About Me

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I’m a cycling fanatic in the information technology and security field with a bachelors in Social Welfare and a some training in the visual arts. I’m a son, a brother, a husband, and a father. I am good with my hands, still consider myself an artist, and could stand to lose a few pounds.

Saturday, July 14, 2018

So... This Happened...

At about 10:07 AM on June 23rd, I had the worst bicycle crash of my long and otherwise uneventful (and decidedly non-decorated) cycling career.

It was at about mile 45 of the 2018 Tour de Lakes.  The video linked to below shows the event, but essentially I was going too fast around an unfamiliar turn and was unable to negotiate it successfully.

Here is a video of the event:  https://youtu.be/-F4X9cidSmI

Here are a couple pictures that show the damage:
Clavicle Break X-Ray
Complete, but clean clavicle break
The clavicle break was not a candidate for surgery, meaning I'm on a longer, but otherwise complication free recovery tract.
Left Arm Laceration
Severe laceration/trench caused by unknown road debris
The laceration/trench required 11 stitches in total, including 4 internal and 7 external. All but one was removed on Friday, June 6th. That one was too embedded and the tissue still too swollen to remove it safely. The final embedded stitch was safely removed on Friday, June 13th.

Detailed Account of The Event -->

Monday, June 18, 2018

Legit Sore

Yesterday was the first time I can recall my quads being actually sore from cycling.  I've had that day-after burn from running and strength training (squats, deadlifts, etc), but never from cycling... until yesterday.  The workout was Spruce Knob, and consists of two thirty minute intervals separated by a 6 minute recovery interval.  All this at 85% FTP.  In other words, it's a tough one.  A lot of time is spent very near threshold power, and there's not a ton of relative recovery time between efforts.

I've done multiple centuries in the Kansas heat.  I've done the 120 mile Triple Bypass in Colorado three times (well, I actually finished it twice).  I've done all-out nothing-left-behind time trials and end-of-long-ride sprints.  None of those have me lingering muscle soreness.  The left me totally cooked, but not sore.

I'm going to read that as a sign that TrainerRoad is working.  Those workouts are the cause of this soreness, after all.  The weekend high intensity workouts prescribed in my Sustained Power Build plan are... well... intense.

Tuesday, June 12, 2018

On the TrainerRoad - What I've Learned So Far

Over the last year or so, after a several year hiatus, I've immersed myself in the world of cycling again.  This time, it's with a much higher focus on actual "training", rather than the bike riding I passed off as training in years past.

I've been riding bikes since I was about 4.  It wasn't really until this past April, 40*cough*-some-odd years later that I really started legit training.

I'm no stranger to hard rides.  Some of my "career highlights" include:

  • Multiple unsupported centuries and near centuries in the Kansas summer heat and humidity.
  • Multiple supported centuries and metric centuries in the Kansas summer heat and humidity.
  • Three attempts at the Triple Bypass in Colorado, with two completions.
  • The Tour of the Moon in Colorado.
  • Thousands of miles on secondary Kansas highways and urban streets.

In April of 2017, I started riding a lot more in preparation for the Tour of the Moon in September.  That was a fantastic ride.  We had a great time.  6 months later, I raced the 2018 Corporate Challenge KC Time Trial.  It's a paltry 2 laps on the Kansas Speedway, totaling 3 miles.  I did it in 7m 22s, at an average power of about 250 watts, and I was completely cooked.  It took me 10 minutes to catch my breath, and another hour for the chest burn to subside.  I left everything out there on the track, and enjoyed every second of it.  As an added bonus, that performance earned me 5th in my age bracket overall, and 1st in my division!

That performance proved to be the tipping point for me.  Maybe I can actually do a little more with this cycling thing.  It inspired me to graduate from simply "riding my bike to get better" to actually "training."  I'd been listening to the TrainerRoad podcast for a few months already, so the concept of structured training was already in my mind.  After that race, I bought a smart trainer, the Tacx Neo Smart, some Favero Assioma power meter pedals, a few other odds and ends for my "pain cave", and a subscription to TrainerRoad.

I researched the training plans, asked some questions, and came up with a path designed to generate the most fitness given my limited time.  On August 4th, myself and a bunch of friends are tackling the Copper Triangle in Colorado (we do like our Colorado rides).  My training began 15 weeks prior to Go Time, on April 22nd.  That's not a lot of time, when you consider that the standard TR plan takes 28+ weeks.  I had to adjust the plans, and bank on having sufficient carry-over fitness to make it work.

So far, I think it's working.

Recall that I was completely spent lungs a-burnin' after pushing 250 watts for 7m 22s.

