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Main
Date: 07 Dec 2006 18:51:15
From: zeke
Subject: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. ---------------------------- Bike: Trek 5500 Project One View my training log: http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo
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Date: 11 Dec 2006 09:36:22
From:
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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dgk wrote: > On 7 Dec 2006 18:51:15 -0800, "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com> wrote: > > >How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > > >---------------------------- > >Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > >View my training log: > >http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo > > I think around 3500. If this thread is still going in January '07 I'll chime in then..... pH
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Date: 11 Dec 2006 15:32:28
From: dgk
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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On 11 Dec 2006 09:36:22 -0800, pureheart@pacbell.net wrote: > >dgk wrote: >> On 7 Dec 2006 18:51:15 -0800, "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com> wrote: >> >> >How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. >> > >> >---------------------------- >> >Bike: Trek 5500 Project One >> >View my training log: >> >http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo >> >> I think around 3500. > > >If this thread is still going in January '07 I'll chime in then..... >pH Oh, I thought the year ran from 12/9/2005 to 12/9/2006. I can pretty much guess what I'll do between now and new years. Usually between 75 and 90 per week.
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Date: 11 Dec 2006 08:44:28
From: dgk
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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On 7 Dec 2006 18:51:15 -0800, "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > wrote: >How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > >---------------------------- >Bike: Trek 5500 Project One >View my training log: >http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo I think around 3500.
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Date: 10 Dec 2006 15:23:36
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <5v1pn2tj9g131jbh9b54e3k0rr691a6dev@4ax.com >, Zoot Katz <zootkatz@operamail.com > writes: > On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 12:51:18 -0800, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom > Keats) wrote: > >>> TK: I think you'll like what they've done with Columbia now. Major >>> bike/pedestrian centric makeover. >> >>I noticed the bike lanes. What's with having both bicycle >>and diamond stencils painted on them? > > The diamond indicates HOV lanes. I assumed as much. But from my cursory glance at those "bike lanes", they looked pretty narrow for 4[+] wheeled vehicles, or anything wider than a Prius. I don't think a MC+sidehack could fit in there. But maybe my recollection or perception is faulty. > They're for cars, vans, trucks and motorcycles carrying two or more > persons. HOV on Hwy 99 means 3 or more persons. > > They're also for bicycles and buses. There's usually a sign > explaining their use as there are sometimes restricted hours. At least, as I recall, there were no parking lanes adjacent to them (unlike Homer St.) Bike-laning Columbia St is all very well[*], but I'd like to see along Stewardson Way made more accomodating for bikes. That's where the best grades are, westbound from New West. I do like those antique-looking post-&-ring hitching posts. Except locking two bikes on one post might be problematic. Especially if the post is too close to the curb. cheers, Tom [*] Actually I don't think it was all that necessary. Columbia St is pretty tame, fraught as it is with so many traffic lights. OTOH I guess it's nice to not be stuck behind a big truck blocking your view. -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 10 Dec 2006 16:06:06
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 15:23:36 -0800, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >>>> TK: I think you'll like what they've done with Columbia now. Major >>>> bike/pedestrian centric makeover. >>> >>>I noticed the bike lanes. What's with having both bicycle >>>and diamond stencils painted on them? >> >> The diamond indicates HOV lanes. > >I assumed as much. But from my cursory glance at those >"bike lanes", they looked pretty narrow for 4[+] wheeled >vehicles, or anything wider than a Prius. I don't think >a MC+sidehack could fit in there. But maybe my recollection >or perception is faulty. I'm not familiar with the location. Perhaps the diamonds are leftover from before it was painted to be a bike lane? -- zk
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Date: 11 Dec 2006 06:07:05
From: Ryan Cousineau
