Zed
Active member
I wanted to brain dump this. Partly for my own future reference, but also for people who are eMtb curious, or new riders, who might find this. I'm wondering how different the story is for others.
A bit of background first. I'm 45 years old, and I'm 95kg at 181cm. A really healthy weight for my slim frame would be probably just under 80kg, and that's where I'd love to be. But for various reasons I won't go into here, getting much lighter and staying there has been very difficult. So, 95kg and 45 years old it is.
I love riding trails, and one of the wonderful things about this activity is that I get some good quality exercise and it's fun. Because it's fun I keep doing it. It's been around 7 years ago now that I found mountain biking and it's by the far the longest I've kept up any physical activity through my lifetime thus far.
What I've learned through much trial and error is this. If it want to ride trails on a regular MTB there are two choices:
1) Have a training plan where I use a trainer and/or spend hours on a road bike to get my fitness up and keep it there. This way I can enjoy a trail ride maybe once a week (because the rest of the time I'm training &/or recovering).
2) Just ride trails and feel like shit a lot of the time because I'm sustaining too high a heart rate for long periods.
Number 1 is very boring - especially since it has to be done long term. To my ADD type brain it's a jail sentence. I need some excitement in my life and this just doesn't bring it.
Number 2 leads to exertion headaches, not having energy to be a good Dad. It's not that I find that riding too hard, it's that it makes me feel like shit and not function afterwards. It's too much to recover from and fitness improvements don't happen. So it's not a fitness plan or even a fitness activity, it's simply an over-exertion.
Now for the the eMtb, well - it means I can go and ride trails and have fun AND THAT IS THE TRAINING PLAN, right there. It IS suitable exercise, all by itself - I don't have to train for hours per week in order to enjoy it. So it's like having my cake and eating it too.
This is my third eMtb and I'm coming back from a regular bike. When I went back to regular bike this last time I was thinking "hey, I'm 45, serious fitness is still possible and I should grab it while I can". The realities of doing this were just not pleasant though, and I suppose it's fair to say I just don't have the motivation to keep it up. I've thought for some time the difference between the serious endurance athlete and a regular person is only motivation. There's a thing they have to prove, something they can't let go. I just don't have that... and to be honest I'm not sure that's a bad thing.
I did recently improve my fitness a lot using a road bike, but that got too boring so I tried Zwift and TrainerRoad on a Kickr. That was more convenient but not even YouTube could appease my brain. It's just not EXCITING. I'd just... rather not get on the bike, do something else (anything else?).
So I'm back to racing around local forests on an eMtb like a lunatic, and loving it. What I want to get nailed now is weight loss, in a sustained way, and I know the eMtb can help me with that if I manage to get the diet part right. If I ride with lots of frequency, but some lower intensity riding too, I think a lot of sustained fitness is achievable with an eMtb.
A bit of background first. I'm 45 years old, and I'm 95kg at 181cm. A really healthy weight for my slim frame would be probably just under 80kg, and that's where I'd love to be. But for various reasons I won't go into here, getting much lighter and staying there has been very difficult. So, 95kg and 45 years old it is.
I love riding trails, and one of the wonderful things about this activity is that I get some good quality exercise and it's fun. Because it's fun I keep doing it. It's been around 7 years ago now that I found mountain biking and it's by the far the longest I've kept up any physical activity through my lifetime thus far.
What I've learned through much trial and error is this. If it want to ride trails on a regular MTB there are two choices:
1) Have a training plan where I use a trainer and/or spend hours on a road bike to get my fitness up and keep it there. This way I can enjoy a trail ride maybe once a week (because the rest of the time I'm training &/or recovering).
2) Just ride trails and feel like shit a lot of the time because I'm sustaining too high a heart rate for long periods.
Number 1 is very boring - especially since it has to be done long term. To my ADD type brain it's a jail sentence. I need some excitement in my life and this just doesn't bring it.
Number 2 leads to exertion headaches, not having energy to be a good Dad. It's not that I find that riding too hard, it's that it makes me feel like shit and not function afterwards. It's too much to recover from and fitness improvements don't happen. So it's not a fitness plan or even a fitness activity, it's simply an over-exertion.
Now for the the eMtb, well - it means I can go and ride trails and have fun AND THAT IS THE TRAINING PLAN, right there. It IS suitable exercise, all by itself - I don't have to train for hours per week in order to enjoy it. So it's like having my cake and eating it too.
This is my third eMtb and I'm coming back from a regular bike. When I went back to regular bike this last time I was thinking "hey, I'm 45, serious fitness is still possible and I should grab it while I can". The realities of doing this were just not pleasant though, and I suppose it's fair to say I just don't have the motivation to keep it up. I've thought for some time the difference between the serious endurance athlete and a regular person is only motivation. There's a thing they have to prove, something they can't let go. I just don't have that... and to be honest I'm not sure that's a bad thing.
I did recently improve my fitness a lot using a road bike, but that got too boring so I tried Zwift and TrainerRoad on a Kickr. That was more convenient but not even YouTube could appease my brain. It's just not EXCITING. I'd just... rather not get on the bike, do something else (anything else?).
So I'm back to racing around local forests on an eMtb like a lunatic, and loving it. What I want to get nailed now is weight loss, in a sustained way, and I know the eMtb can help me with that if I manage to get the diet part right. If I ride with lots of frequency, but some lower intensity riding too, I think a lot of sustained fitness is achievable with an eMtb.