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Deleted member 4366
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When I was at the Cycle Show a couple of weeks ago, just about every other stand was showing some sort of nutrition, some based on natural healthy foods and some scientifically based. It was handy because you zip round taking a sample of each to re-nutrify yourself, but I must say that they didn't do much to re-energise myself. Some of them were relatively expensive, and I had some discussion with some of my friends/colleagues about whether cyclists were being taken or whether they truly thouht that they could buy their way to better performance. I now know the answer.
In 1967 Emily Burton took a new world record when she completed 277.25 miles in twelve hours. During this event, she overtook the guy who set the men's record of 276.53 miles on the same day. While she was overtaking him, she handed him a liquorice allsort, which he took and ate.
Now that I know her secret, I'm off to the corner shop first thing tomorrow, then I'm going to see if I can beat my 12 hour record. Do you think I'll still need to charge the battery or should I leave it off to save weight?
In 1967 Emily Burton took a new world record when she completed 277.25 miles in twelve hours. During this event, she overtook the guy who set the men's record of 276.53 miles on the same day. While she was overtaking him, she handed him a liquorice allsort, which he took and ate.
Now that I know her secret, I'm off to the corner shop first thing tomorrow, then I'm going to see if I can beat my 12 hour record. Do you think I'll still need to charge the battery or should I leave it off to save weight?