Dear Diary... (current entries) and past Diary entries from

11/09/00-11/31/01 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings, visit to TREK & LeMond factory, first ride up Diablo, Sonora Pass, French laundry lesson
01/01/02-07/15/02
Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings, riding in the snow, Gary Klein visit, Millennium Crows, Spooky Old Tree
07/18/02-07/31/02
Incredible trip to the 2002 Tour de France
08/01/02-12/31/02
Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings, 2nd 2002 trip to France, winning Lance-signed frameset, 5th-Annual TurkeyTrot ride, riding in the rain
01/01/03-03/31/03 Yet more ramblings about the regular Tues/Thur ride, Mr. J visits Washington DC
04/01/03-08/28/03
You take the guy with the gun, I'll handle the guy with the Gatorade!
09/03/03-12/31/03
My dinner with Zap, 75000 mile TREK OCLV, meeting Graham Watson

                            TOUR DE FRANCE 2003 TRIP, 2004
04/01/03-08/28/03 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings, Fast older guys, Sequoia Double-Metric, Grizzly Peak Century
09/03/03-12/31/03 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
01/01/04-07/31/04 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings

07/31/04-12/31/04 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
01/01/05-07/01/05 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
07/01/05-12/31/05 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings plus Tour de France ride-a-long in Team Car
11/22/06-07/16/06
07/28/06-12/28/06 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings, Sonora Pass, caught in a snowstorm
01/01/07-06/30/07 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
07/02/07-12/31/07 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
01/01/08-05/30/08 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
06/01/06-12/31/08 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
01/01/09-12/31/09 Endless Tues/Thur morning ride ramblings
THE DAY MOUNT HAMILTON ALMOST BLEW AWAY (with us on it)

TUESDAY/THURSDAY KINGS MOUNTAIN RIDE

Every Tuesday & Thursday morning, rain or shine, 7:45am at Olive Hill & Canada Road in Woodside. 26 miles, back by 9:25-9:40pm (a bit later when it rains). Hills, sprints & great roads. If you can make it up Kings in 30 minutes or less, try it!


The Tuesday/Thursday ride is now on YouTube! Broken up into three separate segments, about 10 minutes each. Filmed by Millo on 1/30/07
The regular cast of characters on the Tuesday/Thursday rides includes
Kevin the first regular on our ride, and the most regular regular. Has too much time to ride!
Karl (aka "Fast Karl"), super-nice-guy road racer who can really charge on the flats
Chris, one of the younger guys who thinks he can climb and sprint. He can.
(Karl now with is own page here, Karl's Korner)(but not updated in ages...)
Eric, who likes to torture me up Kings by riding just a bit ahead or behind me, waiting for me to blow up.
John, relative newcomer, another 50ish youngster who can climb way too fast.
Millo
, who complains that he's old & slow but somehow always there in the sprints.
George, always out on Tuesdays, nice guy, too fast on the climbs

 

CURRENT ALMOST-DAILY DIARY ENTRIES BELOW-

07/15/05- THE ALMOST-DAILY DIARY MOVES TO FRANCE ON SUNDAY (7/17/05)!
Follow the link above for details on my trip to the '05 Tour de France. Shortly this page will automatically redirect people to that link.

07/14/05- BIG MONKEY OFF MY BACK
today, although I had to double-check things just to make sure. Todd, Karl & Rob showed up to melt the asphalt on Kings this morning, although it's possible the hot weather may have had something to do with it. But hey, that's my story, and I'm sticking to it. Karl was feeling good (hate it when that happens) with Todd & Rob in tow, and me just hanging on. But while I lost a bit of ground initially, I found that my legs were working a bit better than I gave them credit for, and managed to catch back up to them near the first hairpin, below the park. At the park entrance Karl moved over to the right a bit, as if he was going to take a breather and wait for the rest of us, maybe even act social. Nope. It was a feint, a strategic move designed to fake us into thinking we could ease up for a moment while he rocketed on up the hill. Why be an armchair racer when you can actually go out and ride and make this stuff up???

I wasn't feeling great, but it didn't seem like I was doing too badly either, so I kept pushing myself, hoping to get a low-26-minute time and avenge Rob beating me up on Tuesday. Todd was hanging back a bit, taking it easy for the first half, and Rob wasn't having quite as good a day as he had Tuesday, so it was just Karl on ahead... way ahead, of course, but there was a slight chance I might finish on the same day. Around the halfway point Todd woke up and raced on past; fine, no way am I going to try and hold his wheel, at least not without a bungee cord. But still, for the most part, I kept my rhythm and didn't completely collapse after each of the steeper sections. By the time I got to the final hairpin (under the power lines) I was feeling pretty beat, but the legs were still moving. I looked at my bike computer, whose stopwatch isn't working correctly so all I had to go by was the elapsed time difference between the bottom and whatever time it was at the top, and it looked like I'd faded a bit and was going to barely get into the 26-something range, but I wasn't really sure; there wasn't a lot of spare oxygen for the blood cells in my brain. I knew the time at the bottom was 15:40, and as I approached the top I was showing 41-something. I finished at 41:28 on the clock, which didn't quite seem to add up. Um, let's see... if it was 16 to 41, that would be... um... 25?... then add 20 seconds to the bottom and 28 seconds to the top and you get... 25:48??? I asked Todd to figure it out, and he came up with the same thing. I still didn't trust it, so when I got home I downloaded the info from the HAC4 computer and verified it. Probably my first sub-26-minute time in 8 or 9 years. Perhaps, just maybe, this thing about losing a bit of weight actually works!

And perhaps, just maybe, I'm ready for France. I'll find out on Tuesday when, instead of climbing King's Mtn I'll be clawing my way up the Col d'Aubisque. Details here, of course!

07/12/05- SOME CATCHING UP TO DO!
Both literally and... well, literally. I missed Sunday's entry, when various obligations intruded almost hourly upon my opportunities to ride, but I did finally get out on a quick 20-miler through Woodside & Portola Valley. High point of the ride was probably when a car stopped dead in its tracks, in the lane, in Portola Valley, nearly causing a cyclist to run into its rear end. What would cause a car to just stop like that, in the lane, an invitation for trouble? Seems a deer was in the adjacent field, maybe 30 feet from the road, absolutely motionless in a strange position as it was trying very hard to deal with... well, let's just say it apparently wasn't getting enough fiber in its diet. And yes, I had my camera with me, and yes, even for me, there are limits to what I would and wouldn't take a picture of. I did think about it though...

MORE CATCHING UP ON THIS-MORNING'S RIDE
as Rob & Todd came out to put the hurt on me. Todd's in another league, while I can usually play for a while with Rob, but not this morning. He & Todd went off the front early, although there was no way Rob was going to hold onto Todd's wheel unless Todd was being exceptionally charitable (which he wasn't). Eventually I caught back up to Rob, took a few pictures, and then drifted back again, with Rob finishing the climb at about 26:10 with me about 25 seconds behind. Todd finished a day earlier, near as I could tell.

Pretty nice time to ride, before all the heat, but I think a whole lot of other people were out trying to beat the heat as well, since we saw 12 dogs being walked (Todd counted 'em), and a lot more cars than usual. The warmer temps meant that I couldn't blame my relatively-poor performance on the climbs on my lungs, which don't work too well when it's cold, but if I think hard enough, I'm sure I'll come up with some other excuses.

Oh, and for those who think I've got a warped mind sometimes, if you check out the picture I think it's clear that I'm more tilted than anything else.

07/07/05- DEFINITELY A CLOSE CALL
, but we'll get back to that one. Just Karl & Todd this morning, plus a rabbit, John, who we often see riding past us at the start of the ride (as we wait for people to arrive) on his way to Skyline. It was not an easy climb this morning; seems like my lungs just weren't working (but at least my legs didn't seem quite as tired as they were on Tuesday). We eventually caught up to John, but he really ought to be riding up the hill with us, instead of ahead... he's nearly as fast as we are, and my guess is that he'd probably hang with us just fine! I made it to the top in about 26:45 which, a few months ago, would have seemed pretty fast, but right now it's just a bit disappointing after last-week's 26:05.

But about that close call. We're heading back on Manuella, with the three of us going flat-out for the sprint to Olive Hill, where there just happens to be an oddly-placed stop sign that cyclists routinely ignore when making the right-hand turn. As we did this morning. As a county sheriff's car is coming up Olive Hill. Todd & Karl didn't recognize it until they were pretty much on top of the sheriff's car, but I somehow had a bad feeling about that car and so was slowing down quite a bit just as I hit the corner. When I saw it was a sheriff's car, I could have come to a complete stop (from a full sprint just nanoseconds before; it would have been both possible and impressive!) but decided not to since I really didn't want to draw too much distinction between myself and Todd & Karl. In our testosterone-influenced state of mind, we just rode right on past the guy, who called out on his loudspeaker "Next time could you guys at least slow down a bit there?" I'll admit that I did feel kinda bad...

07/05/05- GLAD MY WIFE WASN'T AWAKE
when I left the house, one-eyed, for the Tuesday/Thursday ride this morning! During the night the swelling had gotten quite a bit worse, such that my left eye had only this small slit to peer through. It was a bit of an effort to force it open, but it seemed marginally functional, so I figured I ought to at least head out to the start of the ride and let people know I wouldn't be making it this morning. Yeah, right. As I headed over Jefferson to the start, it seemed like my body's main protestations were coming from my legs, which were a bit sore after yesterday's ride to the coast. So what the heck, maybe a bee sting could knock Jonathan Vaughters out of the Tour de France, but it ain't gonna take me out of the Tuesday/Thursday ride!

Todd, Karl, and Chain Reaction alumnus Richard showed up. I didn't know what to expect of Karl & Richard; the only known quantity was Todd, whom I knew was going to ride fast up the hill. About 26:30 later we were at the top, with Karl and Todd not too far behind. This summer it seems like times in the 26-minute range have become pretty much the norm for me, but I doubt I'm going to be able to get down into the 25-minute area anytime soon, especially with the trip to France coming up. Maybe next year?

Todd and Richard extracted revenge on me in the sprints (what did I do though?) on what overall was a reasonably-hard but friendly ride. My legs seem to differ on the "friendly" part though; this is the first time in a while they've felt pretty sore. It's a good feeling.  

07/04/05- A FUN RIDE TO THE COAST
on the morning of the 4th of July. Got up just a little bit earlier than I'd like, as the group was heading out from Woodside at 7:30am. A different group than I normally ride with; Jen & Lisa & Mark & Kevin (not Kevin K), customers from our Redwood City store that asked if I might like to come for a ride with them. Sounded good to me; after last-week's ride with the Alto Velo "A" group, I figured something a bit more social wasn't such a bad idea. Besides, since this ride wasn't supposed to be a hammer-fest, it gave me an opportunity to use my handlebar bag and the "real" camera (yeah, I know, in many circles a Rebel XT isn't considered close to "real" unless it's got one of those expensive white "L"-series lenses attached to it). Adds a few pounds, messes up the handling a bit, but my trip to France is less than two weeks away!

We headed up Old LaHonda, down the other side to Pescadero (via Haskins Grade, which always seems longer than it ought to be), hoping to hit the bakery as it opened. Unfortunately, while not a hammerfest, we still made pretty decent time and got there well before 10am (when they open) and had to make-do with the offerings of the store next door. Not. Fortunately, a Jen & Kevin know the owners of the bakery and were able to get a couple of fresh pastries via the secret door!

From there we headed to San Gregorio via Stage Road, with me stopping at the place with MGM (Machine-gun Man) to get a few pictures, and then racing (unsuccessfully) to try and catch back up with the group. I got in a pretty hard ride with these maneuvers, essentially doing a whole lot of intervals on most of the climbs (since there's no way to get photos with the Rebel unless you stop and set things up). We made the mandatory stop at the General Store in San Gregorio (seen from the inside-out in the photo), where I refueled with a Welch's grape juice before that final nasty piece of Stage Road back up to Highway 1.

And then Tunitas Creek. Generally the nicest, nastiest grade up to Skyline from either side. We came across one of our customers, Norm, stopped by the side of the road on Tunitas, so I dropped back to see if he wanted to ride with us back up the hill, but he seemed content to be doing his own thing out there (and probably feared that this group was more like our Tuesday/Thursday crowd rather than something more closely approaching the norms of humanity). So once again I raced back towards the group, just as a large yellow jacket was racing towards me. Or, more correctly, towards my helmet, which it bounced off and, mad as heck, landed above my left eye, where it proceeded to either sting or bite me, not sure which, but the results are always the same... massive swelling the next day. At this point I was equally mad as heck and, after collecting my Oakleys (which I'd thrown to the ground in an attempt to get ride of the yellow jacket), high-tailed it back to the group. To say that I was running on adrenaline was an understatement; Tunitas hasn't seemed to easy in a very long time! Got lots more photos, but still looking for that defining picture of Tunitas. One of these days...

By the time I got home the swelling was getting impressive, and my wife seemed not-so-happy that I hadn't called her to pick me up. But why? So she could have a reason to tell me I'm stupid? It generally doesn't take a yellow jacket sting for that!

07/03/05- AT LEAST TWICE A YEAR YOU GOTTA RIDE A MOUNTAIN BIKE
right? So I got my Klein Mantra out, the one which still has the racing number from my Sea Otter outing on it, and did a ride in Arastradero Park with my kids. That's really not such a bad place for playing around on a mountain bike, and, who knows, you might get to see a rattlesnake (been there, done that one) or a Mountain Lion (not yet). Took the kids about half an hour to quit complaining about the hills and decide to have fun, but once they did, they seemed to really enjoy it. If you've got a mountain bike hanging around that doesn't see any off-road use, you really ought to take it for a spin at Arastradero. It's close by and easy to get to, being on Arastradero Road in Palo Alto, between Page Mill and Alpine.

06/30/05- WHO ARE THOSE GUYS?
I really didn't know how things were going to go this morning, but after Tuesday's fast (for me) ride up the hill, I wasn't expecting people to be kind to me. But I also wasn't expecting to find Karl, Kevin & Todd kicking back while I made tracks up the hill ahead of them. At the halfway point (hairpin curve/switchback where it crosses the creek) I may have been nearly a minute ahead of them, but saw them coming after me on the straight piece where the road gets wider, and from there to the top, I could look back and see them slowly gaining ground, like the bad guys in Butch Cassidy.  Todd rode on past before the top, while Kevin & Karl stayed mercifully behind, carrying on casual conversation as I was gasping for air. Not as fast as Tuesday, but not really slow either, at 26:20.

It was a beautiful morning, without any of the heavy fog that made Tuesday's ride so wet... and warm enough that I was remarking to Todd that perhaps we'd be seeing some snakes sunning themselves on Old LaHonda. Todd mentioned that he hadn't seen snakes lately, but quite a few suicidal wild hares (rabbits) on his latest off-road ride and, absolutely seriously, within 15 seconds of that remark we had one pacing us for a short distance along the side of the road. And then another, and finally a third.

For the next three weeks
we'll be without Kevin, as he heads to France for a long bike trip (SuperTour), but I'm sure Todd & Karl & Rob will take turns beating me up. At least for the next two weeks, after which it's my turn to head to France, but only for 10 days (of which I'll be riding maybe just four). I'll be revisiting the Col d'Aubisque, one of my favorite passes, carrying a bunch of camera gear so I can grab some shots of the Tour de France as it rolls through. That photo in the front window of our Redwood City store's getting a bit old!

06/28/05- THE PAY-OFF FINALLY COMES.
And it was a long time coming... a very long time. Kevin, Rob, Todd & once-in-a-while Bill on the ride this morning. Initial thoughts that things would be civilized (since once-in-a-while Bill was with us who, after all, had just finished the Climb to Kaiser, about 17,000 feet of it) evaporated in a flash of vaporized tread as Todd took off up the hill. Darn. And Rob & Kevin were hanging with him. Darn again. And I didn't feel like falling off the back this time. That makes it triple-darn. But I was somewhat encouraged by the reading on the scale (showing the upper 160s for the first time in a great many years), and after Sunday's formal training ride with the AltoVelo "A" guys, I figured it was time to give it a go.

Eventually Kevin & Todd started drifting off the front a bit, but pesky Rob was still with them. Dang (that's four "dangs" now, if you're counting, which apparently I am). I was just a bit off their pace, but no way were they going to move out of sight. Eventually Rob faded just slightly, so I moved up ahead of him, but only about 50ft or so, and whatever pace I managed, he was still there, 50ft or so behind. At any moment I was expecting that I might falter just a little bit and watch Rob ride on past. It was one of those things where you knew he was going to be either behind or ahead, but no way were we going to be able to ride together. Besides, it's not too easy to communicate with half-syllable grunts through the heavy breathing.

I wasn't sure of my time splits, since the stopwatch on my bike computer wasn't working (but I did know that I started the climb at 16:50 into the ride), but it felt like we were going for a decent (for me) time. Without timing points, I just had Kevin, Rob & Todd to use as reference points, but that worked out pretty well. I finished at 26:05, my best time in a number of years (I'll have to go over old almost-daily-diary entries to see just how long). And now, of course, I'm thinking about all those places where I might have made up 6 seconds so I could claim a sub-26-minute time (which, of course, translates to 25-something, which sounds so much more impressive!).

I should also mention that Todd's killer sprint capabilities continue, which is a strong incentive for me to further improve in that area. His acceleration is particularly strong just a couple seconds into the sprint, so if I could just match that... yeah, right!

06/26/05- I GOTTA GET A BETTER LEAD-OUT TRAIN!
This morning I rode the AltoVelo "A" ride, on Kevin's (one of our Tuesday/Thursday regulars) recommendation. But what am I doing on a semi-formal training ride? Talk about being out-gunned! But Kevin said it was a friendly group, and he was right. Friendly, but fast.

The route headed from Los Altos through Portola Valley, up Old LaHonda, down 84 to San Gregorio, then back via Tunitas Creek. Sprints were at the Portola Valley sign, the town of LaHonda, and the San Gregorio/Stage Road sign. Most of the group was content to let a few silly people go for the sprints, and I really should have been one of those content people. But of course I wasn't, especially since Kevin had told me about the sprints ahead of time and said he'd give me a lead-out (a wheel to follow). OK, fine, I'm probably more used to sitting on Kevin's wheel than anyone on the planet, so as we near the Portola Valley sign (in a pack of maybe 40 riders) I spot him coming up the side, grab his wheel, and see where it takes me. Where it took me was pretty much the right place, but not nearly a high-enough speed. There were at least four other guys who heavily contest these sprints, and when I saw them coming around, I had nothing left. And I'm sure it would have been a lot worse if the best riders weren't at the Burlingame Criterium!

