April 30, 2008

Clothing essentials: what jersey

One thing that can often baffle and trouble Etape riders is what kit they need to wear and carry on the day. Let's look at the jerseys first.

Light colours are recommended, white if you are happy for it to be nowhere near as clean at the end as the start. They'll reflect the heat better. There's a wide array to choose from on the market in plain colours.

If the ride is as hot as it has been the last couple of years then it needs to be made from a lightweight material but one which holds its shape well and won't sag when the pockets are full as they will be.

Talking of pockets, it needs to have plenty of space in them and be accessible. Try a few on to find out which one works for you as almost every manufacturer positions them differently and some are more accessible than others, depending on your size and flexibility.

Traditionally three pockets is the style but there's a few out there now with two. I like three for the ease of segmentation it offers - solid food and money in one, clothing in the middle, gels and powders in the other.

Here's a few you might like to look at.

Rapha Lightweight Jersey - Top-end stuff from my favourite kit company. Ignore worrying about the price: it does the job.

Prendas Peugeot Retro Jersey - Yes it's a team kit but it's not a current one, therefore avoiding falling into the "wearing kit you haven't earned the right to wear" category. I like it, it's class and looks smart.

Castelli Superleggera Jersey
- if it's a company good enough for Fausto Coppi, good enough for pretty much everyone else.

Do NOT under any circumstances wear any of the following: Maillot Jaune, Maillot a Pois, Maillot Blanc, World Champion, National Champion. I'll allow current pro team replica kits because I'm feeling generous and they're quite reasonably priced in general. If you ride for a club, you should wear your club kit.

April 14, 2008

The myth of the miles

No doubt by now you've been told by someone that "You need to get the miles in" to achieve your goal. They'll have sold you a fishing tale about how you need to be doing hundreds of miles a week and hundreds more at weekends to stand any chance of finishing.

They might have finished an Etape or two themselves by doing this but it is not the only and certainly not the best way to suceed. It's probably the best way to tire yourself out and to frustrate yourself with a lack of progress, being about as good a method of overtraining as can be imagined.

My advice is this: ride three times a week, doing three different types of ride.

  • Intensity - 1 hour aiming to do around 32km/h pace on the flat
  • Endurance - 3-5 hour club run of around 120-140km door-to-door
  • Skills - 30 minutes to 1 hour practicing things like getting food out of pockets, taking off arm warmers/gilet, putting on clothing

And remember: we're only mid-April, the Etape is in July. That's still some time to go.

April 8, 2008

2008: Not again?

At this stage I don't know whether I am definitely going to ride the Etape. It depends on a lot of things, some beyond my control at this stage.

What I have been thinking of doing is making this blog more of an advice hotspot for my tips and advice from other riders on what works and what doesn't.

Feel free to send in your advice and I'll try and publish as much of it as I have time to.

July 23, 2007

Un jour d'enfer


Un jour d'enfer
Originally uploaded by leguape
This is about as bad as it got, going through utter hell on the Port de Bales. This was where I was just clinging on grimly and trying to get over this one without losing the plot. I think this was about 5km from the top so 15km into it.

I've finally got my pics back and they look brilliant. I've stuck them on my flickr account so if you just click on this one you'll be able to find the rest. Timely to see how I suffered after watching Vino ride like a Kazakh warrior today to take the stage. There was something about his attacking and determination not to be broken that really made me feel some proximity to him.

And they be pumped his fist, zipped up his jersey and threw his arms wide open as he crossed the line. It really brought a tear to my eye to know how it feels.

July 18, 2007

The WTF? bits

1. The bloke with one leg. No prosthesis, just the one leg. Pedalling away merrily up the climbs, in his Credit Mutuel-sponsored kit, and telling his mate not to got too hard. His mate's reply was that he'd only catch him later because he descended "like a madman". He certainly did from what I saw as I tried to follow him down one of the mountains.

2. Melted asphalt like black treacle. Smeared all over the Port de Bales road on the way up, sticking me to the road, making a mess of my front tyre to the point that it wouldn't roll properly at low speed.

3. My front wheel rubbing. It was fine before I went out to France but as soon as I assembled the bike there were problems that I thought were fixed until the start. I might have gone a bit quicker without the drag it caused and my front fork might be in a better state still.

4. The descent of Port de Bales. Narrow at the top with no barriers on the corners. Because what you really need as you hurtle into a corner at speed is the knowledge that if it goes tits up there's only the horizon to stop your fall down the mountain.

5. Time disappearing in the turn of a pedal stroke. Minutes to drag the bike a matter of a few hundred metres. Climbing so slowly I was barely moving.

6. The cowbells. Either being rung old-skool style by roadside fans or clanking on yer actual cows. The latter went from being "soothing alpine sounds" to "death march to the summit" over the course of at least two of the climbs.

Report on BBC 606

You can read one of my reports on this year's event on 606 here:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/dna/606/A24909889

I'll be adding more colourful bits on here as well. There's so many wonderful memories that I want to get down somewhere before they fade. I have never been so glad as when I saw the flamme rouge and rolled to the finish. Hopefully the photos will be about soon as then you'll get to see just how much some of it hurt.

July 16, 2007

Get in!


Get in!
Originally uploaded by leguape