“For those of us living near Exmoor or other hilly National Parks or mountainous regions, climbing is a fact of our cycling lives. Exmoor delivers on average 100ft of climbing per 10 miles of riding, much of it quite steep. Many of the sportives that Propello clients take part in involve a significant amount of climbing so how can you improve your climbing with no training?
There are two main ways to improve climbing – one involves a lot of hard work and discipline and the other comes totally for free!
Clearly, increasing your power and/or losing weight will significantly improve your climbing ability. Increasing power is the cornerstone of every training programme we roll out to you. We aim to have you generating your peak season power a few weeks before the priority events that you have signed up for. Losing weight is easier than increasing power but it has a finite payoff – i.e you lose so much weight that it negatively impacts the production of power.
As a coach I spent a lot of time at this time of year trying to get people to do things that don’t sit well with their egos. Ride slowly, keep aerobic and don’t hammer it does not compute to people who want to be ‘on form’ 12 months of the year. These people tend to either under achieve in their target events or are injured at the end of March. So if you want to drop your mates at the foot of every climb then stop reading and continue to not fulfil your potential. If on the other hand you want to improve and become a better climber for free read on…
The Climb for Free System – I was first taught this system from my old coach and mentor Tony Williams at Flamme Rouge – it is so logical but so widely ignored!
STEP ONE:
Find a local climb that is around 6 minutes long – a good Strava segment is useful as you will easily be able to see your average speed and time taken.
STEP TWO:
Go out and try and ride up the climb as fast as you possibly can. Get back home, upload the ride and checkout the power or speed curve of the all out effort. I’ll bet it will look something like this:
The yellow line is the cyclist’s power output or speed and the red line is heart rate. As they hit the climb their initial enthusiasm sees power increase to about 420w before the inevitable oxygen debt kicks in at around 30 seconds and power falls off a cliff. Lactate is now accumulating at an ever increasing rate and power falls further and heart rate goes up. A brief rally into the finish and they are spent – matches are burnt and if they were to ride the rest of their ride in this fashion it would not end well.
Next look at the average power or speed that you managed in your all out effort – In this example the average power was 315w.
STEP THREE:
Have a day of rest and go out to the same hill thinking only about one number – the average power or speed that you managed in your all out effort. Ride for the first 1 min at 95% of your average power or speed – in our example 299w. After the first 1 min increase speed or power to your average from the all out effort for the remaining 5 mins – in our example 315w. Do not go above this figure. Finish the climb and take stock of how you feel. You won’t be breathing as heavily as at the end of your first all out attempt, your heart rate will be much lower and you wont have that horrible stinging in your legs. You will most likely feel that you could have ridden it a lot faster – and you can!
STEP FOUR:
Go home, upload the data and look in amazement at how close your time is to your all out effort. So close but for what seems like half the effort. It’s a free lunch. A couple of days you will go out and ride the same hill for the third time, but armed with your new found wisdom you will set a new record for the climb.
STEP FIVE:
Ride the first two thirds of the climb at your average power or speed – in our example this is 315w for 4 mins. We know we can do this because we rode the last 5 mins of our second attempt at this power. For the last third of the climb increase power or speed to a level that you think you can hold for 2 mins – in our example that might be somewhere near 375w, but pace an effort that will get you to the top.
If you have ridden the first 4 mins at 315w and the last 2 mins at 375w you will have set a new PB with an average power of 335w, a 6.5% increase in average power. Your power or speed graph should look more like this:
As you get more fit and more confident in this new found approach then start to break the climbs down into thirds or quarters aiming to be building speed or power over each segment, always finishing at your fastest. You won’t be dropping your mates at the beginning of any climbs but you will be powering past them very quickly and for far less physiological cost.
The only training we have to do is training is with our minds – it’s a mental strategy for improvement. We haven’t increased our power massively, we have just maximised what we have already. Good cycling is all about economy of effort – blowing your lid off at the foot of a climb is neither economical or good.
Armed with this new strategy you are now much more more efficient and that means less energy expended and more left in the tank for the rest of your ride. On a long sportive this could be the difference between a Gold medal or a DNF.
We are not all built like Fausto Coppi who could glide up a mountain in a seemingly effortless dance, but we can all maximise what we have at our disposal. Climbing is not just about power and weight – it’s as much to do with the mind and executing a proven strategy.” – Robert Wakefield, Propello
**********
Thanks to our coaching partner Robert Wakefield of Propello for this fantastic article all about how to improve your climbing with no training.