Tuesday, October 30, 2007

New York City

Two Weeks ago Jo and I went to New York City for her Dad's birthday and to visit her friend Ally. It was only my second time to NYC ever and 14 years since my first visit. Needless to say I prefer mountains to skyscrapers. After the birthday party we spent a day in Manhattan or "Man-natton" as I was intentionally, obliviously mis-pronouncing it to the disgust of New Yorkers. Ally recently started road biking so we decided the best way to see the city was to rent some "mountain bikes". They were cheap and I'll just say that the definition of "mountain bike" varies greatly between Boulder, CO and New York City. We had a blast touring the city and doing laps around Central Park. I couldn't resist using my fitness and altitude advantage to school some locals on their gucci road bikes. Some weren't too happy getting passed by me on a cruiser bike, I mean "mountain bike!" I passed a guy riding a $6000 Specialized Tarmac SL on the only climb in the park, he was pissed! He stuck on my wheel until the top of the climb where I put in a last ditch effort. It hurt bad, but I dropped him. I stopped after a while to wait for the girls and he caught me. The indignant look he gave me reminded me of the same look my cat gives me when I move him off my desk against his wishes! The whole trip was good fun. Jo's parents treated us to a great dinner and Ally took us out for Fondu. Hmm Cheese...

All Dressed Up


Local



Ally and Jo on the "mountain bike"



West Side Bike Path



Detour Under the Bridge




Graffiti


Mugger's Tunnel


No Hands in Central Park


This Guy Didn't Have a Chance


The Girls in Central Park


Urban Cycling

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Red-Tail Hawk in my Front Yard

I was out raking leaves the other day when I spotted this red-tail hawk thermaling over my neighborhood. I'm not sure if it came from hang gliding or just interest in birds of prey, but it seems like I have a knack for spotting raptors from afar. He was thermaling with another red-tail a couple of streets down, but after watching for a while I could tell they were drifting in my direction. I ran in and got the camera.


I need a zoom lens bad. Look for more on that in a future post (I've got tons of wildlife photos that are too far away). Here is a composite image of 14 shots I took of him as he thermaled over my house.

Monday, October 22, 2007

THE DEATH STAR!! (actually it's a tree stump)

I encountered this Death Star-reminiscent tree stump on one of my recent Kensosha rides. Maybe it was high altitude, being tired from the long climb, dehydration, or some combinaton of factors, but as I was riding along and saw this stump I thought "Hey, it's the Death Star". So, naturally, I stopped and took a picture of it.



For those of you who have been devoid of popular culture for the past 30 years, the Death Star was a fictional planet-destroying space station appearing in the Star Wars movies. You can read more about it here.

My Death Star encounter didn't result in any planet destruction, but after stopping to take pictures I did have to pedal a little harder to catch up with my group. You won this round Death Star!

Am I the only one that see's the resemblance? It is 2:30am and I should go to bed...



Monday, October 15, 2007

25 Hours and 19 Mintues of Moab

24 Hours of Moab 2007 was a blast!


Jo and I were on different teams so we had the opportunity to race at the same time (a first) and enjoy our down time together. My team (Doug D., Pablo, Doug W., Angela) were mostly airline people and Jo's team (Lisa, Mike, Brion, Tony) were all Emergency Medical people.

My Team



Jo's Team


They were all great people and hanging out was just as much fun as being out on the race course. This year there wasn't tons of pressure and suffering like in 2005, nor 100 year floods and mud as in 2006. Our 5 person coed team didn't win, but we did well for our circumstances and most important we had fun which was my number 1 goal. My other goal was to ride the 15 mile course with 1360 feet of climbing in under 1:20, actually I was shooting for 1:15. In 2005 my first (and best) lap was 1:15:32, followed by 1:17:45, and 1:17:55 respectively, the 9 laps I rode in the race averaged out to 1:31 a lap. In both races I also did the start lap (featuring a running start), the most night laps, and the finish lap. What more could you ask for in a 24 hour race!

Sunset against the La Sals


Jo and Angela



I fell short of my sub 1:20 goal, although, Doug did beat it with a 1:19:58. Well done Doug!! My first lap was 1:34:41, but it was plagued with a mechanical drama that sapped about 20 min off my time. Without the drama, I feel pretty confident that I would have crossed the line at 1:15 +/- a minute or two. I used my experience from the 2005 start lap to develop a good strategy this year. Moab has a dusty 200 yard Le Mans (running start) before you get on the bike followed by about 1 mile of wide dirt road leading into the first technical climb. Most people go "all out" on the run and then "blow up" (that's ride slow for you non-cyclists) by the dirt road or first climb. My strategy was to take my time on the run and then ride at maximum effort to work my way to the front on the dirt road. Jo did her team's first lap too, so we opted to take our time and enjoy the run together.

