Categories
Events

Roof of England Sportive – August 30, 2015

Roof of EnglandThe Roof of England Sportive is a new event for 2015 from the Roof of England Cycling Club, which aims to showcase the fabulous cycling countryside of the North Pennines. Separating The Lake District from the North East, the Pennines feature the highest roads in the country, with some of the most challenging climbs and dramatic descents.

 

The Roof of England Sportive comes in three flavours: The 143km ‘Winking Sheep’, 85km ‘Durham Dales’ and the 50km ‘Short Course’. The Winking Sheep features over 2,700 of climbing and all are £25 to enter.

 

The Roof of England Cycling Club, also promote a selection of free-to-ride courses throughout the Pennines as well as other practical information for cyclists visiting the area. The club is run by Cameron Gordon of the Chatterbox Café in St John’s Chapel, where visitors can hire bikes to explore the surrounding countryside.

 

According to Gordon the Roof of England Sportive is set to fill the void left by the closure of the Etape Pennines. ‘The Etape has gone and we have got some of the best cycling roads in the country so it would be a crying shame if we did not have our own event… We have got all the towns and villages on the route involved too – it’s going to be the ride of people’s lives.’

 

Full details on the Roof of England Sportive at roofofenglandcycling.co.uk

Categories
Featured Nutrition Reviews

Osmo Active Hydration

Osmo Active HydrationOsmo Active Hydration, available in both orange and blackberry flavour, comes packed in jersey pocket friendly 20g sachets ready to blend in the bottle. Created by endurance athlete, exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist Stacy Sims Osmo Active Hydration is intended for use during exercise to actively increase fluid absorption and replace key electrolytes which would otherwise result in an overall loss of performance on the bike.

 

So what’s in the pack? Unlike most sports hydration and nutrition products Osmo seems a little coy on the subject; obviously the ingredients are listed (sucrose, so basically sugar, being number one), but it throws in ‘OsmoAct Beverage Base Blend’ to appear a little more arcane – although this then is a blend of sucrose (more sugar or the sugar already listed?), D-glucose (sugar again), sodium citrate, potassium citrate, magnesium citrate and calcium citrate. Osmo Active Hydration also includes a range of vitamins including C, B2 and B12.

 

Mixed with 500ml of water (and taking a little shaking to mix) Osmo does prove rather sweet – hardly surprising when 17g of the packs 20g weight is sugar – but the flavours are fairly refreshing with no artificial aftertaste. On test they seemed to help hydrate well and went down easily enough – the levels of ‘salts’ look well balanced for the job in hand and the convenience of the small tubular packaging was appreciated.

 

Osmo Active Hydration is a perfectly decent product, let down a little by both the branding and information (or lack thereof) on the website. Not sure they are doing themselves any favours by noting that Stacy Sims ‘assisted Lance Armstrong in researching thermoregulation in 2010’ either…

 

A further oddity is that both the blackberry and orange flavours are listed on the Osmo website as being specifically ‘for men’, whilst women get their own mango flavoured variety which are formulated to help ‘avoid premenstrual-related performance decline…’ Fair enough (and seemingly scientifically valid), but we’re sure there’s room for the ‘regular’ formula in most women’s kit bags too.

 

If you’d rather regulate your hydration strategy with zero calories then something like H2ProHydrate or ZipVit’s ZV0 Electrolyte Drink will serve you better – but if you want a (very quick release) sugar surge thrown in – or want to avoid ‘avoid premenstrual-related performance decline’ – then Osmo Active Hydration clearly ticks the right boxes.

 

24 sachets of either blackberry or orange Osmo Active Hydration retail at £34.80 (as do the women-specific mango flavour) or all three versions are available in cheaper, but perhaps less convenient, tubs of 400g for £15.99. More confusion again here as the 400g tubs are advertised as being 40 servings, yet a serving is listed as being 20g – so isn’t that just 10 servings?

 

Further details and online purchase of Osmo Active Hydration at osmonutrition.co.uk

Categories
Books Featured Reviews

Alpe d’Huez

Alpe d'HuezIt might seem madness to dedicate an entire book to a single climb, but when the climb in question is the legendary Alpe d’Huez it all starts to make much more sense.

 

Sometimes referenced as the Tour de France’s ‘Hollywood climb’ the iconic Alpe d’Huez, which tortures riders through 21 numbered hairpins at an average gradient of 7.8% for a sapping 13.8km, was first introduced in 1952 (conquered by Fausto Coppi) but had to really sit it out until 1976 to become the institution it now is.

