The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Wednesday, 12.30.15. “Onward!”

•December 30, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Oddly enough, we’re still inside of a week to go to Nationals! We’re still going to focus on speed when we’re on the bike, and we’re still going to prioritize rest and recovery beyond all else.

Before we hit today’s workout, a couple of things…

  • If you haven’t checked out the race bible for Nats, get on that now. This thing is shaping up to be a potential logistical nightmare, and you’re going to want to know what you’re getting into before you get there. Expect 45 minute plus delays in getting to the actual race venue from where you park your car, and a necessity to catch a shuttle bus to and from the venue… that won’t be equipped to ferry bikes or gear. Leave lots and lots and lots of extra time to get to your race…

 

  • Given how tight logistics are going to be at the race venue, think about trying to adjust your schedule a bit so that the change in time zones isn’t a factor. If there’s a change in time zones for you, that is.

 

  • You are absolutely, positively, going to want to have access to a tent at Nationals. Unless you’re extremely lucky, you ain’t going to be able to bail to your car post-race to change your clothing, your car is going to be parked miles, lines, and a bus trip away. Start networking some tent space to squat now. From what I’m hearing, it’s too late to try and get a space of your own at this point, if you don’t have one already reserved you’re S.O.L. unless you can find a friendly place to hang.

 

  • There are going to be 30 trainers in a neutral warmup tent somewhere near the course. If you think you’re going to need one, you better sign up early.

 

  • Mixed signals are being sent on how possible it’s going to be to warm up without a trainer. It sounds like there’s a really good chance that there won’t be much terrain open for riding that ain’t part of the course, that you’re going to need a trainer, and that getting your trainer to the venue and set up so you can use it is going to be a significant task. Those 30 trainers mentioned above? Yeah. Sign up early.

 

  • Does all this sound like a giant mess to you? Yeah, me too. I’m staying home. Good luck to those who aren’t.

 

Onward!

 

4c2f0211f23fb0d3183b939746e10d98

Today you’re doing Ramp Sprints.

Warm up well

– Find a long, straight section of flat, traffic free road.

– You’re going to do a series of sprint efforts that look like this:

1 – Start from a dead standstill, one foot on the ground. Full gas start, like a race.

2 – Once you’re up to speed, sit down. Pause for two breaths. Go again. Full gas. Short sprint, ’till you’re spun out or 5 seconds.

3 – After you max out the 2nd sprint, slow down quickly. Make a 180 degree turn. Full gas sprint back towards where you started. Go ’till you’re spun out or 5 seconds.

That’s one rep.

Do three, then 5 minute break.

Repeat until you are obviously slowing down, max wattage has dropped appreciably, or you just can’t stand it anymore.

Have fun!

M

 

 

 

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Tuesday, 12.29.15. “It’s all downhill from here…”

•December 29, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Less than a week to go to Nationals.

 

oneweekleft

 

You ain’t going to get any more fit, but you can make sure you’re rolling into the big race with some speed in your legs. With the limited time left, you should be working almost exclusively on short, sharp, quick efforts, focused on getting your legs to turn over fast. 

With that in mind, today we’re…

 

Going Downhill Fast – 

 

s 

 

So, ok… not like that. Like this…

 

Start by warming up well, a bit longer than usual – 30 minutes or so.

Find a gradual downhill that lets out on a flat section of road or trail. The ideal setup for this workout is a downhill that’s about a block long that turns into  a flat section of road another block or so in length.

Extra bonus points if you can loop back to the start without having to turn around – that would be perfect.

You’re going to do 3-5 sets of 5 sprints, full gas. Here’s how the sprints go:

Roll down the gradual descent in a comfortable gear. You want to hit the bottom of the hill going fast, but not yet in a sprint.

As soon as you hit the flat section at the bottom of the hill, get out of the saddle and give it full gas.

Sit back down as you get up to full speed, and try to go even faster.

Go until you are spun out.

Spun out means that your legs can’t go any faster, your form goes completely to hell, or you start bobbing up and down on the saddle a lot.

Ideally, a little bit of all of those things.

Remember, we’re working on leg speed today, so really focus on turning your legs over. The goal isn’t to make the bike go fast, the goal is to make your legs go fast.

There’s a difference, eh? Try to keep it in mind, ok?

That’s one rep. You’re doing sets of 5.

Each sprint should take just a few seconds. Recover for 30 seconds to a minute between them, and 5 minutes between sets.