Warming Up the Legs


Jo Smiling in the Dust


Dust at the Back of the Pack
(I'm #172, that's Jo to my right)


Once I got on my bike, I put the hammer down. I'm a better sprinter than a climber so I tried to get as far ahead as possible while still on the flat dirt road. I was passing people faster than ever before, aggressively yet courteous. I felt like a such rock start blazing by everyone that I worried my head would get too big to squeeze through the gaps! As the peleton spread out I got in a rhythm and would just hang to the sides or work an gap in the center if I needed to. By the start of the climb I was chomping at the back of the lead pack.

Once in the climb I was warmed up and it was time to shift strategies. When I started riding this spring my healing knee slowed me down on the climbs. To adapt, I was forced to work on tech skills and balance to clear (ride) the technical sections of trail. I called it "ultra slow climb mode". It would frustrate the hell out of people I rode with because I would go up the technical stuff so slow that they would have to get off and walk if they didn't get in front of me.

In the weeks before the race I gained had some climbing speed back, but still used my honed tech skills to climb the hardest lines. The first half of the race course in Moab is a technical climb followed by some technical rolling sections. You can climb the whole course in the middle ring yet the trail is filled with typical Moab slickrock steps and ledges with the easiest lines on the outsides of the trail. During the start lap when everybody is grouped together these lines are packed tire to tire and it can be impossible to pass. My strategy was to ride straight up the middle, picking the hardest lines and passing all the people stuck in traffic jams on both sides. It worked great because my body was used to the power output required for the technical riding so I didn't blow up. It was almost easier to ride the technical sections at my own pace rather than have deal with other people's pace on the easy lines.

Top of the Climb


Jo Passing #38 so Fast he Almost Crashed!


At the top of the first descent I could see the race leaders rocketing up the next climb across the small canyon. They were fast!! I was also catching people who were at or above my skill and fitness level and having to work harder and harder to pass and not be passed. It was good fun and with the worst of the climb over I was settling into my groove. Passing slower people is fun, but it's more fun to race someone evenly matched.

Sandy Descent



The backside of the course is made up of long, fast straight sections with small technical bumps and gulley's. The only way I was going to hang with the people I had worked my way up to would be to get in the big ring and stay in some one's draft. I was in a pace line with about 6 other riders by the first straight. It lead into a hard left turn so I positioned myself to the inside for the pass. As I entered the turn I leaned the bike way down low and sling shot up past the guy in front of me I felt a horrible feeling through the bike. It is a feeling I have known many times before. My stomach turned sour. I mentally weaved a nest of denial to crawl into. I finished the pass and stuck on the wheel of the next guy in the pace line, but it I knew it was all in vain now. My comfortable nest of denial started to fade away just like the air slowly hissing out of my rear tire. With each pedal stroke I felt more mush and less speed as the tire went flat.

Some of my blog regulars might remember a certain (just scrool down) where I burned a bike pump and swore off flat tires for ever with the installation of new tubeless tires. As I drifted to a stop I couldn't face the reality that my rear tire had gone flat. I had set up my tubeless tires with tons of Stans sealant so that even if the tire was punctured it would self-seal. I got off the bike and could see huge drips of sealant and sand oozing out of a 1/4" slash in the center of the tire. I topped off the air pressure and spent 5 minutes rocking the tire back and forth to get more sealant into the slash. It seemed to work at first and I clipped back in trying to ignore all the people that blew me while I was stopped. My rhythm was broken, but at least I was back in the game and could start working my way back up to the front right! Wrong!! After about a mile the tire was limp again, it just wouldn't seal. It was time to make a decision - do I spent the rest of the lap periodically stopping to top off my tire pressure and risking a failure or do I take a long stop now to put a tube in it. Continuing was a gamble, so after some thought I chose the latter.

Doug



Pablo



Angela



My long stop took about 15 minutes which is an eternity during a race. I had to unseat the tire bead, which exploded with Stans sealant all over me when it came off. Stans is like a combination of whole milk and Elmer's glue. It changes viscosity quickly as air pressure changes. Once the bead was off I had to put in a tube, re-seat the tire bead, and pump it up. It was probably the worst time and place in all 24 hours of the race to get a flat. It was comical how many people passed me. For the rest of the race people were coming up to me saying "Hey, your that guy that passed me and then got a flat on the first lap, right?" On the rest of the lap I tried to stay focused and get a good time, but my moral was broken. Had I been racing more this year I might have used the incident as a motivator to dig deeper, but I just couldn't turn it around.