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <d38pn2pso2als0om7t25a831dkjj2kl725@4ax.com >, Zoot Katz <zootkatz@operamail.com > wrote: > On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 15:23:36 -0800, tkeats2005@hotmail.com > (Tom Keats) wrote: > > >>>> TK: I think you'll like what they've done with Columbia now. Major > >>>> bike/pedestrian centric makeover. > >>> > >>>I noticed the bike lanes. What's with having both bicycle > >>>and diamond stencils painted on them? > >> > >> The diamond indicates HOV lanes. > > > >I assumed as much. But from my cursory glance at those > >"bike lanes", they looked pretty narrow for 4[+] wheeled > >vehicles, or anything wider than a Prius. I don't think > >a MC+sidehack could fit in there. But maybe my recollection > >or perception is faulty. > > I'm not familiar with the location. Perhaps the diamonds are leftover > from before it was painted to be a bike lane? No. The diamonds are new; there was no HOV system on the road before. The road was narrowed to one lane each way plus the bike lanes, which are adequate for bikes. The major change was going from parallel to angle-out (!) parking, in which cars have to back into the angled stalls. An interesting choice, which has been made with a claim of greater safety (which I find reasonable). So this has a lot to do with increasing parking while simultaneously calming the road and making it more ped-friendly, which suits its current incarnation as a retail district. -- Ryan Cousineau rcousine@sfu.ca http://www.wiredcola.com/ "I don't want kids who are thinking about going into mathematics to think that they have to take drugs to succeed." -Paul Erdos
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Date: 10 Dec 2006 12:51:18
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <rcousine-B5A315.12192410122006@news.telus.net >, Ryan Cousineau <rcousine@sfu.ca > writes: >> Some live-action vid of bombing along New Westminster's Front >> Street between somewhat favourable traffic light phases, or >> scorching down Mt Seymour Parkway, or wending one's way through >> that ugly bike lane thingie on Wayburne Way that's strewn with >> tree blow-downs might be pretty kewl, too. > > TK: I think you'll like what they've done with Columbia now. Major > bike/pedestrian centric makeover. I noticed the bike lanes. What's with having both bicycle and diamond stencils painted on them? Some of the pedestrian traffic light pushbuttons are on the wrong sides (the street sides) of the poles on which they're mounted, and they're not very well aligned with their respective crosswalks. So pedestrians have to reach around the pole to push the button. Oh well. I guess it helps keep New Westminster "quaint" :-) cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 10 Dec 2006 14:26:02
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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On Sun, 10 Dec 2006 12:51:18 -0800, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: >> TK: I think you'll like what they've done with Columbia now. Major >> bike/pedestrian centric makeover. > >I noticed the bike lanes. What's with having both bicycle >and diamond stencils painted on them? The diamond indicates HOV lanes. They're for cars, vans, trucks and motorcycles carrying two or more persons. HOV on Hwy 99 means 3 or more persons. They're also for bicycles and buses. There's usually a sign explaining their use as there are sometimes restricted hours. -- zk
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Date: 10 Dec 2006 20:35:28
From: Ivar Hesselager
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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Den 08.12.2006 kl. 03:51 skrev zeke <support@dltsoftware.com >: > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > ---------------------------- > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > View my training log: > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=3Ddemo&password=3Ddemo > This year I didn't do any miles. Just kilometers. The LBS had offered= = to convert my Flight Deck to miles for free. But at my age the miles = seem overwhelming long. If I was still in my fourties I would probably= = be doing a lot of miles. But since I ride granny gears I have resolved, = I = better stick to the kilometers for the rest of my cycling days. Ivar
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Date: 09 Dec 2006 14:19:07
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <mdfeh.449447$5R2.795@pd7urf3no >, "nash" <zwepytzkehillc9@jetable.net > writes: > You gotta wonder what kind of a yo yo puts his training log up for everyone > to oooohhhhh ahhhhh over I wish I had a camera. Then I could put up some photos of the great riding around here. Maybe some folks would go "oooh" & "ahhh" over them, but I'd prefer they'd say stuff like: "hey, that reminds me of < such-'n-such > where I ride," and contribute their own experiences. And then other riders in far-flung exotic lands might follow suit, and riders from all over the world could come together and say "Hey -- I know exactly what you mean." I especially gotta put up a picture of the polka-dot house up on Lakewood & 4th. New Brighton Park is pretty photogenic, too. Then there's that garden gate made out of gardening tools just across from the Bean Around The World coffee shop at Main & 20th (one of my favourite haunts.) And the vistas from the Mountain View boneyard. Some live-action vid of bombing along New Westminster's Front Street between somewhat favourable traffic light phases, or scorching down Mt Seymour Parkway, or wending one's way through that ugly bike lane thingie on Wayburne Way that's strewn with tree blow-downs might be pretty kewl, too. I guess logs & journals are what we resort to when we don't have cameras. They say a picture is worth a thousand words. Of course, not many of those words are quantitative :-) cheers Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 10 Dec 2006 20:19:24