Stop when you hit 5 sets or just aren’t getting the same leg speed you were on the first couple of reps.

When you’re done, spin out your legs and go home.

Tips –

– You should start the sprint in a pretty big gear, and spin it out. How big? It depends on how fast you’re going and how strong you are. You’re working on speed here, so don’t try to lug a giant gear, but the gear needs to be big enough that you accelerate when you hit it at the end of the downhill.

– Important, let me reiterate: stand up out of the saddle when you start to sprint, and gradually sit down as you begin to spin up into your sprint.

– Don’t forget to breathe. Seriously. Too many people hold their breath when they sprint. Don’t be one of them.

Have fun!

M

 

 

 

 

Hey there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, but over time it has become a little bit of a monster. There are over 1000 workouts on here! How the hell did that happen?!

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s suddenly the time of the year when the bills come due. I need to ante up if I want to keep the lights on for the page.

Honestly, I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Monday, 12.28.15. “Like a raw egg”

•December 28, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Well, we’re inside a week to go to Nationals, and rest & recovery are more important than ever. You can’t do a whole lot to gain fitness in a week, but you sure can blow what fitness you have by driving too hard this week or not recovering well from whatever work you do.

Note well, and make a point of it; whatever else you do this week, you must recover fully.  When in doubt, go shorter so you can cram in an extra hour of sleep.

Seriously.

With that said, no surprise, today we’re going for a…

 

Recovery Spin – 

– Get on your bike. Roll out into the street – or into your living room if you’re on the turbo watching the vid – and just spin around for an hour. Or more. Or less. Whatever it takes.

– Really small gear, no hard efforts – heck, no medium effort.

– Spin. You’re looking to move your legs around in circles, almost like there is no chain on the bike.

– The idea is to get your body moving, flush the systems out, and speed your recovery.

– Just get out on the road and spin easily and aimlessly. At a certain point, your legs will start to loosen up.

– When that happens, turn around and go home.

–  If you’re doing these on the trainer, same deal. Just spin. No hard efforts, just make the legs go around in circles in a small gear.

– Follow up with as much rest as you can. Eat, stretch, and put your legs up. Get a massage if possible.

Got a really fun race vid for you today, the Diegem night race from Sunday. What a last lap! Meeusen cracks like a raw egg trying to follow VdP, and the win comes down to a braking battle for lead wheel coming into the last couple of turns, Moto GP style. Great stuff!

 

Enjoy!

M

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Sunday, 12.27.15. “Bam!”

•December 27, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

This is going up late today, so minimum BS, on with the workout.

BAM!

 

The MB15 – 

Warm up well. (Seriously. Warm up for this one, it’ll help.)

The basic idea here is to do a series of very short efforts with very little rest between them, for a pretty long period of time.

Sound confusing?

Here’s how it breaks down…

Warm up.

Get set…

Go!

15 seconds on

15 seconds off

15 seconds on

15 seconds off

…and so on and so on for the duration of the interval.

How long are you going to do this for?

– Ten minutes

How many sets?

– Three -four sets, 5 minutes between sets. Ideally, you aspire to pile enough ten-minute segments on top of one another to equal the duration of your races.

How hard do you go during the “on” segments?

– Pretty darn hard.

You’re familiar with the level of effort you put out in your 2×20’s by now, right?

You need to go harder than that.

A fair bit harder would be good.

Ideally, you’ll hit these on periods at right about 150% of your FTP, if that’s a number that means anything to you. If it doesn’t, it’s harder than what you’re dong your 2×20 effort at. Actually, it’s a lot harder. Roughly 50% harder.

Like I said, “ouch.”

How easy do you go during the “off” segments?

– A lot easier, but you aren’t soft pedaling.

Right about 50% of your FTP, or half as hard as your 2×20 level.

Again, ouch.

Want to know the real “Ouch”?

Ultimately, you want to be able to do 6 sets of these, or 3 sets twenty minutes each, or however many it takes to equal the duration of your races.

Seriously, Ouch.

Do what you can.

That’s the basics of this workout, but let’s talk about how folks tend to screw this up, shall we?

First of all, you really can’t do this workout correctly with a power meter that’s set to anything other than instantaneous power display. Even a 3-second display rate can screw things up; that’s 20% of the interval duration!

So, go check your PM settings and adjust accordingly.

Next big screw up? These aren’t sprints.

You’re looking to nail these output levels for the duration of the intervals, not way overshoot them and then coast back down to them.