The ride up Old LaHonda was relatively uneventful, at least for me, as I was pretty quickly on my own. And not because I was off the front! Probably two-thirds of the group was ahead of me, but this was going to be a long ride so I wasn't going to blow up on the first climb. We re-grouped at Sky L'onda (not sure why the ride doesn't go down the backside of Old LaHonda) and then rode a pretty fast clip into LaHonda where the next sprint was waiting (I was either 4th or 5th but again, not that many people were actually contesting it) and then a very formal, very fast dual-paceline into San Gregorio. The final sprint at San Gregorio was a tough one, because with the continuing double-paceline, it was hard to get yourself up to the front at the right time. Things finally bunched up a bit though, and once again Kevin came by on the left, and once again I latched onto his wheel for a ride that (once again) wasn't quite fast enough to beat three other guys. It's possible I could get the hang of it if I did this more often.

From there it was straight up Stage Road, down the coast to Tunitas, and then up to Skyline... and again, at the tail end of things. I'm not quite the climber I used to be, and ironically it's partly because I haven't come to terms with my new, lighter weight- which seems to favor standing for extended periods of time, something I have avoided over the past several years when I discovered that it was more efficient (at my higher weight) to force myself to stay in the saddle.

All in all it was a very nice, very tough (for me) ride. And it got me back just in time so that I could head up to the Burlingame Criterium and learn a bit more about my new camera (Rebel XT) before heading off to the TDF in a few weeks.

06/23/05- ANYONE WANT TO RIDE UP GODETIA?
Nice morning, a bit on the cool side, but hot on the road were Todd, Kevin & Pete. Thinking we'd get away from the usual take-no-prisoners up King's, we went up the back way, through the park, connecting with King's about 1/3rd of the way up. Did that moderate things? Not really. Todd was well-behaved, but still, even though it takes a fair amount longer to go through the park, everyone was under 30 minutes.

This morning was the first time I've felt pretty good since... maybe early May? Instead of being in survival mode the whole way up the hill, I was able to do three strong intervals, each time letting Todd & Kevin get quite a bit ahead, essentially spotting them a hundred yards or so, and then sprint like mad to catch back up to them. That really takes its toll on you, but it's also the best way to get stronger, faster. It forces you to recover quickly, and gives you an idea of how fast you could go up the hill, if you were in exceptional shape.

Skyline around Sky L'onda got quite wet, as the fog hadn't quite burned off, and the wet roads & low visibility stayed with us on the Old LaHonda section of the ride, with things finally clearing as we headed down 84 back into Woodside. A nice, reasonably-civilized ride, at least until I asked if anyone wanted to finish it off by a little jaunt up Godetia, one of the meanest roads in Woodside. Thankfully, no takers today.

06/21/05- *POOF* WHERE DID THEY GO?
Kevin, Todd & Rob this morning, with Kevin & Todd taking off pretty darned quickly. I maintained contact for about three minutes and then watched as Rob did his best to keep up with them, eventually blowing up just below the park entrance. It really looked like everyone, including Rob, was going to dust me this morning, but with Todd & Kevin pushing a 24:30 pace, Rob didn't have much of a chance. I tried to ride at a pace that I could sustain, and figured I'd be somewhere in the 27s... it was a bit of a surprise when I later looked at the HAC4 computer data and found that I'd ridden a 26:30.

I did bring my smaller camera and took some photos, but not much chance to get pictures when Todd & Kevin are feeling good! Or I could get better, but I don't think that's too likely to happen right now; those mid-season centuries that I missed out on dropped me down a notch or two. The only reason I'm hitting respectable times up Kings are from losing a bit of weight, but my plan was to lose the weight and get faster (as opposed to losing the weight so I could ride just as fast without as many hard rides as normal). Which brings us to the next couple weekends. This is normally the time I'd be riding Sonora Pass, but I just don't see it this weekend. Maybe next. Has to be soon though, as there aren't that many more Sundays before I'm off to France again (yeah, that bike race thingee they have going on over there).

06/19/05- SOMETIMES THERE'S A REASON IT'S THE ROAD LESS TRAVELED.
No duh. Just got home quite late from a day trip to Nevada City, where Jeff (the guy who's recovering from the nasty liver infection that was first misdiagnosed as liver cancer) and I did a ride on the local roads before watching the bike race. Roads? Well, it might not have been so bad if I hadn't mixed up Red Dog with Dog Bar roads. Dog Bar is a nice country road, not the greatest pavement, but at least it has pavement. Red Dog? See for yourself! You're cruising along a nicely paved road for a few miles, which then turns to not-so-bad graded gravel & dirt, which then turns to very bad gravel, when then descends into a little canyon and disappears entirely! Well, not entirely. It reappears on the opposite side of a steeply-walled creek bed.

The first photo shows the bizarre scene, an apparently-natural carved out piece of earth, with a lot of recreational vehicles darting about. [Later inspection of one of the photos revealed a sign warning about "high speed equipment in operation" which might indicate that this is/was a mine.] The road? It just stops. No bridge. No trail even. You just hike down, cross the creek and climb up the other side. In road shoes. With Speedplay cleats. Which don't like sand & grit. With a bunch of ATV-folk looking on, wondering what the heck we're doing out there.  More on this adventure to come! In the meantime, consider Red Dog Road in Nevada County to be more appropriate for a mountain bike.

06/16/05- UGH.
It was difficult getting going this morning; the brown-out at home (that knocked out my alarm clock, but didn't keep me from getting up in time) was a metaphor for how I felt climbing the hill. Seemed like a lot of power just wasn't there, the heart rate wouldn't tick up on demand, you know, the sort of feeling you get when you watch people riding on ahead and there's just nothing you can do about it. Ueyn, Karl, Kevin & Rob this morning, with Rob getting much better at holding a high pace for more than just a brief sprint. Dang. Ueyn was, mercifully, suffering a bit from not having climbed anything in ages, but that certainly didn't stop him from nailing each of the sprints!

What I need is for Ueyn & Todd to be out there at the same time, watching each other, while I sit back and figure out which wheel to suck. And while I'm waiting for that to happen, we could also get rid of the rain that started up again this afternoon. This is June, right?

06/14/05- FULL HOUSE THIS MORNING!
Let's see if I can remember. Kevin, Karl, Todd, Rob, Pete & new-guy Jeff. Seven, including myself. And what a nice morning to be out there, with temps around 60 (ditched the leg warmers, didn't even carry a windbreaker in my bag, yeah!). Todd, Karl, Kevin & Rob went on ahead to play on Kings, while I did what I could to save face and not totally suck. At least at this time of year "totally sucking" means a time of around 27:30 or so, which I can live with. But what I can't do anything about are the sprints when the "new, improved" Todd shows up. He's probably hitting 24-25mph on the uphill sprint past Star Hill, and I haven't had to do better than 21 so far. At 25mph, even though it's a significant grade, I'm going to have to get onto his wheel (draft) rather than try and sprint parallel. That's gonna be tough, since there's something that fuels me when I'm alongside someone in a sprint, something that says "I can take this one." But that's not going to be the case anymore, not as long as Todd shows up.

Perhaps Karl summed it up best today. Todd got the jersey for Best Young Rider, the Points jersey (sprints), GC (overall time), Polka-dot (climber), Most-improved rider, and a couple others I forget. Stanford seems to have been good for Todd.

06/12/05- PLAYING CHICKEN
but I'll get to that in a minute. Beautiful day, nice warm skies, light winds. Great day for an afternoon ride, but went for the "ugly" variant- north on Canada, up 92 to Skyline (unbelievable traffic, by the way!) and south on Skyline on that long climb that gets to you. The warmer weather brought a lot of salt into my eyes, but the upside was that, for the first time in ages, it was warm enough that my lungs were working great (none of that exercise-induced asthma nonsense that has me breathing like a freight train in the mornings!) so I could get my heart rate to respond a bit more readily. One surprise- very few people ride in the late afternoon. Why not? It's so nice that time of day; just beginning to cool off a bit with gentle breezes, everything stands out a lot more when the sun's not directly overhead... it just feel good.

Oh right, the chickens. We've got some extra (actually, extra noisy) chickens that just had to go. Not something my daughter was very pleased to do (she's raised them as a 4H project), but a customer told us about a neighbor of hers on Old LaHonda who might be interested in adding a couple more to their collection. So I had to time things such that I could meet up with the rest of my family there, although I actually arrived quite a bit earlier so I spent some time goofing off with the new camera (Canon RebelXT), shooting pictures of cyclists coming up & down the hill. The picture on the left is actually taken from the other side of Old LaHonda though (the west side), just after it leaves 84 (you can see a cyclist in the middle of the picture heading up 84).

06/10/05- SUMMER'S HERE, SO NOW I'LL COMPLAIN ABOUT allergies! Well, given the choice, I'll take allergies over rain, even though it looks like I'm going to have to keep Kleenex handy for a while as I get used to a world in which the only things more relieved than I to see the sun are every single pollen-producing plant in the universe. It's not global warming, or global cooling... it's global anarchy (as far as weather's concerned)!

06/09/05- THIS IS JUNE, RIGHT?
At least the weather for the Sequoia Century was dry; this morning's ride was something else again. Heavier than a fog or even a drizzle... I'd say it was legit light rain that greeted Kevin & I as we reached the top of Skyline. I knew it might not be nice up there, but I refused to bring out the Iron Pig (my rain bike) in June. It's gotta stop sometime, y'know? So in an extreme (for me) act of defiance I rode my nice bike, the Trek 5900... at least partly because it needs a complete drivetrain overhaul anyway, including new chain, rear cassette and maybe even a chainring. This past winter & spring were not kind to bikes!

At least it wasn't cold, yet not so warm that it felt particularly humid. Almost pleasant, really. Still, I don't look forward to another ride down 84 seeing spots of oil on the surface every five feet or so. Wake me up when summer's finally here.

06/07/05- DON'T GIVE UP!
But I'll get to that a bit later. It was really, really, really tough swinging a leg over my bike and heading up the hill this morning. I was definitely feeling the effects of the 11k feet of climbing two days ago, not to mention the 123 miles. Getting on my bike today reminded me a bit of the old racing days, doing stage races, and how you felt on the 2nd or 3rd day at the starting line. Kevin, Karl & Rob were at the ride this morning to make sure I didn't chicken out. Kevin feigned feeling really slow (which actually did turn out to be the case... for once), but Karl & Rob were their usual energetic selves. I don't know how long it took to get to the top, but I did eventually get there, along with Kevin. I believe we arrived the same day as Karl & Rob, but I'm not completely sure about that.

The run along Skyline wasn't quite as bad as I thought it might be, although I didn't contest any sprints. I finally began to feel human on the west side of Old LaHonda, where we met up with Milo, who'd ridden the entire ride a few minutes ahead of us, apparently worried that he'd get blown off on the main climb (which wouldn't have been the case today).

By the time we got to the bottom of 84 (back in Woodside), I was feeling pretty darned good, not at all how I felt just over an hour before. I even tested myself a bit on that nasty little rise on Woodside Road before you get to Tripp; my legs were back! So as Rob & Karl rounded the corner on Albion and got ready for the final sprint, I felt like maybe, just maybe, I could contest it. I knew Rob would go early from the front, which would mean I'd have a bit of ground to make up riding behind Karl. And that's what Rob did- he took off quickly, seemingly catching Karl by surprise, with me a bit behind, taking some time to get up enough speed to first get past Karl and then set my sights on Rob. Trouble is, the Albion Road sprint doesn't have a clearly-defined ending point. Most often it ends when somebody calls it quits and gives it to the other person. Since Rob had put a bit of distance between himself and Karl, and may not have realized I was coming up from behind, I yelled out "Don't give up!" to keep things going, which he seemed to do. The ambiguousness of the finish makes it almost a game of chicken to see who flies into the Albion/Olive Hill intersection first, and sprints really shouldn't end that way, but, you know, that testosterone thing... in the end, I got there first, but that might only mean that Rob was more sensible.

Once again it's proven that riding a bike is one of those uniquely-wonderful things, at least for the more experienced (OK, a bit older) among us. You might not feel that great at the start of a ride, but things almost invariably get better as you go on. All it takes is a bit of patience. How many other things in life work like that? 

06/05/05- SEQUOIA DOUBLE-METRIC DOESN'T DISAPPOINT. It's hard, it's long, it's got one descent that's way too similar to Tunitas Creek, and I survived. Didn't have the miles going into it that I'd normally have, but I did bring along my secret weapon- Todd. He didn't mind (much) keeping the pace up and keeping me out of the wind, allowing us to finish the ride in almost exactly the same time I did the year before. Lots of photos, including many from my brother Steve, who was on Highway 9 getting shots of quite a few photos of riders (they can be seen at the bottom of the Sequoia Century page).

400 pounds of ice, 600 sodas & Sal.
Yes, we put up our "secret" soda stop at the top of Bear Creek again, fine-tuning the recipe from last year by adding some diet drinks (still hard for me to figure out why, at 70-90 miles into a ride, somebody wants a diet drink) and ice tea. Funny thing we learned- the people who want Coke will accept no substitutes. Some seemed rather annoyed when Sal (who was nice enough to give up his day to run our soda stop) suggested Pepsi after we ran out of Coke. The Pepsi people, on the other hand, weren't so picky... Coke was fine with them, but a Pepsi was first choice. So perhaps, when you're trying to size up someone's personality and willingness to compromise, you ought to ask "Are you a Coke or Pepsi person?"

06/02/05- I'M GOING TO NEED A REALLY STRONG BUNGEE CORD
if I'm going to keep up with Todd this Sunday (for the 125-mile Sequoia Century). Todd flew up the hill this morning, with a personal best of something around 23 minutes on Kings. But Todd's got an excuse- he's young and trains seriously with the Stanford cycling team. So what's with Preben then? Preben shows up once in a blue moon, but today's blue must have been extra-special as I was barely able to keep him in sight as he did a 26:14 up the hill. Not bad for someone in his 60s, and takes away any excuse I might have for slowing down as I get older! Kevin & Karl and I were there, but Todd & Preben clearly stole the show. The youngest & oldest of our Tuesday/Thursday-morning riders. Yikes, what have I unleashed on the world?

05/31/05- LESS THAN A WEEK TO GO
before the Sequoia double-metric century, and I'm not really ready for it. Just one century under my belt so far this year (the Chico Wildflower in late April); since then my harder Sunday rides have been replaced with easier ones where I've been working with my 12-year-old son to try and get him into better shape. But it's not as if this will be the first time I've gone into a hard ride not fully prepared.

Nor is it as if I haven't had some help from the Tuesday/Thursday-morning guys, forcing me up Kings at a pace not quite what I'd call leisurely. This morning was no exception; Rob was the only person at the start, and about 1/4 of the way up the hill he'd dropped me. Fortunately, I just barely caught up to Milo (first time on our ride this morning, I think) about 3/4 of the way up the hill so had some company for a short while. Since it had cooled down a bit and was slightly damp, my breathing was pretty ragged; Milo said that he thought a Mountain Lion was behind him from all the noise from my lungs. It felt like 28 minutes up the hill but, surprisingly, the computer says almost exactly 27.

On the first sprint Rob took off early & hard again, but this time I didn't let him go. It's a very long sprint, about 1000ft up a roughly 6% grade. If you possess the right combination of patience & confidence, you can have a go at it, even if someone gets off to a substantial early lead. And when you've done the hill a few thousand times with a bike computer, you know what sort of speed you're capable of (between 19 & 21mph). Fortunately, this was a 21mph day. My lungs might fail me on long grades, but for intense, shorter efforts, it's all about the legs. And I still have legs.

05/29/05- TESTING OUT THE NEW TOY. No, not a new bike (although I'm still lusting after a 60cm SSL, which, one of these days, will be mine!). This time a new camera, a bit different than those I've used before. Finally broke down and bought a DSLR, a Canon Rebel 350XT. What a nice machine! And just a tad bit larger than what I've been using in the past, even though this is about as small as a DSLR comes. About 3lbs with lens, and just barely fits into the handlebar bag, so no, this one won't be whipped out for shots while riding. Nor is it likely to grace my bike on my next trip up Sonora Pass! But it worked out nicely going up Old LaHonda, down the other side and then back via 84.


05/2
6/05- CYCLING SOMETIMES LEAVES ME BREATHLESS. And I'm not talking about how exciting and inspirational it is to get up in the morning and climb up to Skyline. No, this morning it was literally breathless as the deadly combo of a bit cooler temps plus the "A" team showing up (Karl, Kevin, Julian & Ueyn) had me pretty gassed going up the hill. No matter, I figure I can still take that first sprint on Skyline, right? Uh... nope. Karl had the idea of taking off way earlier than normal, catching me off-guard and possibly taking advantage of the fact that I time the start of my sprint based on knowing how long I can go (so that I don't die before the finish)... implying, correctly, that there's no way I could hold it from the bottom all the way to the top. Darn, didn't think he'd figure that one out!

05/25/05- THIS THREAD-OF-LIFE THING CAN BE AWFULLY THIN
, and can sometimes break unexpectedly. I knew that Max, the wife of a good customer of ours, was in the fight of her life, having been battling cancer for a number of years. I last saw her at the Sea Otter, where she was looking pretty good- really, just like anybody else. Nothing to tell you that this was a person whose body was turning against her will to live. She looked happy, very active, and... she just looked great. But when I saw Tom, her husband, at a rest stop for the Foothill Century just over a week ago, he told me that she was back in the hospital again, and for the first time having to breathe with the assistance of a ventilator... but fighting having to do that every step of the way. I remember Tom telling me that he didn't think this was her final battle.

This morning Tom came in to tell me that Max was gone. And I'm just dumb-struck, not really knowing how to react. I remember 17 years ago... 17 years ago today, in fact... when my father died. I still came into work the next day, because I didn't know how to deal with it, so I just went on as I knew how. Guess some things don't change.


05/25/05- STARWARS EPISODE III "REVIEW" ON-LINE.
No, it has nothing to do with bicycles, but back in the day I used to post quite a few movie reviews on-line. This isn't really a review per-se, but a response to someone else's observations in a usenet post. Rather esoteric ramblings (as if that would surprise anyone reading these entries!).

05/25/05- ROLL CALL!
Ueyn? No here. Kevin? Not here. Karl? Not here. Rob? Not here. The nicest morning so far this year, and I'm the only person showing up for the Tuesday/Thursday-morning ride. Perhaps it was so nice that everyone else had gotten up extra-early and did the Pete's 6am ride? Maybe. Or maybe they heard that my legs were still a bit sore from Sunday's ride, and didn't want to risk hurting me further. In fact, I did feel pretty sluggish this morning, heading up King's at what some might think a leisurely pace, yet it sure didn't feel that way to me! However, I did get some company about halfway up as I came across Jen, a local tri-person, who was heading up to Skyline to meet up with some friends.

