weekend


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.


2
Jul 11

Fourth on the First

Jerry Katz suggested Opelika’s annual “Freedom Celebration” as a nice way to spend Friday evening. Head out to Opelika High School and extend the Fourth of July holiday a bit. It is an ephemeral thing, here one minute, bright and then falling to the ground and forgotten, except for the inevitable litter. So why not make it a several day celebration? A birth of a nation should merit that.

So we go watch kids play in the inflatables, blow bubbles, get balloon animals, listen to some music and generally have a nice quiet evening.

And then the organizers laughed at the dry conditions left by the drought and threw 22 minutes of gunpowder and charged explosives into the air.

The Fourth is a good holiday for traditions. We have ours. What are yours? What traditions will be started this year? Maybe a few in this video, which establishes the setting for the event, shows some of the atmosphere and the fireworks finale.

We had great seats. Everyone had great seats. Really nice time.


26
Jun 11

Today’s high point is a low bar to clear

We’d been out to Lowe’s to pick up paint swatches and items for plumbing repair. It seems there is a slow leak in each of the toilet basins, and so there is the middle-of-the-night sound of water filling the tank. That’s an easy enough fix. In most houses.

At home, I fix one easily enough. Turn off the water, disconnect the feed line, pull up the old flapper and tug the new one into place. The water is hard enough to do serious damage to the rubberized flappers over time, and I suspect these are the originals.

I move on to the other restroom, pulling out the old flapper, putting in the new one and discover … there’s a little leak in the basin. Nothing that a little sealant can’t fix, hopefully. In most houses. The destructive burial ground spirits that live here have been well-documented.

But, between the hardware store and my temp-job as plumber there was a visit to the grocery store, where we did our best to avoid the four plodding teenagers who’d just walked in before us. [#middleage]

We buy our things from the list, noting with displeasure that they’ve moved the raisins and the trail mix, again. They do this every six weeks or so. It is like they get bored with the aisle arrangement and shuffle things around, just to make sure the stockers get their hours. Now, 90 percent of the time that you shop there you can’t help but be besieged by people asking if you need help, if you’re finding everything OK. The day after they reorganize these people are no where around. It is a little game they play.

But we finally find the raisins and the trail mix. Aisle 6, on the left. And we head up front to play our favorite game: Find the Fastest Line. I believe today we avoided cutting anyone off in getting to the right cashier. There was an older woman in front of us with nothing on the conveyer belt. A bagger had helpfully placed all of her things in plastic and back in her cart. The receipt had been given. And this lady would not stop talking.

We had about a third of our cart unloaded before she finally decided to head outside. (Clearly she had no ice cream.) The cashier rolls her eyes as loudly as a teenaged girl can. I snicker.

“Shut up,” she said with a smile. Kids these days, huh?

I said nothing.

This was the scene just before we started the grill this evening:

Sunset

We had steaks and okra and lumpy mashed potatoes. Seems we broke the hand blender. And, no matter what you think, you’re not going to duplicate the speed of those beaters yourself.

We’re working our way through Dexter just now. I watched the first season on CBS a few years ago when they aired it during the writers’ strike. The show moved fairly slowly, and now I see why. The acting is a little stodgy and some of the dialog was written by a 13-year-old boy, but the camera angles and the writing are generally amusing. I don’t remember many specific details of this first season, only that the last episode had some amazing ending.

Unlike this entry.


25
Jun 11

The point of catching up on purely voluntary exercises

The site’s photo galleries are now up-to-date through May. Previously they’d stopped at February — I’m blaming comps. Now, though, you can see most of the things my camera saw in March, April and May.

This one did not make it in there, but will be on the June page when I build that.

Allie

Allie is very streaky when it comes to places she occupies. Each part of the day has an assigned location, most having to do with the sun in the windows and where we leave her alone. And from time to time those locations just. Lately she’s been a monorail cat on the arm of the sofa.

She’s sitting there just now, in fact. I think she likes it because it gives her the high ground (over her entirely fictional competitors) and allows her a commanding view of two rooms and the main hallway. She could pounce down from her mesa and control any situation.

This is the cat startled by anything larger than a moth.

Easy day today. Overslept, and so I missed my opportunity to ride. It was decidedly too warm by mid-morning. I’m going to have to maintain a real schedule in order to get my rides in, it seems.

Cleaned the office a bit, caught up on the site, goofed off with The Yankee and generally had a nice day of it. We were fortunate enough to have shrimp for dinner tonight; there’s nothing wrong in our little corner of the world.

Hope your weekend is a blast!


19
Jun 11

Happy Father’s Day

Step-father, Rick.

FathersDay

Father-in-law, Bob.

FathersDay

Grandfather, Clem.

FathersDay