cycling


8
Jul 11

My Google+ page is at the bottom of this post

Broke my bike. Or at least the tire.

wheel

Aww. My first flat.

Changing tires isn’t hard. There’s roughly 48,000 videos on YouTube of varying quality that can walk you through the process. The thing none of them discuss is thumb strength. You need it.

So I wrestle with the tire, forfeiting my opportunity to ride this morning. Theres was a time crunch. Finally get everything situated and discover a chain rub. Well, good. Can’t figure that out on my own and the solution is the bike shop. I was taking it in next week for a tune up anyway, but now I’ll lose the weekend.

And I had such great rides planned for the weekend.

Took the Yankee to the airport and, afterward, found myself very hungry. My Chinese last night wasn’t the tastiest, never settled well and didn’t stick around long. So, where to go?

My friend and noted foodie Chadd Scott suggested I try Sprayberry’s Barbecue. One of the young members of that family is a student of The Yankee’s and we’ve been trying to visit, but every time we pass through they are closed. (Why can a barbecue joint be open at 2 a.m., anyway?)

The timing worked. It got a recommendation. Had to be done.

Here’s my lunch:

Cue

As I said on Twitter, I grew up in the center of the BBQ universe. I’ve had BBQ in restaurants, gas stations, shacks and off the back of pickup trucks. I’ve had Thai barbecue, smart casual barbecue, in environments where the 1950s decor that never evolved and on more grills than you could count. Sprayberry is good y’all.

I met one of the other young men from the Sprayberry family. He told me that part of the ceiling was original. This is from the 1926 gas station:

center>Ceiling

Calvin Coolidge was president when Mr. Sprayberry had that ceiling installed. Consider that for a second.

So I drove through tiny Newnan to get back to the interstate. Found this little factory will missing windowpanes, burning lights and the distant sound of production inside:

center>factory

What a great look that building had. No sign, though. Maybe, I discovered later, because I was standing at the back of the property. Google Maps was no help in trying to figure out the name of the place.

The banner across the bottom of the blog is also from that building. I love the guy walking. Makes it look very dynamic. The banner across the top, meanwhile, is from just a few blocks away. Do you remember those books from childhood that spread an entire city panorama before you? Everything was moving, everyone in town was there and things were going on everywhere. (Similar to this.) I always loved those settings. So much to see! So many expressions to study!

That’s what that corner, where I shot the top banner, looked like. Utility workers were busy on both sides of the intersection. The roads were humming along. People were working on one side of the street and there were people standing and talking intently across from them. Busy little moment in a sleepy Southern town.

Made it home and to the bike shop. Described the problem. Was assured, by the third person I’ve seen working there (I’ve been there three times) that they’d get it figured out.

And then he asked how you changed gears on my bike. Promising.

Came home. Read for a while. Had dinner, wiping out the remaining chicken tortilla soup, a recipe from Henry’s Puffy Tacos in San Antonio, Texas as found in the Off the Eaten Path book. Stuff is even better after you let it sit for two days.

Sorry. Dozed off during a Fraiser marathon. I was icing my shoulder and woke up to the interminable Golden Girls theme song. The ice pack was still mostly ice, so the nap wasn’t long, but that’s enough to chase me to bed. I must now wrap up my evening’s festivities, put everything away, including this.

Find me on Google+. Finally got one of my invites to work today. I spent part of the evening tinkering with the site, getting used to the interface and wondering “How many platforms does one need, anyway? Fatigue sets in. Time to feed the monster is finite. Something has to yield. Which will it be?


6
Jul 11

Another wall broken

We often have this conversation at night:

Me: Do you want to ride tomorrow?

The Yankee: Yes.

Me: How far do you want to go?

The Yankee: X miles.

Me: Where do you want to go.

We had this conversation last night, in fact. This morning she said “I want to go here and there, hill and dale and so on.”

She did not, but you don’t care about the street names. What you do care about is when she said ” … and then come back here to fuel up.”

Which, I’ve decided today, is the meanest thing she’s ever said.

See, I’d figured I’d do my 30 miles — because I am at a place where doing less than 15 is a joke, doing 20 barely seems an effort, but 30 is time well spent AND I can still function like a human being for the rest of the day. I’d do my 30 and then come home, rest, hydrate, shower, you know, that stuff. And then later this evening I could mow the lawn.

