17
Jul 15

Ride Columbus, ride

Riding in Columbus this evening. It was very warm:

We’re doing the Chattahoochee Sprint Tri tomorrow. And, as we always do at this particular race, we rode the bike course the night before.

I road so fast the sticker on my rim fell off!

That’s twice I’ve done that now. It has nothing to do with speed and a lot to do with adhesive, I assure you.

And now off for the pre-race pasta dinner.


16
Jul 15

The tank banks

I saw this piggy bank at Stonehenge. At the time I had no idea about the history behind it, which is, like most history, rather interesting.

It comes from a World War 1 British fund raising campaign. Six tanks toured the countryside promoting war bonds. You have to remember this is in the fall of 1917 and tanks were still the high end of war marvels. The public was fascinated to see in person what they were just starting to read about.

The tank rolled in with soldiers and artillery alongside. Airplanes dropped pamphlets, speeches were made. The tank was put through its paces before spending several days in the town with a table inside where people were giving money. They raised millions of pounds, nationally. Soon a competition emerged to see which place could raise the most money and “win” a tank. West Hartlepool would win and Egbert — they do know how to name things, don’t they? — stayed in the town until it was scrapped in 1937.

After the war was over, the government gave 264 tanks to towns and cities in 1919. Most just rusted out over time and sold for scrap. All but one was gone before the end of World War II. The town of Ashford still has their tank, the only one left. It is now a registered war memorial, though without its engine or gearbox and with replica armaments. You can see the tank here:

That tank, one of 1,200 Mark IVs the British built for that particular war, is thought to have never seen combat. Only eight remain. The Mark IV carried a crew of eight and traveled at seven miles per hour.


15
Jul 15

Pluto, from my living room

From Kennedy’s moon challenge to the outer edges of the solar system in a lifetime. Even with robotic exploration no one here today will likely ever see such a scale of success again.

At least we have Photoshop:

It was quite cool to see the experts geeking out in their press conference over that first image coming in from the flyby. Who knows how much of their lives they’ve put into that and then, suddenly, there it was, Pluto, the heart, no craters and plenty of conjecture of what it all means.

“Part of the reason you’re not hearing us say ‘Pluto looks like this world or that world’ is because Pluto has SO MUCH diversity. There’s nothing like it,” they said.
What a cool day to think about what’s out there.


14
Jul 15

Small circles, groceries and unknown routes

Rode my bike to the store yesterday. It wasn’t really a recovery ride. I guess I sort of rationalized it to myself that way, but I didn’t work that hard in the race yesterday anyway. I did this today, though:

We needed a few things, beans and tomatoes and the like, and I can go on the random daily store run on my bicycle in the summer.

Truly, it is the infinitesimally small things that can earn a real grin.

Plus carrying a bike through a grocery story is fun. I stuffed them in my musette bag, almost wiped out in bike shoes on the slick floor and walked my ride all over the store. Nobody has ever given my bike a second look at the grocery store, which is cool.

Guy behind me at the checkout made a joke about not knowing where they stocked the bicycles. I told him they were over by the produce, but, you know how they’re always moving things around.

He didn’t ask what aisle had the spandex.

I took a long way home, just to add a few miles to the route. So I tried a new route, sometimes you see things you’ve never seen before:

The route involved two paths and a wooden bridge. It was worth it:


13
Jul 15

Last night’s lightning

We were out for ice cream with friends last night when a storm moved through the area.

I was in a terrible spot for it, but here are a few shots of the storm I took on my phone. Sorry about the foreground, but, hey, lightning shots on my phone. More than 19,000 people have seen these on Twitter. (Seriously.)