Hanging at the Campsite


Gearing up for the First Night Lap



Molly Getting Settled for the Night



Back in the tent city I chilled out and enjoyed hanging with Jo and our teammates. Both night laps were solid times and the fastest on my team, 1:27:45 and 1:31:50 respectively. As I rolled into the gate off the last one first light was dancing off the peaks of the La Sals in the eastern sky. I decided to bring in the dawn with a 10 minute nap and a shower. Then somehow I got in my mind that my race was over and I wouldn't have to do anymore laps. When Doug came in off his lap we did a little math which showed otherwise. I spent the next 2 hours like a little kid that didn't want to go to school in the morning. I was tired, warm, and clean. My knee hurt, but not as much as my ass! The last thing I wanted to do was get back on my bike. Pablo, our team captain, caught wind that I was done and came over to give me some encouragement, but I wouldn't have it. When he got there I was sitting in a camp chair with my head down eating a chocolate doughnut. I told him he could say what he wanted about me but I was DONE! He walked away and I finished my doughnut. I was disgusted with myself. Where was the person who suffered through all those solo 24 hour races and 30 hour adventure races. When did I turn into a sniveling little girl! Someone call the Wambulance - MAN DOWN!!

Warm Blanket - Don't want to Ride Anymore


I knew deep down I wasn't done. Maybe my misery tolerance isn't what it used to be, but I couldn't face letting down myself and my team. In the end I made the right decision and suited up for one more lap. Jo grabbed the camera and Doug readied my bike. Our other rider named Doug came in at 11:53 am, 7 minutes before the race ended. My last lap was mixture of pain and pleasure. The race ends at noon, but if you can get a rider out before noon the lap still counts. It was a ghost town out on the course and I tried to combat my pain by setting short goals and positive thoughts. Once I got going I felt strong, but my knee hurt. The sharp pains ran through my nerves like little missiles into my brain. I could have gone harder, but didn't want to be out rehabbing all winter (been there, done that, no fun). I finished with a respectable 1:25:58, total race time 25:18:58.

Jo Finishing her Last Lap


Finishing the Last Lap


Our team got 19th out of 35. Both Jo's and my team were made up of great people. We topped off the weekend with a chaotic delirious drive home through rain, snow, and fog.

Snow and Fog



More pictures can be seen here.

Friday, October 12, 2007

Off to the 24 Hours of Moab

We're off first thing tomorrow (today, it's 2:00 am) to the 24 Hours of Moab race. I hope we don't run out of gas.





Okay, we're not driving the fun car to Moab. When I took this pic after riding Kenosha Pass I did almost run out of gas. It was a great photo spot, but unfortunately the sign was all that was left of the gas station. Gas mileage in the M Coupe varies greatly with how it is driven. I was having a little too much fun on the mountain roads up to the pass and looked down to see the empty light was on. Luckily, I was near the top of th pass and coasted to the next town large enough to have a gas station. I had about .3 gal left.


This will be my 3rd 24 Hours of Moab race. My first was in 2005 (pre-knee injury) with my rockstar teammate Brandon. We got 4th place in the Duo Pro class, one of my best finishes. It was one of only a few times, I've done well racing against Pros. Brandon was faster, but I ended up riding a few more laps (9 to his 7).





Last year Jo and I did it on a 5 person coed team. My knee was in bad shape, but it was one of the funnest races I've done. 1oo year rains which turned into 100 year floods just happened to descend upon the race as the sun was setting. As the sky's opened up and pandemonium broke out I just happened to be in the massage tent. As I lay there, warm and dry, sipping tea I couldn't help wonder how Jo was fairing in the dark, cold and rain. Turns out she was literally trying to stay alive in mud and flash floods, with a broken chain and no light. When she ran in from her lap of hell, I decided it might be best to hold off telling her how great my massage was!! Shorty after that they closed the race course because emergency medical personnel was overwhelmed by injured racers.





The view from the massage tent.





This year, after slowly increasing my strength and fitness, I feel pretty strong. My knee is holding up so far. I'm on another 5 person coed team. It's not a super competitive class and I have no idea how our team will do. My only goal for the race (besides having fun - the most important) is to have a sub 1:20 lap. That might be too lofty, though, right now I feel more in the 1:25 range.

Tuesday, October 09, 2007

Running, flying, and Molly Dog

Here's a story James wrote correlating running and flying. He just ran the Chicago Marathon and finished with just over half of the other original registrants that made it to the finish line. He tells a great story about running a Marathon while mentally reminiscing about flying gliders with his dad. Through out the journey he draws many parallels between feet and flight, pain and altitude gain, and hitting the wall and recovering from a stall. Check it out Here.


On the topic of stories, running and flying, here's a picture of Molly Dog taking flight. It's not photoshopped at all other than slight levels and saturation adjustments. The shutter speed was slightly too long for the flash, 1/60 at F5.6, but I needed that to catch the sunset.





