(Long Distance) Ramblings |
I like to ride my bicycle - for long distances. I have earned the California Triple Crown and finished the Furnace Creek 508. My goals include qualifying for RAAM and ...(read the blog to find out). "The bicycle has a soul. If you are able to love it as it deserves, it will give you emotions you will never forget." "Nothing compares to the simple pleasure of a bike ride."
"The important decisions in my life I make while out riding my bike."
"Pain is temporary, quitting lasts forever.” Lance Armstrong
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Tuesday, May 16, 2006
Surviving the Move, and the Central Coast DoubleWhere to begin? The MoveWe are in our new house and slowly emptying the boxes. We have a lot of work yet to do, but the house is coming around slowly. The move itself went well. In four days, everything we owned was transported the seven miles to our new house. Except for the Spa, it had to wait a week until the spa movers could get to it. DirectTV did a very good job of re-connecting us during the move. We had TV in time for OLN's coverage of the Giro on Sunday. However, Quest dropped the ball. First, they gave us a new number after telling us we could keep the old number. Then, once notified of their error, it took them five days to give us our old number back. Then there were delays in getting the DSL circuit up. I was down for over a week. Central Coast DoubleWell, here is my report. The night before the ride, I found pasta at Wilson's, a "family" restaurant in Paso Robles. The portion was fair to small and I have had better spaghetti, but it was what I needed the night before a long ride. Woke up at 4:30 and consumed 2 bottles of Ensure, one small banana and one Paley Bar. So, I had more than 800 calories, but this amount felt good. I was ready to ride. We started at 5:40 am and the climbing soon began. I climbed well and stayed with the main group for much of the first climb. But, when it got steep, I backed off as it is a long ride. There are some steep sections on the way to the first rest stop. My HAC4 was reading a 17% incline and I saw at least one rider get off and walk the steepest sections. Soon, I reach the first rest stop which is perched on a ridge line. Below us we could see the fog filling the canyon below us. The was our route to the ocean. I descended to the coast mostly by myself, but I joined four other riders and we formed a pace line that sucked up others for 27 miles. It was a very good pace for me, fast enough but not too fast. Once we left the second rest stop, we were either climbing or descending. This went on for 20 miles to the base of the big climb - Nacimiento/Ferguson Road. On the climb I started out with the same group of folks, but they soon dropped me. The climb was just as hot, and just as steep, and just as long as last year, but I did much better. Just for this climb. I replaced my 30-tooth granny chainring with a 26 tooth ring. I must say that my 26x27 is a very good gear. None the less, both knees complained. I paused shortly at the top and then descended down to lunch at 113 miles. I felt much better during this portion, I even felt good. The knee pain never came back. I had a short lunch and started off with Greg Olsen from Gresham. But soon he broke a spoke in the the rear drive side of his low-spoke Shimano wheel. His wife was nearby in their van with is other bike but he does not carry a cell so he asked to use mine. The problem was that we did not have cell coverage for several miles. We stopped four times before we had enough bars to make a call to his wife. I stayed with him until I felt his wife would be able to find him. Only then did I go on alone. This was a very hot section, and I ran out of fluids. But on the long climb before the next rest stop, I passed someone who was truely suffering. He could barely turn over his pedals and he looked like he could fall over at any moment. He said he was OK when I asked, but I had my douths. I reached the rest stop very hot, and my brain was cooked. I drank a Mountain Dew, then went inside of the community center and put my head underneath the bathroom sink faucet and ran cold water over my head. This refreshed me and I felt much better. This is the stop where I picked up my lights (and Peppermint Patty - which another rider saw and wanted!). Along the way to the next stop, I decided to stop at a market and get some ice for my bottles as I was still feeling the heat of the day. It was here that I dropped my eyeglasses and my prescription insert broke. I purchase some superglue to repair it, but I wasted more time here than I should have. None the less, I knew I was ahead of my time last year as it was still daylight when I passed the driveway that I stopped at last year. I finished the hill and descended down to the next rest stop. But, I made a mental miscalculation and thought the rest stop was five miles closer than it was. I was expecting the rest stop at 28 miles, not 32 miles, so when 28 came and went and there was no rest stop, I became a bit panicked. I was afraid that I was off course. I was very glad to see Lee Michell's van drive by! Only then did not realize my error and then I felt OK. I did not stay long here and started out while it was still daylight. I started a mild climb up into a canyon when the sun set. While the sky still had some light in it, but all around me was in shadows, I saw three owls fly above me. This was the first time I have seen owls in the wild and it was very cool. I descended to the last rest stop in darkness. There, I was asked to shepard in a woman whose battery had gone dead. We rode in together at a slow pace. I finished at 10:31 pm. Rest stop times (please note that my HAC4 did not record distance properly): RS1 - 6 minutes RS2 - 6 minutes RS3 - 10 minutes (bottom of the big hill) Top - 3 minutes Lunch - 15 minutes Total (including lunch) is 40 minutes. Time to Lunch was 8 hours and 106 miles. Spoke issue - ~20 minutes RS4 - 29 minutes Store - 10 minutes RS5 - 20 minutes RS6 - 13 minutes Total 93 minutes plus. Time of the second hundred was 8:32 and 93 miles. Final Statistics DST: 209.25 miles AVG: 14.4 MPH Max: 45.3 MPH ATM: 14:25 During the ride, I consumed one bottle of Sustained Energy (two scopes) with one scope either Gatorade or Revenge Pro between each rest stop. In addition, I had some misc food, a Paley Bar or two, about 5 oz of Hammer Gel, one Peppermint Patty and one small bag of salted peanuts. Oh, I should mention the Popsicle at rest stop 4, the hot dog at rest stop 5 and the Raman noodles at rest stop 6.
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