5 Tips to Spin the Tour de Fleece Injury-Free
5 Tips to Spin the Tour de Fleece Injury-Free
With the Tour de Fleece in full swing, here are some thoughts about rider safety and avoiding injury. With the Tour de Fleece in full swing, here are some thoughts about rider safety and avoiding injury. Continue reading.
Physical therapy is both expensive and time-consuming, and being in pain is no fun—and potentially avoidable. Here are 5 self-care tips for this year’s race:
Sitting for long stretches of time puts tremendous strain on your back, neck, shoulders, and more—something I learned from my physical therapist while recovering from my own spinning-related back injury. As tough as it may feel to stop spinning and get up from your wheel, do it at least once an hour just to walk around or do a few minutes of stretching (but twice is better).
Turns out, your mother was right: slouching is not only unattractive, but it causes more trouble for your spine. Remind yourself to sit up straight (shoulders back & down) while you’re seated at your wheel.
Whether you spin at a wheel or on a spindle, good posture will help you spin longer.
People, we athletes are given rest days for a reason! Take a lesson from the great event itself: the immune system, our brains, and of course, our muscles need at least a day off from intense activity in order to regenerate healthy tissue. (Need more information about Le Tour de Fleece’s specific riding days, or stages? Come join us on Team Spin Off on Ravelry, for this and more!)
We all know how repetitive stress injuries occur: from using the same muscles in the same way over and over again. The vastness of the 3,351 kilometer route of Le Tour de France allows for stages varying in intensity of grade, stressing different muscle groups. We spinners can put this lesson to use on the Tour de Fleece by following the riders’ actual route and their most arduous days and planning for our own challenge days in addition to “flat” days. Perhaps a day of plying or learning a new-to-you technique? Or switch up the way you draft your fibers by spinning long draw or supported long draw after your usual day of short forward draw? This is also an ideal time to add walking with a spindle to your practice.
Try something new to keep your spinning fresh and fun during the Tour de Fleece. Photo by Debbie Held.
As spinners, we would be lost without our most precious tools, our hands. During this time of heavy use, thank your hands, and keep them strong long into your future, by bringing these spinners’ hand strengthening excercisesto your routine. (Bonus: you’ll strengthen your neck and shoulders, too!) See you en route! Debbie Held is a freelance writer, a contented real-life spinster, and an international fiber-arts educator. She writes recurring spinning-related content for Spin Off in print and on the web as well as for PLY, SweetGeorgia Yarns, and more. Debbie and her Persian cat, Marty, live on an urban farm in Atlanta, Georgia, where both enjoy watching the Shetland sheep that roam beneath their windows. Debbie’s new book, The Spinner’s Blending Board Bible, is available from Stackpole Books. Originally published June 26, 2019; updated July 16, 2025.
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