View Full Version : Q for Ladies re: Leg Muscles, gf thinking of picking up cycling
Lartymarf 11-13-2006, 08:47 AM Hi Ladies,
My gf is considering picking up cycling. She has relatively developed outter
quads compared to her inner quads. If she starts cycling more and more,
which leg muscles will start to develop more for her? (Speaking from your
past cycling experiences etc.) What leg muscles have you seen develop
from cycling? Did your legs get thinner more toned? Or did it bulk up a little?
Much thanks.
il sogno 11-13-2006, 10:56 AM I did not ride for about two months this summer so this fall, I have been able to see the changes my body goes through when I ride as opposed to when I'm not riding.
My legs don't bulk up much at all. They get toned with lots of definition. My back and torso build up as I put the miles on. It was a bummer. When I wasn't riding I lost an inch or two around my waist. Now I've got those inches back. :(
SilasCL 11-13-2006, 11:10 AM Go on cyclingnews.com or velonews.com and look at some photos of female pro cyclists.
Your wife won't get that developed riding 200 miles a month, but she will get some of the same look. Bigger butt for sure, along with more muscles on the outside of the thigh and also the hip flexors, quad just above and inside the knee and some lower back development as il sogno noted. Maybe calves too, but not a lot.
Silas
JayTee 11-13-2006, 11:20 AM In my experiencing cycling absolutely has not added bulk at all and conceptually it shouldn't be expected to. I also don't really agree with Silas about a bigger booty... maybe a little "perkier" is all. Bigger=bad. Perky=good!
Pro cyclists may give us a hint what cycling will do to a body, but they do so much more weight work than the rest of us (not to mention logging a ton more miles) that its only a hint.
Bocephus Jones II 11-13-2006, 11:21 AM Hi Ladies,
My gf is considering picking up cycling. She has relatively developed outter
quads compared to her inner quads. If she starts cycling more and more,
which leg muscles will start to develop more for her? (Speaking from your
past cycling experiences etc.) What leg muscles have you seen develop
from cycling? Did your legs get thinner more toned? Or did it bulk up a little?
Much thanks.
She will soon have bigger legs than Arnold Schwartzenegger--better dump her now.
theBreeze 11-13-2006, 11:41 AM I noticed a definate change in quads and hamstrings. So from the side my legs look bigger than before cycled a lot, but from the front they look thinner; got rid of that "saddlebag" look. That is probably a result of general body fat loss. And yes, the glutes will develop, but like jtolleson said "perkier" not necessarily bigger. I work in the fitness department of a YMCA. I walked into the aerobics room at the end of a class one day while a couple women were talking to the instructor. "I want a butt like hers" one said pointing to me. I offered to be a partial "butt donor" but I don't think it would work. ;)
I also do quite a but of weight training, not just cycling.
SilasCL 11-13-2006, 11:47 AM In my experiencing cycling absolutely has not added bulk at all and conceptually it shouldn't be expected to. I also don't really agree with Silas about a bigger booty... maybe a little "perkier" is all. Bigger=bad. Perky=good!
Pro cyclists may give us a hint what cycling will do to a body, but they do so much more weight work than the rest of us (not to mention logging a ton more miles) that its only a hint.
Bigger=bad?!? We must not have the same taste in women...
When I say bigger, think bigger muscles. If she has a flat butt now, cycling will definitely make it rounder. Is this a bad thing? I would say not,
Silas
JayTee 11-13-2006, 01:15 PM :)
well, let's just say to a woman's ears, "bigger butt" usually won't sound like a good thing, but you are right about the, uh, "rounder" result.
sarah 11-13-2006, 01:55 PM I don't know if they've bulked up, but they've definatley gotten more toned and defined. I think they look a lot better now than they did before I started cycling!! My butt has gotten smaller also.
Sarah
P.S. I apologize for any spelling mistakes in any of my posts. I can't spell and I'm too lazy to look anything up.
vonteity 11-13-2006, 02:25 PM Hi Ladies,
My gf is considering picking up cycling. She has relatively developed outter
quads compared to her inner quads. If she starts cycling more and more,
which leg muscles will start to develop more for her? (Speaking from your
past cycling experiences etc.) What leg muscles have you seen develop
from cycling? Did your legs get thinner more toned? Or did it bulk up a little?