05/22/05- FINALLY, IT ALL COMES TOGETHER.
Beautiful morning, and the first time I haven't had to wear leg warmers or carry a windbreaker in... well, a very long time. Met up with Kevin & Todd at Roberts (Woodside), and we headed up Old LaHonda, riding through a large group of cyclists from Woodside who had left shortly before us. Kevin was suffering a bit from a Triathlon he'd done the day before in Auburn, but Todd... well, this was the strongest I've seen Todd in a long time, maybe ever. Todd was being kind though, never making an effort to intentionally drop me (which he certainly could have). We regrouped at the top and headed down to LaHonda and then up & over Haskin's Grade to Pescadero. At this point we picked up quite a bit of company, as the Tour de Cure was running a 100k event over the same roads that we would now travel. Even came across some of our customers, including Burt M (shown waving in the photo) and then, near the Flamingo house, another one who had the misfortune of taking a nasty spill (and in need of a few minutes of my assistance to make his bike workable again).

The intent had been to pick up some pastries at the Pescadero Market, but we got there a bit too early and found them closed (the early bird may get worms but no pastry!) so we headed off into a nasty head/sidewind north on Stage Road. Thank goodness for Todd; Kevin & I were glued to his rear wheel. The headwind actually worked out well for me, as I was able to stay with Todd on Stage Road's first climb, and only came slightly detached on the second. This ride was just what the doctor ordered; I hadn't had a really good, hard ride of any length in quite some time, and was beginning to worry about how I'd do on the Sequoia double metric in just two weeks.

We regrouped again at the San Gregorio General Store, a refueling stop before the upcoming long climb up Tunitas Creek. Somehow my legs still felt pretty good so we hit the final climb up to Highway 1 pretty hard, and found Sergei, a Chain Reaction alumnus who'd recently graduated from UC Davis (and a Cat 1/2 racer) at the top. This, I'm thinking, is a good thing... Sergei & Todd can ride off the front on Tunitas while I enjoy a more casual pace with Kevin. Uh... no. The first third of the climb, where it isn't too steep (maybe 7-8%), I was still feeling really good and right there with them. But, sure enough, when it got to the nasty stuff I was feeling pain, and watched as they rode off the front. A bit. Seemed like they just wanted to sit maybe 50-100 meters ahead, having a good old time chatting about who-knows-what, while I'm doing everything I can to keep going. It was probably one of my better recent efforts on Tunitas, with my heart rate between 165-178 the entire distance. By the time I got to the top I was pretty wasted, and basically limped home after the ride down King's into Woodside. But dang, it feels good to have legs that worked so hard they hurt when you walk down steps.


05/19/05- TURNING BACK THE CLOCK ABOUT 32 YEARS
this morning, as the continuing wet weather meant yet another outing for the Iron Pig (my rain bike), followed by a commute to work because, after all, this was Bike to Work day. This is pretty much exactly the same routine I had in high school during the summer- on Tuesdays & Thursdays I'd have my ride up Kings and south to Sky L'onda, although back then I didn't do the extra loop of west-side Old LaHonda. And after that I'd ride to work... all on the same '73 Cinelli I rode this morning.

Nobody showed up but me; my guess is that, after the news last night said the rain was going to be clearing out by morning, the annoyance of waking up and seeing more rain was just too much. I can hardly blame anyone for that, although I did see a pair heading south on Canada as I was waiting for anyone to show up; one of the two, a woman, exclaimed "This is fun?" as they rode past.

So what do you notice when it's raining (actually just a light drizzle after a short time) and you're all alone? First, how few cars there are. At times you go several minutes without seeing one on Kings. Second, that it must have rained pretty heavily last night because the creeks are really moving! Third, that it's probably not the early bird that gets most of the worms, but rather the bird that's discovered how many worms find their way onto roadways, making for very easy pickings, when the ground's saturated. This morning I witnessed that first-hand. Fourth, that the vegetation is growing like mad. As I mentioned elsewhere though, if April showers bring May flowers, what do May showers bring? My guess is lots of poison oak.

Since I had the Iron Pig at the shop (that Bike to Work thing), I finally weighed it. Weighed it with fenders, half a bottle of Cytomax, frame pump, and a seat bag with a couple tubes and a waterproof jacket (worn on the first part of the ride, before I realized how warm it was such that getting wet wasn't that big a deal). About 26.5 lbs. My Trek 5900, on the other hand, would weigh about 20lbs similarly adorned (although without the fenders). Still, it's not the weight that I notice most, but rather the lack of STI shifting on the Cinelli that makes it so much less desirable than my 5900. That plus the considerably-harsher ride.

05/17/05- THEY MADE ME DO IT!
Going into this morning's ride, I never would have guessed that I'd be doing a mid-26-minute time up King's Mtn. Especially with a rear wheel not properly tightened, so I couldn't stand up without it rubbing. But that's what happened, as I tried to keep Kevin (older Kevin, 49-year-old fast Kevin, not my 12-year-old son Kevin whom I'm gradually introducing to the joys of cycling) & Karl in sight. I didn't have a separate stopwatch going this morning, so I really didn't know how fast I was going until I hit the top and Kevin said they'd done a 25-something and I was about a minute behind. I still didn't really believe it until I downloaded the data from my bike computer and there it was- about 26:30 or so (tough to get the start & end points precise) and a consistent heart rate of about 165, not once dropping below 160. Ouch! But it actually felt pretty good, almost in control. What made this so unlikely is that I haven't had a killer Sunday ride since the Wildflower Century in April, so I assumed I would be getting slower. Apparently not; the key, it seems, is keeping the weight down. Guess that's one of those "duh" things?

Rob took it a bit more sensibly up Kings, but later went on to run me into the ground on Old LaHonda. One thing's for sure- I'm going to ride at a lot more sensible pace on the Sequoia double-metric century in early June. I won't have the base miles I did last year, but I'll be going into it a fair amount lighter, which should help. In fact, it was last year's Sequoia century that gave me the idea I could not only lose weight on a ride, but keep it off... and managed to do so. I lost quite a bit on that ride but, of course, most of it was water. So what? I used the artificially-light scale reading as my target, and over the course of the following two weeks, managed to stay down at the new-me (about 8 pounds lighter) weight. Who knows, maybe this year I can do it again! But I really should be happy enough just that I didn't watch it climb back up this past winter.

05/15/05- ANOTHER TOUGH 30-MILER TODAY!
Got my 12-year-old son out on his second organized road ride, this time the Foothill "Century" out of Sunnyvale. Not a terribly exciting route; an unimaginative out-and-back on Foothill, Arastradero & Alpine to the Windy Hill parking lot in Portola Valley. But quite a bit more challenging than the Delta 35-miler a couple weeks ago, as this one had (according to my HAC-4, which is generally accurate) about 1150ft of climbing. That's about 1100ft more than the Delta, and Kevin was feeling it, especially on that steep little pitch of Arastradero between Foothill and Page Mill. That's where the picture comes from, and, at the time, he was feeling as bad as he looks. He really doesn't do all that well until the turnaround point (which coincidentally is where the first & only rest stop is), and there's no doubt in my mind that the shorter-distance rides need more rest stops than they have! But after a few pieces of a banana he was good to go, with the second half of the ride a much more pleasant outing than the first.

He really doesn't like climbing, which is why I'm thinking it might be time to introduce him to something real- perhaps Old LaHonda. The idea will be to take it easy, with lots of breaks and some sort of reward as he goes. My thinking is that once he knows he can do a really big hill (even if it takes most of the day), he'll have a mental edge that will make subsequent climbs seem a whole lot easier. Either that or some wiseguy lawyer will see an opportunity for a 12-year-old to sue his dad for extreme abuse.

05/12/05- I'M BECOMING ONE OF "THEM", AREN'T I?
Guess it had to happen. Guess it probably happened years ago, only I'm just now realizing it. I'm becoming one of "them." One of those "older" guys, who shows up on a "training ride" with the younger guys, and exploits whatever advantages might come my way because there's no way I can keep up on longer climbs. So I've become that guy who doesn't want to lose a sprint. An opportunist. The guy who knows everything about the other guys he rides with (where they're going to take off, how long they can turn a certain gear, how much speed it's safe to carry down the hill with them behind you, and how long to follow someone else trying to go around them).

And so much about sprinting is confidence. You know it's possible, and since it's a relatively-short effort, you can possibly pull it off even on a day when you're not feeling all that great. Or, in the case of Thursday's ride, even when you're riding the Iron Pig.
I certainly felt the weight of the Iron Pig on the climb, and perhaps let it psyche me out a bit. But sprinting is all about the moment. You swear you're not going to get involved; you're going to sit back and watch everyone else. But it doesn't happen that way. Inevitably Kevin starts to pull up the climb towards Skeggs, with Rob & Karl close by. The speed's not slow but consistent, so instead of falling back I'm pretty much right there. Then you hear something behind you, or just to the left, and you go. You just can't help yourself. Well, maybe you can, but I can't. There's that competitive side that says, if you can't ride with the boys up the long climbs, you'll try to extract a victory elsewhere. It's somewhat hollow of course, since what exactly are you trying to prove by sprinting? It's not as if it's a race, nor is it something you can benchmark like your time on a climb.

But you're not thinking about that on the descent into Sky L'onda, as you trail Kevin, Karl & Rob on the lead-in to the final sprint. You're thinking instead that your reluctance to really push it into the corners (because you're on the Iron Pig, which doesn't handle nearly as well as the 5900), which has caused you to hang back a bit, has put you into an ideal (and unusual) position. Nobody expects that you're behind them, because you're usually up front at this point. So you sit behind first Kevin, then Rob, as you descend into the start of the uphill sprint. And Karl... he couldn't have done a better leadout for me. Coming across him from behind was like a rocket using a planet's gravitational field to boost its speed. If you had to engineer a plan for how to win a sprint against superior talent, this was it.

So, like I said, I remember people like me, from the way-back days. I'm trying to figure out whether I should reconsider my earlier analysis (from 30 years ago) that such people were sad examples of those who can't, and try to compensate where they can. Whether I'm like the guy I remember, when I was 16 and discussing with my racing friends whether a SunTour or Campy rear derailleur was better, and this older guy who couldn't keep up with us on the rides lectured us about "not losing sleep over equipment." He had to find a way he was superior to us, but all we thought of him was that he wouldn't be so condescending if he could keep up. Those who can't do, criticize. Or, perhaps, sprint.

05/10/05- IT'S ALL A BLUR SOMETIMES
, just one more day on the bike, doing the same route you've done for 30 years, up the hill, down the hill, looking for something to differentiate one ride from the next. Or at least that's what you might think, reading my twice-weekly ramblings about the Tuesday-Thursday morning ride. I thought about that on the way home this morning, as I passed the starting point of the ride where, about two hours earlier, we (Kevin, Kevin C & Karl) met and noticed some of the exact same people passing by on Canada that we see every Tuesday & Thursday morning, at the exact same time. Routine. Ritual. Boring. But it's not, never has been, even after all these years. Why?

Because I'm on a bike, that's why. Because it's my own two feet driving me along. Because it's
something I choose to do, and something that I've apparently decided is one of those things that defines who I am. Because I notice new things each ride, or perhaps a different way of looking at what's been there for years. Because it's a social thing, riding with people who have become my friends over the years. Because it's a private thing, an opportunity to clear my head on a nasty climb if I want. Because I can compete with myself, or with others, or not at all (rarely, but it happens). Boredom is just something that I've never associated with being on a bike. As for being routine, or ritualistic, so is waking up every single day. The alternative is definitely worse!

So yes, my Tuesday/Thursday ride, over the same route, for all these years, is routine. It is a ritual. But it's also fun, sometimes exciting, there's always something new (if you care to look for it) (and it's kinda dumb not to!), and it feels a whole lot worse when something happens such that I don't get to ride. And if it hadn't developed into a rather strict routine/ritual, I might have found excuses for extended periods of time for why it wasn't "practical" to ride. And then, at 49, I wouldn't have that feeling that I'm stronger now than I was at 35.

So maybe you don't need to ride "more" as much as you need a ritual. Something that you do no-matter-what. A bit of time, a couple days a week, that everything else gets planned around. Once you've got that down, adding in a bit more mileage on other days, doing Centuries when the family permits... it becomes pretty darn easy. You've got your base miles, but more importantly, you've got your mind. A sense of self-definition that's constant, despite the world's attempts to twist & mold things on a daily basis. MY NAME IS MIKE JACOUBOWSKY. I'M A BIKEAHOLIC,
AND I DON'T WANT TO BE CURED!

05/09/05- DIDN'T RIDE YESTERDAY.
What more need be said? It would have been easier (not to ride) if it had decided to rain, but, for the first time in as long as I can remember, the skies actually passed up the opportunity to open up. It rained elsewhere, and it always looked like it was about to rain, but it didn't. Mother nature playing the cruelest of jokes on me, knowing that, on Mother's Day, the chances of me getting out on a ride approached zero, but giving me dark & foreboding skies to make me feel like I wouldn't have been riding anyway... then holding back on their promise of a drenching. It's unfair when it rains, and it's even more cruel when it threatens to but holds back.

05/05/05- HOPEFULLY THE LAST RAIN RIDE?
Got to be careful, 'cuz I sure don't want to jinx things. The Iron Pig (my rain bike) is riding a whole lot better now that it's got 175mm cranks and a functional freewheel. Kevin & Rob joined me for this morning's wet ride up King's, although Rob had actually left a bit earlier, concerned that his old touring bike was going to hold down his speed quite a bit. Riding in the rain is actually rather pleasant, especially when it's not too cold... if only it didn't wreck your bike! But I'm ready, really ready, really really REALLY ready, for the rain to be over. I'm ready for a drought. I'm ready to see the Northern California TV stations showing how unpatriotic everyone in Southern California is, watering their lawns & washing their cars when there's barely enough water to flush your toilet. That's how ready I am.

But if I can't have that, at least I'll marvel at how all the Redwood trees lining King's Mtn have an inch or two of super-bright brand new green tips at the end of their branches. It really is something to check out, absolutely striking in contrast to the color of the older leaves/needles/whatever Redwoods have. I've never seen it quite so noticeable; probably conditions are perfect at this exact time for massive new growth. Should have brought my camera, but didn't think there'd be much to see in the rain.


05/04/05- I *AM* DAVE STOLER!
Well, not really, but felt like it this evening as I had to bring my Iron Pig (1973 Cinelli, now my rain bike) back into commission because it's raining... again. [For those new to the game, Dave Stoler was the young bike-racing geek in the movie "Breaking Away", one of the all-time great films]

Had to work on it because the freewheel was near failure (very loose and made constant loud cracking noises all the time). So heck, you own a bike shop, replace the darned thing. Yeah, right. 120mm axle spacing means you can use only a 5-speed or narrow-6, and narrow-6 hasn't been made for years, and I was out of 5s. Which meant... gasp... I had to rebuild a freewheel. Haven't done that in... well... three decades. But otherwise I couldn't ride.

So, with the shop wondering what the heck I was doing (particularly since I'd fire anybody for offering to rebuild a freewheel for a customer, given the amount of time it takes and the likelihood of a ratchet spring failure), I grab a shoebox and get to work. Why a shoebox? 'Cuz you need something to capture all the small parts in!

What's the worst part of rebuilding a freewheel? If you're 49, it's counting the ball bearings in each race. Yuck. But an hour and a half later I've got a rebuilt Cyclo freewheel that runs great, repacked rear hub and, for a bonus, a new Phil BB.

But it really seemed like the soundtrack from Breaking Away ought to have been playing in the background. I even told one of my guys that, in real life, I *am* Dave Stoller. He said no, since I don't (and never did, even when I raced) shave my legs.

05/03/05- 7 DAYS SINCE RIDING UP THE HILL
and I felt every one of them. Last week I missed Thursday's ride due to the bicycle lobbying gig in Sacramento, and Sunday I rode the 100% flat 50k Delta Century ride with my son, so this morning's run up the hill felt just a little bit rude. Probably didn't help that I'm getting over a nasty cold too, but I'll use whatever excuses I can come up with. Even carried a handlebar bag with my better camera in it, and that must have added, what, another 15 pounds? More like 3.

It was the fast group today, with Kevin, Karl and Rob. I watched them ride up the hill for as long as I could; they even waited for me at the Park entrance, and then I got to watch them ride away yet again. I eventually got to the top, and they were nice enough to claim they'd arrived just shortly before. With me riding so much slower than normal nobody was making much of the sprints, so I was able to get a couple of nice shots on the run up to Skeggs.

Fortunately, I was able to keep off the weight that normally accumulates (far too quickly!) when I deviate from my normal routine. I've been known to add a pound a day at times- ouch! I'd really rather not pack extra weight prior to the double-metric Sequoia Century; with 11k feet of climbing, you feel it all. But heck, that's a whole month away, lots of opportunities to ride myself into the ground in the meantime. As long as it doesn't rain. Please, no more rain. Ever. The wildflowers are blooming, the hills are green enough already. Sigh. Has it really been 12 years since we've had a drought?


05/02/05- GREAT NEWS/WHAT SOME PEOPLE WILL DO TO GET OUT OF A RIDE.
Just heard that Jeff, my friend who had been diagnosed with liver cancer... we're told that it looks more likely that he has a massive liver infection. Not something you'd wish on anybody, but a whole lot better than the initial diagnosis. To say that I'm relieved is an understatement; presently, I'm suffering through a bit of a cold, and, in a moment when I was feeling a bit sorry for myself, it hit me that some people get sick and will never get better. So will Jeff be riding Sonora Pass later this year? I'm a bit doubtful of that, and I'm sure his wife would say no, Jeff's not doing any ride with me, ever again (because the only rides we do tend to involve rather nasty climbs). I'll take no for an answer on that one. For now. But like I said earlier, Jeff's reliable if nothing else.

05/01/05- DIDN'T SEEM ME AT GRIZZLY PEAK? Probably because I wasn't there! Today I chose to take my 12-year-old on his first organized bike event, the 50k version of the Delta Century (lots of pictures if you click the link). Not quite as much climbing as Grizzly Peak (about 100 feet total, including the two overpasses?), but a really nice day with a lot of really friendly people.