If you’re doing a 300 watt “on” segment, that means 300 watts for 15 seconds, not 400 watts for 5 seconds and then 250 watts for 10 seconds.

That’s fine and all, but it’a different exercise.

A corollary to this is, on the “off” segment, you aren’t coasting. Ever. You’re doing 50% of your ftp. It’s not uncommon at all for people to experience the “off” portion as just as hard – or harder! – as the “on” section as the overall duration of the interval set reaches the duration of your race day.

In graphic form, your workout should look more like a square wave –

Square-Wave-1kHz-24W-Push-Pull-KT88-Tube-Amp

Than like this…

niki microb

(yup, snipped from a real-life attempt at this workout)

Make sense?

Have fun,

M

 

 

 

Hey there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, but over time it has become a little bit of a monster. There are over 1000 workouts on here! How the hell did that happen?!

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s suddenly the time of the year when the bills come due. I need to ante up if I want to keep the lights on for the page.

Honestly, I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Saturday, 12.26.15. “Day after math”

•December 26, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

I hope you all had (are having) a happy holiday, filled with all kinds of whatever brand of jollity you happen to prefer.

We’re inside the two weeks to go mark for Nationals.

Your workouts at this point should – in general – be short, sharp, and focused on rounding your form into shape for the event. You ain’t going to get any stronger at this point, but you can easily overcook things.

If you’re ever in doubt, default to less. Less time, less work… but more speed.

Focus on speed and quickness.

Today, we’re going to do some really short climbing intervals.

We’re going to do…

 

Sventervals – 

 

Sometimes a picture (or a video) is worth a thousand words.

Just like in the video.

Really darn short – 10 seconds max – full gas hill sprints, ideally on pretty technical terrain.

5 sets of 5 for today (you’ll build up to more) and notice how hard Sven is breathing after these?

That’s the idea.

Hit it hard. Really hard. These are super short, and super intense, but even though you’re giving them everything you’ve got, the idea is to do them on terrain that self-limits what you can do.

Can’t get up the hill anymore?

You’re done.

Have fun,

M

 

 

Hey there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, but over time it has become a little bit of a monster. There are over 1000 workouts on here! How the hell did that happen?!

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s suddenly the time of the year when the bills come due. I need to ante up if I want to keep the lights on for the page.

Honestly, I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Happy Merry Redux

•December 25, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Happy Merry

•December 25, 2015 • Leave a Comment

xOIbVi8

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Thursday, 12.24.15. “The actual day before”

•December 24, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Happy Christmas Eve Day! Judging by the impassable crowds at every supermarket I drove by this morning, not only do most people have the day off, they’re taking advantage of it by spending the entire morning trying to park at somewhere near their local supermarket. Yeaaahhh…

So, much like yesterday, the operative assumption today is that you probably aren’t going to have a whole lot of time to train.

Today, we’re going to – once again – do something that maximizes the time/benefit ratio, and this time you don’t even need to schlep the bike along (although I still recommend warming up on it…) because we’re going…

 

Stairing –

SchroederStairs_1000

 

 

Start by finding yourself some stairs.

These are going to be short intervals, so you don’t need stadium stairs or anything like that. Something in the neighborhood of one single flight of standard office building stairs is perfect.

In a pinch, you can use a grassy knoll or hillside, but stairs are really the ticket for what we’re dong today.

– get on your bike and warm up for 15 minutes or so.

– Mosey on over to your stairs and get set. Stretch, have a sip of water, turn up the volume on your Ipod.

– Jog up the stairs. Walk down.

– Repeat x3

– Sprint! up stairs, fast, using whatever stride is most comfortable. Walk down.

– Repeat x3

Rest for 1 minute, walking slowly up and down stairs.

– Sprint up stairs, this time using quick, tiny strides, 1 stair step at a time. Jog down.

– Repeat x3

Rest again, same as before.

– Sprint up stairs, this time using long strides, several stair steps at a time. Walk down.

– Repeat x 3

Rest again.

– Sprint up stairs, combining the previous two exercises; long step, followed by 2 short steps. Do 1x.

Walk down.

– Run up stairs, high knees, exaggeratedly so

Repeat x3

Rest again, 2-5 minutes.

Sprint up stairs, free form, just go as fast as you can. Go until spent.

– Repeat entire damn thing if you’re a freaking animal.

Get back on bike, spin out your legs, go home.

Notes –

– If you can, go really damn hard. If you do this right, it’s a brutal workout.