Much thanks.
The only way to find out for sure is to start riding. Some people bulk up, some people thin out. It's not about what cycling will do to her body, it's about how her individual body will respond to cycling.
vonteity 11-13-2006, 02:26 PM Go on cyclingnews.com or velonews.com and look at some photos of female pro cyclists.
Your wife won't get that developed riding 200 miles a month, but she will get some of the same look. Bigger butt for sure, along with more muscles on the outside of the thigh and also the hip flexors, quad just above and inside the knee and some lower back development as il sogno noted. Maybe calves too, but not a lot.
Silas
His wife won't get that developed unless she's on 'roids.
p.s. My butt disappeared... so much for "bigger butt for sure"!
SilasCL 11-13-2006, 02:51 PM His wife won't get that developed unless she's on 'roids.
p.s. My butt disappeared... so much for "bigger butt for sure"!
Oh sheesh, should've known better than posting on the women's forum...with my level of tact it's remarkable I was able to get back on jtolleson's good side.
I'm sure you all have lovely, small and shapely butts.
Silas
physasst 11-13-2006, 03:38 PM will definitely develop her lateral quads more. Her "inner" quads or more commonly referred to as your VMO or Vastus Medialis Oblique is hard to, if not impossible to develop with cycling, the problem is that you really only fire and strengthen this muscle in the last 20 degrees or so of extension. In cycling you are very rarely extending your leg fully, so the VMO will not strengthen or develop to the same degree as your lateral quads. I always laugh when I go to the gym and I watch the big weight lifters doing weighted leg extenions and they are flexing the knee all the way back and then rocking forward and lifting their legs to about 15 degrees short of full extension....I then ask them what they are doing, and they tell me that they are strengthening their quads....I just quietly laugh to myself and walk away. If she really wants to strengthen her VMO and ALL cyclists should do this, then get some weights, attach them to your ankles, let your leg lie at about 20 degrees of flexion on a stool or step, and extend all the way...hold to a count of ten, and then let it down.....Sounds easy...put 30 pounds on each ankle and try it....it isn't that easy. Now, my daughter decided to give me the flu...so I'm going to go take some more nyquil and blow my nose........again.
il sogno 11-13-2006, 05:13 PM If she really wants to strengthen her VMO and ALL cyclists should do this, then get some weights, attach them to your ankles, let your leg lie at about 20 degrees of flexion on a stool or step, and extend all the way...hold to a count of ten, and then let it down.....Sounds easy...put 30 pounds on each ankle and try it....it isn't that easy.
Do this while seated on a chair, right?
physasst 11-13-2006, 06:05 PM Do this while seated on a chair, right?
yep...:thumbsup:
innergel 11-14-2006, 10:33 AM My wife is primarily a runner, so she is long and lean. She's also 6' tall. When she rode with me a lot, she added a little bulk and a lot more definition to her legs. I think she looked better when she was riding, but that's not to say she doesn't look good now. Cycling is more about strength than running, so you can expect some more definition in her legs and lower back. I would bet that she shouldn't be worried about bulk until she starts really piling on the miles. A lot more miles than even any serious recreational rider would do.
And I agree with whoever said it, rounder and more perky = good!
SilasCL 12-13-2006, 05:49 PM Well, I had a training session at work today. One of the instructors noticed the graham watson photo on my desktop, and asked where it was. Turns out she's a road racer, and serious cyclist. We chatted a bit about cycling, women's racing, etc.
The point of the story? She had a large, very round, muscular looking butt. I rest my case,
Silas
vonteity 12-13-2006, 07:22 PM Well, I had a training session at work today. One of the instructors noticed the graham watson photo on my desktop, and asked where it was. Turns out she's a road racer, and serious cyclist. We chatted a bit about cycling, women's racing, etc.