04/29/05- YES, MISSED YESTERDAY'S RIDE
, one of the few times that will ever happen. Instead I was in Sacramento, meeting with various legislators regarding bicycle matters. The new, politically-aware me. Well, sort of. I don't even know who the mayor is in the city I live, but I know a fair amount about who's likely to vote for & against AB523, a bill that sets aside a whopping $7 million for municipalities to compete to get funds for cycling projects. A virtual rounding error in a typical major CalTrans project, and yet we have to fight like dogs to make sure it's not reduced in the new budget. Also on the agenda were bills to encourage cities to adopt a new traffic signal, where appropriate, that has a separate green light for bikes, and another that would prohibit charging cyclists & pedestrians tolls on bridges. There were about 15 participating in the effort, led by the California Bicycle Commission (more details on the bills available on their website).

This was basically a low-key version of the big DC Bike Summit, and a whole lot easier to sink your teeth into. For the most part, the staffers we met with seemed both interested and supportive, a stance probably helped by the fact that so many were products of UC Davis, where cycling is a way of life. One thing did come up though; to some, cycling is something you do when you're in college, but once you get out into the world and get a job, that part of your life is behind you. Rather sad, that.


04/27/05 addendum- DOES BICYCLING AS A CURE HAVE ITS LIMITS? I hope not. This morning I got word that Jeff, one of the guys I ride centuries with from time to time (and one of the guys silly enough to have ridden with me up Sonora Pass) was just diagnosed with liver cancer. He'd been feeling like he had a bad case of the flu for the past week, and eventually went to the doctor when he wasn't feeling any better for way too long a time. For a cyclist, feeling bad for 5 or 6 days is way too long a time. Just not normal.

He was suppose
d to ride with me on the Wildflower Century in Chico; the photo on the left is him on last-year's ride. It's easy to get great pictures of him; he's always smiling, always friendly. Only now he faces a challenge that's a whole lot tougher than Sonora Pass. But he's tough, and he'll be back. He's nothing if not reliable, and I'm counting on him to be back on the bike, sooner than most would think. Because, as I've said so many times before, bicycling fixes just about everything. I (literally) pray that I've been right about that! --Mike--

04/27/05- SO WHY DID I TAKE THE TRAIN INSTEAD OF DRIVE? I type this as I'm on my way to Sacramento, for a bicycle lobbying effort with the California State legislature. Somehow I figured driving wouldn't be appropriate, but as I tried to figure out how to get there, without taking a bus for part of the trip... let's just say mass transit in the SF bay area still has a long way to go. I had to get on a local (CalTrain) train from Redwood City at 4:21pm, switch trains in San Jose for a 5:40 departure, and if all goes well I'll be in Sacramento at 8:40pm. That doesn't sound so bad, but the next later option would have had me on a bus from San Jose to Oakland. The whole thing seems a bit bass-ackward anyway, going south first before north. The return tomorrow night is still problematic; the train leaves Sacramento about 8:40pm, and I take it as far as Richmond where, at 10:20pm I transfer to BART, which I take to Oakland, where I transfer to a different BART train which will take me to the Millbrae CalTrain station where I catch the 12:20am train there. I *may* be home by 1am.

BUT... if I were driving, it would be a bit over two hours, alone, in a car during heavy traffic. Instead I'm sitting sorta comfortably on a half-full train, with a laptop open on one tray and some food on the adjacent seat's tray, checking to see if it's remotely possible to connect to an unsecured wireless network while traveling at 70mph. Answer: No. By the time you recognize its existence and try to connect, it's gone. That's OK, it's still given me a chance ot catch up on some "lost" emails that I never got around to. Now, I wonder if there'll be a signal I can snarf at the hotel? In the meantime, having pulled into Davis and thinking maybe long enough to steal a signal, everything's encrypted... including the mysterious SSID "ILoveDavisLumber." OK, glad somebody does. Well, we're finally hauling along, passing cars on nearby I88 as we head onto the Yolo Causeway just west of Sacramento.  Almost there.

04/26/05- SORRY 'BOUT THAT ONE, ROB!
Rough morning today as the legs just didn't seem to have it, and the "A" team (Karl, Kevin & Rob) showed up. I struggled up King's, watching the three of them from a safe distance for a bit, and then *poof* and they were gone. By the time I got to the top Kevin had already ridden on ahead, detouring slightly to his house so he could change his rear wheel (it was skipping pretty badly on the cogs). We headed down Swett Road a bit to meet him, which meant having to climb back up to Skyline, right to the place where our first sprint starts. Yuck I'm thinking, I'll just sit back and suck wheels today and let someone else take it. Unfortunately, that particular sprint takes place in slow motion and it didn't' take long to see that Rob, who'd taken the lead, had maxxed out. What the heck, no matter how bad I feel, you just gotta sprint, right? So I found some reserves and got to the top first. But that wasn't where I fouled Rob.

It was on the final Skyline sprint, where you're heading into SkyL'onda up that last little climb, that I would have been disqualified in any race. It was a pretty fast run up the hill, and I just wasn't holding my line, apparently cutting over a bit (at about the same time I found my front wheel up in the air for a moment). This really wasn't my day; I don't intentionally act like a dork in a sprint, but today that didn't matter. A bit later, on Old LaHonda, Kevin and Rob wanted to make sure nothing like that happened again so they just took off, leaving me well behind. Karl was nice enough to keep me company (and he's got enough racing experience that, if I took a bad line again, he'd probably just hook me and take me out!). Still, a nice morning to be out, and I did feel a whole lot better at the end of the ride than at the beginning.

04/25/05- WILDFLOWER CENTURY PAGE NOW UP.
Photos aren't great due to weather conditions, but you can also view photos from the '04 ride (without descriptions) which followed the same course.

04/24/05- WILDFLOWER CENTURY PART TWO.
Last year was the first time I'd ridden the Wildflower Century in Chico; I'd heard about it for years, but never made the long drive up there. Had a nice ride, but it was a pretty hot day (got up to about 94 if I recall correctly). This year was quite different, as it threatened the rain pretty much the entire ride (a thread that fortunately wasn't carried out) and temps ranged from 48 to 70... not bad weather for me at all. I'll get a page up shortly with photos and yes, I did come across quite a few of our customers, including Howard & Peggy & David. Overall it was possibly the easiest century I've ever done, possibly because it's the first one I've ridden since last year's Sequoia Century, after which I worked to lose a bit of weight. Definitely makes a difference!

04/21/05- WHAT A DIFFERENCE TWO DAYS MAKES!
On Tuesday it was just Kevin riding with me up the hill, and very slowly at that. And with Sea Otter just a couple days prior, it's not like my legs felt like doing anything more than a slow ride anyway. But today the "A" team showed up. Kevin, Karl and Rob. Yikes! And nobody even participating in the normal ritual of making excuses ahead of time for how they're going to ride slowly because of this or that. Serious bad news. But for some reason my legs responded, my lungs began to work and I didn't get totally blown apart halfway up the hill. Sure, towards the top Kevin & Karl passed me, but I felt like I could just keep cruising along, never hitting that point where you're thinking that, if you keep this up for another 30 seconds, you're going to collapse. To bad I didn't have a timer set, as it was probably my best time up the hill for the past couple of years.

Of course there's a price to be paid for going hard, and I was quite fearful it would be paid for on Old LaHonda, especially when Rob chose his usual spot to take a flyer. But for whatever reason Kevin & Karl didn't respond so we bid Rob adieu and continued at a civilized pace to the top, giving Rob the KOM (King of the Mountains) points. Not a problem, Rob earned it, as I'm sure he was pushing himself quite hard, believing that we were just behind him all the way to the end.

By the way, I learned that Karl had also ridden in the 45-49 age class at the Sea Otter Mtn Bike race. Only he rode expert, not beginner class, and did two laps in a time of only 3:03, good enough for 9th place and a huge amount of respect from anyone who's ridden that course. Well, from me anyway!

04/20/05- SEA OTTER MEMORIES.
Geez, a bit early to be reminiscing about a race that was just a few days ago isn't it? But I'm already suffering withdrawal. For me, doing a mountain bike race is so much better than doing a normal off-road ride. Why? Because things happen so fast I don't have time to think... don't have time to get scared and think about all the reasons why it's a crazy thing to be doing. No time to think about the fact that there's no way I'm good enough to make it up that hill without getting off the bike. No time to think about the sand bog that you come screaming down the hill into, the one that demonstrates why they use sand traps to stop runaway trucks on steep grades.

Plus, in a race, there's nobody with a radar gun ticketing you for going over 15 miles per hour. That seems like such a ridiculous thing; how can you not go faster than 15 miles per hour if you're having fun off-road? But then you look at the HAC-4 printout from the race and realize that your average speed is well under 10 miles per hour, and the time you spend above 20mph was pretty small. Top speed around 30, but I'm sure that's from a computer malfunction, 'cuz no question about it, I was doing at least 60 a couple of times! Well, it sure seemed like it.

And that final climb, the one where I managed to pass a whole lot of people (mostly because it was on a fire road so wide that even I could get past people)- the one time where I felt like my equipment was holding me back, as the old Klein Mantra's rear suspension wouldn't let me stand, and my grips were slowly sliding off the bars... now I want revenge! I want to do better. More racing. This is totally crazy stuff coming from a die-hard roadie who has no off-road skills whatsoever, but perhaps that's part of the attraction. I have no history to hold me back, no memories of how I might have ridden many years ago. Nothing to make me feel bad about being in a "beginner" class. And there is something fun about competition, whether it's with yourself or against others.

If not for the Wildflower Century this weekend
I'd be quite tempted to ride the Napa mtn bike race on Sunday. This is such strange stuff to be thinking... did somebody spike my water?

04/19/05- BACK TO THE ROAD RIDING AGAIN.
Not that my life as a mountain-bike-rider is entirely over; past history suggests that I'll probably ride next year's Sea Otter event again, and quite possibly with very few off-road rides in-between. But for today it was back to the road bike, meeting up with Kevin (who still doesn't understand why I don't ride the Sea Otter road race instead) and heading up King's. Nice, easy ride this morning, without Karl to push the pace or Steve to make sure no sprint opportunities are passed up. We'll probably do a harder ride on Thursday, and then Sunday I'll be up in Chico for the Wildflower Century... assuming the rain in the forecast has been replaced by something more favorable by then. Sure, I don't miss the Tuesday/Thursday morning rides no matter what the weather, but somehow I don't feel like driving 3+ hours so I can ride 100 miles in the rain.

04/17/05- MID-LIFE CRISIS PART TWO- MY LIFE AS A MOUNTAIN BIKE RACER!
Fear not, the Universe has not tilted on its axis, and I won't be replacing the Tuesday/Thursday-morning road ride with a mountain bike option anytime soon. But I did live up to my ill-timed comment last year (ill-timed in that there was somebody around to hear it) that even I could ride the Sea Otter course and survive... and ride it I did. And, truth be told, it was pretty cool.

110 people had signed up for the 45-49 beginner class, and according to the official results, 89 finished. Unfortunately it is called a race, and that generally gets me going. I thought I'd be immune, since it was a mountain bike race, and I'm not a pretty sight on a mountain bike. But there I am on the starting line, noticing my pulse was quite a bit higher than normal as I looked forward to my first mountain bike ride in a great many months. Oh, I didn't mention that? I'd thought it would be a good idea to get some off-road rides in, but somehow never got around to it. In fact, until two days before the race, I didn't even know which bike I was going to ride- my seriously-retro Trek 9800 first-year carbon hardtail with a 7-speed drivetrain, or my neo-retro Klein Mantra dual-suspension from 1999? Well, since I couldn't even find my 9800 for a while, the Klein Mantra was the choice. Hey, why not? Old bike for an... oh no, don't want to go there. Anyway, as long as you lay off the front brake (otherwise it tries to dive head-first into the ground) and don't stand up while pedaling, it works great!

This year's Sea Otter was a great course for people like me, as they removed one of the more-technical sections and the final climb was on a fire road. Nevertheless my heart rate may have been higher on some of the descents than on the climbs as I worked not just to keep up with those ahead, but to try and keep from being run over by those behind. At times I was in way over my head, but the same basic rules from road biking apply- if the other guy can take that line through, then so can I. Confidence is everything.

I was doing my best not to hold people up, and had probably found my place about midway through the field. On the other hand, when we got to the climbs I tended to move up pretty quickly, even on the fairly technical ones... just put it into a really low gear and get way way way forward on the bike and go. Of course, that led to my only two kabooms, as it doesn't matter how good you're doing if the guy in front of you suddenly stops to dismount and walk! Truthfully though, I really had no idea how I was doing relative to the rest of the field, but there remained the possibility, however slim, that it wasn't as bad as I thought going in. So, when we came to the final long climb, the one everyone seemed to fear, I just said to heck with it and went. I don't think anybody passed me on that climb, aside from two junior men who had started 10 minutes later than our group and had caught up... and I passed a whole lot of people. By the time we got to the part where you do the final half mile or so on the paved race track (a strange way to finish a mountain bike race!), there were more riders in sight in front of me and I just decided to give it everything all the way to the end, passing everyone I could. Some part of me thought of this as being not particularly sporting, but it was, as I said, a race, and I wasn't going to finish with anything left in the tank.

In the end I finished in 24th place, much higher than I expected. That's probably not a good thing; I don't need encouragement to take up something silly like mountain bike racing. Heck, I haven't even done a road race for a number of years! But it was a lot of fun, I did survive, and my time would have been good enough for 10th place in the class I race in next year (50-54). But of course I am greatly humbled by Todd, one of our staff in Redwood City, who placed 6th in the 19-24 Expert class with a 2-lap time of 3'05". Another of our Redwood City guys, Jason, rode in the 19-24 Sport class and placed 15th in his 1-lap race with a time of 1'34". My time for one lap was 1'48". I can't even imagine where I'd make up 14 minutes on that course, not to mention have the strength to do a second lap! And speaking of intensity, my average heart rate was 160, substantially higher than 140-or-so average on the Tuesday/Thursday road ride (probably because I can actually relax and rest when descending on a road bike, while off-road I'm more tense descending than doing anything else!).

04/16/05- KEEPING SECRETS FROM THE DIARY
is not something I usually do, but I've kept this one under wraps for a while, just in case things didn't work out. You see, last year I visited the Sea Otter mountain bike races, watched some of the cross country event, and was overheard telling someone "This doesn't look too technical; maybe I could even do it." Yeah, right, me the die-hard roadie, one of the ugliest things ever seen when off-road, doing a mountain bike race.

But, here I am in Carmel, the night before my 9:25am start for the beginner men's 45-49 cross-country race. 19 miles, 2700ft of climbing, and who knows how much walking! And I'm doing everything right, with new shoes I haven't worn before, a bike I haven't ridden in two years (my Klein Mantra, which my brother had borrowed; normally I ride a neo-retro Trek 9800 carbon bike that dates back to 1993 or so).

Don't look for photos taking during the event; I'll have my hands full trying to stay out of people's way when they're passing me!

04/14/05- UEYN'S BACK!
Just Kevin & I at the start this morning, although we picked up Ueyn partway up Kings. Of course, he'd already done the "morning" ride, starting at 6am... and of course, Kevin had already been swimming... these guys really make me look like a slacker, sleeping in until 7:05! Nice morning with great views, but dang, isn't it a bit late in the year for 39 degrees?

04/12/05- NO LAZY START TODAY
as I find Kevin, Karl & Rob (recently recovered from a broken collarbone) waiting for me. A bit colder than it ought to be, which doesn't do wonders for my breathing, or it could just be that, with this group, I'm looking for whatever excuses I can find!

Karl pushed the pace up the hill, using today as his "hard" day prior to the Sea Otter Road Race he's doing (along with Kevin) this Friday. I held on for... well, not very long. Then Kevin went past, and it wasn't long before I was barely hanging onto Rob's wheel, and then following it the last half of the climb from maybe 10 yards back. And this is what I do for fun? In some strange way, yes. Trouble is, I don't know when to give up, so if I can't climb, then I just gotta go for the sprints, as unlikely as it seems that I might prevail, especially after we picked up a bit more firepower at the top of King's, where Steve joined up with us. But somehow I did manage to hold them off on the first sprint just past Swett Road (which means that Karl probably wasn't trying) and then again at Skegg's. The nice thing about sprints is that they don't last too long, so the fact that I don't breathe well when it's cold isn't such an issue. Or maybe hearing my heavy breathing when it's cold intimidates everyone else?

But overall another nice ride, on a very nice day (nice because it didn't rain, which seems highly unusual lately, and has greatly lowered my definition of what "nice" means!). And, at the end of the ride, a reminder that cycling is something you never have to give up, as we came across Fast Eddy and Sean... that would be 73, soon to be 74-year-old Sean, who was going to head out with the remnants of our group for another 30 miles or so, at a pretty hard pace. Unfortunately I had places to be, people to see, so I bid them adieu and headed back home. Life is both good and apparently long on a bike!

04/10/05- STARTED OUT AS A LAZY SORTA DAY
Sunday, with no early-morning pre-church ride, just a vague plan to get out later with the kids and encourage them to ride a bit. But of course one kid's complaining about an upset stomach, and the other isn't willing to wait around, so my wife & daughter go out and do the Bicycle Sunday thing, while I have to suffer at home watching OLN's coverage of the Paris-Roubaix race (where George Hincapie took 2nd place, go George!). Eventually my son did feel better, so we rode out to Woodside and north on Canada Road and back. Even though Bicycle Sunday had long since ended, there was little car traffic on Canada, and no zig-zagging little kids & rollerbladers either.

Oh, and did I mention how nice it was to not have to wear leg warmers & long-fingered gloves, nor worry about rain? We've earned this nice weather!

But 12 miles isn't quite enough for me, even on a lazy day, but it's 6pm so you're racing the sun... what to do?

Easy. No, hard. You head out to King's but instead of heading up towards Skyline, you stay to the left and go up Entrance Way, which is steep enough, but also the back route to the nefarious Summit Springs Road. The meanest, nastiest little climb in the Woodside area. How nasty? In just .69 miles it gains 500 feet (from Trip Road to where it dead ends). If you haven't tried it, well, it's not one of those things that should be on your list of things to do before you die, but if you really want to know what a steep climb is, it's worth doing... especially since it does end after a mercifully-short distance (although it won't seem like it at the time!). Plus, it dead-ends into a pile of dirt. Somehow seems appropriate.

Best way to do Summit Springs is to start at Trip Road; it's about halfway between Highway 84 (Woodside Road) and Kings. Looks innocent enough at the bottom, but gets serious very quickly. Many will bail out at the 2/3rds point, where there's a road that goes off to the right that connects up to Kings (via Entance Way, as mentioned above). But it's the very last part of the climb that's to die for.