From: Ryan Cousineau
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <rocfle.33k.ln@bud.garden.local >, tkeats2005@hotmail.com (Tom Keats) wrote: > In article <mdfeh.449447$5R2.795@pd7urf3no>, > "nash" <zwepytzkehillc9@jetable.net> writes: > > > You gotta wonder what kind of a yo yo puts his training log up for everyone > > to oooohhhhh ahhhhh over > I especially gotta put up a picture of the polka-dot house > up on Lakewood & 4th. New Brighton Park is pretty photogenic, > too. Then there's that garden gate made out of gardening tools > just across from the Bean Around The World coffee shop at > Main & 20th (one of my favourite haunts.) And the vistas from > the Mountain View boneyard. Hey, do you know about the house somewhere near Avalon Dairy (or is it Vancouver Cemetary) where the front yard is chock-full of lawn tchotchkes? The overall effect is surprisingly harmonious, but it's a lot of stuff for a front yard. > Some live-action vid of bombing along New Westminster's Front > Street between somewhat favourable traffic light phases, or > scorching down Mt Seymour Parkway, or wending one's way through > that ugly bike lane thingie on Wayburne Way that's strewn with > tree blow-downs might be pretty kewl, too. TK: I think you'll like what they've done with Columbia now. Major bike/pedestrian centric makeover. > I guess logs & journals are what we resort to when we > don't have cameras. > > They say a picture is worth a thousand words. -- Ryan Cousineau rcousine@sfu.ca http://www.wiredcola.com/ "I don't want kids who are thinking about going into mathematics to think that they have to take drugs to succeed." -Paul Erdos
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Date: 09 Dec 2006 01:53:01
From:
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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Earl Bollinger wrote: > "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com> wrote in message > news:1165545365.489650.134070@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... > > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > > > ---------------------------- > > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > > View my training log: > > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo > > > > Hummm, that is a toughie, not counting other parts what does three rear > tires add up to? Depends. It's possible to get a load of miles on a good tire if you wear it all the way down til the tube pops through the casing and says howdy. That is a definition of a good tire--one that can be worn all the way to and through the casing while still retaining its integrity otherwise. Some brands (like Continental) never make it, their sidewalls fail long before the tread is worn out. How many licks does it take to get to the center of a tootsie pop? I doubt I will reach 9,000 road miles this year, but I did about 1500 singletrack which is not bad. Robert
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Date: 09 Dec 2006 02:26:11
From: mike vore
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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zeke wrote: > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. Not that many, but it's hard to tell now - ask again when the year is over, there are still over 20 days left to ride! -- Mike Vore http://www.OhMyWoodness.com http://mike.vorefamily.net/twr
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 17:30:12
From: Zoot Katz
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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On 7 Dec 2006 18:51:15 -0800, "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > wrote: >How may miles have you ridden this year? All of 'em except a maybe one the few times I walked the bike. -- zk
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 18:12:19
From: Earl Bollinger
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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"zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > wrote in message news:1165545365.489650.134070@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > ---------------------------- > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > View my training log: > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo > Hummm, that is a toughie, not counting other parts what does three rear tires add up to?
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 18:15:15
From: Mark Hickey
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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"Earl Bollinger" <earlwbollinger@comcast.net > wrote: >"zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com> wrote in message >news:1165545365.489650.134070@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... >> How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. >> >> ---------------------------- >> Bike: Trek 5500 Project One >> View my training log: >> http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo >> > >Hummm, that is a toughie, not counting other parts what does three rear >tires add up to? Somewhere between 1 and 15,000 miles (probably). That's the range for me over the last few years, too... ;-) k Hickey Habanero Cycles http://www.habcycles.com Home of the $795 ti frame
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 08:03:08
From: catzz66
Subject: Re: How many miles have you ridden this year?
