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I Love Bicycling

I Love Bicycling is a website that is geared towards cycling for beginners with road cycling tips, training articles, nutrition tips, weight loss, how to’s and bike repair articles.

Cross Training For Cyclists

November 12, 2017 by Josh Friedman

With the weather turning cooler, spending less time on the bike might be appealing. There is more adverse weather to deal with, along with waning daylight. Riding indoors on a trainer or rollers is a good way to maintain cycling form despite being a bit on the boring side. Cross training for cyclists on the other hand can keep up some of your fitness while being fun, exciting, and simply different.

cross-training-for-cycling

There are additional benefits to cross training for cycling besides maintaining hard-fought fitness gains you made when the weather was nice and the days were long:

  • Workouts in cross training disciplines can be shorter, while making similar fitness impacts.
  • Cycling is a low impact sport; you need to do other work to boost bone density. Cycling alone can lead to bone mass loss. Many cross training activities have some impact, increasing bone density as your body responds to the training. (this is particularly important for woman)
  • Cross training can be a great mental break. After all of the hours you spend on the bike, sometimes a change is nice, especially if it is going back to an activity you love.
  • Hiding from the bad weather is not always a bad thing. Too many wet and cold rides can take away some love for cycling.

Cross Training for Cycling

There are lots of ways you can spend your time cross training. If you are excited about it and it will keep you fit and moving, go for it. Below are five activities that are common and will have a few of the benefits mentioned above.

Running

The benefits of running when it is cold and the days are short are easy, it takes less time to get a workout in and because you are going slower, there is less wind, thus it’s easier to stay warm. With the impact of each stride, you make your bones stronger. You may see less of the world on the bike, but you can see it in greater detail – it will give you a different perspective of your local training grounds.

Weight TrainingTips For Cross Training For Cycling

Weight training can give you great benefits on the bike by developing both muscular endurance through high repetitions and low weight exercises and neuromuscular explosiveness with high weight maximal exercises. It is very easy to stay warm when you are working out indoors, while benefiting your bone density greatly by putting strain on your skeleton. It might not be the most mentally uplifting activity, but staying focused on the benefits can get you through a winter’s worth of workouts and stronger on the bike.

Other Sports

Was there a sport that you enjoyed before cycling? Now is the time to do it. Lots of sports that are traditionally outdoor sports have some indoor version – soccer, rock climbing, basketball, etc. It can be an enjoyable mental break that will keep you fit and healthy through the cooler days of the year.

Tips For Cross Training For CyclingYoga

Core strength is quite trendy right now. Yoga is an activity that can boost core strength, along with all-around strength and flexibility. It can also be a time to get your mind focused and settle your thoughts unlike many other competitive disciplines.

Skating

The first few times you run after exclusively riding, you will be sore (but your lungs will work great). But there is an activity that does use roughly the same muscles and movement as cycling – skating. If you know how to skate, you can jump right in and show off your fitness immediately. If not, go learn and you will be skating well relatively quickly. There are even skating clubs that offer competition and the group environment that cycling offers during the fair weather. (And if you were wondering which type of skating was being referred to… well all three: skate skiing (traditional cross country skiing in skating form), ice skating, and roller skating which can be a great activity when it’s cold out but not cold enough for snow and ice.)

Do not let the word training fool you; cross training for cycling should be a fun and beneficial distraction through the fall and winter. Find and activity that suits you and enjoy yourself while keeping up your fitness.

Top 10 Off Season Activities for Cyclists

December 19, 2013 by Craig Richey

off season activities for cyclists

Top 10 Off Season Activities for Cyclists

1) Cross Country Ski. This is probably the most popular and trendy winter activity for cyclists and not without reason. Nordic skiing is very demanding of the cardiovascular system and elite xc skiers generally rank as having the highest VO2 maximum levels of any athletes in the world. Getting out on xc skies is a great way to train your heart and lungs so next race season your legs start burning before your lungs do.  Many top cyclists, such as former mountain bike world champ Catherine Pendrel, do a lot of cross country skiing and even include some racing in their Nordic season. Cyclists tend to gravitate towards skate skiing as opposed to classic for a couple of reasons. Firstly, with skating you don’t have to deal with grip wax which is required for classic technique, and with icy or warm snow conditions grip wax can be a major hassle. Secondly, skate skiing tends to use your legs more and less arms, which is a better match with a T-Rex cycling physique .

2) Hit the Gym. During the busy cycling season it can be hard to find time to go to the gym, but proper gym workouts can improve strength, power, and muscle recruitment on the bike. Cyclists should also use this time to build up their core strength which will provide more stability and injury prevention during the race season. Your significant other likely won’t complain about the 6-pack either.

3) Run. It sucks and you will probably wish you were on your bike instead, but it is easy and convenient way to get in a quick cardio workout. Keep your runs short initially and on softer surfaces, higher frequency with shorter duration will help you avoid injury and adapt quickly to the impact of running.

4) Rest & Sleep. A key purpose of the off-season is to recharge your body and mind so you are ready and motivated to train and race hard again soon. Rest is important and can be fun, catch up on reading and watching movies.

5)Work. Sadly most of use have to do it. Now that you are not travelling to races and spending longs days on your bike, channel some of that time and energy into your profession. Be productive and start building a foundation for the year so you are set up for success and can take some time off when needed next race season. Don’t forget to set goals and when you achieve them reward yourself, a new set of race wheels or exotic race/training destination can be the motivation you need to get things done in the office.

off season activities for cyclists

6) Rock Climb. A less obvious off-season activity but just about every city has an indoor climbing gym. Climbing is a fun way to build up some upper body and core strength without bulking up. Plus indoor climbing can be fairly social and it is good way to expand your circle of friends.

7) Swim. It doesn’t matter how ugly the weather is outside the (indoor) pool is always the same. Swimming is a great way to stretch out, open up your chest, and improve your posture. Breakout the flutter board to strengthen your hip flexors and stabilizer muscles to provide more stability on the bike.

8) Snowshoe. Less popular than xc skiing, going for a snowshoe is a fun winter activity that is growing in popularity. Snowshoe technology has come a long way and they are surprisingly cheap, so if you have some old snowshoes in the garage donate them to Salvation Army and treat yourself to a new set.

9) Hike. A possible alternative to snowshoeing if there is no snow. A fairly low key activity that gets you out into nature and away from the hustle of daily life.

10) Turbo Trainer. Yuck! I know, but start your favorite movie and do an easy spin. A few trainer rides will make your pedal strokes feel less like squares when you get back on the bike. Don’t push yourself, when you get sick of the trainer and keep checking the clock then stop.

 

off season activities for cyclistsAbout the Author:

Craig Richey is a multiple time Canadian National team member, representing Canada at mountain bike World Cups and cyclocross World Championships. Craig is currently doing an MBA in Boston and recently launched SponsorConnected.com

 

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