04/07/05- I'M READY FOR SOMETHING DIFFERENT.
Like no more rain. Ever. The weather.com forecast said it was likely to rain in the morning, but I went to bed not really believing it; the skies were pretty clear, not much breeze, and besides, doesn't the water run out eventually? I didn't have have my rain bike available, as it's in severe need of a new bottom bracket and hub overhauls. But I wake up in the morning to wet streets and a light misty drizzle. OK fine, I can put up with that. Still, it takes quite a bit longer to run down the extra stuff you need to bring when it's raining (different jacket, shoe covers, glove covers, hat for under the helmet, etc) so I arrive at the start about five minutes late. This is well beyond my normal punctuality (+/- about 30 seconds or so), prompting Kevin to give me a call from his cell phone, making sure I wasn't wimping out.

Darrell was waiting with him, making it three of us, which usually means a fairly fast ride. Why? Because even if one person isn't feeling that strong, the other two are probably going to push each other. When there's only two, things tend to be a bit more civil. But fast ride it wasn't, at least not up Kings Mtn, as Kevin truly was looking dead today, and not trying to hide it. I made sure to keep him in sight while Darrell went on up the hill (it's not a whole lot of fun if you're alone and get a flat, and wet roads make flats much more likely). At the top Kevin had had enough and headed back down, which, a few minutes later, might not have seemed like a bad idea for myself and Darrell either, as it started raining. At first it was the sort of thing where you weren't sure if it was really rain or just stuff falling from the trees, but that sorted itself out pretty quickly... nearly all of the ride up on Skyline was in a fairly heavy and pretty cool (43 degrees) rain. Just what my non-rain-bike needed.

But it did feel very good to be out there, even though I hadn't slept well the night before (that sleep stuff is over-rated), and did a decent job of keeping up with Darrell. All in all a very pleasant ride, although I'm willing to bet it would have been even more pleasant if it hadn't been raining!

04/05/05- LIES, LIES, & MORE LIES.
I should be used to that by now. When Kevin says he's feeling sluggish, don't believe him. I was looking forward to a civil ride, the type where you can possibly carry on a conversation while climbing the hill. And, for a short while, that looked possible. After all, it was just me & Kevin (& King's Mtn). I started up relatively slowly and, at first, Kevin did look like he was dragging a bit. But then, shortly up the hill, there was Karl. I don't know if he came from the top-down or what, but he was waiting for us, looking like one imagines a shark does while circling its prey. And, what do you know, Kevin suddenly starts feeling a whole lot better. And I'm hoping that we're going to stop at the park entrance, so Kevin can water a tree. Not today.

Normally I'd be game for a hard ride, especially after a good ride on Sunday. But this morning, I was having a really tough time getting any sort of rhythm going on the climb, and my heart rate just wouldn't come down to where it ought to be for the (lack of) effort. I pretty much stayed with them, but even during the first half of the climb, where I was just a bit ahead, I was tortured continuously by the sound of their voices in casual conversation, while I'm gasping for air. By the time I got to the top I'm thinking "OK, so what's all this stuff I write about, where maybe you start out feeling dreadful but things get better as the ride progresses? I'm ready for better, but not feeling it!" Karl makes matters worse by pushing the pace south on Skyline up to the base of the first sprint; he later explained that he didn't know I'd been blown off the back- he was just trying to make sure I was a bit winded before that sprinter's hill.

Fortunately I caught up at the top of that hill, and from there on started feeling human again. The second sprint (at Skegg's) surprised me, as I managed to get past Karl somehow, and the final sprint was all mine as Kevin was nice enough to go around me just before the start of that last hill before Sky L'onda, giving me an exceptional draft to help launch me the final 200 meters or so. The rest of the ride was uneventful but beautiful, as everything is incredibly green after the recent rains. I ended the ride a bit earlier than normal, with that nice feeling in the legs that yes, I did something. And an added bonus is that the scale is saying nice things too. 172lbs, 7 to go. Don't know if it's realistic to actually get to 165 or not, we'll see.

04/03/05- REVENGE OF BRUNO.
In advance of his latest TREK-Travel gig, Bruno, our Redwood City service manager, is back on the bike in a serious way, trying to get ready for those mountains in France. This morning he decided to take it out on me again (he rode on our Tuesday/Thursday ride earlier in the week), but for what? Have I been that bad a boss?

The torture began with the hour of the ride- I was to meet him at 8:30am at Arastradero & Page Mill. Hey, that's not so bad. Except for the beginning of Daylight Saving's Time, that is, which made the meeting time effectively 7:30, and since it takes a bit over half an hour to get there, it meant getting up at the equivalent of 6:20am... and I am so not a morning person! And for a ride up Page Mill, probably my least-favorite climb, at that.

But Bruno's one of the good guys, and with a spot of foul weather scheduled to hit a bit later in the day, it seemed like a morning ride made some sense. As usual, Page Mill had its way of getting to me, but Bruno was relatively kind, not taking too much advantage of the fact that I don't have all that much power anymore on the really steep stuff. It was actually a pleasant ride to the top, with the relatively-cool temperatures (45 degrees near the top) keeping me from overheating, although my lungs don't work so well when it's colder.

After heading north on Skyline we dropped down the west side of Old LaHonda, admiring the views and avoiding the horse poop in the middle of the road. After a quick run back up to Skyline we had breakfast at Alice's- their Sunday "Ducatti Special" (two eggs, two pieces of French Toast and two pieces of bacon). Given what we presumably smelled like we sat outside, thankful for the space heaters (and, in my case, hot chocolate; I doubt Bruno's orange juice did much to take off the chill).

41.5 miles, 3734ft of climbing (HAC-4 bike computers are pretty cool), 16.3mph average speed... but more importantly, someone to share the ride with and getting to see an awful lot of our customers out on the road.

03/31/05- THE TALE OF THE TAIL.
What a difference a couple of days makes. The skies cleared beautifully, warmer temps returned, and my primary bike (Trek 5900) responded beneath me as if I was in control. At the start of the ride I found Bruno waiting, a friendly-but-scary face to see (as he's climbed Alpe d'Huez in 54 minutes, putting him in rather elite company). He'd noted the passing of another cyclist, older guy on a red bike- that would be Steve L, getting a head start up the hill. Shortly after Darrell (whose name I've spelled Daryl in the past) arrived and we took off.

With Darrell along we had at least one climber who was going to push the pace up the hill, so I hit the bottom hard, even harder than usual, to see if I could hold him off for a bit. Nothing doing, and not for a lack of trying on my part. At the first timing point my computer was showing 2:28, the sort of pace you might do for a one-way suicide mission that you don't plan to return from. Darrell was still there. So I backed off a bit (not that I could have done otherwise) and figured I'd shut down a bit and regroup with Bruno... only Darrell stayed within reach, and I hadn't completely hit empty, so I kept going with him up to the park entrance. I figured he'd slow down there a bit and we'd wait for Bruno, but he didn't... he just kept on going. With Bruno's quick arrival I continued on up, surprised that there was anything left in my legs, and equally surprised that Bruno wasn't passing me. But he was just a bit behind. That uncomfortable sort of behind, where the slightest faltering on your part gives the other guy the mental edge to pick it up and go flying past. I remained content to ride at a steady pace, a whole lot slower than at the start, and not expecting anything better than a mid-27-minute time for the climb, if that.

A bit past the halfway mark we reached Steve L, and shortly after that Kevin showed up, riding down the hill to meet us. Darrell was still a bit ahead, and Bruno... always just a bit behind. Lurking. A vulture looking for weakness in its prey. But my legs kept going. By the time we got to the final hairpin (at the archery range, where you pass under the high voltage lines) it looked like I could, with a strong finish, hit something around 27 minutes. This surprised me, as I hadn't been riding for time this morning, but the motivation was there as I was being pushed from behind (by Bruno's relentless presence) and pulled from ahead (by the clock). Entering the final straightaway I got to watch Darrell finish in around 26:20 or so, and I managed to drag myself to the top in 26:55. Bruno was only 25 seconds behind, and I don't honestly remember if Kevin was ahead or behind, but since he only rode 1/3rd of the hill, does it really matter anyway? Steve was maybe a minute or two behind Bruno, saving himself for whatever sprints might come later.

A nice cruise south on Skyline, followed by a fast westward run on 84 (thanks to the mild offshore flow!) to West Old LaHonda. No total carnage this time, just partial as Kevin & Darrell rode off the front on the return section, with me in the middle between them and Bruno & Steve. Hate it when that happens; if you give up, you risk shutting down adn getting dropped like a rock by the guys behind you. But dang you feel lonely out there, so you chase, and chase, and on the twisty stuff through the trees actually make some ground and catch up right at the end (no doubt because Kevin and Darrell were probably taking it easy on that part).

When we got back to the start we met up with 73-year-old Sean, the speed demon who proves that age need not be an excuse for slowing down. Kevin, Steve, Bruno & Darrell all headed south with him for a few more miles, while I counted my blessings for surviving a relatively-fast ride and headed on home, but not before spotting a low-flying and rather large red-tailed Hawk circling overhead. Not today. Today I felt at least somewhat alive. Today the Hawk will have to stalk someone else.

03/30/05- FIRST DAY OF SUPERSALE A SUPER SUCCESS!
Well, we survived it anyway. Sales are always pretty tough on me, as I have to get price changes into the computer, print up sale flyers, publicize whatever needs to be publicized on the website, help get all the banners hung up in the store (can't have a sale without looking like a used car lot, y'know?) etc. Sleep is over-rated. Or not. Right now, it seems strange to think I'd want to get up early tomorrow morning and ride, but once I get on the bike, once I turn the pedals over for the first time as I immediately climb away from my house... the world will be a better place. It always is.

03/29/05- WHAT HAPPENED TO TUESDAY?
What happened indeed! A day late getting Tuesday's ride up, as things kind of got away from me with all the preparations for both SuperSale (which started today) and our 25th Anniversary Sale (which starts on Saturday). I did ride Tuesday morning... sort of. First, seems I didn't hear the normal part of the alarm, and woke up violently 10 minutes later to the really annoying noise it makes when you sleep through the first part. Plus, it's raining. OK, downstairs to drag the Iron Pig (rain bike) out of the garage, the rain bike that's been getting more than its share of use this year and showing signs of a few too many wet rides and too few hours of maintenance. But despite the fact that it's raining, it seems almost pleasant out there.

Too bad the bike was anything but pleasant. Every turn of the cranks elicited a very loud crunching and sometimes crackling noise, as whatever's left of the bottom bracket bearings are deforming and breaking up. By the time I (the only person on the ride) get to the base of King's Mtn, it's difficult to believe the cranks aren't going to completely seize up. Still, I ride down Greer Road, thinking... well, not sure what I was thinking, but it seemed like a good idea to stay off the hill as long as possible. But realistically, there's no way this bike's going very far. So I reluctantly turn around and head for home. Reluctantly because it really did seem like a nice day for a ride in the rain. 53 degrees, light wind, little traffic. Sigh.

03/27/05- THAT'S ONE NASTY HILL.
But what is it about Page Mill that makes it so tough? There are many other similar climbs in terms of elevation gained and distance (Tunitas Creek comes to mind). But there's something about the bottom part of Page Mill that keeps you from setting a pace, keeps you from settling in, at least until you get to the park entrance about a mile or two up. About 35 miles this morning, out through Portola Valley, up Page Mill to Skyline, north to 84 and back down into Woodside. Curiously, almost nobody else on the road. I would have thought quite a few others woudl be doing what I was- trying to get in a nice ride before church or family obligations on Easter Sunday.

03/24/05- IT STOPPED RAINING!
It almost felt wrong to be riding without rain, but sure felt great to be off the Iron Pig (my rain bike). The roads were still a bit of a mess in places, but not so bad that I wished I'd had my other bike. At the start were Jason, Todd & Karl (yeah, fast Karl), and we picked up Kevin along the way. Karl took off hard on the climb up King's, with me trying to grab his seatpost to keep up with him. We waited for the rest at the park entrance, where I was really hoping that Kevin might have to water some trees, giving me a bit more than 30 seconds to catch my breath. It appeared that Kevin & Karl wanted to have fun seeing if they could melt their rear tires on the climb so I watched them ride off, spotting them a bit of distance (more than I should have) before sprinting to catch up. At that point I then waited for Todd and we rode up together for a bit, and then about halfway up the hill I connected with Jason and sent Todd on ahead. I make it sound like I'm in control of things when I say that I sent someone on ahead; a closer approximation to the truth would be that I couldn't keep up.

Jason rode a much stronger second half of the climb; I don't think he really knows yet how strong he is. When he figures it out, I'm sure I'll be seeing his backside!

It was quite a bit cooler up on top; 41 degrees at one point, making our group look pretty impressive as we exhaled clouds of condensing air. But 41 degrees and dry is greatly preferable to 44 degrees and raining, so no complaints! The west-side Old LaHonda loop was ridden at a surprisingly-civilized pace, which was a great relief since it was now just Kevin & Karl with me, Todd and Jason having continued down 84 for a longer ride out to the coast. All in all, a great day to be out on a bike, and the first time I really felt like myself since my week layoff in Wisconsin. First time the scale showed something I wanted to see too!

03/22/05 2:08pm- WHO'LL STOP THE RAIN?
That's (predictably) the song on the radio right now. Maybe they'll follow it up with Supertramp's It's Raining Again. Last I saw, we were supposed to be having scattered showers, gradually breaking up and maybe even a chance to see the sun. Late-breaking news- 5:38pm There's a hole in the sky with something blue showing through! Actually a bit of contrast; no longer is the entire world shades of gray. Hope springs eternal!

03/22/05- SO YEAH, IT DID REALLY DUMP ON US
but I wouldn't have missed it for the world. Kevin & Ueyn showed up at the start, for a drizzly run 3/4 of the way up King's. Then it stopped drizzling. By the time we got to the top it was, as predicted, really dumping. Low-visibility dumping. Worse, we picked up Karl (traded him for Ueyn, who had to head back down the hill to get to work), who didn't seem to be any slower despite not having ridden over the weekend (he was his team's masseuse at the San Dimas bike race), so there was no letting up on the pace. By the time we got to west Old LaHonda I was pretty fried, and got to watch as Kevin & Karl rode off into the distance.

Was it a silly ride? Yes. But fun. Even standing in the rain at Sky L'onda as we put on our last pieces of dry clothing (there's something kinda odd about being out in the open, in the pouring rain, putting on your gear... wouldn't normal people find some cover?). And descending at reasonable speed down wet roads that most people would be tempted to take at a crawling pace... not sure that's normal either. Probably because it just doesn't seem normal to not hit your brakes, but if you do, that's when you go down in the wet. Thank goodness this is instinctive stuff that I no longer have to think about, because it doesn't make sense.

03/21/05 4:34pm- MIKE, IT'S KEVIN, IT'S SUPPOSED TO BE REALLY DUMPING TOMORROW, YOU GONNA RIDE?
Why does he even bother to call? I'm nothing if not consistent; like he's got to ask if I'm going to ride in a downpour? A number of years ago I might have decided to wait for a nicer day, but as you get older, and you see day after day after day of nasty weather, you start wondering how many more nicer days you're going to see! And eventually you realize the truth- it's up to you to make a nicer day. It's all about attitude, not the weather. You determine what a nice day is and isn't. And there's something to be said for thumbing your nose at convention anyway. Especially since Billy, one of our staff, taught me the secret. When it's raining nastily, wear a cheapie cycling hat under your helmet. Amazing what a difference it makes! No more water making your glasses useless, no more sweat pouring down into your eyes. So simple.

03/20/05- SPRING MAY HAVE SPRUNG A LEAK, BUT WEST ALPINE IS CALLING.
Sure seems like it! March has been annoyingly up-and-down, weather-wise, with a wonderful warm spell just over a week ago, followed by icky stuff. But ride I must, especially after being off the bike for a week due to my trip to Wisconsin. So this morning I was going to ride no-matter-what and convinced Kevin & Todd to go with me on what was most certainly going to be a nasty wet one. But it didn't work out that way!

The skies were threatening as I started out, so riding the Iron Pig (my rain bike) seemed like a good thing. As Todd & I headed up over Jefferson to meet up with Kevin, we came across John, the guy who regularly starts out just ahead of us on King's (giving us a rabbit to chase). His plan was to ride up King's because... well, because that's all he really knows. Six months of riding and the only route he's taken to Skyline is King's Mtn. Wouldn't you think somebody would get bored of riding up King's all the time? Oh, right, I've done it well over 1500 times... well, we weren't going to let that happen to John, so we invited him along on our ride, since we were heading up Old LaHonda. Actually, I'm beginning to feel a bit like the Pied Piper, as I pick up new riders along the way on many of my rides.

So Todd, John & I meet up with Kevin and his friend "Long" Bob at the base of Old LaHonda and head up the hill at what was supposed to be a moderate pace. Right. But we did regroup at the top, marveling at two things- the fact that not a drop of rain had fallen, and that I was terribly over-dressed and almost hoping for some seriously-foul weather. But this was going to be a ride when the skies always looked threatening, but nothing came of it.

John had to head back down the hill due to time constraints, while the rest of us enjoyed a pleasant run down the west side of Old LaHonda, connecting to 84 and passing through LaHonda on our way to West Alpine. I don't know why West Alpine is one of my favorite roads; it's certainly got the potential for being nasty, and today was no exception. Todd, "Long" Bob & Kevin charged on up the road at a pace I could hold for maybe the first mile or so before feeling the effects of last week's lack of riding. I kind of expected to see them stop & regroup at the midpoint of the climb, where West Alpine connects to the road heading into Portola State Park, but not today! That's OK, not a bad thing for me to remember what it's like to be off the back once in a while. Well, OK, I get quite few such opportunities. But, as Kevin is fond of saying, that which doesn't kill you makes you stronger. But did Nietzsche ever ride a bike?

By the time we got back to Woodside I was feeling pretty good, but not so good that I had to feel too jealous of the fact that Kevin, Todd & "Long" Bob were going to do another climb up Skyline (via King's) while I had to get back in time to make it to church (wouldn't be a good idea to be late this morning, since my wife was singing in the Choir for the first time in... well, first time in 25 years anyway). Left at 7:35am, arrived back at 10:30, two good climbs, nice company and better weather than expected. What's not to like?

03/18/05- DIDN'T RIDE YESTERDAY MORNING
since I finally got home at 2:30am. I did wake up at 7am, but was just barely coherent enough to realize that I had a body separated some distance from a brain, with little hope of the two working together in the near future. Was it from the extra-long day due to the time change? That might have affected the brain. Perhaps the body could have been affected by too much fried cheese in Wisconsin. I tried to eat well, and even had fish entrees for three of the four dinners there. Of course, the first one was an only-in-Wisconsin fish plate- salmon wrapped in Bacon. Was it as good as it sounds? Sad to say it was.

With no ride Thursday morning, and a bathroom scale that told a tale that won't be repeated, there was no choice but to ride this morning. Called up Kevin, who needed a ride as well (he missed riding Thursday due to work, one of those 2 or 3 days/week he had to fly... tough job being a pilot!), so out we went this morning, into the rain. Didn't see anybody else out there; on our regular Tuesday/Thursday schedule we'd see a few, even in the rain. Has everybody gone to a Tuesday/Thursday schedule?

Thank goodness my computer battery died so I have no idea how slow we actually were, although the fact that I arrived home about 15 minutes later than normal was definitely an indication. Still nice to be out there, rain & all, although it's pretty annoying that I left 75 degree weather to head to Wisconsin last Sunday, and arrive back just as it gets nasty again. Not fair!

03/17/05 1:04am- GREAT, I'VE GOT A WINDOW SEAT! (Maybe, but is it on the inside or the outside of the plane?).
It's been quite the long trip, three full days of product meetings in Wisconsin, too many meals with fried cheeses, no bike riding since last Thursday (and yes, I feel like I've probably gained a pound a day) and, in all likelihood I won't get to ride in the morning (Thursday 3/17) since I'm typing this on a plane at 1:07am enroute to San Francisco.

I have vague memories of it being fun to fly when I was a kid, memories that are greatly in conflict at the moment. This flight (UA 161 Chicago to SF) was supposed to leave at 9:05, and finally got off the ground around 10:45. Why? Because there was no crew available, due to bad weather in Atlanta. Apparently they're not supposed to have the passengers board until the flight crew arrives, but, they explained (after we'd been sitting in the plane for an hour), somebody goofed.

So what happens as we get older and flying doesn't seem to be so fun anymore? Has flying actually gotten a whole lot worse, or is it that, when you're younger, you don't care so much about traveling to new places, but it's kinda cool that you can travel at 500 miles per hour... but when you're older, the cool thing is where you're going, and the flying time just delays you?

03/16/05 9pm- MAN, THAT WAS THE WORST LANDING IN MY LIFE!
Not me saying that; rather, it was the pilot of the regional jet talking with the flight attendant after we landed in Chicago. The guy had managed to one-wheel the landing... hard... but thankfully brought down the wheel on the other side nicely. Then he proceeded to slip sideways a bit down the runway before straightening out. As we exited the plane and noticed how the cockpit looked like a fancy video game console, we also noticed the pilot looked about 20 years old. And the way he said "Man, that was the worst landing in my life" was along the lines of the Spiccoli character in the movie Fast Times at Ridgemont High saying "Dude, I'm sooooo wasted!"

03/14/05- WELL, IT IS WISCONSIN, AFTER ALL!
So I've traded the relatively-sunny and dramatically-warmer weather of Northern California for the 30-ish with occasional snow flurries and generally-icky weather of Wisconsin. Why would I do something like that? Why indeed. Apparently it's all part of a plan to make a better bottle opener, or at lest a more convenient one. I'm at my home-away-from-home, Trek bicycles, attending product meetings where we focus on making sure nobody can beat the stuff coming out of Waterloo, Wisconsin.

The day after I arrive (that would be today) is always the roughest, as I'm getting up at the equivalent of 5am for a series of meetings that run essentially non-stop through 6pm (4pm equivalent sensible, er I man West Coast time). We covered just about everything Bontrager, but I'd be endangering my life if I gave you any details. But I am going to let something slip out- the new, much-improved Bontrager seatpost/bottle-opener combo. You think I'm kidding? I wouldn't make something like that up. You think it's vaporware? Nope, they showed us a real live demo! Using a real live production seatpost (as if a balsa wood mockup would stand up to a Wisconsin beer bottle anyway). I even took a picture to prove it.

By the way, in case you haven't figured it out, I won't be making the Tuesday-morning ride, but I believe Kevin will be there to punish anyone showing up. By the time I make it back, I'll have probably put on about 10 pounds and added 2 minutes to my time up Kings. Oh, the things I do for Trek...

03/10/05- FINALLY FIGURED OUT MY PLAN.
Good thing to know after all these years. This morning, as I was reflecting upon the ride while at work, I was thinking- thinking about why it mattered that I rode up King's Mtn in 26:40 this morning, or why it matters that I contest sprints with Karl or whoever else shows up. Or why it matters that I eat rabbit food (salads) for lunch. It's that mortality thing, sort of. It's a desire to be in better shape at 50 (which is about a year away now) than at 35. Turning back the clock, or at least stalling it for a while. And so far, I'm succeeding.

So that's another reason I look forward to mornings like today, the first one since October that it was warm enough to go without leg warmers and long-fingered gloves. A day when Kevin & Karl chose to challenge each other up the hill, with me watching for as long as I could, but not feeling like there was that much in me... and yet I still managed a pretty fast (for me) 26:40 time. Met up with Steve L at the top of the climb; looks like he's making a habit lately of starting out a few minutes ahead, giving us a rabbit to chase. All in all a very nice ride, faster than many, fierce yet friendly. A great way to start the day, perhaps a great way to start the next 10 or so years.

03/08/05- PLAYED THE PIED PIPER
this morning, or so it seemed as we added more people as we rode. the ride began pretty gloomily; nobody at the start and a very thick fog. For once I was completely in tune with my surroundings! I wasn't feeling great but certainly a lot better than yesterday, when I might have been fighting off a very brief bout of the flu (sore muscles everywhere but otherwise OK). Don't know why but I did start my stopwatch at the bottom of the hill, with the intent of making it up in under 30 minutes. I rode at a fairly moderate pace, about 45 seconds off a really fast ride at the first creek crossing. Fine, I figure, I can do this, maybe a ride alone will clear my head a bit. Except... what's that up ahead? At the park entrance Ueyn & ...darn, forgot his name again... (Cyrus)anyway, two fast guys lying in wait for me. And, they told me, Steve (who hasn't shown up in quite a while) several minutes up ahead. No rest for the wicked today! So after the briefest of pauses I continue upward, out of the fog (both literally and figuratively) with something to share the ride with beyond my labored breathing.

We caught up to Steve maybe a mile up the road, and by the time we got to the large clearing, it was looking like a 28-minute time was possible. Hey, I'm up for that! I never felt on the edge of collapse, although my heart rate was sitting pretty high (which, I've learned, is fine as long as it mirrors my effort; it's when it either won't kick up or stays high regardless of effort that I know things aren't working quite right). At the final timing point (the last clearing, about half a mile from the top, where there's a house up on a hill to the right), I was at exactly 26 minutes. Two minutes left. As long as I didn't fall apart (entirely possible on that final stretch!) I could do it. And I did. Only it turned out I was a minute off; somehow I'd read my computer wrong and my final time was actually 26:55, not 27:55. A rather pleasant surprise!

We wait briefly for Steve to make his way to the top and then the four of us head southward towards Sky L'onda, when, on the descent, we find Kevin riding to meet us. What a change from a ride that started with just me. At least for today, the more the merrier!

03/06/05- BEAUTIFUL DAY NOT TO RIDE THE TOUR OF THE UNKNOWN VALLEY
but the usual suspects all had reasons they couldn't make it, and while I don't mind going to a ride on my own, it's not a whole lot of fun to drive several hours each direction alone. Too bad, as the Tour of the Unknown Valley will always mean something special to me, since it runs past my Grandparent's ranch in Maxwell (which is near Willows, or Williams, or Colusa, or some other place you've never heard of, about, about halfway between Sacramento and Redding).

So instead I take advantage of a spectacular day, the first one where I haven't needed leg warmers in many, many months, to do a reverse of my normal Tuesday/Thursday ride, bringing along my camera gear (with my "Fred" bag mounted on the front of my bike) and hoping for some nice pictures. Surprisingly, not as many people out in the hills as I thought there'd be, but I still managed to get some nice shots on Old LaHonda.

On the way up I came across Laura, one of our Los Altos customers (and a fan of Amy) who was riding strongly up the hill on her Project One Trek. A bit further up the hill and I found Berry Stevens, the guy who's almost single-handedly responsible for turning Belmont's Waterdog Lake area into a mountain biking mecca. And then, towards the top of the climb, I came across one of two families heading back down the hill with about-12-year-old-kids who'd apparently managed to make it all the way to the top of the climb. A very impressive accomplishment!

At the very top of Old LaHonda I got to give directions to a car full of people looking for Highway 84, so they could head out to the coast. No big deal normally, until as they were driving off I noticed the Nebraska license plates... could be they were going to see the Pacific Ocean for the first time! Things we take for granted living out here. Heading down the other side I encountered another customer, Pel, who's recovering from some work on his knee and taking it a bit easy (he's normally one of those animal types that does double centuries in his sleep, along with his wife Deb).

Riding back up to Skyline I was still in semi-tourist mode, content to stay that way for the remainder of the ride. Or so I thought. That long, obnoxious stretch of Skyline, heading south uphill towards King's, just begs to be gotten out of the way as quickly as possible. Something clicked and, for about 15 minutes, it was time to hammer. No time for photos; instead I was watching as my heart rate climbed steadily, eventually hitting 178, a number I haven't seen in some time. No doubt the warmer weather helped!

03/03/05- FRESH MEAT!
Or maybe pulverized meat as a new guy showed up and showed a few of us that it's not just Kevin & Karl who can climb fast. Normally my leadout at the bottom leaves a fair amount of carnage in its wake, especially amongst newcomers who get discouraged because they don't realize that I'll flame out shortly. But dang, Jeff P was feeling no pain at all! So I'm hauling Jeff, Kevin & Karl as far as I can (which wasn't as far as normal, probably because, quite frankly, I'm not used to three guys on my butt making it look easy!), and then regroup for a bit at the park entrance for Ueyn & Pete, both of whom were sensible enough to not try and catch this morning's bullet train. As the group continued, I held on for a minute or two before dropping back to the land of the living.

Nice morning, moderate temps and no fog on Skyline. A little bit of water in the corners kept insane descending to a minimum though. We didn't get to see how long Jeff P can hold up, as he had to turn back on Skyline to get to work. Good thing; don't think I wanted to see him & Karl pushing the pace on Old LaHonda! Well, truth is I wouldn't have been in a position to see that happen anyway, as I would have been off the back pretty quickly. For some reason the remaining riders (Kevin, Ueyn, Karl & Pete) were content to be relatively civilized on the first section of Old LaHonda, with Karl making it tough on the "return" section. I managed to hold on until just before the part near the top where it flattens out a bit, which, surprisingly, came after the other guys dropped off. So, all in all, a pretty nice ride. Until-

Until, on Tripp road, I make the suggestion that we detour up Summit Springs. Why? I don't know. Just wanted to make sure my legs felt like I'd ridden, I guess. Or mabye it was because I spotted that Kevin had a 23-tooth cog on the back? Whatever the case, it was fun adding something new to the ride, but not so much fun that I think we'll make it a regular feature.

03/01/05- TWO DAYS LATE GETTING THIS POSTED
, something I'll try not to make a habit of. Been busy, but still... Tuesday's ride had Ueyn & Karl showing up, along with a part of me. Just didn't feel like the old self... or maybe tha's exactly what I felt like? Kevin would have been there but for a trip to the dentist for a root canal. By the time we got to Skyline I was feeling better though, and since Karl was feeling worse, I had a shot at a couple of sprints that I'd normally get to watch from the back. We did come across one of our customers (whose name escapes me) towards the top of Kings, and he rode with Ueyn along Skyline until he got a flat. Said he had what he needed, but wished we'd been together to help him out (by the time I heard about it Karl & I were three miles down the road).

02/27/05- UNDER THE WEATHER, IN THIS CASE,
means literally "under" the weather! With the forecast predicting showers in the morning, turning into rain later in the day, I figured it made sense to get out early. Kevin K & Kevin S showed up for a nice ride up Old LaHonda, down the other side to San Gregorio, north to Tunitas where we did the Los Lobitos detour (needed to get in a few more hills, y'know?) and then up the remainder of Tunitas. At times I was just barely hanging on which, of course, I blame on riding the Iron Pig (my rain bike) instead of the 5900. Plus being rather over-dressed and carrying way more stuff than needed (although I left the Ark-building materials at home).

It was, in a way, a homecoming for the Iron Pig. It had been at least 20 years since its last trip up Tunitas Creek, and a good 30 years since the days when a quick trip up Tunitas was an exercise in pain... for the other guys. The Iron Pig (ok, my Cinelli) was rarely out-climbed back in the day, which kinda makes a mockery of my excuses now (wheelbase too long, fork flops due to excessive rake, too heavy, 170mm cranks that are too short etc). Today I was just happy to be out there with friendly company.

Quite a few other friendly folk out on the road today; on the left you see a photo of the Sunday 8am Woodside ride, turning onto Old LaHonda for one of my favorite rides- over Old LaHonda to LaHonda, and then up West Alpine back to Skyline. And hey, is that three Chain Reaction bikes up front, leading the charge?

The second photo is from Los Lobitos cut-off, one of those must-ride roads that many don't know about. Instead of heading straight up Tunitas Creek, you head inland a couple miles and take the first left turn Los Lobitos cut-off. Follow this over a small hill and down the other side to Los Lobitos; make sure you take every possible right-hand turn (including the near-u-turn shortly after that first descent) and you'll be rewarded with an extraordinarily-pleasant diversion.

So a nice 50 mile ride, punctuated by a flat tire in the middle of Tunitas (not a bad place to have one, really), and getting home just before the wind started really picking up and band of rain started moving in. Sure, it was wet when we were out there, but not so bad, in retrospect, that I had to leave the nice bike at home. That's OK, the Iron Pig enjoyed the outing. And so did I.

02/24/05- STARTED OUT FURIOUSLY
this morning, as Kevin asks if I can pull him (fast) up the hill to the park entrance. Ouch! But, being the friendly guy I am, I oblige (and go into pretty extreme oxygen debt). Karl's with us too, as well as new-guy Mike. At the park entrance we wait a bit for Karl, who then continues up the hill with Kevin while I hang out for a bit so Mike can catch up... I don't think he's used to people who think it's fun to see how high your heart can really go first thing in the morning. I'm not sure I see the point either, but seems like it's become a habit! By the time we get to the top Karl & Kevin have moved on; most of us have time constraints such that we've got to get back to the start by 9:30 or else we turn into pumpkins (or, worse, we end up having to skip a shower before work, not a good thing!).

Mike & I ride on to Sky L'Onda, where I have to head straight back down to Woodside instead of doing the Old LaHonda loop, due to the aforementioned time constraints. After doing this ride for 20+ years, I think I've got it figured out; we need to get everybody to the top of King's in about 35 minutes, and make it to Sky L'Onda by 8:55 or so (and even then we'd be just a bit late, but still time for a shower... the coffee might have to wait!). Mike stayed up top to get some coffee and warm up a bit at Alice's, while I decided today would be a good day to add a bit of additional pain & suffering and ride up Summit Springs (off Tripp Road)... all the way to where it dead-ends, just about the same time the grade has become so steep that you're trying to avoid pulling a wheelie. And then for good measure I did the Godetia shortcut to Jefferson. Ouch. But a good kind of ouch.

02/22/05 11:54pm- IT DOESN'T GET MUCH BETTER THAN THIS!
Maybe I'm just feeling good because I had a great ride this morning, one of those rare ones where I had the feeling that I could twist a throttle and instantly accelerate? Yes, that's part of the reason I'm feeling pretty darned good right now, but not all of it.  Cruising the bazillion channels on my Dishnet DVR I come across the movie Breaking Away, with some guy playing Dave Stoller playing me back in the 70s. Pretty much my life up on the screen. One of my favorite movies, of course! But it follows on the heels of another of my favorite movies I found last night- Vanishing Point! The ultimate existential car-chase movie, from 1971. I remember seeing it... hmm... must have been a late-night flick at the New Varsity theater in Palo Alto, back in '74 or so, with my friend Paul Duncan. Maybe it was just the Varsity back then? I think it's a restaurant now. Go figure why a kid who didn't get a driver's license until 18 and never took anything stronger than aspirin would get into a movie about a guy on speed driving cross-country at high-speed to deliver a car to somebody?

OK, let's see, the short list of movies that have had an effect on me- Robocop, Breaking Away (although I think it's the reverse; somebody was following me around and wrote a movie about my life), Vanishing Point, The Ruling Class, Casablanca, almost any older Woody Allen film (I still remember going to the Vitaphone in Los Gatos, to see the combo of Play it Again, Sam & Casblanca, where they merged the ending of the first with the beginning of the second... or what it the other way around?), The Day the Earth Stood Still, Close Encounters of the Third Kind... what does it all add up to?

02/22/05- I SAID I WAS DUE FOR A GOOD RIDE, AND I WAS RIGHT!
A bit concerned, since I didn't get a chance to ride on Sunday, but with the first really nice day in a while, I was looking forward to throwing my leg over the saddle and riding up the hill. Things just felt right. Not even as much traffic as normal, since the schools are closed for "snow week" (they've shortened Christmas vacation a bit and put in a week off so kids can hit the slopes and do things their parents can't, or shouldn't do, like snowboarding).

Jason, one of our guys from the Redwood City store, showed up for the first time in a while, along with Kevin, who kinda didn't show up. Some of him was there, just his legs that were missing. Good thing this wasn't a Karl or Ueyn or Julian day! Jason headed on up the hill, keeping a pretty decent pace, while I tried to keep an eye on Kevin at the back, eventually giving up and finishing with Jason at the top. I did get in some pretty strong intervals, and, for the first time in several months, felt like I just could have kept going. Obviously, the mind trying to trick the body! The body, however, has a way of letting the mind know what's possible, what's not, and what's foolish to even try. I have trouble with that last part though; I'm generally willing to try the foolish stuff, no matter what the body is telling me.

Did I mention how beautiful it was? A few clouds here and there, a little bit of fog up on Skyline, but no threat of rain, no really cold temps. In fact, it was quite the warm breeze blowing down at us as we climbed the west side of Old LaHonda, making it obvious the weatherman was going to be very wrong about the forecast high of 61 degrees today!

If the big guns show up on Thursday's ride, I'll not be afraid. I'm ready, or at least delusional enough to believe I am.

Oh yeah, the rumors are true. I have signed up for the Sea Otter Mountain Bike race. 45-49 age bracket, cross-country course, in the class that allows training wheels and full-body airbags. Oh my, what have I done...

02/20/05- NICE TO THINK THAT IT'S ALL ABOUT RIDING BIKES,
but the truth is that owning a shop is about all manner of less-romantic things than riding. For example, it's 1:33am and instead of being asleep, planning to get ready for a ride in the rain Sunday morning, I'm putting the finishing touches on a web page describing the different Trek carbon-fiber road bike offerings this year. It's a confusing mess, there being so many of them, and I don't think Trek has even got a handle on things, so I've given it a stab myself. Not for altruistic reasons, mind you; if that were the case, I'd be doing it at a more reasonable hour! But the truth is, if I can get our customers to better understand the bikes, they'll feel more comfortable buying them. And as long as enough people buy them, we stay in business, my employees get paid, and I can further rationalize spending time riding and writing in the almost-daily diary. Oh, and it also makes it easier to leave the shop in capable hands and travel to France and watch that Lance guy ride a bike.

So don't look for me in the rain Sunday morning, as I think I'll be sleeping in a bit!

02/17/05- GANGING UP ON THE SICK GUY
just isn't fair, y'know? But that's what happened this morning. I wasn't all that sick, just a bit of a cold, but it caught me a bit off-guard when Kevin, Daryl, Karl, Rob... uh-oh, one more guy whose name is escaping me now. [Late-breaking news- an email from Karl reminds me that Julian was the 6th guy with us this morning, and also the primary troublemaker on the climbs.] The point is, it was a sizable group, and people seemed to want to ride fast. In other words, there was nobody I had an excuse to hang back with, just me & my nose. Kevin, Karl & somebody else flew off the front on Kings, with me towards the middle, er, OK, end. Still, I managed to make it up in about 28 minutes, so it could have been worse. Fact is, is could have been a lot worse, since I was, after all, riding the 5900 instead of the much-heavier and not-so-fun Iron Pig (my rain bike). Skyline was nice but very foggy in parts, but how far do you have to see so you can suck the wheel ahead of you?

Unfortunately, my worst fears were confirmed on Old LaHonda. It didn't seem like Karl was really pushing things, as if he was saving something for the "return" section. And he was. Rob made a move and Karl took off with him, with Kevin in tow. Ouch. Normally I'd try to hang with them, but not today. But maybe next week. I'm due for a good ride. I can feel it. I'll make them pay. Yeah, right.

02/15/05 7:18am- "MIKE, KEVIN HERE, IT'S REALLY RAINING OUT THERE"
said the voice mail that came in while I was getting my bike ready. "Give me a call if you're still planning to ride." So I call him back, and he tells me that it's really dumping, as if I can't look through the window and see all the water that's pouring over the gutters that I haven't cleaned. I tell him of course I'm still going to ride. That's what I do. I ride, on Tuesdays and Thursday mornings, no matter what. But Kevin decides to stay indoors, saying that he needs to get some decent rain gear. As if. As if it really makes a huge difference; when you've got a ride with lots of climbing, you've got the choice of either getting soaked from the inside (sauna effect) or the outside (rain). Still, you at least have the choice.

Just saw a couple other cyclists out there, both on Canada on my way to the start. Brave souls, they, as it was seriously dumping at the time. In fact, it kept on dumping all the way to the top of King's, where the heavy rain was replaced by heavy fog. Too bad, as it takes some of the "epic" nature away when a ride starts gnarly but ends on a softer note. One benefit to nasty weather though- the car traffic always seems substantially lighter.

The biggest effect rain has on my ride is to lengthen it by maybe 15 minutes or so. Some of the extra time comes from the fact that the Iron Pig (my rain bike) weighs a whole lot more and just isn't all that fun to ride. No STI shifting, cranks a bit on the short side (170s while I'm used to riding 175s these days), and gears that aren't quite as low as they ought to be (42 front/23 rear vs 34 front/27 rear on the 5900). But, it works, and when it gets all messed up you don't have to worry about having destroyed expensive equipment.

I thought about shortening the ride a bit by lopping off the Old LaHonda west-side loop, but according to my bathroom scale, that wouldn't have been a good idea. (Why do we keep scales in the bathroom anyway? Wouldn't they have more effect if we kept them near the dining room table?).

Overall, it was a good ride. Certainly not fast, but sometimes you need to ride just because you can, and if the weather is foul enough that people would think you crazy for wanting to, well, that's all the better. The only thing that could have made it even better would have been if the rain had kept up through the day, since bragging rights are greatly diminished when the day becomes not-so-bad, even though it was insane when you were out there. "You rode today?" If it's a Tuesday or Thursday, the question is entirely rhetorical. It's what I do.

02/13/05- NEW SOFTWARE, JUST WHAT I NEEDED!
Or not. Rode with Todd this morning out to the coast, as you can see in the printout below-



Kevin had threatened to join us, as we were heading out early and he needed to get back by 10am for work, but we never did make contact with him. Too bad, as it was pretty nice out, and virtually zero cars along the entire route!

While the ride didn't actually start at Olive Hill & Canada Road, like nearly every ride I do it passes by there on the way from my house, so for convenience, we'll start it there. We did things a bit different this time, heading past Roberts and out Mtn Home (nothing strange yet!) but then, instead of heading up Old LaHonda, we did one of those rare runs up Highway 84. You know, the one you always avoid climbing due to all the traffic? Well, at 8:10am on a Sunday morning, there is no traffic on 84! Just a great, high-speed climb (any climb you can average over 10mph on is, to me, high-speed) up to Skyline. From there it was straight out to the coast, apart from a short diversion up a road that may, or may not, be a shortcut to Old LaHonda (unfortunately, the gravel was a bit too nasty to trust our tires on).

No sprint for the San Gregorio city limit sign this time, as it wouldn't have been fair with Todd using his strange training cranks where each arm can turn independently of the other. They weigh a ton and probably eat a lot of extra energy as you have to actually lift up each side (since pushing down on the other has no effect on its position). The only attempt at racing this morning was from a potential Killer Squirrel that made a mad dash in front of me, crossing my path and then, after going past by maybe a foot or so, stopping dead in its tracks and, for all the world, looking like it was going to reverse course and nail my front wheel! Fortunately, it didn't.

Tunitas Creek was even more friendly than usual, as our moderate pace allowed us to experience the sounds & sights of the accompanying creek more fully than usual. Didn't see many cyclists out until the descent of King's towards Woodside; seemed like a lot of people were riding up this morning!

About that software... it's the CicloTour program that comes with all current Hac-4 computers. Way-cool but it's going to take some time to learn!
 
02/10/05- YOU REALLY DON'T WANT TO WAKE UP
, and it continues even after getting onto the bike. That's pretty rare for me; usually, once I put a leg over the top tube, I seem instantly transformed into a fire-breathing speedster. Yeah, right. But I do feel a whole better once on the bike. Except today. I dragged myself over Jefferson to the start, never seeing my heart rate climb into that "getting going" zone (150+). As I get to Olive Hill, I'm thinking that maybe Kevin will be feeling as bad as he did on Tuesday, and it will be an easy ride. Wrong. Not only is Kevin feeling good, but there's also "Special K" Karl, Rob, Daryl & Pete. Yikes!

But, like most times when you're not feeling very good at the start, things get better as you go. And, as usual, I get going pretty quick, riding the first part of King's in my usual fast manner. People probably think I'm showing off, but the reality is that, if I don't get a bit of speed at the start, that first steep part at the beginning just kills me!

Today was a day for Kevin & Karl to play at the front, so I watched them ride away prior to the park entrance. I was secretly hoping that Kevin might have to stop and water some plants, but that wasn't the case... he & Karl just rode off into the distance. I managed to keep ahead of the rest for a bit, but stopped around the half-way point to get some photos (none of which came out very good) and then picked up Pete for the rest of the ride up the hill. Actually, I let Pete get ahead a bit as I took pictures, and it took me a lot longer to catch back up than I thought it would! When I saw that we were right at 20 minutes at the 2/3rds point (the wide clearing with the 1.41 mile marker on the right), I figured that was an opportunity to get the entire group up the hill in under 30 minutes, and Pete responded to the challenge (we finished at 29:45). Pete's probably the best 50+ age group climber we've had on our rides, and my guess is that he can do 28 or so on a nice day. Of course, in just over a year Pete's going to have a bit more competition in the 50+ age bracket as both Kevin & I qualify for the Geritol jokes and whatever else comes our way...

Once on Skyline I started feeling actually human, and was able to ride an uncontested sprint (which does make you feel a bit foolish) up the grade past Swett Road. Actually, Rob started up the hill first, and I really thought he was going to have a go at it... but he quickly throttled back, joining the rest of the group who must have been wondering why I was being so anti-social. I dunno... with Karl there, I just figured something was going to happen. And it's usually not something good!

With moderate temps (mid-40s to low 50s) we didn't have to stop and add or subtract layers of clothing, so we actually made pretty good time this morning, pulling into Sky L'Onda about five minutes ahead of schedule. A light tailwind made for a fast ride down 84 to Old LaHonda, with Kevin doing the aero-thing most of the way. I figure if he really wants to pull us down the hill, why spoil his party? Besides, it's a good idea to leave something in reserve for west-side Old LaHonda, which started at a moderate pace and then picked up speed at the end of the valley where the road turns back on itself for the final climb. It would have been nice if my legs could have responded to Kevin, Karl & Daryl taking off, but I did, after all, have the excuse of trying to take photos of them with the camera at the same time. Eventually I caught up with Daryl, but Karl & Kevin were in a different league this morning.

At the end of the ride I had that feeling in my legs that I'd done some damage, which is a good feeling to have. Of course, the damage done was entirely to myself; Karl & Kevin & Daryl & Rob & Pete had little to be concerned with! Still, I'd have to rate it as one of the better rides, simply because I felt like I was alive at the end of the ride, quite different from how I felt when I woke up.

02/08/05- SOMETIMES A RIDE IS JUST A RIDE?
Just myself and Kevin on a colder-than-it-seemed morning. About 43 degrees at the start of the ride, dropping to 40 at the top (which, lately, is a bit unusual; it's typically been warmer on Skyline). I'd like to feel good about being faster than Kevin this morning, but that wouldn't have been the case if he hadn't been doing pretty hard rides nearly every day for the past week or so! We rode at a civilized pace, actually able to carry on conversations in areas where, on another day, I'd be coughing up a lung if I tried to do anything but breathe. As I headed towards home after the ride, I decided I needed something a bit nastier, so I took the Godetia cutoff instead of Jefferson. This is something you do only if you want to experience pain. There's simply no easy way to go up Godetia; even when I've felt nearly invincible, I either avoid Godetia or feel like death riding up it. Today? Yeah, it got me, but not without a battle!

02/06/05- TIGHT SCHEDULE, BUT MADE IT.
It would be a crime to not get out on a good ride on Superbowl Sunday. Why? Because far too many people will be accomplishing little more than eating too much and yelling at their TV, and, generally speaking, that's a better place for them to be than out driving on the highways. Especially when it's yet another really nice day!

And a nice day it was. A bit on the cool side as I headed out the door at 7:30am on the only day where sometimes I get to sleep in a bit and not ride so early. But today I had to sneak in a ride before church, and I'd decided it had to be a good ride. So I arranged to head out to the coast with Kevin, who brought along "Long Bob" and Kevin S. I really wasn't planning a hard pace up Old LaHonda, but it sorta happened anyway, with Kevin and I blaming each other for starting it. Doesn't matter, we were both having a pretty good time and it helped to keep us warm! The rest of the ride out to the coast was relatively uneventful, aside from the mandatory sprint for the San Gregorio city limit sign, which somehow caught me a bit off guard (seemed to come up sooner than I'd thought it would).

From there we headed north to Tunitas, wasting not a whole lot of time since I had to be back by about 10:30 or so. Kevin & his group went a bit further south by heading out Los Lobitos Cut-Off, while I had to make pretty decent time straight up Tunitas. And I felt pretty decent too, which was nice! Usually, when you're running late, you can't count on your legs to do as commanded and pick up the speed, but today it all seemed to come together very nicely. About 50 minutes from the coast to the top of Skyline, and with dry pavement, I was even making up time heading down King's into Woodside (a descent I normally don't feel too safe taking at speed). And somehow I did, in fact, make it back in time. Just barely though, with my heart rate not getting much of a chance to recover after racing through the door and straight into the shower, bravely facing down a razor (without enough time to be cautious) and heading out the door with socks & shoes in-hand, putting them on at the curb as the family was getting into the car. Not a whole lot of wasted time this morning!

02/03/05- SOMETIMES I
T'S JUST PLAIN FUN! And today was one of those times. 8 people showed up this morning, including Gary from Mt. Shasta, who I rode with at the Tour de France last July. I can't even begin to name everyone right now (Ueyn will fill me in on one of the new guys shortly), but it was a great group on a nice morning... so nice, in fact, that we even ordered up breakfast at Alice's. The routine is that we stop there before descending to the west side of Old LaHonda and order our food, which is ready for us 20 minutes later on our return. What could be nicer?

OK, I'll take a stab at those in the photo.
From left to right we have... ok, it's the very first guy on the left whose name I forgot. Next to him is me, then Karl, Rob, then Daryl (I think?) then Gary and Ueyn. Kevin wasn't able to ride past King's, as he had to work today. Tough job, those pilots, having to work a few days each week!

02/01/05- JUST A FEW DAYS AGO
I was telling you about John, the guy who we frequently see riding up the hill just ahead of us, claiming that he wasn't fast enough so he needed a head start. In my 1/27/05 entry, I even mentioned that I didn't think he'd have any trouble riding with us, and I was right- he showed up today and did quite nicely on the climb (although he had to ditch us at the top so he could get to work in time... that work thing sure gets in the way of riding sometimes!). Very nice to have a morning with no wet pavement, new guy on the ride, and, best of all, Kevin in a seriously-overtrained state trying to recover from a gnarly ride on Sunday. It just can't get a whole lot better than that!

That's John in the picture, rounding one of the corners on King's at about the halfway mark up the climb.

01/30/05- MUCH LESS PAINFUL THAN LAST THURSDAY, as I did a Sunday afternoon ride up Old LaHonda, down the other side to LaHonda, then back up West Alpine. Not a cloud in the sky, temps from 50-62, and, our course, friendly people out on bikes. What's not to like? I was doing a full-camera run (small Olympus D40 in my rear pocket for on-the-fly photos, with the larger Olympus 5050 in my handlebar bag), which gives you an excuse for not riding too fast, since the extra weight is definitely noticeable. I didn't even time myself up Old LaHonda, which is a good thing since it turned out I was doing a "Lance" with my rear brake dragging when I stood up (I'd put the wheel back in a bit too hastily this morning and had it offset to the side just a bit). Must have caused me at least 3 minutes of time, yeah, sure, that's my story and I'm sticking to it!

Finished the ride with Kelly, one of our customers, who I came across on Skyline just prior to the descent into Woodside. 41 miles total, 4370ft of climbing, and didn't get in too much trouble when I got back home. Maybe someday I'll find out what it's like to have a 5-day workweek and spend part of one day on the bike and the other with the family, without having to feel too guilty about it...

01/27/05- WHAT DOES PAIN LOOK LIKE?
I'm sure you've felt it; I certainly did this morning on the west side of Old LaHonda. But what does it look like? I may have an answer to that-



The section on my HAC-4 computer printout, from mile 16.95-19.47. That's what pain looks like. The ride started out pretty mild, with Kevin, Ueyn & new-guy Daryl heading up the hill at a moderate pace. While it had rained the night before, the roads weren't too bad... a bit damp, but fortunately not worthy of a rain bike. So everything's going quite nicely, and we once again met up with John, who we see pretty regularly at the top of the hill (he starts out just a bit earlier than us, thinking he's not quite fast enough yet, but I have a feeling he'd do just fine). But then, just as we start up Skyline towards 84, we hear someone yell from behind. Karl. Party over. No, maybe not, as he rides a pretty civilized pace with the rest of us, partly slowed down by a lack of willingness to really push it on damp roads. Sensible guy, that Karl.

But when we hit the base of Old LaHonda, Karl, who usually takes it easy until the "reverse" in the middle of west Old LaHonda, took the lead and pushed the pace. Where we'd usually cruise along at maybe 10mph, Karl's pushing 13 or so. Never mind that he's not breathing hard, never mind that I'm not going to give up his wheel because I know he'll throttle back pretty soon, never mind that I'm not the only one in trouble.
I am so looking forward to the next section, where he'll cut back.

But he didn't cut back. He just kept on going. I don't think he even looked back at the carnage he was creating; I'm sure that if anyone else was as strong as he was on today's ride, the two of them would have been nicely chatting away while the rest of us listened to their voices recede into the distance. But there wasn't anybody else, and just as I was about to give up, I noticed we didn't have much company. Kevin was there, but Ueyn & Daryl were a bit off the back. So I decided to find out what pain really is. Kevin passed me at one point, but he looked like he was having even more trouble than I was, so I didn't give up. Eventually I overtook Kevin and managed to keep Karl in sight, but that was about the best I could do.

And this is what I do for fun?

01/25/05- NO RAIN, FRESH MEAT & EVERYBODY LIES.
Some think that I enjoy riding in the rain; they're wrong. Or at least I'd rather ride when it's not raining, but I won't let rain stop me from riding. Thankfully the weatherman was wrong (again) and we had very pleasant conditions. Pete, Kevin & Ueyn started the ride, and I suggested that we cool our heels a bit and ride through the park and connect up with King's at the upper Park entrance. Why? Because it's different, and we could take it easier. Yeah right. Like we'd actually ease off on the climb. About the only time that happens is when Kevin's not feeling well. So if you show up for one of our rides and people say they're going to take it easy today, don't believe it!

At the top of King's we picked up a new rider- Josh, a Stanford grad student on their cycling team. Nice guy, strong, and helps to keep the average age of our ride down so we don't attract Geritol as a sponsor!

0
1/23/05- A BIT OF STOCKTON IN LA HONDA. It started out as a normal Sunday afternoon ride, the plan being to ride over Old LaHonda, down to LaHonda, up West Alpine and back via Skyline to 84. But once in LaHonda I came across Pete (one of our semi-regular Tuesday/Thursday morning riders) and his buddies from Stockton, who were on the way back from a ride to Pescadero.

I wasn't really looking for an excuse to ditch West Alpine (one of my favorite climbs), but when I heard that Pete didn't know about the "faces of Old LaHonda", well, I just had to make sure they found it! So no West Alpine today; basically, just an out-and-back to LaHonda. Beautiful day for it though, and very nice company.

32 miles, 3400ft of climbing, so technically it qualifies as a hilly ride (by passing the 1,000ft of climbing/10 miles test) but it didn't seem all that challenging... with the exception of the initial climb up Old LaHonda, where I felt anything but strong. But that's OK; better that I have a slower climb when I'm alone than when I'm trying to keep up with people on the Tuesday/Thursday rides!


01/20/05- LOST A BET THIS MORNING!
It was plenty cold at the start of the ride (cold by California standards, about 37F), but Kevin, who lives up on top of Skyline and had just come down to join us, insisted that it was 20 degrees warmer up top. Yeah, right, I said. No way. 15, maybe. 20?

Kevin, Karl, Ueyn & Rob this morning, enjoying an incredibly-nice winter day, with the potentially-nasty fog burning off just before we'd get to where it used to be. I felt pretty sluggish at the start, but of course that doesn't keep me from riding hard up to the park entrance. We regrouped there, shed some clothing as it was quickly warming (remember Kevin's bet?) and continued upward. Rob had drifted back a bit so I had good reason to watch Kevin & Karl ride away, with Ueyn in the middle. After my ride of a few weeks ago, when I had 4 flat tires, I'm not inclined to have someone riding at the back alone! But little did I know that Rob had laid a strategic trap. He hadn't run out of gas; rather, he intentionally powered down for a bit, waiting for me to shift into a lower-power mode and then, after meeting up, catch me off-guard and blow past too quickly to catch his wheel. Almost worked too! But I know just about every trick in the book, and someday I'm gonna find out who stole the strawberries too (you may have to rent The Caine Mutiny to understand the absurdity of the last few sentences).

Up on Skyline it's 54 degrees, and I'm beginning to get a bit nervous about that bet. 55 degrees. 56. And Kevin's asking me the temp as we go, until I eventually claim I can't read the temp gauge on the computer (which isn't quite true, yet, but the day is coming where I'm going to need bifocal Oakleys)... but by the time we get close to where Kevin lives, it had gone to 59 and I had to admit I was wrong, he was right. Pretty dramatic temp difference between the top and bottom!

We rode a decent but not ruthless pace, powered largely by the Ueyn/Karl juggernaut (shown in the photo on the upper part of Old LaHonda), finishing the ride a couple minutes earlier than normal but without feeling like it had blown any of us apart. Yet another beautiful day to be out on a bike.

01/18/05pm- WHY DID WE EXILE AN EMPLOYEE TO SINGAPORE? IS THAT EVEN LEGAL?
Sometimes expedience takes precedence over the ponderous workings of our legal system, so you just have to do what needs to be done, consequences be danged. When Brian decided to write a song about my alleged fixation with Sonora Pass, he left me no choice. Especially when a music website made it their comedy song of the day. But why Singapore? We had to get him out of the country before American Idol auditioned for new people to abuse, and Singapore's nearly as far away as you can go. It could have been very ugly if Simon got ahold of him. Or worse; we might have had the next William Hung!

01/18/05am- WHAT? NO CLEAN BASE LAYER, NO CLEAN LONG-SLEEVE JERSEY?
My wife loves winter, as the amount of cycling apparel in the wash doubles when you add in bib tights & base layers, and she loves me when I act surprised that it's cold outside and I need something that apparently hasn't yet been washed. I've offered to wash my own stuff, but she thinks that's some sort of male self-deception to the extreme, believing that there's no possible way I could figure out how to load a washing machine and figure out how much soap to put into it, not to mention finding the button to start it. 

I think the solution starts with having a separate dirty clothes hamper
just for cycling stuff, and I'm thinking there might be a good market for such a thing. Why would it be any different from a regular clothes hamper? Probably because it needs to be completely sealed so you can't smell what's in it, while at the same time having some sort of chemical dispenser that makes sure mildew doesn't start in. Oh, yeah, it's also got to be expandable, so that when you decided that it's easier to buy more clothing than to wash it, you've got room.

Oh yeah, this morning's ride.
Really nice day! Started out a bit on the cool side (42 degrees) but got warmer as Kevin & I rode. Kevin wasn't on top of his game this morning, which was a good thing, as neither was I. But that's OK, gives you a bit more time to appreciate how beautiful a day it is to be out on a bike, and notice the fairly-strong offshore flow that was pushing us down 84 towards the coast at a pretty good clip! Normally I might consider ignoring the tail wind effect and just say that we were really feeling great, averaging 30mph+ on a section we'd normally be working hard to do about 27, but I already pointed out that neither of us were out to set any records today. And it really was spectacularly beautiful, especially the view of the ocean from Old LaHonda.

01/16/05-
UGLY RIDE TIME AGAIN! I've missed a couple of Sunday rides, and the belt was getting just a little bit tighter. It's times like that when you need to pull out the "ugly" ride. Yep, that means heading north on Canada to 92, up 92 to Skyline (which is probably an ill-advised route in the afternoon, due to traffic, unless you feel don't get rattled and can ride a pretty straight line on a very narrow shoulder), Skyline south to Sky L'Onda, west on 84 to Old LaHonda, then back up Old LaHonda and down 84. From where I live it's just under 40 miles.

Lots of people out on the road today, including quite a few of our customers (easy to tell with our Chain Reaction water bottles). And what a gorgeous day! After several weeks of rain, finally, a day that reminds us why we live here. Temps from 62 (on Canada Road) to a low of 50 (on Skyline), very light breeze, no water on the road... what's not to like?

Things I saw that were cool
while riding? As I was climbing Skyline towards King's Mtn (and looking briefly impressive as I was standing on the pedals and moving at a good clip), a motorcyclist passing in the other direction gave me a thumbs-up sign. But perhaps even cooler was at the bottom of Old LaHonda (west side), where a dad was supervising his young kid playing in a creek on their property. You know, building dams, throwing rocks into the water to see the splash, that sort of thing.

But getting back to that "ugly ride" thing-
an "ugly" ride is when you intentionally do one of your least-favorite routes, in this case, the climb south on Skyline from 92. It's one of those grades that seems to go on a lot longer than it should, with long straight stretches where you can see far too much road ahead of you, so it doesn't seem like you're getting anywhere. But the funny thing is, after a bit, you get into it. Soon you're riding a lot stronger than you thought you would, and shortly after that the realization that the worst bike ride is a whole lot better than the best of just about anything else. In fact, you can't even remember why you thought it was such a bad route in the first place!

01/13/05- LAUGHING AT THE ABSURD
is easier when the absurd is highly visible, as is the case when it's raining, or incredibly windy. But today, well, it wasn't even all that cold, at least not according to the computer. But it certainly never got warm.

Kevin, Rob, Karl (that's Karl with a "K", not "C" as I've spelled it previously) and Ueyn joined me this morning, with everyone seemingly impatient to get to the top of King's. Kevin & Karl I expect to rocket off the front (and stay there), but it was a bit of a surprise to see Ueyn & Rob hanging with them as well, while I did my best to minimize my losses. Ueyn eventually fell off the pace, and why not? He just got back on the back after foot surgery! So we rode up the hill together, with Rob not all that far ahead. 40 degrees at the start, 38 at the traditional cold spot (before you get to Tripp road), and a gradual "warming" trend up to... gee, a whole 42 degrees in the middle of the climb! And then, surprisingly, it dropped back down to 40 at the top. Even heading out on 84 (towards the coast) the temperature dropped rather than climbed, getting back down to 38 again. Big deal, 38 isn't that cold? Don't know why, but it felt a lot colder than that this morning!

On the Old LaHonda section, we let Rob & Kevin go play off the front while the rest of us just cruised along. After all these years, I'm finally noticing that below 43 or so my speed drops off quite a bit. But why? Is it lack of motivation, or something physical? Whatever the case, I just don't seem to have what it takes to keep up when it gets that cold, particularly when it stays that cold. The highest temp we saw was 42 degrees, and the ride finished at the exact same temp it began (40), which is, simply, wrong. And mildly absurd.

01/11/05- IT'S RAINING AGAIN
(but hopefully not for long!). It looked like maybe things were breaking up this morning, with a few spots of light showing through the clouds. Such was not to be however, as just as I'm sitting on the front porch, pulling on my neoprene booties & winter gloves, it starts to dump. I mean really dump. Really, really, REALLY dump. What the heck, is there really that much difference between a little bit of rain and a whole lot of it? So I'm heading up over Jefferson to the start of the ride and the water is coming down the road at me in layers. Really. So much was coming down that, even on a moderately steep grade, it was rolling down the hill at me in thick layers. But, by the time I got to Canada Road, it had started to let off a bit, and by the time I met Kevin (the only other cyclist I saw today), it was just a drop now & then.

The climb up Kings was nothing special, with the Iron Pig earning its name quite well today. We stopped at the park entrance to shed some clothing and then continued on, uneventfully, until Kevin broke a spoke at the wide clearing. Since he lives up on top of Skyline, he took a slight detour to his house to swap out wheels, delaying things a bit too much for me to do the Old LaHonda section. Darn, might have been fun seeing the effect of all that water out there! Probably turned out for the best though, as it began raining pretty steadily again on the 84 descent, and didn't let up until we got to the bottom. Funny how it works that way! Funny too how, from the end of our ride on, the day just got nicer and nicer and nicer.

01/06/05- CARS DON'T ALWAYS EXPLODE LIKE THEY DO IN THE MOVIES.
We can't absolutely guarantee the ride of your life when you're out with us, but it just might happen. Take today's ride, for example. Started out like any other winter day; cool (38-45 degrees), overcast, damp roads. Kevin, Carl & newcomers Julian and Joan in attendance. Kevin warned me about Julian; he's been a customer of ours for several years, but this was the first time he made it to one of our rides. He's strong. Period. I was part of the Kevin/Carl/Julian group for the first few minutes, then gradually lost contact. At the wide clearing I slowed down and waited a bit for Joan; after my ride a few weeks ago with four flat tires, I wanted to make sure nobody else was suffering a similar fate on their own!

Joan and I continue the climb together, until we come to a pair of tree limbs/trunks/whatever that had fallen onto the road from the adjacent hillside, blocking a car from getting through. At first I tried to move one of them; have you ever pushed really, really hard against a concrete building and noticed how far you could move it? Same thing. So much for male ego. Fortunately, while the driver didn't think she could get through, I could see that it looked possible, and guided her past with at least half an inch to spare at the top of her car. Hopefully one more car driver who will think something a bit nicer of the next cyclist they come across.

We regroup at the top of Skyline and head south towards 84... for maybe half a mile. That's when we come upon a guy in a truck sideways across the road, blocking traffic. Why would somebody do that? Did somebody hit it? Nope. The guy in the truck is turning people around, explaining that there's a car on fire a bit further up the road. Cool, we're thinking, as we head on past, figuring that we'd be able to get through and maybe see something else interesting this morning. And interesting it was. Sure enough, we shortly came to an old pickup with a trailer, thoroughly engulfed in flames that reached up into the trees. I can't really tell you just how odd such a sight is, nor how stupid I felt for leaving my camera at home this morning! One fire truck tending to it, spraying foam now & then. We're thinking it might be OK to squeak past on the far left side of the road, until somebody in our group more intelligent than I mentions that cars have gas tanks, and it might explode. Now we're talking waaaaaay cool! (I should note that we'd already been told nobody was hurt; the driver apparently noticing his vehicle was on fire and parking it at the side of the road long before it was so thoroughly engulfed).

So we wait for maybe five minutes, with nobody paying us much attention (we're the only people on the north side of the fire, while a long line of cars are waiting to get through on the north end). The flames get bigger, the tires start burning (not much wind so the smell wasn't too bad, as the black smoke carried straight upward with the heat from the fire) and all-of-a-sudden there's this big "whoosh" sound and a bunch of flame shoots out of the far side of the vehicle. No thunderous explosion causing the car to fly up into the air, not even a couple inches. No fireball. Not at all like the movies! After another couple minutes there's another "whoosh", after which the firefighters finally start getting aggressive and move in to get the flames down. We figure that whatever might have exploded already had, so we get back on our bikes and ride past, with nobody paying us any attention whatsoever. How strange that you could come across something much less dangerous and somebody would be telling you to turn around and detour 20 miles, but here, we're on our own.

Enough for one ride? Not quite. I thought about shortening my ride and heading straight home down 84, since there's this Chain Reaction place I'm supposed to be at when it opens, but figure nah, we're only 20 minutes behind schedule, I'm fine! So we all continue on to the west side of Old LaHonda, where the sun actually makes an appearance and life seems pretty good. Almost. Julian forces the pace and I try to keep up. Luckily, just where you enter the forest, we come upon another group of riders, one that Harry, another one of our customers, is part of. So I slow my pace briefly to say hello, seeing it as a great excuse to shut down for a bit and take it easy. Nope. Pleasantries were exchanged all-too-quickly so I'm back to chasing Julian again, a rather futile thing to do. We assemble at the top, with four from his group and four of us (Kevin had to turn around and head back at 84 for work), with Julian and Joan heading down the east side of Old LaHonda. No, don't do that, we told them. Too dangerous. But they felt more comfortable with fewer cars than you'd find on the 84 descent, so we bid them adieu and continued toward 84.

The road surface is a bit wet in places, with oil spots here and there. As I've said before, I prefer descending when it's really dumping, because traction is much more consistent and the oil's been washed away. But today it was alternating wet & dry, with oil. Not my favorite. Still, I know the road well, and generally don't find too many people who ride it faster than I do. But today, Harry was one of those people. He didn't want to get stuck behind a car that might have tried to pass us if we went too slow, so away he went. About half a mile down the hill we're going into a damp corner, with me following him by maybe 50 feet or so. I'm amazed at how quickly he enters the corner, and even more amazed at the daring line he's willing to take (given the conditions). And I'm thinking at the time, can you really take that line and make it work at that speed? The answer came quickly- no. He went sliding down around the curve, landing on his right side, coming to a stop near the middle of the road just past the corner. Ouch. Cracked helmet, gash above the eye (needed four stitches), torn jacket, bloody knuckles and many bruises. We stopped traffic and found someone who had some paper towels that were useful for cleaning him up a bit, took a bit of time to assess his situation (Carl, a Chiropractor, seemed pretty capable of figuring out if he'd scrambled his head or not... he might later be useful for dealing with some of the aches & pains), called his wife on a cell phone to have her meet up with us a bit further down the hill, straightened out his bike and headed back down the hill.

Almost.

Just as I'm getting back on my bike I notice my rear tire's flat. So, we had a blocked road (actually two), burning car, crash and a flat tire. All that and I still made it to work on time. Who cares that my face looks like I was clawed by a cat because I had to quickly shave in the shower?

01/05/05- WHERE DID THE TIME GO? A DAY BEHIND ON DIARY ENTRIES ALREADY!
Not a great start to the New Year but hey, anything would be a letdown
after the great ride up Mt Hamilton last Saturday. But I'd better recap Tuesday's ride. Cool, not terrible, at about 40 degrees in Woodside. Somehow there was a bit more of a bit to the air though, as it felt considerably colder. Just Rob at the start, and as we got to the hill, I couldn't quite decide what sort of pace to set... so, as usual, I went pretty hard at the start. My hope was that Rob would quickly drop back, my cue to ease off and have a casual ride. But Rob didn't drop back. Dang that Rob, doesn't he know how things are supposed to work??? Eventually he falls off the pace a bit, so I opt for one of those nasty hard-for-a-couple-minutes-then-die routines, repeating several times until I feel like I'm about ready to drop.

About halfway up the hill we meet up with Kevin (who's coming down from the top to join us), and then at the top Pete finds us. Sort of. We didn't see that he was there (he was using the porta potty and we didn't notice his bike), and he spent several miles on Skyline chasing us down. Thank goodness we were taking it relatively easy at that point, not so Pete would catch us, but because my legs didn't feel like they had much left! In fact, I felt pretty drained until we got to Old LaHonda. But feeling fine was fleeting as Kevin & I were setting the highest-possible pace where our group could hold together, easing off a bit when Pete dropped back. Wouldn't you know it that, at that moment, Rob blows past us on the inside of a corner.
.. so once again the old men have to chase down the younger whipper-snapper. Our hope is that, if we make it clear we won't let him get away with it, he'll eventually stop doing it! So far he still hasn't gotten the message (and it won't be too long before we're incapable of delivering it!).

01/01/05- GREAT DAY FOR OUR MT HAMILTON NEW YEAR'S RIDE! See the pictures elsewhere on our website, but in a nutshell, if you stayed home, thinking the weather was going to be too nasty, you missed a great ride. It was one of those rare rides where the hill seems to be a lot easier than you remembered, and the miles just seem to fly by.

12/30/04- AM I THE ONLY PERSON DISAPPOINTED WHEN IT'S NOT POURING FOR A BIKE RIDE?
Once again I was all set for an "epic" ride, and the weather report certainly indicated there'd be no failing this time. Heavy rain & wind from midnight-11am, so my 7:30-10am ride seemed to finally qualify for a real drench & wind-fest. I got everything out the night before (so as not to be stampeding around the house, waking everyone else up as I look for wool socks or whatever) and went to bed, secure in the knowledge that the howling wind and constant rain would be keeping me company in more than just my dreams.

But dang, once more foiled again! I wake up not to the sound of wind across my windows or water dripping from the drainspout, but just because it was time to wake up (I do set an alarm clock, but usually find myself waking up a couple minutes before it goes off). And when I open the shutters to look out upon the world, I find it gray, but certainly not scary. Yes, it looks threatening, and yes, there's a light rain falling. Looking west to the hills, there's a small glimmer of hope that imminent doom is jus over the horizon. So I'm hopeful of the worst as I put on wool socks, thermal tights, heavy drylete base layer, long-sleeve jersey, shorts, waterproof pants, waterproof jacket, balaclava, shoes, full neoprene booties, helmet, wind-proof gloves and waterproof glove covers. BRING IT ON!

The roads were certainly a mess, and the volume of water coming off the bottom of my front fender made me thankful that I got religion (regarding fenders) a year ago. But it wasn't that cold (about 43 degrees), it wasn't dumping (only mildly sprinkling), and it was only slightly breezy. Kevin was out there, of course, although I don't know if he really quite gets into the laugh-at-the-absurd mentality that makes me want to ride when it's nasty. But it wasn't nasty, and shortly into the ride I found myself removing the waterproof pants (the balaclava had already come off earlier) and glove covers, and we enjoyed a ride over seriously-mucky roads but without any serious challenge from the elements.

In all seriousness, I do find I feel more comfortable descending on roads when it's pouring rain, since the traction is more predictable and the oils are washed away. Today there were several times, particularly descending 84 into Woodside, when it felt like your tires just weren't all that well connected to the road.

One interesting observation- most cyclists apparently decide the night before whether they're going to ride or not, based on the weather reports. I base this on the fact that, on those mornings when it's really not so bad (but was predicted to be), like this morning, there's absolutely nobody else out there. Yet on mornings when the weather's much worse, I'll see a number of other cyclists out there, if the weather report had been somewhat favorable the night before.

AM I READY FOR MOUNT HAMILTON ON SATURDAY? Absolutely. There's little chance of a repeat of last year, when I woke up to rain smashing horizontally against my window in 60mph winds, and wimped out. But, no way am I taking the rain bike. The Iron Pig stays home this time, even if it means a 100% disassembly and rebuild of my 5900. That's just the way it is.  


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