Sunday, July 29, 2018
Tan Candle Fitness Regime
Sunday, July 22, 2018
Some Time to Think Over a Piece of Humble Pie
When we arrived in Jordan, Matt announced that his shifter cable had snapped and he was stuck in one gear. While he removed the broken cable, I took this photo of the little river running near the cute downtown area.
- I really would like to go back to Northfield. The one brewery (and its food) was really good, the town is quaint. I don't know that I need to see the Jesse James reenactment thing again, but wouldn't go out of my way to avoid it.
- Owatonna has a free county fair. Their old-timey Village of Yesteryear or whatever it is called was really interesting. I wouldn't make a special trip, but I wouldn't go out of my way to avoid it.
- Kellie and Gregg provided some good intel on the Impossible Burger, which is a vegan burger offered at a few restaurants I've visited. (It was delicious, and Lavaburger's lava sauce was deliciously spicy.)
- I am SO GLAD I asked the fairgrounds workers in Owatonna about the schedule for the sprinkler system and they turned off the sprinklers so that roughly 300 of the riders wouldn't get sprayed at midnight!
- The pizza farm near Waseca served as a good reminder that the summers are short and a pizza farm (not to be confused with Dave's Brew Farm) needs to be a priority.
- The Cycleops team still has tons of creativity for the team poems and team songs. I have a team crush on them. Not a teen crush.
- Not many cities have campgrounds and, if it hadn't been so rainy, I would have liked to have spent more time in Mankato's Land of Memories Park. It might be worth checking out again sometime, just to see what it is like when the river levels are normal. If I was a kayaker/canoer, I think I'd be all over it.
- I suspect I was among the small percentage of BikeMS cyclists who really liked the hills/river valleys between Mankato and Rapidan on Friday. We were warned that there'd be some hills, but even I was surprised. We weren't warned that it would be 20 miles to the first rest stop, which is probably what made most riders grumpy (20 miles is far, even in flat spaces, for a stretch of a BikeMS ride), in addition to a second day of rain. The pie at the Dam Store was a great ROI.
- I stayed at a hotel Thursday night, and am really glad I did it. I thought I might feel wimpy. I felt great in the hot tub after riding in the rain all day and was glad not to camp with damp gear.
- Peter, a volunteer for the MS Society who was a photojournalist for 40 years in NYC and was taking team photos for the event is the main volunteer for advocacy work in Minnesota. While all the rest stop and traffic control volunteers who have MS are very inspiring, he is amazing. He was working hard to convince me to help do some Minnesota-based advocacy in my *free* time. I am going to give him a call.
- It was great to see our new teammate, Mike, who has never done a multi-day ride, power through the 3-day route. I love all the smiles and laughs of my teammates Kim, Alicia, and Danaca, and the finish line surprise offered by birthday girl Stacy, Keisha, and Kelly. I loved spending 5 days with my friend Deb, who is a powerhouse and did this ride for the second year in a row. I hope I will stay as strong as she is as time marches on.
- I also got to spend time with our new friends Gregg and Kellie who rode for the first time this year and camped and hotel-ed with us. I was missing them today on my bike ride. They are funny and sweet. They don't have a car, so they don't really ride recreationally (just like I don't go for a Sunday drive in my car). I will need to find some other way to make them hang out with me.
Friday, July 20, 2018
Quick Day 5 Debrief
As I take a break from sorting through duffel bag detritus, I offer today's brief recap:
- Great Lyft driver from hotel to starting line. He drove us to the luggage truck and to our bikes.
- Deb rode 10 feet and discovered she had a flat. So we turned back and had a bike shop fix it (staple in the tire).
- Unexpectedly, rest stop one was 20 miles from the start, given some adjustments made due to Thursday's rain. They weren't joking when they said (at Mankato brewery on Thurs night) that there were a number of hills before rest stop one.
- I ate pie ala mode at rest stop one, in Rapidan, where there's a big dam. It drizzled to Rapidan, and rained more steadily for a while afterwards.
- Leaving rest stop three in Nicollet (after we reconvened with the team) was a little hairy - no shoulder; fast, big trucks. Deb got run off the road by a semi. Another rider required an ambulance.
- We had a number of visitors at the finish line and it was such a great surprise! Thanks, Stacy, Keisha, and Kelly! 💞
- Deb and I stayed at the finish to cheer on our camping and dining companions from the week - Kelli and Gregg, whose team is appropriately named, "MS is BS."