 

Cycling journalist Peter Cossins – author of the equally excellent The Monuments: The Grit and the Glory of Cycling’s Greatest One-day Races – combines both passion and reverence for the climb, weaving together stories of TdF appearances with tales of the climb’s (and resort’s) developments and occasion scandals. Whilst you might expect such a niche book to appeal wholly to the geekiest of cycling enthusiast Cyclo would argue that the highly accessible prose and sheer joy of the writing could tempt even the most casual Sunday cyclists.

 

Only a handful of pictures are included – something of a shame, but a limitation of the format – although more than an intimate sense of association with Alpe d’Huez is conjured up regardless. Anyone who has ever watched the TdF riders slug slowly – sometimes not so slowly – up this climb, battling the legendary crowds as much as the mountain, will find inspirational detail here and those who have been brave/fortunate enough to tackle it themselves will be able to relive every last energy-depleting twist and turn.

 

If any one single climb deserves a book all to itself, it’s the Alpe d’Huez and Cossins is demonstrably the man to tell the tale.

 

Alpe d’Huez: The Story of Pro Cycling’s Greatest Climb by Peter Cossins is published by Aurum Press, currently available from, amongst other places, Amazon at £12.99 hardback and £12.34 on Kindle.

 

Further details and all the latest news from Aurum Press can be found on Facebook and Twitter - You can follow Peter Cossins on Twitter too @petercossins

Categories
News

Revolve24 Hits the Tracks

Revolve24Revolve24 has been announced as a global series of 24-hour cycling relay races set at iconic motor circuits around the world. Officially launched at Brands Hatch – which will also play host to the first event on September 19-20 – by Revolve24 ambassador Jason Kenny, the series will then embark on a world tour throughout 2016 including famous motor racing circuits in the USA, France, Spain, Portugal and Canada.

 

Having set a casual lap time of 6:16:20 on the undulating, 2.433mile circuit, Kenny commented: ‘I’ve always been a keen motorcycling enthusiast since a young age, so to combine this with cycling, Revolve24 is a dream event for me to be involved in. To see thousands of people here racing round the course on their bikes and enjoying a weekend of cycling entertainment is going to be great, and from taking on the course, the cycling side of things won’t disappoint!’

 

Racing teams can be single sex or mixed – disabled or abled bodied and entrants can be soloists, duos or teams of four, six or eight. Aiming to be as inclusive as possible British Cycling has agreed that race licences are not required to compete. Non-riding ‘Team Captains’ and team supporters are also welcome to enter and attend to provide strategy, support and encouragement.

 

For more information and to sign up to Revolve24 see revolve24.com

Categories
News

Jupiter London Nocturne Highlights Schedule

Jupiter London NocturneThe ninth edition of the Jupiter London Nocturne has been hailed as the best yet with the reversed circuit providing plenty of drama and excitement in the men’s and women’s elite races and thousands of spectators packing the streets of Farringdon.

 

Team JLT Condor rider, Ed Clancy, dipped over the line first to take the prestigious Santini Elite Criterium crown, holding off stiff competition from Steele Von Hoff of NFTO and Chris Lawless of ?Team Wiggins, who were almost neck and neck with him to the line.

 

in the Schwalbe Elite Women’s Criterium race, Pearl Azumi Sports Tours International rider Katie Archibald reigned supreme with a destructive display of power that also gained her the Combative Award for the most aggressive performance of the night. Eileen Roe of team Wiggle-Honda was in hot pursuit, closely followed by Team Giordana Triton rider, Nicola Jupiter.

 

Aside from the elite races, the event also played host to a penny farthing race, the F&F Folding Bike ?Race and the Santander Cycle Hire race. James Pope, organiser of the Jupiter London Nocturne commented: ‘Every year we try to build on and improve the racing somehow and this year for the first time we reversed the circuit. The change in layout made sure that the racing was super charged and exciting for the fans. Congratulations to the winners and thank you to everyone that took part and came to watch.’

 

If you weren’t there to witness all of the action TV highlights of the event will be available to watch on Channel 4, Sky Sports, Eurosport, Bloomberg TV and online on the Jupiter London Nocturne’s YouTube channel from Sunday June 14. Full details of all things Jupiter London Nocturne at londonnocturne.com

 

Channel 4: June 16, midnight and June 20, 07.00

Sky Sports: June 12 (Sky Sports 4), 12.30 and Sky Sports 3 at 15.00. Plus June 13 (Sky Sports 2), 09.00 and June 14 (Sky Sport 2), 19.00

Eurosport: June 14, 17.00

Bloomberg TV: June 12, 12.00

 

Can’t wait? Watch the trailer below:

 

Categories
Featured Features

Hydration for Training

Hydration for TrainingGood hydration is crucial and with warm weather here now could be a good time to think about how you will make sure you are correctly hydrated so that you get the most from your training, and recover fast.