On Saturday June 8th, after training for 6 weeks, I did a workout composed of 5 6 minute intervals at 250 watts separated by 4 minutes of recovery.  That's nearly the equivalent of doing the Corporate Challenge Time Trial 5 times over with 4 minutes rest in between.  And I rocked it.  It was definitely challenging and there were moments when I didn't think I could do it.  But I did it.  And I wasn't completely spent afterwards.

In 6 weeks, I went from from being completely spent after a hard effort, to being able to repeat that hard effort 5 times with minimal rest.  That's improvement.

So, what have I learned so far:

  • There is a distinct difference between riding my bike, and training.  Training definitely involves riding my bike, but riding my bike doesn't necessarily involve training.
  • There is no substitute for honest effort structured training, designed by people who understand the sport and the physiology required to perform well.  Fully enjoying my outdoor rides is the point at the end of the day, but structured disciplined indoor training is vastly superior in terms of making the most progress in the least amount of time.
  • Nutrition matters.  I knew this.  Now I know that I really don't know that much.  I've learned that it's not just what you eat, but also when you eat it.  Maybe when you eat it  is more important.  I'm still learning this.
  • Cycling improvement is more like weight training than I'd previously considered.  The only way to get stronger is to push deep into uncomfortable territory.  Sounds so obvious, now that I write it down.
  • That this is a journey.  Getting fit and becoming a faster more capable cyclist isn't a destination, it's a commitment that will take as much time as I'm willing to give it.

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Botnets and Blackhats

Cryptomancer looks interesting.  Looking forward to when my son is old enough to start role playing.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Moving Back

I've decided I'm just too geeky to not run my own server and blog. So... please reverse your steps and head back over to dvicci.com.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Bike Week KC

I've not been very good about riding my bike to work the last couple of weeks. I was gung-ho the first week, and rode every day. The last couple of weeks, though... I don't know, I just didn't have it in me. I caved to the pull of the seat vs. the saddle. I took the easier, more populated road. Can't say I felt great about it, and though there were only a couple of days where I legitimately needed the car to either be somewhere far away quickly, or to carry something my bike just isn't equipped to carry (lumber, for instance), I did it every day anyway.

Bike Week KC starts up next week, and I joined up on Brent Hugh's MoBikeFed Wheel Wizards team, for no other reason than b/c I got a mass e'mail from him about it. I couldn't pick the man out of a crowd, but if it keeps him from buying dinner for other people I don't know, and helps me with the whole biking thing...

Well, why not?

So... I'm signed up, and though I'll need my car at least one day next week, I don't see why I can't ride to work the rest...

See you out there. And Noah if I see you, I promise I'll wave back.

Keep ridin'...

Thursday, April 22, 2010

Thursday Nights at Wheeler Airport

We've recently started up a Thursday Night Ride at the Wheeler Airport just northwest of downtown KC. It's a 4.3 mile loop around the limited access road that surrounds the airport. It's popular due to the lack of traffic, the relatively flat course, and the fact that you're never more than 2 miles from you car (in case things go south one way or another).

If you're into training, it's a good location to gauge progress over time, and between rides.

If you want to join us, we meet at 5:30pm every Thursday night at the Wheeler Airport, just off the Broadway Bridge, north of downtown KC. Last week we rode for an hour or so, at a 18-22mph pace.

There are two main parking lots to set off from, and we'll make it a habit to meet near Hanger 3.

Today, however, on only our second go around, it's raining steady and may not lighten up by tonight.

- Keep Ridin'

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Verizon Clearly Doesn't Know Me

Lately it seems that every time I reboot my Blackberry 9360 Tour (which I'm quite fond of, incidentally), there's another strange new app loaded onto it. At first, I thought it was odd... Slacker Radio was there, bright and shiny on my home screen. "Odd" I thought to myself, "I don't remember getting that... must have missed a clause in some EULA somewhere". Then Bing showed up. Then Skype.

Ok. Something is up.

Then today, NFL Mobile showed up.

Seriously. Verizon. You clearly don't know me. It's obvious at this point that you have no idea who I am.

Let me be absolutely clear on this. I couldn't possibly care less about the NFL.

I did a quick Google (!Bing) search on line, and found this: Free NFL Mobile App for Blackberry Now Available. Thoughts and solutions to this intrusive (though unavoidable at the moment) practice are in the comments.

In short, you can...

  • Delete the service, though it will probably show up again when you resend your service book.
  • Simply hide the icons, or put them all in a single folder and hide the folder.
  • Install the app, and then delete it. Until you install it, the delete option is unavailable.

Hope that helps...