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11 comments
I held my breath on the way home and got completely different results.
yeah, funnily enough i tried the very same thing, and i didn't have to get off and die either. and i was on the africabike. likewise, i couldn't have put 100% in but i don't tend to on the ride home anyway, so it was okay.
hmm, that quote button doesn't seem to work properly...
joe - didn't really understand #2 (in your first list). backing off and climbing more efficiently ... efficient in terms of what? use of energy, oxygen...?
Well there's a good book by John Douillard http://www.amazon.com/Body-Mind-Sport-Mind-Body-Lifelong/dp/0609807897/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1240304690&sr=1-2 - which has a lot to say about relaxed nose breathing.
My experience suggests:
1. you can nose breathe, with training up to around 82-85%HRmax
2. once you have to start to gasp through your mouth you are already into lactate build up and could possible back off and climb more efficiently
3. most riders key limiter to climbing is rider mass and their power (ie. power to weight ratio) NOT bike mass (sorry weight weenies) or how they breathe
4. that said if you learn to cruise by nose breathing occasionally it limits you to riding aerobically and not over exerting (the biggest cause of lack of fitness development is too hard too often with too little recovery)
5. the year the L'Etape finished with L'Alpe D'Huez I think I was also breathing out my ears and belly button by the top
Three ways to get better at nose breathing:
1. Try a Breatheright strip to clear the nasal passage and put focus on your nose as a tool for correct breathing
2. Lie on floor
put heavy book on belly button area
breathe in and push the book up
breathe out and let the book fall
practice for 3 mins a day
you can also do this type of exercise (without the book)
using a simple straw
3. Watch on climbs the point at which you revert to mouth breathing and what HR and perception of effort it occurs at - this is around lactate threshold (just below it) but gives you a good guide for long climbs
not me, i'm very much a mouth breather
seriously though, there's no way i could get up the hill back home breathing through my nose. i'd suffocate about half way up...
yeah - that was exactly my thinking. so i'm more than a little surprised to report that I just did my 8 mile trip home (with a similar climb to dave's) with mouth clamped grimly shut.
started off quite tentatively, expecting to run out of breath immediately, but by the top of the climb i was out of the saddle. i'd guess i was a couple of mph slower throughout, although the clock suggested the time wasn't all that much different.
interesting...
mm yeah interesting article. got a bit lost somewhere around the yogic stuff, but it makes a good case otherwise. i notice, though, that after several months of doing it he says he is still noticeably slower than if he was mouth breathing, so it sounds like it takes a long while for your body to acclimatise....?
i was curious to see if anyone on here could tell me that yes, even while going up hills they still use their nose.
and another, though this one's more general:
http://breathing.com/articles/nose-breathing.htm
the first article makes reference to a specific study but i can't find anything on that...
there's a fairly long article about this at
http://www.sethigherstandards.com/increase-your-endurance-and-reduce-str...
which has some interesting stuff in it. sounds like you can train yourself to do it effectively. anyone tried?
Hmmm sounds interesting. All I know is that the last thing I'm thinking about whilst tackling a climb is regulating my breathing, im just interested in gulping down as much oxygen as possible