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Install in OpenClaw
/install cycling
Description
Cycling training, bike fit, power zones, nutrition, safety, and maintenance essentials.
README (SKILL.md)
Bike Fit Fundamentals
- Saddle height: slight bend in knee at bottom of pedal stroke — too low wastes power, too high causes injury
- Saddle fore/aft: knee over pedal spindle when crank is horizontal — affects power transfer
- Handlebar reach: slight bend in elbows, relaxed shoulders — locked elbows transmit road shock to neck
- Cleat position: ball of foot over pedal axle — too far forward stresses Achilles
- Professional fit worth the cost — prevents chronic injury, improves efficiency
Power Training Zones
| Zone | % FTP | Feel | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | \x3C55% | Very easy | Recovery |
| 2 | 56-75% | Easy, all day | Endurance base |
| 3 | 76-90% | Moderate, focused | Tempo |
| 4 | 91-105% | Hard, sustainable 20-60min | Threshold |
| 5 | 106-120% | Very hard, 3-8min | VO2max |
| 6 | >120% | Maximum, \x3C3min | Anaerobic |
- FTP (Functional Threshold Power): highest power sustainable for 1 hour
- Test FTP: 20-minute max effort × 0.95 — retest every 6-8 weeks
Cadence
- Optimal range: 80-100 RPM — lower grinds joints, higher wastes cardiovascular capacity
- Climbing: 70-85 RPM acceptable — lower cadence when gravity resists
- Sprinting: 100-120 RPM — higher cadence for explosive power
- Train both: low cadence strength, high cadence efficiency — versatility wins
Endurance Training
- 80% of rides should be Zone 2 — builds aerobic engine without accumulating fatigue
- Long rides: 2-4 hours, steady effort — weekly anchor of training
- Weekly volume matters more than single ride — consistency compounds
- Rest weeks every 3-4 weeks: reduce volume 40% — adaptation happens during recovery
- Base phase: 8-12 weeks of volume before intensity — patience builds foundation
Interval Sessions
- Sweet spot: 88-93% FTP, 10-20 min intervals — sustainable training stress
- VO2max: 3-5 min at 106-120% FTP, equal rest — painful but effective
- Over-unders: alternate 2 min above/below threshold — teaches body to clear lactate
- Sprints: 15-30 seconds max effort, full recovery — neuromuscular power
- One hard day, one easy day minimum — back-to-back intensity causes overtraining
Climbing
- Pace by power or heart rate, not speed — gradient affects speed, not effort
- Seated climbing uses different muscles than standing — alternate to delay fatigue
- Gear selection: spin up, don't grind — save matches for surges
- Weight matters: 1 kg = ~3 watts saved on 7% grade — rider weight, not just bike
- Descending: look where you want to go, weight outside pedal in turns
Nutrition On Bike
- \x3C60 min: water only — no fuel needed
- 60-90 min: 30g carbs/hour — one gel or banana
-
90 min: 60-90g carbs/hour — practiced gut training required
- Hydration: 500-750ml/hour depending on heat — thirst lags dehydration
- Caffeine: 3-6mg/kg 30-60 min before hard efforts — proven performance boost
Safety Essentials
- Helmet always, no exceptions — non-negotiable
- Assume drivers don't see you — ride defensively
- Hand signals before turns — communicate intentions
- Lights in low visibility: front white, rear red — even daytime
- ID and emergency contact on person — worst case preparation
- Descending: hands in drops, cover brakes — reaction time matters
Maintenance Schedule
Every ride:
- Tire pressure check — correct pressure prevents flats, improves efficiency
- Quick brake and shifting test
Weekly:
- Chain lube — after cleaning, wipe excess
- Tire inspection for embedded debris
Monthly:
- Chain wear check — stretched chain destroys cassette
- Brake pad inspection — replace before metal on metal
- Bolt torque check — especially stem, seatpost, handlebars
Common Mistakes
- All intensity, no easy rides — Zone 2 feels too slow but builds fitness
- Ignoring bike fit — chronic knee/back pain from poor position
- Skipping rest weeks — overtraining syndrome takes months to recover
- Fueling too late — bonking means you didn't eat enough 30 min ago
- New equipment on race day — test everything in training first
- Grinding big gears — high cadence protects knees, improves efficiency
Indoor Training
- Smart trainer: power accurate, resistance controlled — better than dumb trainer
- Fan essential — overheating tanks performance indoors
- Shorter but harder: 60-90 min indoors = 2-3 hours outdoors — no coasting
- Entertainment helps: Zwift, videos, music — mental challenge of trainer
- Structured workouts shine indoors — no interruptions, exact targets hit
Racing and Events
- Pre-ride the course if possible — know the climbs, corners, hazards
- Warm-up: 15-20 min with high-intensity openers — body ready for start effort
- Draft in group rides: 30% energy savings — stay safe, hold wheel
- Positioning: front third before climbs and turns — avoid accordion effect
- Negative split long events — start conservative, finish strong
Usage Guidance
This skill is low-risk as provided: it only contains cycling advice and asks for no installs or credentials. Before enabling, skim the SKILL.md to confirm the advice meets your needs and isn't presented as medical/clinical guidance (consult a professional for injury or medical questions). Note that the agent can call the skill autonomously by default; if you prefer manual control, disable autonomous invocation in your agent settings. If you plan to share personal health metrics with the agent, remember those data may be retained in conversation logs depending on your platform — avoid sharing sensitive medical or identity information unless necessary.
Capability Analysis
Type: OpenClaw Skill
Name: cycling
Version: 1.0.0
The skill bundle contains only informational text about cycling in SKILL.md and standard metadata in _meta.json. There are no executable commands, network requests, file system operations, or attempts at prompt injection against the AI agent. The content is purely descriptive and aligns with the stated purpose of providing cycling information.
Capability Assessment
Purpose & Capability
Name/description (cycling training, fit, nutrition, maintenance) match the SKILL.md content; nothing in the skill requests unrelated resources or privileges.
Instruction Scope
SKILL.md contains only cycling training, fit, safety, nutrition, and maintenance guidance. It does not instruct the agent to run shell commands, read files, access environment variables, or transmit data to external endpoints.
Install Mechanism
No install spec and no code files — the skill is instruction-only, so nothing is written to disk or fetched at install time.
Credentials
No environment variables, credentials, or config paths are required; requested data is proportional to the stated purpose (none).
Persistence & Privilege
Defaults used (not always:true, model invocation enabled). This is normal for skills and not excessive for a fitness guidance skill.
How to Use
- Make sure OpenClaw is installed (local or Docker)
- Run the install command in chat:
/install cycling - After installation, invoke the skill by name or use
/cycling - Provide required inputs per the skill's parameter spec and get structured output
Version History
v1.0.0
Initial release
Metadata
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Cycling?
Cycling training, bike fit, power zones, nutrition, safety, and maintenance essentials. It is an AI Agent Skill for Claude Code / OpenClaw, with 799 downloads so far.
How do I install Cycling?
Run "/install cycling" in the OpenClaw or Claude Code chat to install it in one step — no extra setup required.
Is Cycling free?
Yes, Cycling is completely free (open-source). You can download, install and use it at no cost.
Which platforms does Cycling support?
Cycling is cross-platform and runs anywhere OpenClaw / Claude Code is available (cross-platform).
Who created Cycling?
It is built and maintained by Iván (@ivangdavila); the current version is v1.0.0.
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