Two things I know:
- The good opinion of a fool is not worth having.
- It is an honor to have certain people as enemies.
unless specifically noted, no artificial intelligence used in the writing; 100% human content
Two things I know:
First post of the year.
Three weeks ago, I did a ride I didn't post about, because later that day, I was in a collision in the car. Nobody hurt, and the car is to be repaired... but aspects of the collision were such that I was shaken about it at the time, and I've had post-traumatic stress from time to time since.*
*Not PTSD; I would not demean the people who genuinely suffer from this by equating my situation with theirs. But my experience does share some of those features, in type, if not in duration or intensity.
I was anxious about going out on the ride that Tom H emailed about last week (it was last week, even if it was only yesterday, right? Like, today's Sunday, and that's the start of the week). In addition to the twitchiness about the recent collision, there's the fact that I haven't always been able to keep up with this group. But the ride was to be only 35-ish miles, and flat, and I wasn't too disabled after a too-good meal and a demanding theatrical experience yesterday*, so I agreed to go.
*Anna Christie at St Ann's Warehouse in DUMBO. It was worth the trip.
Tom assembled his insane bike posse.
Before we departed, Tom told me that if I'd continued to avoid his rides, he was about to come by the house and get me. The gesture of friendship was warm and reassuring.
You can see the ride page here. The weather (in the low 40's) wasn't as cold as other days we'd been out, and we started with a tailwind. It was pleasant riding with these people, with whom I have decades of riding experiences.
Conversations started and flagged as we proceeded. Sometimes, talk is replaced simply with presence.
After a few miles, I found that I did better keeping my chain on the small ring and keeping my cadence high; I was better able to manage hills (the little we had), and the headwind when we experienced that. I'm also able to ride comfortably in the drops on both my bikes, and I found that I could go almost a mile-per-hour faster in the drops than on the tops or ramps, making no other changes and with no more noticeable effort. At my age especially, it's good to be flexible.
I was NOT sorry, though, when we passed Etra Park and I figured we were about six miles from the end. This is about the longest distance I want to do when I'm in this condition.
I expect it will be longer in the spring, when the weather is more congenial, and I have (I hope) a bit more fitness.
In previous years, I've posted links to videos of Dodie doing Christmas songs in a minor key. I love them. But it appears she's moved on to other stuff.
But, as if solely to assuage my grief, the internet has come to my rescue. In my thoughtless internet ramblings, I've come across Mary Ann Muglia, a singer and arranger. She arranges Christmas songs, and songs from the Great American Songbook, in wonderful close harmonies of a type that's somewhat out-of-style. They're wonderful, nonetheless.
But better than that: she also posts "harmony breakdowns", where she sings the accompaniment parts first, allowing you to guess where the actual key is going to be. I can't usually get it on the first part, but I can usually get it by halfway through the second.
I'm pretty sure I'm not making any sense. Here are a couple of examples:
I love them. You will, too.
Above: Free Wheelers point out one of the "Four Ft Clearance" signs posted at a location suggested by the club. Pic by Martin G.
Laura OLPH listed a ride that was gonna be 35 miles for yesterday, which is about the mileage I want to do these days. I haven't been riding with her and the Hill Slugs, because I haven't been able to keep up with them for the full distance (and they generally go longer than I want to). But because of the shorter distance, even with the hills she likes to do*, I figured I'd tag along for this one.
*I used to be pretty good on a hill, too.
I didn't connect that she was shortening the ride because of the low temps. Holy bananas; it was 28°F (about -2°C) when I left the house, and not much warmer when I parked and started unpacking the car. Peter G has a "Shackleton Index", named for the polar explorer who saved his crew after his ship sank. The Shackleton Index compares how much clothing you have to put on, and how much preparation for the cold weather you have to do, with how long you're going to be able to ride and what you'll get out of it, to derive a value for whether it's actually worth going out for a ride on a cold day. (No, it's not exact, and there's not an actual formula, and yes, individuals will have varying values. Use you imagination, for heavens sake.)
We were nine. Some of us at the start:
As noted at top, we found one of the 4-foot clearance signs at a location suggested by the club. Martin G took the picture at top, and the one below:
So, dfl. Better than dnf, I guess... And I did get out and do the ride. But I think I'm goin' for shorter, flatter stuff for now. Maybe I'll be in better shape for next summer.
Above: the author, looking better than I ought. Thanks to Martin G for the photo.
I have not posted often about rides this fall, mostly because I haven't gone on group rides, and my solo rides don't generally include anything interesting (even to me).
When it gets this cold, we generally stay off the roads, and ride paths and trails to avoid the wind. (Sometimes, the wind-avoidance is successful.) I got invited on two such rides this Thanksgiving weekend. The first was a ride around the Lawrence-Hopewell Trail, led by Tom H.
This crew had riders at a range of abilities. Some went off at their own pace; others slowed to ensure that nobody rode alone (partly because the LHT is not ideally marked, and it's easy to get lost). We swapped off on the riding-in-the-back duties.
We left from the Maidenhead Meadows lot (which was PACKED! Evidently, a number of folks had the idea of hiking or running part of the trail on this Thanksgiving Friday). Early in our route, we came upon a boardwalk, of considerable length (and apparently, newly-finished), over some wetlands along the route:
You can see our route on the ride page.
While we were on that ride (apparently), Laura OLPH apparently got the idea to do a D&R canal towpath ride from Washington's Crossing up to Lumberville and back. She sent out feelers later in the day to gauge interest, and there was enough to run the ride (we had five).
At the start:
Some of our number stopped at the Prallsville Mills.
On the way back, crossing the bridge, we saw a huge flag. Martin G thought to stop for pictures, and I decided he had a good idea.
*I used to be a good climber. I still am, sometimes. But I don't love the hills the way I once did. (And I'm not good at descents.)
So at stupid:30 this morning, I registered, and showed up at the start. It's close enough that I could have ridden from home, but I over-exerted on a project in the garage yesterday, and decided to allow myself a break. I drove in, stopping for a couple of bagels (carbs for the ride, doncha know).
And I had a great time with these folks. You can see the route and my performance on the ride page. It happens that much of this ride went on roads through the neighborhood we moved to a couple of years ago, so these roads are now on my regular solo training routes (this is a new experience for me; I've been riding in the Sourlands for years, and I'm still lost up there most of the time).
We had riders at a range of experience. For much of the way, I chose to stay in the back with the slower folks, and helped to make sure the group didn't split up too badly. Except for two who chose to go off the front, we kept together at turns, and when there were the occasional requested stops, we went only when everybody was ready.
Jeff P showed off his new wooden bike:
At about 25 miles, we turned west on Federal Road, and started about six miles of straight-into-the-wind, which had picked up out of nowhere; it had not been windy previously. We traded pulls, and at one of the stops, a rider pointed out that the tops of the trees didn't seem to be moving... it was as if the headwind were ginned up only on the road surface itself, solely for our consternation.
It goes that way sometimes.
I know classical music is classist... but I have loved it for years, and I'm not giving it up.