Tuesday, July 25, 2017

TRAMtacular Week

This year's The Ride Across Minnesota fundraiser for the MS Society did not disappoint. The first day, we drove to Alexandria, signed in, hopped on our bikes, and rode to Long Prairie after stopping at a VFW for a $6 breakfast that featured some very garlicky, burp-inducing sausage. I got hit by some rain during the last half of the day, but I dried out and warmed up at the very well-organized fairgrounds. 


Seriously, my dumb body shuts off the blood
to my fingers even when chilled in a summer rain.

We had dinner at a great Mexican restaurant in the back of a grocery store, after seeing some pretty rude anti-immigrant signs in town. The people working there hauled out extra folding tables and chairs to accommodate the cyclists. 


On the way back to the fairgrounds, we saw a family butchering some large animal in their backyard. It was fascinating. Once back at the fairgrounds, I skipped watching the country band and opted to shower instead. The next morning, the Long Prairie mayor picked up my luggage and took it to the luggage truck for me, and I ate a delicious breakfast in exchange for making a donation to the local kids hockey team.

The second day was pretty hot with some rolling hills,  beautiful Amish homesteads, wandering chickens, and homemade cookies from church ladies. I also rediscovered how satisfying a can of Coke and a little cup of chocolate pudding can be mid-ride on a hot day.

We saw a lot of this.

And this.

I wondered how large the town is with a town hall of this size.
This woman on the left is someone I see each year. This is
the first time I saw her wearing denim shorts while riding. 

I lost these fantastic sunglasses on day 5.
Someone went through a lot of trouble to paint this building.

We camped in Wadena for the night, where I spent a good hour cleaning up all the lotion that had exploded in my bag.

On day three, we rode to Fergus Falls, by way of Phelps Mill. Parts of this year's route overlapped with last year's route, which is unusual. On the bright side, I got to visit the mill again. 

Phelps Mill

Very slowly assembling camp in the heat and humidity.

We found good pizza in Fergus Falls.
On the first night in Fergus Falls, we were evacuated to a government building when some storms swept through. I talked with the Mayor of Marshall, Minnesota, who does the ride each year, while there. I ignored the second evacuation request at 4:30 a.m., which was a good call.

This year was weird, as we spent two nights in the same place, but did a long day of riding in between. The day started off cool and foggy and got rather hot, humid, and quite windy. The homemade caramel rolls and nut goodies made by church ladies along the way helped me feel better, as did the huge pile of ice cream at the end of the day, purchased from an ice cream truck that may have once been an ambulance.


Egrets filling a tree in Fergus Falls


Steamy, pretty uphill climb

Me, on the downhill later in the day
Dan, Steve, and I took a very short detour from the route and rode to, and walked to the top of, Inspiration Peak.

Sinclair Lewis praised "the enchanting peace and seclusion of this place for contemplation."

After dinner on the second night in Fergus Falls, we watched Miss Minnesota emcee the team poem and song contest. She was surprisingly good. And the team poems and songs, as always, met the right balance of humor and seriousness about why we ride.



On the final day, we rode from Fergus Falls to Alexandria. I saw the lower half of a deer leg on the trail. It was a cooler, greyer day, and I enjoyed pushing myself by riding pretty hard.

Our 2017 TRAM team on
Day 5 a/k/a "the day I lost my sunglasses."


5/6 of us afterwards

I saw many of the TRAM regulars this week - the guy that looks like Vinny from Veronica Mars, the cigarette-smoking guy with fancy bikes who we've nicknamed "the Enigma," the young couple who are always camped by us but whose names I don't know, the tandem-riding couple who have been married for over a decade after they met on the TRAM, the lady from Austin with a plastic pig strapped on her bike, a kind of odd, but nice, duck named Ralph. I met a nice guy, Joe, from Northfield and learned about his early retirement to spend time with his wife who has MS, and heard many stories from riders throughout the week about why they ride and who they are riding for. 

Many people who don't have immediate family members affected by MS tell a similar story: they do the ride for the fun and challenge of it, and get hooked and return each year after learning about why it is so important witnessing the dedication of the other riders and volunteers.

Our team raised over $70,250 for the MS Society this year by riding our bikes. I'm really proud of our work! Thanks for all the support! 

Friday, July 14, 2017

Conflui


Yow! We leave for the TRAM in just a few days. My lack of sharing news here is directly proportionate to my lack of riding. I have only been on my bike once in the past 10 days, and that involved a short ride to the bike shop and back. 