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2100, up from 1550 my first year. Don't have time to ride much more than that, but am happy with the increase and will try to do better this coming year.
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 16:18:28
From: noweldrecumbent2@hotmail.com
Subject: Re: How many miles have you ridden this year?
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Not much :-/ "catzz66" <dingdong@rammalamma.net > wrote in message news:4tt9ktF15ae5vU1@mid.individual.net... > 2100, up from 1550 my first year. Don't have time to ride much more than > that, but am happy with the increase and will try to do better this coming > year.
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 07:11:48
From: Ken C. M.
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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zeke wrote: > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > ---------------------------- > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > View my training log: > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo > Well rough estimate tells me somewhere about 3,000 Ken -- The bicycle is just as good company as most husbands and, when it gets old and shabby, a woman can dispose of it and get a new one without shocking the entire community. ~Ann Strong
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 07:06:17
From: Roger Zoul
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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"zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > wrote in message :: How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of :: 10,000. Hey, there's nothing wrong with comparing miles. You did real good. I just wish I had time to ride that many miles!
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 01:34:08
From: Mike A Schwab
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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Well, if you want to compare miles, you could post them on http://www.bikejournal.com . Most features are available with free enrollment. Menu items in yellow require paid membership. zeke wrote: > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > ---------------------------- > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > View my training log: > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo
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Date: 07 Dec 2006 21:19:22
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <po5eh.32929$rv4.1776@edtnps90 >, "Grolch" <hjwilkeremovenospam@telus.net > writes: > Your a friggin hero and seem to need validation from others to make it > meaningful. Seen your analyst lately? So sorry that ya don't like it. cheers, Tom > "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com> wrote in message > news:1165549667.436224.197670@79g2000cws.googlegroups.com... >> >> >>> >>> How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) >>> (I don't know how much I got, either. >>> Except, not enough.) If I bothered to do New Year >>> Resolutions, I think I'd pick: hillclimbs. Maybe >>> make an effort to get some of that old stuff back. >>> >> >> Although I live in the foothills of North Carolina, I don't consider >> myself much of a climber so I try to stay away from the really big >> climbs. I think my short Monday through Thursday rides (~ 25 miles) >> are around 1800 feet of climbing. >> >> ---------------------------- >> Bike: Trek 5500 Project One >> View my training log: >> http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo >> > > -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 15:08:02
From: nash
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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" >> Your a friggin hero and seem to need validation from others to make it >> meaningful. Seen your analyst lately? > > So sorry that ya don't like it. > > > cheers, > Tom > >>>>> >>>> >>>> How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) >>>> (I don't know how much I got, either. >>>> Except, not enough.) If I bothered to do New Year >>>> Resolutions, I think I'd pick: hillclimbs. Maybe >>>> make an effort to get some of that old stuff back. >>>> >>> >>> Although I live in the foothills of North Carolina, I don't consider >>> myself much of a climber so I try to stay away from the really big >>> climbs. I think my short Monday through Thursday rides (~ 25 miles) >>> are around 1800 feet of climbing. >>> >>> ---------------------------- >>> Bike: Trek 5500 Project One >>> View my training log: >>> http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo >>> >> >> > You gotta wonder what kind of a yo yo puts his training log up for everyone to oooohhhhh ahhhhh over
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 10:49:08
From: Roger Zoul
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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"nash" <zwepytzkehillc9@jetable.net > wrote in message :: You gotta wonder what kind of a yo yo puts his training :: log up for everyone to oooohhhhh ahhhhh over I'd wonder more about anyone who'd take the time to do that....
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 05:04:18
From: Ron Wallenfang
Subject: Re: How many miles have you ridden this year?
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There are usually threads addressing that issue in early January, that often include other personal highlights and/or lowlights of the past year, new year's bike resolutions and whatever. We'd hate to leave out the mega-miles we're all accumulating in December, as it were! "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > wrote in message news:1165545365.489650.134070@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com... > How may miles have you ridden this year? I'm just shy of 10,000. > > ---------------------------- > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > View my training log: > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo >
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 09:49:50
From: Pat Lamb
Subject: Re: How many miles have you ridden this year?
