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250 miles a day - for a month
Was just reading about Lachlan Morton's plan to ride around the perimeter of Australia. Something like 14000 kilometers. To break the record (there's a record for everything), he has to average around 400 km a day, or about 250 miles, for over a month straight. 35 days or so.
Sounds like a perverted prison sentence to me, but what do I know. Is there such a thing as too much time on the bike? |
#2
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Can someone do a wellness check please, blink twice if you're held hostage
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#3
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Doesn't seem like a big deal to me. Assuming he can manage about 16mph average total for the day, that's 15.5 hours per day of riding.
Get up a 7, hit it hard until about 10:30, get a good nights sleep, repeat. If I had a month of free time, I'd give it a shot. Good excuse to eat a lot of ice cream and gas station burritos.
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http://less-than-epic.blogspot.com/ |
#4
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If I put in a 30 hour week, I’m gassed for a day or two (I average 20+ hours a week). Doing over 100 hours a week for a month straight? Devasting. That has to be a tremendous challenge, possibly a dangerous one, even for a cyclist of his calibre. |
#5
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I couldn’t even do that on a motorized bike, seems crazy to me but respect for trying to do something nobody else has done.
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#6
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This has been a good year for me, mileage-wise, and I'm averaging 9.3 hours/week for just over 4,300 miles. Lael's average speed is about 1 mph faster than mine but I bet she has a lot more average elevation/mile. I wonder how Lachlan's route compares with Lael's route. They are both cool people and super-studs (if you can call a woman a stud, I'm open to a better word choice!)
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Bingham/B.Jackson/Unicoi/Habanero/Raleigh20/429C/BigDummy/S6 |
#7
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#8
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Good luck to Lachlan with it, I just hope they have good support. Unfortunately some of the ultra distance events in Australia have had tragedy. Having lived there, the roads in the remote parts certainly add risk just based on speeds and conditions.
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#9
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Give your head a shake, there's no way you'd keep pace with Morton for 4 hours, nevermind the next 11 and then 34 more days. He's trying to cover 14,000km in 35 days. That's bonkers!!! |
#10
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Lon Haldeman set himself the goal of riding across the US in under 10 days. In 1981 he rode from New York City, New York, to Santa Monica, California, in 12 days and 8 hours. Having failed in his goal, he rested for 6 hours, and then decided to try again, and rode back to New York, this time taking 10 days and 23 hours - a round trip distance of about 6000 miles over 24 days, average about 250 miles per day.
The following year he tried again, this time meeting his goal by riding across the USA in 9 days and 20 hours (or roughly 300 miles per day). |
#11
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The level of grit and determination is incredible, the lack of fun is not. Well I suppose it’s type III fun on meth.
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Cheers...Daryl Life is too important to be taken seriously |
#12
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I too ride for fun and health and that does not sound like fun or healthy. I seriously question if the extreme is even good for your health in the long term. A big chunk of my life is off the bike. A family, other interests and a volunteer job one day a week. When I see people going things like that I ask myself “Don’t they like themselves”?
I have a friend that started a triple decathon two days ago in Italy. While everyone on my team gives him praise for attempting it I think he’s nuts and one day his obsession wuth the extreme will end his life. Look at Dave Scott and Scott Tinley. Heart issues.
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A bad day on the bike is better than a good day at work! Last edited by JMT3; 09-04-2024 at 06:48 AM. |
#13
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I've ridden 250 miles in a week but that was a loooong time ago.
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Contains Titanium |
#14
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200ish miles a day. Like they said in 7 Samurai, "Mister, I admire your idea of fun" |
#15
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Sounds like a great way to wind up with a pacemaker before the age of 55. To each their own.
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