The point of the story? She had a large, very round, muscular looking butt. I rest my case,
Silas
I'll have to post pictures of my butt (or lack thereof) after I get back to my spring racing weight. :wink:
p.s. You really need to stop using the words "large" and "butt" in the same sentence in a forum full of women.
il sogno 12-13-2006, 09:15 PM Well, I had a training session at work today. One of the instructors noticed the graham watson photo on my desktop, and asked where it was. Turns out she's a road racer, and serious cyclist. We chatted a bit about cycling, women's racing, etc.
The point of the story? She had a large, very round, muscular looking butt. I rest my case,
Silas
So it was "perky", right?
Argentius 12-14-2006, 12:15 AM Don't tease us...
--
My girlfriend wondered about that, too, but as far as bulking up / not, it really seems genetic...
On my collegiate team, there was a cross-country runner who did road bike riding as rehab for knee injuries and ended up doing a couple of races, but had to quit because she was developing really massive quads and the XC coach wouldn't have it. Too bad, she was fast...
Then there is a woman at the LBS who is a master's nat'l 200m sprint champion, and she has very small proportions, even if "perky."
This became funny as I needed to tell my girlfriend to "go to the bike shop and look at the girl's butt," since she was worried about taking up cycling and getting too "big."
cyclequip 12-14-2006, 03:30 AM With enough cycling you can pretty much develop most of the leg muscles. Posture on a bike does play a part in "butt" development - the more included hip angle you customarily ride hard with, the greater the glute development.
Could women end up looking like this?:eek:
http://i23.photobucket.com/albums/b392/cyclequip/Ullrich.jpg
my wife and my cousin were teasing me that my legs were nicer than theirs. I think that they were half teasing about a man's having nicely shaped, shaved legs and half genuinely jealous.
Von is right -- some women seem to bulk up up a bit in the quads and butt, some just get leaner and more toned. Ina Tuetenberg -- a lovely person, by the way -- is built like a fireplug. And then there are others who are lean and lithe. That Canadian doper who tore everyone's legs off -- what was her name? she was a little slip of a thing. Genevieve Jeanson.
Short of the whole female body-builder thing, which is definitely an acquired taste I have not acquired, there is nothing, nothing, nothing unfeminine about a toned, healthy body, even if it is of a type not seen on a Milan catwalk. Women are much harder on themselves and more critical about their bodies than men are. True.
Spinfinity 12-14-2006, 09:30 AM when she rides a lot:
Her calves look smaller and tighter
Her outer quads look more muscular but the same size
Her inner quads near the knees muscle up the rest looks the same.
Her butt looks higher and rounder.
Her hips look more narrow.
There are more changes than this, but those questions weren't asked.
joehartley 12-16-2006, 09:06 AM I think a lot of the "bigger" illusion comes from the emergence of muscle. When I'm at my fighting weight, I am a stick. But, a lot of people will look at me and say I've gotten bigger just because I have very little body fat and the muscle is more defined.
I have a very hard time believing that riding a bicycle can have a negative effect on a person's physique...that may be a naive thing to say, but I'm quite the advocate of getting anyone into cycling that wants to.
venus 12-23-2006, 09:26 AM I've been a competitive bodybuilder for 20 years & won many titles. Riding bike will not build much mass unless you are taking steroids or you are a pro & that's all you do. I've used biking to stay lean & to cut up for a show. Drugs are key to developing striated quads, etc. How picky are you about your wife's legs? Lets see yours.
the_rydster 12-24-2006, 03:33 AM Most guys would approve of the sort of toned legs developed through cycling....tell you gf to just get out and ride.
wankski 12-24-2006, 04:30 AM i dunno, i've built up my legs noticably riding, definately seeing it on my outer quads - but to be fair i may have been genetically predisposed to it, i've always had muscular legs disproportionately to the rest of my body.
i think riding style has a lot to do w/ it too. spinning away on a long flat route would lean you out.... sprinting up hills on a shorter course would build you up, particularily if you're heavy.
then there are ppl that spin a big gear and so on... too many variables to generalise..
wankski 12-24-2006, 04:31 AM Most guys would approve of the sort of toned legs developed through cycling....tell you gf to just get out and ride.
yeah but girls don't dig it. some chicks i know generally like riding, but wont do it for fitness because they got "too big".. their words...
shame, i'ld like to take some of them out for a ride :aureola:
|
|