I am aided in this because, being from the north, the Deep South summer wipes her out. She decided earlier this week she can ride in humidity — it was odd hearing her admit that — but it is the sun that truly hurts. And, if you think about country roads, or even urban areas, rare is the spot where you can be in a lot of shade. July. Deep South. And so on.

So she starts out, and then I play catch up. I pass her. I get home and have a refreshing beverage and think “I’m done. She’ll get home and by then it will be serious July and no longer the early morning and that’ll be the day’s ride.”

But no.

She decides to go back out. And I’m stubborn, so I decide to go back out. She gets a head start. I catch her, and so on. She has a flat tire. I help with that. Turning right at the top of this hill — which I’ve climbed twice, because I had to go back for the tire — means going home. Turning left means we continue our pre-existing route. She turns left, figuring that, having done 45 miles, she’s pressing on.

There’s an expression we’ve learned in long duration exertion called bonking. It is defined as “a condition caused by the depletion of glycogen stores in the liver and muscles, which manifests itself by sudden fatigue and loss of energy.”

I think I had several bonks today.

But we rode 60 miles. SIXTY.

And finally we made it home. Now we’re not doing anything else for the rest of the day that requires coordinated muscle effort, because, really.

She made a delicious dinner. We had a late, large lunch. (Because we’d burned something like 4,000 calories pedaling around town.) And then we dove into Morgan Murphy’s Off the Eaten Path, which is a ringing endorsement for dives and out of the way places across the South (and, for some reason, Delaware and Maryland).

The Yankee’s mother gave us this book. We’ve been looking forward to trying most everything in it. Over the weekend we put sticky notes on each page marking a recipe we’d like to try. Basically we now have a book with sticky notes on most every page. That was a useful exercise.

Cookbook

Tonight we had chicken tortilla soup from Henry’s Puffy Tacos, in San Antonio, Texas. Delicious. Want the recipe?


5
Jul 11

Attention shoppers

Started the day on the bike, as per usual. Made it 14.5 miles. It was warm and bright and sunny, but that wasn’t the problem. There’s a cramping pain in my shoulder that would not allow me to look behind me to the left. This is important, you know, to monitor traffic, so I figured I should call it an early day.

Which is very interesting. At 20 miles I feel as if I can at least say I’ve had a little exercise. Thirty miles seems to be where I can say is a good place to park the bike, clean up and still have a marginally useful day. Higher than that and the bike ride becomes the day, physically speaking. Thirty isn’t a plateau, but you can see it from there. Fifteen? Why bother?

I pedaled around most of the bypass, hooked a left through the airport’s neighborhood and decided to shut down from there. I took the downhill express route home, and found The Yankee already back inside. She’d bailed, too, blaming the sun.

So we had a day of Court TV. Casey Anthony not guilty! I’m shocked! Appalled! I don’t know why, but the media is telling me I should be! And the media is full of talented litigators.

This sort of news holds little sway with me anywhere. It’s terrible on the personal level and cheap and facile from the news media’s perspective. No doubt it is very important to those involved, and I understand how bystanders can become invested in it. We’ve all been there on some type of story or another. This particular one just isn’t for me.

This is what I know of the entire story, which has been going on for years now: a child is dead, a mother is the suspect and she probably won’t win any Mother of the Year awards. So, naturally, I’m shocked. SHOCKED!

Because the newspapers tomorrow will tell me I should be; just like the talking heads have told me I should be all day. Except for that one lady on CNN, who suggested a lynch mob was on the verge of forming at the courthouse.

Really?

They set up for a jury press conference. Those wishing to take part could stand before the media and give an oration dissimilar to the fiery stuff that came out of one of the defense counselor’s head. The jury demurred. And that’s where the entire thing got boring.

I’m only writing this for the search engines. Casey Anthony! Mother of the Year! Guilty! Not guilty!

Shameful, isn’t it? And that’s what cable news has been doing for months. Or, in the case of some of the Headline News wags, years.

