[Search for users]
[Overall Top Noters]
[List of all Conferences]
[Download this site]
Title: | Bicycling |
Notice: | Bicycling for Fun |
Moderator: | JAMIN::WASSER |
|
Created: | Mon Apr 14 1986 |
Last Modified: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 3214 |
Total number of notes: | 31946 |
2212.0. "Magazie article, entered with humor 8-)" by COLRDO::1738233 () Tue Mar 10 1992 12:46
Entered without permission from the Rocky Mountain Sports and Fitness, March
1992, magazine. DISCLAIMER: Views of the author are not necessarily that of
this noter.
Vertical Psycholing
By Hal Walter
If there was a sport tailor-made for the techno-geek, it is road cycling.
In what other discipline can you spend big money to overcompensate for your lack
of ability or fitness? A few pounds overweight? Buy a plutonium frame!
The fact of the matter is that most of the people I see with road bikes are
using them on Interstate-25(Colorado) - as high-tech bug catchers. Still
others are pedaling away on the frontage road - not much training benefit there,
if you ask me. Here's your first clue that riding a bike down a flat paved road
is somewhat less than a total workout: You're sitting down! Also, it is
boooooooring.
Simply put, to add some spice to your spin, you've got to ride on an incline.
I hate to admit it, but I've become somewhat of a cycling wacko myself. For the
most part I don't like it. The only thing I do like is the look on the
techno-twerp's face when I, riding a Trek 1200 with Japanese gearing, jam
uphill past his tricked out plastic-frame aero machine with Italian components,
praying mantis bars and wheels that you can't even see through.
My advice - if a two-wheeled vehicle doesn't roll on knobby tires or dinosaur
juice, don't buy it. But if it's too late and, like me, you've already let one
of these road machines into your life, there's something you can do about it.
Actually, cycling can be fun and relatively low-tech workout. You just have to
go about it in the right locale. Here's some advice from a few roadies who
definitely are not geeks.
(The remainder of the article was based on four Colorado riders and there
training ride routes.)
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
2212.1 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Mar 10 1992 13:08 | 3 |
| THAT had better be tongue-in-cheek! Plutonium's heavier than lead!
:-)
|
2212.2 | Pedal 'till you glow | BICYCL::RYER | | Wed Mar 11 1992 11:15 | 1 |
| Yeah, and what about the lead-lined shorts you'd have to wear! 8*).
|
2212.3 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Wed Mar 11 1992 12:51 | 3 |
| And, it is rumored that Plutonium is more expensive than Titanium.
:-)
|
2212.4 | WHADDA PIN HEAD! | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Tue Mar 17 1992 11:57 | 10 |
| I'll wager a year's salary that the author's head is much denser
than plutonium. I say string 'em up. The remarks clearly indicate
an example of arrested physical and intellectual development.
In other words, the guy's head is a permanent fixture of his
intestinal tract...
Chip
P.S. Where can I get some plutonium tubing?
|