The Ride Across Minnesota (formerly known as TRAM) week is my favorite week of the year. I'm so grateful for the opportunity to do a great ride and to raise awareness and funds for this cause. I had such meaningful conversations this week with people affected by MS, reminding me why we ride.
Thursday, July 19, 2018
Sog-a-licious
We got up earlier than normal, earlier than the sun, to try to get riding before the rain hit. (See photo of the lake - the view from my tent this a.m., after I took off my headlamp.)
We were riding by 6:15, the earliest I've ever ridden for TRAM, and we still were some of the last riders to leave camp. The rain started 10 minutes later. The rain was still light by the time I hit the first of the many churches that served as rest stops today (I declined the coffee, cinnamon rolls, and scrambled eggs, tried taking a selfie, and got some help.)
At 7:40, I thought the reasonable rain hitting my jacket sounded like rain on the tin roof of the old family cabin, and thought cocoa would be yummy. By 7:50, it was pretty torrential, and sounded like it. The rest stop #2 volunteers offered homemade brownies. When the rain slowed, we headed out into a pretty windy storm. We mostly had a tailwind, but the sidewinds and headwinds were crazy.
Rest stop #3 featured scalding hot church lady coffee, homemade cookies, and a boatload of adults who apparently do not know how to throw away their cups. My parents taught me better, and would have been proud of my cleanup skills.
Rest stop number four, also at a church, was where we learned that rest stop #5 would be the last stop of the day, due to a washout on the trail leading into Mankato. (See photo of Deb as we waited for the van to take is and our bikes to Mankato.)
I am warmed up from the hot tub at the hotel I impromptually (I know) booked the other night. I think it was a good decision, especially seeing the sodden grass at the camping area and the rain outside.
Wednesday, July 18, 2018
We'll be singing bye bye to MS, you and I
My favorite night of TRAM: the team song competition. The safety crew even participated this year! They moved team song and team poem to tonight because tomorrow will be icky.
Four members of our team joined Deb and me today, for the remainder of the week. Alicia took the photo of me. I rode with a guy today who has asked me if I'd be willing to be a mentor-like person for his daughter, which is an interesting story.
Anyhow, the team poems and songs were pretty funny this year, which helped provide some levity before we head into a day of rain tomorrow. I still can't believe we booked a hotel room, but I am really glad.
Tuesday, July 17, 2018
Day 2 Life Goals
Last night, we went to downtown Northfield and watched the reenactment of the defeat of the Younger-James gang. I snapped a pic of Kelli, Gregg, and Deb along the Cannon River.
Today, we were the last people to get on the road. I saw a huge hawk and some sandhill cranes early on, and took a picture of the church at rest stop 2.
Shortly after that, I rode a stretch with a man who said he was going slower than he'd prefer - usually no one passes him. But, this year, he's only ridden a total of 75 miles in addition to his weekly spinning class. Oh, and he's 80 years old. So, he decided to cut himself some slack. I hope I'll be riding when I'm 80.
When I pulled into rest stop 1, I saw a woman on the ground. She is a slight woman with limited mobility due to MS, who rides a recumbent bike. She's hearty - I've seen her on hills in lightning storms over the past couple of years. She apparently arrived and was throwing up and sort of collapsed. The theory, after an ambulance picked her up, was that she was too hot and possibly dehydrated. This is why we ride.
Monday, July 16, 2018
58, 43, potatoe potahtoe
1. I thought today would be super easy riding because the website said it was a 42-mile ride. It actually was a 58-mile day. It still was fine!
2. I didn't wear my padded shorts (not unusual), but forgot to put on my wicking, seamless undies. Hmm.
3. I realized at mile 18 that I was kind of tired because my brakes were on. I adjusted the levers and was fine for the remaining 40.
4. I ate the Le Center HS band pancake breakfast across from the Le Sueur County Courthouse (see photo).
5. There was a lot of roadkill killed in what we've deemed to be heroic positions.
6. One lady who has waved cyclists through intersections for years, with a little dance, now uses a scooter, rather than standing. This is why we ride.
Sunday, July 15, 2018
Stillwater Still Life
I wasn't still yesterday. Although I didn't ride as much as intended, I still rode around Stillwater. And, like every other place around here, it is full of water. After that, I flitted around the house and yard for hours, tying up all the loose ends before I head to St. Peter today for this week's bike ride. (In between, there was a nice respite - my friend Matt and I tried lunch at my local book store cafe. I'd never had a sunny side up egg on pizza. It's good.)
Here are some photos of most inanimate, typically commonplace, or man-made objects from the ride.