Her first jump was when she was about 10 months old, we were on a road trip through Northern Idaho and Montana. I decided it was time for her to learn to jump off a dock. After some scouting I found a good one on the crystal clear, frigid waters of Lake Coeur D' Alene. If there is water, Molly has to be in it and being with me in the water is even better. Teaching by example, I ran out the end of the dock and jumped in. My body locked up in shock from the cold, a feeling I sadistically enjoy. It's like the ultimate refreshment. Molly followed me to the edge, but was too scared to jump. She barked, cried, and whimpered, but wouldn't jump. I swam closer to the dock and started calling her name excitedly. She was a ball of rising energy that kept building with each call (think puppy on Red Bull), but she couldn't get past the fear. She would run full speed and chicken out at the last minute, skidding clumsily to a stop at the dock's edge. Finally, she was overcome by an explosion of puppy super power and did it! It wasn't a half ass lob either, it was a 150% effort. She was like a dog missile launching into the air! She soared over me in slow motion, tail spinning like a helicopter and disappeared into an eruption of white spray. My vision was blurred by the splash in my eyes, but when I shook the water out I couldn't see here anywhere. Then, when she finally popped up I thought she might never do it again because it was so violent and she was under water for a while. She did do it again and still does at every opportunity. It's the only way she can beat Nana's powerful swimming to the stick.





In Boulder all the docks have rails (stupid safety), but Molly isn't phased. She just squeezes under them. Although, she can't get good height or the distance, she makes it work even in the dark.





Monday, October 08, 2007

"HELP!!!!!"

Jo and I went for a late afternoon ride (in snow flurries) today up Chimney Gulch and down Enchanted Forest and Apex in Golden, CO. About half way up Chimney Gulch there is a pull off on Lookout Mountain Road where lots of tourists congregate and walk 100 yards up the trail to be in "nature". I stopped at the pull off to put on my arm warmers as the snow was getting a little cold against bare skin, meanwhile Jo kept going. Just up the trail from the pull off I encountered a pack of over-weight, mid-westerners. Where they were standing the trail washed out into a steeply angled, off camber rock garden split up into different lines by trees. I normally don't clear this section and started to get off my bike to give way to the hikers, but as I did that the crowd came alive with cheers of encouragement. "You can do it", "Go, go, go" they chanted at. (Now I felt bad for thinking they were over-weight)

Not wanting to deprive them of a show and possible carnage I accepted the challenge. The problem was that an already hard section of trail was made almost impossible by my portly new friends standing in all of the good lines. I picked a lower line first and then had to bunny hop up to a higher line to avoid one. Somehow it worked out, but then my rear tire stalled on a root. For a split second I thought I might tumble off the edge into the abyss, but I managed to power out of it and rode off. I waived a victory salute as my audience cheered and tried to catch Jo.

She had a good lead on me, but I caught her near the top of the climb. She let me go ahead as the trail descended over a boulder and climb a short section to the top. I was just settling back into climbing mode when I heard the unmistakable sound of rubber and metal sliding on rock followed by "Help, Help!!" I could see through the trees that Jo had took a spill on the boulder, but couldn't make out any detail. I got off my bike and spent a few seconds moving it off the trail as her screams got more deliberate. Forget the bike I thought and started running towards her. As I did the tree branches gave way to the gravity of the situation.


Jo was dangling off the top of a 15 foot rock wall clinging with both hands to some loose roots on top. Even worse, her bike was dangling below her the saddle hooked miraculously on her foot. My adrenaline kicked in and I ran full speed thinking I have to grab her hands before she falls. As dove to grab her hands she screamed for me to grab her bike. What?! "Get the bike! I'm fine, GET THE BIKE!!" she yelled. How she managed to catch her saddle with her foot and tediously balance the bike on it as she went over the edge, I don't know. It looked like something out of an action movie or a cartoon. I tried not to laugh as I struggled down the rock wall to grab the bike. I got it and hoisted it up to the trail and then pulled her up. Then we both collapsed in laughter.


She's got a true mountain biker's attitude - Forget about me, hows the bike??

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Kenosha Part II (Pics)

Kenosha was so awesome we decided to do it again. Jo rocked it on her single speed which was an amazing feat. Here are pics from 2 trips, 5 days apart. I used most of my good trail pics below in the previous post. The thought that this trail might be closed next year makes me sick to my stomach.

Bikes Loaded Up


Ready to Ride


Top of the 1st Descent


Ramine Killing it


Jo and I Enjoying the View


Trip 2 Crew


Jo in the Trees


1st Bridge


No Problem


Tire Tracks in Fresh Snow


Doug up Top


Angela up Top


Last Climb back to the Car


Driving Home - just as Fun as the Ride!!