 

Before Training

 

The first goal is to be in good fluid balance at the start of your training session.

 

To do this, you just need to drink sensibly during the day. It is a myth that you should drink eight glasses of water a day to stay healthy, and there is no evidence at all to say that this much helps you with your training. Instead, drink when you feel thirsty, and take a drink at meal times.

 

Most people don’t need more that about 2 litres of fluid per day. This fluid can come from any source – water, juice, squash, milk, tea, coffee, food – so you can see it is quite easy to get most of this through normal meals and little more than a couple of cups of tea.

 

To make doubly sure you are ready for your training, you could drink 250-500ml about one hour before your session. It is perfectly okay if you drink a bit a little more here – you will just get rid of the excess when you take a visit to the toilet before you start your exercise.

 

During Training

 

What you should drink depends on the duration and intensity of the training, and your goals.

 

Duration: How long are you training for?

 

If you are training for one hour or less, then it doesn’t really matter if you drink or not; it is very unlikely that you will become significantly dehydrated in an hour, even if you are exercising hard in hot conditions. Your body has enough energy stores to easy cope with this amount of hard work, so you do not need to take in anything that contains energy.

 

If you are training for more than one hour, then you may need to replace the energy/fluid that you use. Plain water is not a great choice here – choose squash or a sport’s drink instead or consider electrolyte replacement tablets such as H2Pro or VipVit’s ZV0.

 

Intensity: What kind of session is it?

 

If the session is long, warm, and at a high intensity, then along with losing water (in sweat) and using up energy, you also lose electrolytes (salts) in sweat. To replace the electrolytes, you should definitely consider something with replacement salts in. You could add a small amount of table salt to your squash (a pinch per pint is the rough rule), or choose a sport’s drink – for example Lucozade Sport or Powerade ION4 – or, again, use electrolyte replacement tablets.

 

What are your goals?

 

If your goal is to lose weight, then you should not replace the energy that you use. Instead, you should choose a drink that does not contain much energy. Water could be good here. However, if you are sweating a lot and need to replace your salts, make some sugar-free squash and add some salt (you could add salt to water, but it doesn’t taste too good). Alternatively, there are some sports drinks formulated to contain electrolytes but not sugars – Powerade Zero, for example.

 

How much should I drink?

 

You can sweat quite a lot before dehydration starts to affect performance. A good rule is to drink just enough so that you don’t lose more than about 2-3% of your bodyweight. For a 70kg person, this means losing no more than about 1.5kg – three pint glasses! But how long does it take to lose 1.5kg (or 1.5 litres) of sweat? Of course, this depends on the weather conditions and the intensity you are training at. Also, everyone sweats at different rates, so it is a good idea to find out how much you sweat. To do this, weigh yourself before and after you exercise. For example, you weigh 70kg at the start, and 69kg at the end of a 1-hour ride. This is a loss of 1 litre of fluid per hour – typical for hard exercise in warm conditions.

 

Now let’s say you are doing a two-hour ride. You are okay with losing 1.5kg, but we know that in two hours you will lose more than that: 2kg, in fact. Therefore for this length of ride, you should drink about 500ml on-the-go. There are a number of hydration calculators available to help you with this, both online and as smartphone apps – see the Cyclo feature here.

 

After Training

 

The aim after training is to get you back to where you were before you started. If you haven’t lost any weight during your training, then you don’t need to drink more than your thirst dictates. But if you have lost some weight, you need to get back to where you were before. To do this, drink up to 500ml in the first 10-15 minutes after you finish training, and then take sips, or drink to thirst, for the next 3-4 hours. Don’t rush it. Weigh yourself again to check if you have made it.

 

Feature by Stephen Fritzdorf  - Stephen is a Sport Physiologist, a lecturer at Lund University and creator of the Quench hydration app. He worked with the Danish Olympic Team 2008-2014, and before that with the English Institute of Sport. Details of the Quench hydration app here.

Categories
Featured Nutrition Reviews

MuleBar Nosebag

Mulebar NosebagNosebag is the latest nutritional offering from MuleBar; available in two flavour combinations Tamari Nuts with Seeds and Fruit Avalanche they contain no synthetic ingredients, artificial preservatives, colourings, flavourings or palm oil – just real food.