– If you haven’t been doing much running this season, be careful. Don’t overdo this and  risk screwing up Nationals by blowing up a knee or something. Better yet, try this, or just ride today. Check out yesterday’s post.

Have fun!

M

 

 

Hey there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, but over time it has become a little bit of a monster. There are over 1000 workouts on here! How the hell did that happen?!

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and it’s suddenly the time of the year when the bills come due. I need to ante up if I want to keep the lights on for the page.

Honestly, I’m not trying to get rich off this thing… or even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

Thank you!

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Wednesday, 12.23.15. “Twas the night before the night before”

•December 23, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Wow… Christmas is in two days? Holy cow.

This tends to be a really, really tough training week for folks. Lots of external pressures and obligations can make it pretty darn tough to get out and get on the bike.

Here’s a tip: don’t stress out about this. Ride if and when you can. Try to get some kind of riding in. This close to Nationals, doing a bunch of short fast efforts are a good idea anyways, so if you’re short on time? Do some sprint efforts, or work on your starts.

The workout today is an in-depth start and skills session, but if you’re short on time just do the start. Heck, you can roll out your front door and get some quality work in just blasting out a set of start efforts on the residential street in front of your house! Just don’t get creamed by a car, ok?

Enjoy…

Starting up…

1 – warm up for 10 minutes.

2 – Stretch out after you’re warm.

Pay special attention to all the muscles used in those movements you make hopping on and off the bike that are different from what you usually do.

3 – Dismount/remount  skills for 5-10-15 minutes (depends how rusty you are. Do more of these, less of everything else if you need to.)

– Start at literally a walking pace, and slowly increase speed until you can mount and dismount the bike smoothly and perfectly at full speed. Do not jump on and off the bike, you are looking to smoothly slide yourself on and off.

 Need a refresher on the basics? Click here.

Do just the most  basic dismount/remount as per above until you have it wired, smooth at all speeds. When you are feeling confident, add some barriers to the session…

– Again, start at a super, super slow speed.

– Approach the barrier, dismount smooth as silk.

– Step over the barrier, paying attention to how you lift the bike, and how you place your feet.

– Remount. Again, think smoooooth….

– Start with a single barrier, move to a double, and keep going slow until you have things wired. Then, speed things up until you aren’t smooth, back it down 1 notch, and make it smooth.

(If you don’t have barriers, anything will do. Use a log, put a stick on the ground – whatever.)

4 – Starts.

Just like the beginning of a race. One foot on the ground, dead standstill, get-up-and-go.

Begin with a few medium effort starts, working on all the things we talked about above.

Remember…

– Start with your pedals at 3&9 o’clock, not 12 and six.

– Alternate butt-on-saddle and off

– Alternate hands in drops with hands on hoods.

When you start to get the feel for things, hit it hard a couple of times, then back off.

2 sets of all the variations above at a medium to slow pace.

Feeling solid, skills-wise?

Nice.

Get  yourself ready to go hard.

– Bang! Six full-gas starts.

– short effort, just go long enough that you are up to full speed, then back down, turn around, go again.

Spin easy for a couple of minutes, then…

– Bang! ~pause~ Bang!

– Six full-gas starts, but each start effort will look like this…

– Full effort start from a dead-stop, foot on ground.

– As soon as you get up to full speed, sit back in saddle, take one deep breath, go again, HARD!

– Ouch.

5 – Recover for a few minutes, then Finish the night with two interval efforts on relatively easy terrain.

– “Easy” as in a loop on grass with some tight-ish turns on it, or some pretty buffed double-track.

– Go hard, and work on accelerations out of the turns.

– Every time you slow down entering a turn, get on the gas on the way out of it, ass out of the saddle, working hard.

– 6 minutes full gas, rest for 2 minutes, then go again for 5.

– Start each effort with, well… with a start. Like you were working on a couple of minutes ago…

Warm down, go home, relax.

Enjoy!

M

 

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and as you may have noticed, I’ve recently started asking for folks to chip in a bit if they feel like what they’re getting her is worth something to them.

Honestly, it’s not like I’m trying to get rich off this here thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose quite as much money doing this as I currently do.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG

The Cyclocross Workout Of The Day for Tuesday, 12.22.15. “Last get-up”

•December 22, 2015 • Leave a Comment

Howdy folks,

Hey, guess what? It’s…

2 x 20 Tuesday!

This is the last one of these for 2015, so let’s make it special, let’s make it…

Get Up Style with a Happy Ending…

At it’s most basic the 2×20 looks like this:

– Warm up.

