have enough rest.

It then starts off dark in my hometown of Kane’ohe, Hawai’i.

What time I started

What time I started

For me, the first mile is a slight uphill, then a bit of flat, followed by a slight rise, and onto Kahekili Highway, headed toward the historic Hygenic Store (I still don’t know why it’s called that), then a turn back toward Kane’ohe town where it started, alongside He’eia Ke’a Pier where my dad’s ashes are scattered (always good for a quick spot to reflect and use the bathroom), and up a short rise back toward Windward Mall.

When the sun’s rising, it’s through Kane’ohe town, then down Kane’ohe Bay Drive (a pretty fast downhill) to Kailua, where there’s a lot of flat roads up until Keolu Drive, where I headed up a pretty steep hill, stopping halfway, doing a quick pit stop for some G2 at the Kailua 7-11 (G2 may not have been designed for diabetic endurance athletes, but it’s great for them–for us), then turning around and heading back down to Kailua town.

Nothing better for a cyclist with diabetes--or any athlete with diabetes--than G2.

Nothing better for a cyclist with diabetes--or any athlete with diabetes--than G2.

Finally, it’s back up Kane’ohe Bay Drive for a long grind of a hill, back to Kane’ohe town, where a fast stretch leads to the last mile before home, and a quick downhill to cool down.

All of that done, and before 8 am7:40 am. Plenty of time to get to service and do the rest of my Sunday errands, and had it not been for a headset problem that I spent 30 minutes fixing, I could have made service too. Oh well, next week!

This Week at the Carnivals and Festivals

Posted on May 16th, 2009 by ryan
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This week Athletic-Diabetic.com was featured at the Athletic Alley blog carnival. If you are visiting us from this carnival, welcome and please consider subscribing to our RSS feed!

My Story, Part Sixteen

Posted on May 15th, 2009 by ryan
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Early on, small signs of progress are encouraging. In the beginning, when you’re struggling, very small things show progress. Being able to ride your bike for an hour rather than half an hour can be a huge deal. When I started running, being able to run an hour without stopping–or later, walking rather than stopping–was […]

What I Like About Running

Posted on May 14th, 2009 by ryan
Filed under Exercise, Organized events, Running, Social aspects, Technology | 1 Comment

As I confessed here some time ago, even though I’ve done the Great Aloha Run (twice), the Ford Island Bridge 10K, and hobbled badly through but finished the Honolulu Marathon, I hate running. But that said, there’s still some positives to this exercise I don’t like but participate in nonetheless: Low cost: Running doesn’t cost […]

My Story, Part Fifteen

Posted on May 13th, 2009 by ryan
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The day after, in this case, anyway, isn’t about the morning following a one night stand, but rather the day after you start on your exercise regimen. If you’ve been pretty sedentary, there’s certainly a strong chance you’ll be sore. Muscles you’re not used to using–heck, muscles you didn’t even know existed!–have been used harder […]

Forty Miles Into a Marriage

Posted on May 12th, 2009 by ryan
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The relationship between a cyclist and bicycle is not unlike a marriage. Many scoff at the concept, but when you’re relying on a piece of machinery powered by your legs to take you 100 miles in a day and it’s the only thing between you and the pain of pavement at 50 miles per hour, […]

My Story, Part Fourteen

Posted on May 11th, 2009 by ryan
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What’s it like to start an exercise program? It is, for lack of a better term, the opposite of glamorous. For those of us with an illness like diabetes, it needs to start with an okay from your physician. I can’t stress this enough–your doctor will probably love the idea, but make sure you actually […]

This Week at the Blog Carnivals

Posted on May 9th, 2009 by ryan
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This week The Athletic Diabetic was featured in another blog carnival, one with a local flair: the Carnival of Aloha at Homespun Honolulu. If you are visiting us from this great carnival, mahalo, aloha, and please consider subscribing to our RSS feed!

Eating an Elephant

Posted on May 8th, 2009 by ryan
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You eat an elephant, the saying goes, one bite at a time. You work on your health, diabetic or not, in a similar way. In the excellent Type II Diabetes: the First Year, Gretchen Becker makes the point that she doesn’t like exercise, but she can definitely commit to movement–doing something (anything really) to get […]

My Story, Part Thirteen

Posted on May 7th, 2009 by ryan
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This week, like so many April and May weeks over the past few years, is being spent on the beginnings of trying to work myself into “century shape”–the shape I need to be in to ride 100 miles. It’s early in the season, but it needs to happen. I’m skipping over to week seven of […]