Achieved one of my 2016 goals. :)

Machka9
Posts: 26,067 Member
I used to be an active long distance cyclist ... ultra distance. Randonneuring, audax, 24-hour races and things like that. If any of the cyclists here have heard of the Paris-Brest-Paris 1200 km event ... I've done it and 3 others like it. Long distance cycling is definitely the type of cycling I enjoy the most. 
Then a few years ago, my activity level dropped for various reasons and I put on a bit of weight.
So one of the main reasons why I joined MFP and set about losing weight was to get back into Randonneuring again.
Yesterday I cycled my first 200 kilometre randonnee since March 2012, and completed it in 11 hours 18 minutes total time.
I am so pleased to have done that and absolutely ecstatic about the time. The time limit on a 200K is 13 hours 30 min, and I figured I'd be right close to the limit ... finishing with so much time to spare was amazing!
My ride report is here:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/Machka9/view/campbell-town-canter-200-2-km-802156

Then a few years ago, my activity level dropped for various reasons and I put on a bit of weight.
So one of the main reasons why I joined MFP and set about losing weight was to get back into Randonneuring again.
Yesterday I cycled my first 200 kilometre randonnee since March 2012, and completed it in 11 hours 18 minutes total time.

My ride report is here:
http://www.myfitnesspal.com/blog/Machka9/view/campbell-town-canter-200-2-km-802156
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Replies
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Wow, great work!
200K!!! Amazing.0 -
Nicely done. Great blog.
But where is Campbell Town?
Cheers, h.0 -
middlehaitch wrote: »Nicely done. Great blog.
But where is Campbell Town?
Cheers, h.
Right in the middle of Tasmania.0 -
Wow, well done. Great achievement
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Well done!
A real mental as well as physical challenge - Audax events also seem to attract a really friendly crowd.0 -
That is awesome!!!
Congratulations
~Lyssa0 -
Ooh, any chance you took a couple of photos on your ride?
Tasmania is exotic when one lives in Canada.
So glad I didn't start searching a map of the USA. I would have been confused.
Cheers, h.0 -
that is amazing, congratulations on your accomplishment!0
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middlehaitch wrote: »Ooh, any chance you took a couple of photos on your ride?
Tasmania is exotic when one lives in Canada.
So glad I didn't start searching a map of the USA. I would have been confused.
Cheers, h.
No photos on this ride, I was very focused on completing it.
I am a Canadian who moved to Australia about 6.5 years ago. I lived in Victoria for the first 4 years and then moved down to Tasmania (my husband is Tasmanian). And I do like taking photos so I've got several "albums" of them already:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/machka-bb/collections/72157644517168953/
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That us so funny, I'm English and moved to Canada, Victoria. My SO is Canadian.
Thanks for the link. I will drool over Tasmania this evening.
Cheers, h.0 -
middlehaitch wrote: »That us so funny, I'm English and moved to Canada, Victoria. My SO is Canadian.
Thanks for the link. I will drool over Tasmania this evening.
Cheers, h.
Enjoy! It's a relatively small island, but I'm still exploring.
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And thank you all.
This is something I've wanted to do again for a long time ... but just couldn't with the extra weight.Well done!
A real mental as well as physical challenge - Audax events also seem to attract a really friendly crowd.
Yes, definitely a mental challenge as well. That aspect came up several times, but especially about 10 km from the end when all of a sudden everything hurt and I stopped on the top of yet another hill and said to my husband, "I'm not sure if I can make it. I might have bitten off more than I can chew." His response was, "You're so close to the finish ... keep riding". So I did and a few minutes later, I felt better again.
I have done Audax events in several countries, and yes, I'd have to agree about the friendly crowd. In fact ... I met my husband on the Paris-Brest-Paris in 2003.
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@Machka9
My mate describes Audax events as "an eating contest held in beautiful countryside".
Mmmmm 5000+ calories and still in a deficit.
If you find yourself in England this is a lovely ride....
http://www.cyclosport.org/event/07-Jun-2015/UK/the-london-ditchling-devil.html0 -
I am not a cyclist
but this I like
congrats0 -
@Machka9
My mate describes Audax events as "an eating contest held in beautiful countryside".
Mmmmm 5000+ calories and still in a deficit.
If you find yourself in England this is a lovely ride....
http://www.cyclosport.org/event/07-Jun-2015/UK/the-london-ditchling-devil.html
When I've really actively been involved in Randonneuring and all the training that goes into it, I've had trouble keeping my weight in the normal BMI range ... I keep slipping down into underweight. You just burn so many calories and it is hard to keep up. I get sick of eating all the time.
I'm kind of hoping to get back to that level again.
And thanks for the link.I have cycled in the UK a few times ... mostly on my own or with a friend, but a couple times with a CTC group.
I am not a cyclist
but this I like
congrats
Thanks!
And we're now actually toying with the idea of doing a longer distance!!
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Congratulations
I had to google Radonneuring. Looks like something I would really enjoy. I used to cycle a lot ~15 years ago. A few hundred kilometers per week was nothing. But sometimes I think that's when my weight problem started. I "learned" to eat huge ammounts of food just to stay in a healthy weight. And I "learned" to enjoy eating a lot. Then: work, marriage and kids and suddenly there is little/no time for the cycling anymore. But I just can't unlearn the eating
Are you "allowed" riding in the slipstream of another cyclist when you do a randonnee?
Definitely inspring! Thanks!0 -
Congratulations
I had to google Radonneuring. Looks like something I would really enjoy. I used to cycle a lot ~15 years ago. A few hundred kilometers per week was nothing. But sometimes I think that's when my weight problem started. I "learned" to eat huge ammounts of food just to stay in a healthy weight. And I "learned" to enjoy eating a lot. Then: work, marriage and kids and suddenly there is little/no time for the cycling anymore. But I just can't unlearn the eating
Are you "allowed" riding in the slipstream of another cyclist when you do a randonnee?
Definitely inspring! Thanks!
Yes, you are allowed to ride in the slipstream of another cyclist in randonneuring.As long as that other cyclist is also riding the event.
I've done a couple 24 hour time trials ... where you ride for 24 hours straight through ... and on those you're not allowed to draft. My husband and I had to ride a certain distance apart.
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