Bike For Life: How to Ride to 100
Posted: Mon Jan 07, 2008 3:25 pm
My wife picked up the book at the local bike shop, and I stole it off of her bedstand and read it myself.
Really enjoyed the book, had lots and lots of useful tidbits of information. Target audience is the aging biker who is starting to feel the steady onslaught of aging, but has useful gouge for everyone. The content of the book is about 50% biking, and about 50% other stuff, which is why I review it here.
A core precept of the book is that biking is a partially complete physical activity, and if all you do is bike you will end up physically out of whack in many ways, to include strong risk of osteoporosis, back pain, poor posture, declining strength and reflexes, even impotence and poor relationships. Ouch.
That is where the "other stuff" comes in. A lot of discussion on weight training, flexibility, yoga, cross training, and other topics always of interest here. The two authors, Roy Wallack and Bill Katovsky, are both world class triathletes who bring in different perspective to these topics. They've thoroughly researched the issues and cite the literature. Obvious fitness wonks who have experimented on themselves.
Interspersed are very interesting essays/interviews of renowned bike riders who are going into their later years. Ned Overend is one, a many time world mountain biking champ who raced and won into his late 40's. Another, whose name escapes me at the moment, rode a 100 mile ride on his 90th birthday, and rides 30 miles per day. He gets his cross training in by raising all of his own food in his garden.
Anyway, highly recommend at least picking it up and scanning it if you are at the local big box bookstore. Good stuff.
Really enjoyed the book, had lots and lots of useful tidbits of information. Target audience is the aging biker who is starting to feel the steady onslaught of aging, but has useful gouge for everyone. The content of the book is about 50% biking, and about 50% other stuff, which is why I review it here.
A core precept of the book is that biking is a partially complete physical activity, and if all you do is bike you will end up physically out of whack in many ways, to include strong risk of osteoporosis, back pain, poor posture, declining strength and reflexes, even impotence and poor relationships. Ouch.
That is where the "other stuff" comes in. A lot of discussion on weight training, flexibility, yoga, cross training, and other topics always of interest here. The two authors, Roy Wallack and Bill Katovsky, are both world class triathletes who bring in different perspective to these topics. They've thoroughly researched the issues and cite the literature. Obvious fitness wonks who have experimented on themselves.
Interspersed are very interesting essays/interviews of renowned bike riders who are going into their later years. Ned Overend is one, a many time world mountain biking champ who raced and won into his late 40's. Another, whose name escapes me at the moment, rode a 100 mile ride on his 90th birthday, and rides 30 miles per day. He gets his cross training in by raising all of his own food in his garden.
Anyway, highly recommend at least picking it up and scanning it if you are at the local big box bookstore. Good stuff.