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Ron Wallenfang wrote: > There are usually threads addressing that issue in early January, that often > include other personal highlights and/or lowlights of the past year, new > year's bike resolutions and whatever. We'd hate to leave out the mega-miles > we're all accumulating in December, as it were! Durn straight! Although at the rate I'm going this month, I should have posted last week. Concert blew last weekend, train ride torching this next weekend. Boo hoo. Wouldn't give either of them up, nor the kids coming home next week. OTOH, set a new personal best mileage for the year today (as I have every day for a few months!). And I've had fun riding this year. Even if it isn't really time to sum up the year yet! Pat
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Date: 07 Dec 2006 19:47:47
From: zeke
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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> > How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) > (I don't know how much I got, either. > Except, not enough.) If I bothered to do New Year > Resolutions, I think I'd pick: hillclimbs. Maybe > make an effort to get some of that old stuff back. > Although I live in the foothills of North Carolina, I don't consider myself much of a climber so I try to stay away from the really big climbs. I think my short Monday through Thursday rides (~ 25 miles) are around 1800 feet of climbing. ---------------------------- Bike: Trek 5500 Project One View my training log: http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 10:53:15
From: Matt O'Toole
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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On Thu, 07 Dec 2006 19:47:47 -0800, zeke wrote: >> How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) (I don't know how >> much I got, either. Except, not enough.) If I bothered to do New Year >> Resolutions, I think I'd pick: hillclimbs. Maybe make an effort to get >> some of that old stuff back. >> >> > Although I live in the foothills of North Carolina, I don't consider > myself much of a climber so I try to stay away from the really big > climbs. I think my short Monday through Thursday rides (~ 25 miles) are > around 1800 feet of climbing. Similar terrain for me, so probably similar climbing. The hill right outside my home drops 700' to my preferred riding area, and there are plenty of hills beyond that. Even the other way into town it drops at least a couple hundred feet. Anywhere I go I have to climb to get home. To answer the original question, probably 4-5000 miles. I'd be doing twice that for sure if I didn't spend 2-3 months away each summer. Getting back on the bike around here after that is murder. A flatland vacation with bike on the way home sure helps get me moving again. To those wondering how to get more miles in -- sell the car! Matt O.
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 03:57:09
From: Grolch
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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Your a friggin hero and seem to need validation from others to make it meaningful. Seen your analyst lately? "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > wrote in message news:1165549667.436224.197670@79g2000cws.googlegroups.com... > > >> >> How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) >> (I don't know how much I got, either. >> Except, not enough.) If I bothered to do New Year >> Resolutions, I think I'd pick: hillclimbs. Maybe >> make an effort to get some of that old stuff back. >> > > Although I live in the foothills of North Carolina, I don't consider > myself much of a climber so I try to stay away from the really big > climbs. I think my short Monday through Thursday rides (~ 25 miles) > are around 1800 feet of climbing. > > ---------------------------- > Bike: Trek 5500 Project One > View my training log: > http://dltsoftware.com/efitness/login?userID=demo&password=demo >
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Date: 07 Dec 2006 19:19:48
From: Tom Keats
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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In article <1165545365.489650.134070@n67g2000cwd.googlegroups.com >, "zeke" <support@dltsoftware.com > writes: > How may miles have you ridden this year? I dunno. I don't have a computer anymore. I got rid of it. Okay, to be honest I lost it a few years ago and happily didn't bother to replace it. I'm just shy of 10,000. How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) (I don't know how much I got, either. Except, not enough.) If I bothered to do New Year Resolutions, I think I'd pick: hillclimbs. Maybe make an effort to get some of that old stuff back. cheers, Tom -- Nothing is safe from me. Above address is just a spam midden. I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca
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Date: 08 Dec 2006 12:23:17
From: Paul O
Subject: Re: How may miles have you ridden this year?
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Tom Keats wrote: <snip > > > How much elevation gain did you get this year? :) <snip > > Almost exactly the same amount that I lost ;-) -- Paul D Oosterhout I work for SAIC (but I don't speak for SAIC)
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