 

Starting with the Tamari Nuts that offers up 417kcal of energy with 33.1g fat (4.3g saturates) with 12.6g of carb of which 2.3g are sugar. There’s a decent hit of protein too with 14.5g from the combination of pumpkin seeds, cashews, almonds and apricot kernels, which are coated in tamari (a variant on soya sauce.) Whilst the fairly generic seed and nut mix are nothing unusual it’s the tamari apricot kernels that set things apart with a delicious tang that lingers in the mouth and has you reaching back for another hit. A more generous ratio of these to the other ingredients would certainly have been a good thing.

 

On to the Fruit Avalanche: Obviously these are going to deliver far less energy than the nut-packed option but at 207kcal that still tops most gels including, for example, MuleBar’s own Cherry Bomb (112kcal.) Again fairly obviously the protein levels are down on the Tamari Nuts option at 2.9g but so too are fats at 2.2g (0.3g saturates.) The fruits that make up this particular ‘avalanche’ are raisins, apricots, and dried cherries, gooseberries and goji berries. The taste actually left us slightly disappointed – it’s far from bad and there’s a nice sharpness (the gooseberries?), it’s just that MuleBar have set their own bar so high in serving up more left-field options we half expected popping candy or unicorn tears.

 

The 70g bags allow for several generous handfuls on the ride and whilst it would obviously be cheaper to rustle up your own custom trail-mix there’s both convenience and the knowledge of excellent quality ingredients with Nosebag.

 

Both varieties of Nosebag retail at £19.60 for eight packets or £35 for 16 packets. Further details and online purchase at mulebar.com

 

More reviews of MuleBar products here.

Categories
Featured Features

33Shake Chia Energy Gels

33Shake Chia Energy GelsOnce in a while a product comes along that really does things differently and 33Shake Chia Energy Gels certainly tick that box.

 

From the same company that produce the excellent All in One Shakes, see our review of those here, the Chia Energy Gels look to be a whole new way of fuelling your ride. For a start they are a dry mix, weighing in at just 21g of ingredients (under 30g all-in with the packaging) to which you add your own liquid. There are several clear advantages to this: firstly the slight weight-saving on a long ride if you opt to fill them with water from the bottom (marginal gain!) but more significantly it makes them versatile. Want more carbs? Add fruit juice. An electrolyte hit? Top up with coconut water. A caffeine boost? Stick in a shot of espresso…

 

To prepare for use you undo the resealable spout, blow to slightly inflate the pack, and then fill with your chosen liquid. Give it ten minutes and the gel is good to go and if you want to prep them in advance they can be kept for up to 24hours once opened and hydrated. Of course it’s a slightly tricky job to hydrate the 33Shake Chia Energy Gels from a bidon, but it’s more than manageable and no more inconvenient that getting covered in sticky ‘traditional’ gels when trying to open them (also there’s nothing sticky about these…)

 

So, what’s in the 33Shake Chia Energy Gels? Well there’s coconut palm sugar, Himalayan pink salt and organic Madagascan vanilla – which give them just the subtlest of flavour – but at their heart, in case the name hadn’t already given it away, are chia seeds that deliver an exceptionally smooth (no jags and crashes) source of energy, here helping serve up 90kcal, 11.2g of carbs (6g of which sugars), 4g of fat (0.4g saturates) and 5g of fibre. It’s a heady mix, perfectly judged for the bike.

 

The texture – not a strong point with any energy gel – is slightly gelatinous but easily swallowed and because you are the master of your own destiny when it comes to hydrating them they can be made thicker or thinner to taste. Okay, so you’ll spend a couple of miles picking chia seeds out of your teeth with your tongue, but it gives you something to do between gels. Perhaps 33Shake should use it as a selling point?

 

In addition to helping power the ride the gels also include 1.1mg iron and 17.6mg and 103mg of sodium and potassium respectively – helping to replace salts lost through sweating and adding to your hydration strategy – plus 1.1mg of calcium. Because the Chia Energy Gels are fresh, handmade and natural with no preservatives (basically ‘real’ food) their shelf life is shorter than more conventional gels, generally 10-12 weeks, but each gel is marked appropriately.

 

There’s no doubting that 33Shake do things differently, but not just for the sake of it. We’ve been hugely impressed by the ‘clean’ and sustained energy from these gels.

 

33Shake Chia Energy Gels retail at £1.99 each, dropping to £1.89 per gel when you buy them as an Event Pack (10 gels), or just £1.79 per gel when you buy an Endurance Pack of 30 gels.

 

Further details and online purchase of 33Shake Chia Energy Gels at 33shake.com and you can get social with them on Facebook and Twitter too.

 

Four-time World Ironman Champion Chrissie Wellington champions 33Shake and you can read on our sister-site TriGear what she has to say about training and racing here and nutritional and mental preparation here.