Commonplace signs, these days. I like the look on my face. It's almost like a dare. |
Mostly, but not quite, inanimate: Matt told me to look natural. That's impossible. I like how these photos show my attempts at stifling a laugh. |
Commonplace, lately. I wanted proof that we didn't go through the water, although I broke the day's resolution to not ride past any "path closed" signs. |
Man-made, seemingly inanimate: The new bridge between MN and WI. The old one is not yet open as a pedestrian bridge. This one is pedestrian-friendly, though. |
Man-made, less inanimate when a lot of other curious cyclists and walkers have the same idea. Also, the cars are very animated, but on the other side of a barrier. |
Might not be a still life, technically, but this is Stillwater. I can't vouch for the current. |
http://main.nationalmssociety.
Tuesday, July 10, 2018
For whom the bell tolls, but in a good way
Which bike is whose? |
Sunday, July 8, 2018
The USS Minnow
Without even a ship.
The mate was a mighty cycling man,
Matt making his phone was above water |
The current got too strong for pedaling. We were surrounded by minnows and saw ducklings. |
Five hours set aside that day,
For what coulda been a three-hour tour, a three-hour tour
The sign said the trail was closed,
We looked at it with doubt,
Because of the stupidity of the fearless crew,
Minnows swam around the bikes, minnows swam around
We biked across the bridge to the shore across the flooded ri-ver,
And hit a fence,
T'was really high,
We handed the bikes over,
Hung off the bridge,
To get around the fence
Here on the Minn'sota River.
We crossed the fence by climbing on the outside of the bridge. Surely unadvisable. |
They should know better than this.
Wanting to take this route
Cycling with some fish.
Wednesday, July 4, 2018
She went down to the river on a warm summer day; the air was thick with... humidity
At the end of the workday yesterday (Tuesday, I guess, even though it felt like Friday), I snuck in a ride to St. Paul and back. The road was closed, but I saw a guy who accurately described the existing water on the road as passable.
Lilydale Road on Tues night |
It rained all day Tuesday despite the forecast being clear. I figured I lucked out and that the water would be higher today, especially downstream from the Mississippi/Minnesota confluence. So, I decided to ride upriver today and see what happened.
It was supposed to be 90 with the heat index at 100-something, and the rain wasn't expected to hit until 1:30 p.m.
Well, I got to the Coon Rapids Dam at about 9:15 and was greeted by storm clouds that quickly turned into a 45-minute downpour, lightning, and thunder, and then drizzle afterwards. (And then more of a downpour once I was back home.)
The Mississippi River, looking north from the Coon Rapids Dam |
The ride to the dam smelled of barbequed meats and was very philosophical in nature (e.g., people on fat tire bikes on shared ski and bike trails in the winter are probably as annoying as people on those fake ski things on the bike trail in the summer) and rather sweaty. The ride home was remarkably cooler, drenched, and largely isolated.
I stopped for a latte at a coffee shop close to home, which I drank on the outdoor patio due to my soggy gritty nature and planned out my process for cleaning up at home without getting wet grit all over the house. It was good training for the Ride Across Minnesota - hot and unpredictable.
Last year at this time, I'd ridden 700 miles more than I have ridden this year. This might explain why my clothes are a little more form fitting this year. I'll be fine for the upcoming week-long ride and I'm pretty okay with this more slacker-y year (see my last post), but I suspect - considering how fun my rides were the past two days - I'd be a little more content if I rode more frequently in 2018. I am really looking to riding for 5 days straight the week of July 16!
http://main.nationalmssociety.
Sunday, July 1, 2018
Shoulda, Coulda, Woulda
I suspect that I'm not unique in my battle against myself.
Although I'm happy, my brain nags me: You didn't get that work thing done. You didn't get the yard work done. You didn't pay the bills. (Oh, shit! The bills! Whoops.) You ate more cookies than needed. You should've skipped the beer. For the love of god, you trimmed the grapevines and did laundry instead of riding your bike??
Well, today, after delaying our ride from 8 til noon, and then eating lunch to kill one more hour, some teammates and I went on a lovely ride. That's when my brain settles down (so I probably *should* ride instead of trimming grapevines). And you know what? I'm doing pretty well, you dumb brain.
And, as I saw this photo of me walking over one of the many trees that fell in the storm, I realized I have nice strong calves. I'm glad this was a photo that didn't cause me to judge my posture, my belly, or arms. Instead it offered me a view I don't normally see, my strength. I'm doing pretty well, you dumb brain.