In my fun reading today I stumbled across a site called Dead Malls. This is a subject of little interest to me, but I appreciate the labor of love that goes into it. There’s a generation of culture built into the trappings and successes and failures of the mall culture. And you have to know, beginning a site like this, that your audience is extremely narrow. Who wants to read about a mall in Peoria except for the good people of Peoria?

Here are three I skimmed from Alabama: Eastwood, Century Plaza and Montgomery. The first two I’d actually visited at one point or another.

I’ll admit it. I was a teen in the right time for malls. They were a great place to meet with friends, play video games, catch a movie, buy things and play with the gadgets at Brookstone. Visiting one now does seem a bit different. Maybe it is timing, or age or the economy, but the vibrance seems gone.

Of course, I’ve been in a dead mall, too. I suddenly remembered. Only those people hadn’t covered it. To the Googles!

Another mall blog — there are several, it turns out — chronicles the sad demise and the odd current stasis that inhabits Westlake Mall.

The guy that runs that site is in his early-30s. He’s from Atlanta. And, despite clearly being uncomfortable cruising around the place he has the history pretty well figured out. The comments are wonderfully insightful. I left one, too, because one good comment deserves another and another. And it all harkens back to a changing of the retail guard, names I can recall in locations I would know better under different fonts and signage. But still. What was Woolworth became a Walmart, until they moved and that is now a Big Lots and a Fred’s. What used to be Zayre morphed into Kmart which was in a perpetual slide, but is now a thrift store. What was once Westlake Mall went through two iterations of anchor stores. (I remember the Consumer Warehouse Foods, where you wrote your own prices so they didn’t have to employ extra help, thereby keeping prices down. I recall Ronnie Marchant Furniture which was going out of business for 20 years, but is even still open today just a few blocks away from the mall. I recall Goody’s, in what used to be Loveman’s, have the faintest recollection of Sears and a Handy electronics place where no one ever seemed to buy anything.) The mall finally died after years on life support around the turn of the century and is now owned by a car salesman (who’s sons I knew in elementary school) who hopes to turn it into a giant flea market. Maybe.

Retail is always changing, but it seems to have changed a lot in my youth.

I began looking at other malls on his site. Here’s the Galleria, the local mall of choice in my youth, which was fabulous and then became generic, but is still rather impressive to see, especially through other people’s eyes.

I wrote of this in an Email to a friend, suggesting he give it a look because there would be a few names he recognized. I said this is another in a long list of “I love the Internet” moments. He wrote back that that is sort of sad.

Not sure if he meant the dead malls or what I found interesting today.

One final interesting thing: All of this somehow led me to an old column one of the local writers had on the fabled Bessemer Super Highway. He once ruffled some feathers by asking what was so super about it. (The corridor has seen better economic days. And that’s being kind.) Also, he said, it isn’t precisely a highway.

This, of course, prompted a reply and a terrific picture. Most importantly he received a little written history from a former DOT official that explained the road:

By the mid-1930’s, the State Highway Department began serious consideration of (a) new route to connect Jefferson County’s two major cities.

State engineers were aware of the revolutionary freeway system, the Autobahn, being developed in Germany and acquired a set of design plans from the Europeans. They then applied the design to a new highway … Unfortunately, the economic constraints resulting from the Great Depression caused the State to eliminate plans for a complete freeway facility.

[…]

However, the completed product was magnificent and resulted in the State’s first completely new multi-lane highway with roadways separated by a grassed median. The State Highway Department intended to simply call the highway the Birmingham-Bessemer Boulevard, but the public was so enamored with the facility, they dubbed it the “Bessemer Super Highway” and the designation was ultimately officially adopted. In 1940, a lighting system was installed along the route and, for a time, the Super Highway was the longest whiteway east of the Rocky Mountains.

[…]

Had the State been able to carry through with the original plans, the Super Highway would have pre-dated Connecticut’s Merritt Parkway and the Pennsylvania Turnpike as the first freeway in America.

I grew up alongside what was almost the first freeway in the country. The Yankee grew up alongside the Merritt, which was the first.

MerrittParkway

That’s an M.P. Wolcott shot of the Merritt Parkway (via the Library of Congress), in July 1941 Connecticut, months before people knew what Pearl Harbor was. This was 70 years ago, perhaps to the day. What do you think they were listening to on their car radios?


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.