Posts

My Guilty Pleasures as a Cyclist

    Everyone has it maybe ice cream, Pizza, an extra piece of cake, maybe just a mars bar. Every cyclist has a few guilty pleasures and justifies indulging in them through cycling.  These are top 10 pics for the guilty pleasures of cycling.  1) Pizza: Through all the time I’ve been cycling never met a cyclist who says he or she doesn't like a pizza. Sure, they’ll tell you that once a month or on occasion or something like that but we know better don't we? If you're one of those people feel that pizza is a fatty food and you’re in the middle of one of those weight loss diets, do yourself a favour and treat yourself to one every now and then. If done right, you'll still lose the weight and not be miserable all the time.  2) Chocolate: It's a good source of sugars, it's a good alternative to the gels, I need the carbs for the ride, healthy for the heart, improves circulation, I’m about to hit the wall (Cycling term for run out of energy), all are ...

The Fitness Mantra.

Fitness is a lifestyle choice. Training  is fundamental to fitness / a fit body. Training your body and mind go hand in hand , for now we will focus on the process of training the body.  Training the body follows a life cycle.  Plan - Stress - Recover - Repeat. Plan your training :  Understand where you are and form an idea of where you want to be. Do a bit of research on how people have done it before you.  List out the stuff that works for you , what doesn't and what might with a slightly “ fitter ” version of you and begin charting out a programme.  Your programme can be anything from a scribble on a piece of paper to a smartphone app or an extremely detailed “custom” Excel sheet with data from a range of sensors to quantify your training. My personal recommendation is to start with what you have and not think of how you imagine your perfect training session to be.  I started out by getting a cycle and riding for a 20- 30 ...

The BTWIN Triban 5 White. REVIEW

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It’s finally ready, The BTWIN Triban 5 White.    I’m a 173cm tall guy, very heavy build (87kgs at the time of writing, 94 when I purchased it.), inflexible back and a large tummy (Proof in the pics attached to the post). This is my review on the Triban 5 white 54cm frame. The bike is the heaviest of all the three Road bikes I have and it has always been a pin in the back of my head that I will be slow on a heavier bike but I was wrong.  Over time I have concluded all this is the fastest bike I have for a rolling terrain but without the ability to go for an out right sprint. I admit the frame's rather aggressive compact geometry gave me a tough time at first, especially on the drops while descending and sprinting (Probably cause I ride a 56 cm frame on my daily commuter.) but it more than makes up for it in the flats, gentle long climbs and sweet-short-sharp inclines. It came as a surprise to me when I experienced first hand how this bike handles the v...