Why no riding, you ask? Life.

Instead of riding, I:
  • Hung out with my nephews for two afternoons, supervised their whittling activities, and learned how to play Exploding Kittens (it's a card game; no real kittens are involved) and clean bunny hutches (real bunnies are involved). 
  • Used some time outside of the traditional workday hours to catch up on some grant writing and reporting activities that hopefully will keep our funders funding us.
  • Went to a pool party hosted by one of our MS150 riders. (I am still surprised at how much fun it was to just horse around in a pool. The food was good, and Andy made some good margaritas, too, which didn't hurt.)
  • Took my bike to the shop for a tune-up.
  • Met with our TRAM riders to discuss our essential gear for the ride (coffee, foam roller, jerkey, screen tent). 
  • Went to Pittsburgh for a work meeting.
My cool, historic Pittsburgh hotel.

The confluence of the three rivers, with a new Steelers stadium presumably on the site of the former Three Rivers Stadium, and the Pirates stadium just beyond that. I question whether these really are three rivers - - - isn't it just one flowing into the other? I think it demonstrates someone's refusal to compromise.

We rode up "the Incline" in this little car. It's a commuter
tram built in the 1920s to help people get up and down
the hill. If you go, pay the extra 50 cents to go into
the mechanical room. It was pretty fascinating.

I saw this sticker on the bathroom stall door upon my return to the MSP airport and it totally made my day. It's the little things that keep me engaged, sometimes.




I need to pick up my bike and hope to get some rides in this weekend, since my general cycling physical state has deteriorated - - as best demonstrated by this past week's theme song by G Love and Special Sauce:

I like cold beverages
Give me frosty mug
Filled with a&w
If you got ice cream
Make it a double scoop
Milkshake at the fountain
Really good sounding
Chocolate egg cream



All of these life things have kept me from sending out my MS150 thank you notes, but that doesn't mean that I'm not grateful, or that they aren't coming. (Stay tuned!) I lowered my goal for that ride this year (and met it - thanks!) and raised my goal for the TRAM. I am at 78% of my TRAM goal (thanks!), and hopefully will close that gap in the next few day (more thanks!). 







Tuesday, July 4, 2017

Great Scott!

"Great Scott! is an interjection of surprise, amazement, or dismay. As a distinctive but inoffensive exclamation, popular in the second half of the nineteenth century and the early twentieth century, and now considered dated. (Wikipedia entry, July 4, 2017)"

Today, I rode the Great Scott Classic Bike Ride, starting in Prior Lake, and riding throughout various parts of Scott County, Minnesota. (Thanks to Dan's friend's bike shop, Michael's Cycles, for sponsoring the ride and providing mechanical and SAG support.) I include the Wikipedia definition above because the ride was one of surprise, amazement, and (very little) dismay, and also because I also am very surprised, amazed, and dismayed that I haven't done a biking-related blog post on my biking-related blog since the MS150 bike ride. What the heck?

(Among other things, I did a nice long ride with Deb on 6/24, getting caught in a kind of fun, brief, thunderstorm on my way home. And Matt and I rode to Grey Cloud Island, an old beautiful favorite, yesterday, where I saw a toad smaller than my thumbnail by the biffy at the halfway point.)

Anyhow, today's ride. Great route! Way hotter than forecasted! Probably should have worn lycra rather than a cotton t-shirt and regular non-cycling shorts! Well-stocked rest stops! Huge bathroom line at rest stop one! Hills! There's my amazement, surprise, dismay and chafing, surprise, amazement/dismay, and surprise.







Who knew it was so easy to get to New Prague, relatively speaking, from Prior Lake? It was fun to take a break in the park where I camped overnight on the TRAM a few years ago. I had never been in Jordan, really, and think that I ought to take a trip back there sometime. There was a pretty river going right through the little historic downtown and some sights that I'd like to see close up.

Today's ride was a great training ride for the TRAM - I rode solo, without any music, on hilly, sunny, windy country roads with ample snacks. In two weeks, I'll be packing up for that ride. I'm really excited. I love being on my bike for five days straight and am glad to have the opportunity to fundraise for the MS Society, which does such great work to help the people I love.

I'm at 68% of my goal for this ride. If you're able to help me get closer to my goal, please go to this link: