cycling


3
Jul 11

Breaking the wall

How’s it going?

“Alright. How are you?”

Good. Beginning to wonder about this ride, though.

“Yeah, I was going to say, it is hot out.”

If I’m not back in three hours send out the search party.

“We’ll send the air conditioning, too!”

That was my neighbor, at the beginning of my ride today. He was pampering a Rolls, so I didn’t have a lot of faith that he’d come looking for me. And there was a moment or two when I could have used the help today. I took a route we’re accustomed to, but then branched off of it and headed out to another wide spot in the road, just to have a different route.

Sometimes you need to see different trees.

So 13 miles in I turned left and pedaled down a round that was closed. Signs and everything. I dislike backtracking on my bike, so I’d determined that I would just become the cyclocross type if I had to negotiate a bad bridge. But the road was fine. Better than fine, really. It was perfect. Newly painted and still without traffic. Made it through the now absent construction and then found that the road turned to dirt.

A lady happened to be checking her mail just then and we discussed the roads. It seems the road I’d mapped out for myself was just gravel the rest of the way. I’m not interested in that, so I had to backtrack. Go to the next intersection back, she said, take a right and then ride that until it ends. Another right will take you to to 280.

Which is what I’d hoped to avoid, but that’s my only option. So I backtracked, passed the Auburn asphalt research center — the roads around it are, unsurprisingly, in pretty decent shape — and ultimately found myself on the road I’d originally hoped to reach. This was about the halfway point.

And now am I’m on roads I’ve never been on. There’s nothing but woods and the occasional house.

I like to know where I’m going. I like to know the roads, the distances and what’s out there so I can meter my pace, ration my water and generally feel like I can tell someone where I am if there’s a problem. But my detour has thrown all of my distances out of whack. There’s not a gas station around for miles. Fourteen miles, in fact. Also it is mid-day. And hot. And I’m by this point thirsty.

So I nursed my water and pedaled on. And, if you passed me, I’m sorry about that.

Here are some of the scenes:

Barn

The artist seems to be making a statement of rural life here. Note the overexposure, the storm moving in over the dilapidated farm and the heavy equipment lying in repose beneath the shade tree.

Or it could be that I was trying to not fall off my bike.

Hay!

Hay

Where I saw possibly the largest butterfly of my life. Birds thought it intimidating:

Curve

When was the last time you saw bunting? Note the very friendly folks who waved me on from the parking lot there.

Church

And, finally:

Barn

After that seven mile stretch, which felt more like a test of purgatory — and far more than seven miles because I was limping along for fear of my water situation — I made it back to the home road. After four more familiar miles I was back to a gas station where we frequently stop. It is my goal to carry my bike inside the store and not have them be surprised by it.

While I was picking up a Gatorade it began to rain, so I sipped my drinks under their covered picnic table area. I drank 64-ounces of fluid and didn’t even feel it. (Did I mention the heat index had been around 100 degrees and I’d been outside for several hours?) The rain passed. I got back on my bike, ignored the aching protests from my body, which pretended to not know I had a little way to go, yet.

I pedaled close to home, through the red light and past the drugstore and down the long straightaway that is my sprint. I pushed beyond the subdivision, choosing the longer way home, so up another hill, where I was by now getting a kick from the Gatorade and raisins and pedaling like a maniac, and then onto another road and then two more hills. The last of which was almost the end of me.

Made it home, got cleaned up and deleted the map I’d made for the trip, redrawing instead the route I wound up taking.

When I plugged it into MapMyRide I found good news. I broke through my wall. The last three long rides I’ve hit the physical and mental wall at 42-miles. My first “long ride” was 42 miles, and I was done, physically spent, just as we got home. The second time I’d planned to do 42 miles I made it home and felt better, but there was nothing left in me. The third time I’d planned for 50, but called it off at 42.

This was my fourth try, and my original plan today would have been 47 miles. But there were those changes in my route so I had no real idea. On the bike I felt great, though, so I was worried about the actual distance.

Fifty miles.

Did I mention how hot it was?

We visited the grocery store before dinner, bought the things from the list, made jokes of other things that caught our eye, acted silly and had a nice time of it. The cashier rang us up. Another young man bagged our items. He offered to carry them out for us, which is nice, but silly.

He seemed incredulous, disbelieving that I could handle the last 16 feet. Never mind that I’ve been pushing the cart all over the store. Or that there’s someone in one of the lines who might need more of your strapping young help.

Besides, I wanted to say, I just rode 50 miles in blistering heat. I can do this.

Like I deserve a medal or something.

We had chicken parmesan tonight, which is a tasty dish The Yankee makes. Chicken, cheese, sauce, pasta. I could have eaten another plate or two. I burned some where between 3,400 to 4,600 calories today. I could afford more pasta.

Tomorrow I’ll rest. Tuesday I’ll do more riding and reading and writing … that’s the summer to me.


1
Jul 11

The monthly movie returns — July? Already?

I spent 23 miles — or 27, our maps are at odds — on the bike today. Lot’s of bike lately. More cycling in the future. And that inspired the movie, which has been on a several months long hiatus.

Usually because I forget about the thing until the third or so. Anyway. For those newcomers, the idea is that this little video, just 30 seconds, sets the stage for the month, on the first day of the month. Usually there is a theme. And here we are.

Which reminds me, I should also update the video section of the site.

This, if you were wondering, was all shot on the iPhone. Now stop wondering and go enjoy your weekend.


29
Jun 11

Four stories for the price of one

Let us recall: I did 42 miles on the bike yesterday. That was, in a sense, giving up on my original plan. Recall I’d planned to do 50 miles. But, when I crossed the artery off which our subdivision thrives I noted a deep, emotional pleasure of seeing the road sign. Taking that as a sign, I turned and headed in.

Because saying no to the last 10 miles with a heat index of 96, to me, is giving up.

But the better for it, I felt. Discretion and all that. Saddle sores can’t be nearly as fun as the alliteration they make. So I was OK with it, especially after rubbing a curative elixir in my quads. All of that was yesterday, after which I visited the helpful bike store which is full of helpful lads doing thoughtful things trying to keep their laughter about your predicament to a minimum.

This pain in my hand, for instance. And what about this? And how do I? Why, yes, 42 miles, thank you. Why do you snicker?

So today The Yankee and I set out for more of this delightful fun, where the heat index was a mellow 90 degress — hey, even the relative humidity has a take a day off every now and again — and we covered 29 miles.

Well, I covered 29 miles. I took a slightly longer route, intent on racing her home. But then every part of me gave out in the last few miles. Which doesn’t mean anything bad, really. Not to worry. I just coasted more than I should. And wondered how I could simultaneously cramp in 103 percent of my body.

She beat me soundly.

Here’s the cheering section.

Horses

Note their casually dismissive approach to encouragement. The distance between camera and subject isn’t expressive enough, but the fence line keeps them back and their lack of amazement by my cycling further restricts them.

At first I thought that it was a denuded poplar tree in the background. When I finally cropped the picture I realized it was the power pole. Cursed power poles. Yesterday, on one long stretch of highway I found no shade. All of the blessed, dark coolness was on the left-hand side of the road. It was long and my field of vision was clear. This blisteringly hot condition was continuing on for some time. And then, I realized, it was the power poles. They were all on my side of the highway. Everything else had been clear cut.

And I uttered perhaps the most petulant thing I’ve said in my adult life.

Oh, like these people need power.

Clearly my shade was more important.

Where I tell you about our search for dinner: Have I mentioned we broke one of the toilets in our house? I did. How about the various evil spirit curses placed upon our property?

When we first moved in we broke the thermostat. That cost $50.

Then I broke the shower head trying to fix a drip. That led to a larger problem which required plumbers, a drywall saw and an acetylene torch. It should have cost us about $1400, the plumber said, since it was a weekend. Fortunately the house warrant and the new shower head stuff cost us around $100.

And then we woke up one weekend to find the frozen contents of our refrigerator hanging out in liquid form on the floor. That cost us $50 (thanks home warranty) plus whatever we paid for ice and dry ice to preserve our perishables.

(We’d been in the house for two months by then.)

Then, in October, the dishwasher broke. Fifty more bucks. (And our second in-house electrocution.)

Then it broke again in December. We had it repaired during the holidays. Yep, $50 more.

This list does not include the bird feeder or the cable/Internet problems.

It does now include March’s necessary garage door button replacement.

It should also be noted that another air conditioner man had to come out and replace a contact on our external unit. Seems you can stop a Trane. And I have to pay $55 dollars to get back on board. This was, apparently, not noted in the blog. But believe me, it happened. I have the canceled check to prove it.

The current minor plumbing issues.

At this point we’re keeping a running total of the devious spirits.

So, to quickly recap (because, really, this story is about dinner): I replaced the flapper in the basin of each toilet tank. In doing so I managed to make one of them leak. I emptied it again and dried the tank, hoping a sealant would be an easy and quick fix. Tonight we visited Lowe’s to get silicon. I run across a man who works there who suggests the fix is probably in a filter, and corrosion related. So he dissuades me from picking up a sealant, encouraging me to bring in the damaged parts so we can find a suitable replacement. “Oh and plumbing repairs are seldom easy.”

Not that that was anything new to hear.

So we leave Lowe’s and look for dinner. We rattle off the options, prattle off the things that don’t sound good and turn to a food app. Thai! There’s Thai in Opelika. We turn the car around and drive across town. We find the right place, where we see a sign that translates to mean “We are no longer Thai.”

NoThai

We settle on Logans. Which is right across the street from Lowe’s. When the waiter comes The Yankee orders. He turns to me. I’ll have the Thai. This is hysterical to everyone. They’re holding a ceremony to honor this joke next week.

Where I tell you about my repair work: After dinner I decided to investigate the water filter on our refrigerator. This is the first unit I’ve ever had with the water and ice dispenser in the door. There must be, I rationalize, a filter somewhere. Probably it needs replacement.

I do a little study. I find the Whirlpool site that tells me precisely where the filter is. The site insists I find the model number so that it can tell me what filter to order.

I find the model number of the refrigerator. I enter it into the Whirlpool website, which does not recognize it. I enter it again. I carefully inspect my data entry. Still the Whirlpool database suggests this is a secret box of government documents, or perhaps a crate of uranium, anything but a series of letters and numbers that correspond to a refrigerator. I examine each number on the filter. I enter them all into the Whirlpool site. None are recognized.

I’ll just order a new one by eye. Because this is a good technique for this house.

Fridge

I decide, after failing to resolve my refrigerator issue, to take apart the toilet tank. One needs the feeder hoses, washers and connectors so the hardworking folks at Lowe’s can remind me: lefty loosey, righty tighty.

I remember that to put the flapper into this tank that I had to remove the feeder tube that pumps the refill water in the right place. This wiggled the floater canister, which controls how much water the tank holds. This is the area in which the leak has suddenly appeared. I take the entire thing apart and put it back together. I torque it as if I need to crank down the landing gear so we can safely put down and we’re only getting one chance at this. I say a little prayer, pre-select an oath to mutter just in case, and fill the tank.

No leak!

This is the first thing I’ve fixed in this house that cost five bucks and stayed at that price.

But the brick which is in there, because water displacement saves the earth, started making noise. Seems the porous brick had dried out. The water seeping in and the air escaping sounds like a rainforest. After a few flushes the creatures in the brick were drowned and silenced.

I tinkered with the master bathroom’s toilet, too, because I did not like the flush rate. I adjusted the chain’s location on the handle, which improves the turning ratio (and now it can climb semi-steep hills). I realized, in glancing at the flapper package as I’m about to throw it away, that there is a part of that rubberized flapper I was supposed to cut away. I make the requisite snips.

Now that one is running again.


28
Jun 11

Too much time in the saddle

I set out to ride 51 miles today, but cut it short out of fatigue and a threatening storm. I finished at 42 miles, though, which is now the place the mental wall is going up. Three times I’ve been to 42 miles now, and each has felt just about the most I could possibly do.

We discussed this at the bike shop this afternoon. Seems I should eat more.

Pictures from the trip? I took a few.

This is before I bottomed out:

Countryside

And this is about the spot where my endurance betrayed me:

Curve

So I plodded on through much of my pre-planned course. Stopped to refill the drink bottles across the street from the old Bottle. (Wikipedia calls it a community, but that’s overstating the case.) The landmark has been gone for years, but it is still on state maps. Here’s the scene today:

Countryside


27
Jun 11

Doe, John Doe

Pay

The out-in-the-country wall post. Saw that on our bike ride this morning, an easy 23 miles out and back. Interesting how hills that once seemed daunting you can work through with comparative ease.

The last time we were out this way there were three names on that sign, but two of them must have settled up. And so I looked up Trey Gunter … and I’m thinking that might be a masterful alias.

What alias would you use? I think I’d cobble together a name from literature, or go with an obscure president.

My name? Cal Coolidge.

Might work.

Visited Walmart because there wasn’t much keeping me from going there. Picked up Miracle Gro. It seems the things that we wish to keep small in the yard grow prolifically. The things we’d like to accentuate need some steroids from Scotts.

Picked up Gorilla tape, which is as strong as sticky duct tape, looks like electrical tape but most certainly is not. I’m going to wrap it on my handlebars, because another over-gripping primate needs to grab hold of my handlebars.

Snacks, more snacks and not any waterproof silicon, which was the actual purpose of the visit. All of the directions instructed you to not apply below the waterline. It is waterproof with conditions. This is not the sort of relationship I wish to begin with sealants.

Links: Your tax dollars, lowest common denominator, governmental humiliator at work in the form of the TSA:

A 95-year-old Barry County woman’s ordeal with airport screening — where a relative says security agents required her adult diaper be removed — has become the latest in a string of national stories on frustrations with TSA procedures.

Lena Reppert, a native of Barry County, was flying from Florida to move home to the Hastings area, where she’s living with relatives who are caring for her, said her daughter, Jean Weber of Destin, Fla.

Instead of a getting a special goodbye moment with her cancer-stricken mother, Weber said the June 18 security check turned in a tearful ordeal because of the lengthy pat down by Transportation Security Administration agents.

“She was subjected to 45 minutes of searching, and I didn’t think that should happen,” Weber said this morning from her home in Destin.

There’s now an update to that story, but the response is thin gruel, but I feel safer already knowing a nonagenarian with leukemia has been ruled out as a threat.

North Korea is starving, perhaps even more than foreign policy guesstimates. Secret footage paints a grim picture:

“This footage is important because it shows that Kim Jong-il’s regime is growing weak,” he said.

“It used to put the military first, but now it can’t even supply food to its soldiers. Rice is being sold in markets but they are starving. This is the most significant thing in this video.”

This sort of thing is not what China and the South Koreans want to hear. When the government falls, or the serfs finally have had enough, those are the two borders and economies that will be directly stressed.

Maybe they should send in these ladies to assess the situation. World War II spy ladies from the OSS have been reunited in their neighborhood:

It was the early 1940s when Bohrer and McIntosh fell into jobs at the Office of Strategic Services, the nation’s first intelligence agency, created by President Franklin D. Roosevelt and led by William “Wild Bill” Donovan, a Wall Street lawyer and World War I veteran. They were among the rarest of operatives, women working overseas during World War II.

In China, McIntosh, a “black propaganda” specialist, whipped up fake news stories to undermine the morale of the enemy — including an effort to convince the Japanese emperor’s soldiers that their wives were procreating with other men back home. Stationed in Italy, Bohrer analyzed aerial photographs of Germany, helping select sites to air drop and rescue OSS officers behind enemy lines.

Great story.