Riding inside, riding outside: different, both great

We ride outside, we ride inside…..we love both.

Yes, we run an indoor studio, but we love the idea of cycling of all kinds.  The benefits of indoor and outdoor riding are awesome in so many ways!
About 25% of Spynergy riders are also serious about their outdoor riding.  They do both inside and outside riding.  The vast majority of our spinners do NOT ride outside….ever.
Riding inside and outside are different………and the same.
The same because they are both rhythmic, low impact, cardio exercise.  While fundamentally solitary endeavours, indoor and outdoor cycling are often done in groups and can be social.  Both workouts can be intense….but both can be moderated.  Both are exercise that experts agree is ideal for a range of health and fitness related goals.
How do they differ?  Other than the obvious (you don’t need a helmet indoors, the sun shines outdoors), there are differences that make the workouts somewhat distinct.  One is time spent.  Spin classes are an “in and out” workout.  In less than an hour, you can burn huge energy.  With time pressures everywhere, the “exercise value per minute” is extremely high in a spin class.  With outdoor cycling, equipment and preparation and clean up issues add significantly to the average ride — but you get scenery!
Outdoor rides tend to be a more varied mix of endurance and interval training, indoor rides focus more on intervals.  Intervals (intermittent periods of high exertion) tend to be longer outside, leading to a very different feel and experience.
In either workout, you can work hard….or not. In both workouts the presence of other riders around you tends to motivate.  Indoors, the music keeps you alert, outdoors it’s the presence of cars.
Spinning is great aerobic training for outside riding.  Some outdoor cyclists complain that the cadence and saddle positions in spin class do not simulate outside riding —- but even the most ardent admit that there is tremendous heart rate work in a good spin class, not to mention the toning of key muscle groups.
Spinners who don’t ride outside usually cite traffic and safety concerns, or sometimes technophobia about all the “stuff”.  These are legitimate reasons not to ride —- but if you’re a spinner, you would actually be pretty good at it, and even periodic outside riding is great cross-training for your spinning!
What’s the bottom line?  Both are great exercise depending on your preference, your available time, and your mood!  If you’re an inside rider looking to explore outside (or vice versa) —- feel free to email us with any questions.  We love both.
Enjoy the ride!
Bill and Alex

Video Intro to spin® or indoor cycling

If you have never been to an indoor cycling or spin class, here is a video to de-mystify this great cardio exercise. It introduces the basics of attending a class and answers general questions.

Spynergy Glossary: Low Impact

OK, can we talk? Here is part 1 of the Spynergy no-nonsense glossary to de-mystify fitness terms thrown around by the press, doctors, personal trainers and other so-called experts. These are a basic concepts you should know —- translated into straight talk. Today it is the idea of low impact exercise.

“Low-Impact” Does that term mean anything to you right now? If not, it will soon.
First, let’s discuss high-impact activities (virtually ANYTHING involving running). Here’s an image: think of a 120 to 180 pound bone-in rib roast that is picked up and dropped on to cement or asphault……thousands of times. No, make that hundreds of thousands of times. Visualize what that sudden impact does to the soft fleshy tissues that hold that rib roast together. Hmmmmm. That’s high impact. Now picture a different bone-in rib roast placed on a playground swingset and swung back and forth thousands of times. That’s low impact.

Which piece of meat do you think has suffered less trauma?

For most people (granted, there are a few freak-of-nature exceptions) there is a limit to the amount of ground-pounding that your ankles, knees and hips can take. The goal is to NOT reach that limit in your lifetime because it would be nice to walk comfortably during your last few years on earth.

Since aerobic exercise is good for you (a topic for another day, but trust us, it’s true), a good strategy is to get as much of it as possible, or practical……. from low impact activity: cycling, rowing, swimming – to name a few. Not all your activity need be low impact, but a lot of it should be. Example: a fanatic runner who runs 4 times a week, and replaces two of those sessions with a low impact activity (note: it could be anything, but spin would be our preference), will theoretically extend the “life” of his or her joints by 50%.

Summary: low-impact exercise minimizes wear and tear on your body while still giving you the aerobic and other benefits. This is a reality that becomes more and more important with age. Make sense? Love to hear your comments.

Reminder: great reasons to spin

Lots of cool responses to the Spynergy Blog……one of our teachers, Jesse Page (manicspinner) provided a link we hadn’t seen before: 10 REASONS TO MOUNT A SPIN BIKE…..to read the full article with all details click here

1) Burn, Burn, Burn Calories
2) Cardiovascular Health
3) Progress at your own pace
4) Time Flies
5) Low Impact
6) Shapely legs
7) Lower your bodies breaking point
8) Build abs while you spin
9) Ride Together
10) Mental Strength

………..we’ll add number 11 ——- Cool Music!!!
click here for full article