– Go as hard as you can for 20 minutes.

– Recover for 5 minutes.

– Go again for another 20 minutes.

The idea is to go as hard as you can for the duration of both intervals without being forced to go easier at the end of the second interval.

It’s all about doing two intervals.

Two intervals at as close to the same level of consistent, steady power output as you can manage.

If you’re doing this with a power meter, you want your wattage output to be as constant and unvaried as possible.

For both intervals.

Both.

How steady?

Can you keep it in a 10 watt range?

Probably not.

15 watts?

More likely

20 watts?

Try.

Keep it steady.

If you run out of gas before you finish the second interval, then you went too hard.

If your vision isn’t blurry at the end of the second interval, you went too easy. But guess what?
It’s way better to go too easy and finish both intervals than it is to go too hard and crater part way through the second 20.

That’s the basic version (and if you’re new to all this, it’s probably the version you should do.) Today, though?

Today we’re doing the get-up version, so…

Start your 20-minute interval out of the saddle, and stand for the first 30 seconds.

After those 30 seconds are up, sit down. Keep the effort going, and keep your level of output consistent.

Stay seated for the next 1:30, then stand for 30 seconds.

Repeat to the end of the interval, and follow this format for the next 20 minute interval.

Remember, the idea here is to go as hard as you can for the duration of both intervals without being forced to go easier at the end of the second interval.

If you’re doing this with a power meter, you want your wattage output to be as close to constant as possible, and the out of the saddle time we’re throwing in makes this even more challenging.

Keep it steady.

These take practice to do well, and the better you get, the harder they get, as your output level gets closer and closer to the absolute max you’re capable of doing for an interval of this duration.

Add in the constant standing and sitting component, and you’re going to know you did some work when you’re through.

I know I’m repeating myself, but do try to avoid the temptation to up the output level when you get out of the saddle, OK?

That’s an entirely different workout – check out this post for the beta on Over/Under efforts.

One of the things we’re learning with this workout is how to calibrate our out of the saddle efforts. We’re getting a better handle on what we’re actually doing when we stand up on the bike.

You need to know – really know – when you’re going harder and when you’re not.

What most people find when doing this workout is that every time they get out of the saddle their power output takes a big jump.

Which isn’t a huge surprise, because we largely train our bodies to correlate out of the saddle with “go time.”

Cyclocross ain’t road racing, though.

A lot of the time you’re getting out of the saddle not to accelerate, but due to a bike handling challenge.

Heck, if you get out of the saddle in a super sketchy tech section and reflexively put the power down,  that might just result in rear wheel slip and lack of traction, with the expected bad results.

One of the keys to good bike handling is having an almost instinctive understanding of how much power you’re producing, and the effect that has on your traction.

Step one to developing that understanding is getting a real feel for how your power output can change when you get out of the saddle.

Nothing will give you a better feel for that than this workout.

Make sense?

Especially since we’re trying to work on perception not just output, this is a workout that’s especially suited to the indoor trainer, and that’s how you should do ’em if you can stand it. If not, really try to find the most vacant, flat, soulless terrain possible. The fewer the distractions the better.

But wait! We’re doing adding a Happy Ending today!

 

happy-03

 

 

What does that mean?

After the third interval…

-spin for 1 minute.

sprint for ten seconds, starting at the one minute mark on your watch.

-spin until you hit the 2 minute mark on your watch

sprint for ten seconds

-spin until you hit the 3 minute mark on your watch

sprint for ten seconds

Etc., etc., continuing until you hit the five minute mark, and give the last little bit of your energy in one final 10 second sprint.

Ouch.

Have fun!

M

 

 

Hi there…

Thanks for following my blog!

This thing started off as a lark, and over the years that I’ve been doing it, has become a little bit of a monster.

It takes a fair bit of time – and a wee bit of money – to keep this thing rolling, and as you may have noticed, I’ve recently started asking for folks to chip in a bit if they feel like what they’re getting her is worth something to them.

Honestly, it’s not like I’m trying to get rich off this here thing… or really even make any money from it at all.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose quite as much money doing this as I currently do.

It’d just make my life a fair bit easier if I didn’t lose money doing this!

So, hey… if you feel like you’ve gotten anything of value out of this blog, please do me a favor – and yes, it’s a favor, and I will be truly thankful for it – and send a buck or two (or five, or whatever…) my way.

How do you do that?

Simply click on the graphic below, and PayPal will be glad to make it happen.

btn_donateCC_LG