Thursday, August 2, 2012

I Love Craig's List

Found in Craig's List:

Trek bike - $250 (Puyallup/ South Hill)

Date: 2012-07-28, 3:53PM PDT
Reply to:

I have a Trek bike for sale. I cannot answer any questions, as I am not a bike person--although I DO know that this bike won the Tour De France in '68. Please see pics, and if they aren't good enough, I can take more for you, or measure the bike's dimensions if you need that information. I am asking $250 OBO I would like to sell this bike soon. PLEASE make it obvious in your email that you are not spam, or I will not respond to you, out of fear of my computer exploding. Include your phone number, and don't ask me if I still have it, I will remove this ad after watching it get loaded onto it's new owner's Subaru.



I'm not sure if the seller is referring to this specific bike or just the model when s/he says that "this bike won the Tour De France in '68". The bike pictured appears to be an early '90s aluminum Trek 1100. This has me wondering if maybe Jan Janssen, the '68 Tour winner, had been visited by a young Michael Fox driving a modified De Lorean sometime before the '68 Tour.

Hmm... maybe time-travelling bike technology will be the new doping.

Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Three Volcanoes 300k Pre-ride: Better than Perfect

Mt. Adams from Babyshoe Pass
Can a bike ride be too perfect? I was mulling over this question, and the nature of perfection in general (gettin' all filosofical and shit) as I did the pre-ride for the Seattle Randonneurs Three Volcanoes 300k last Saturday.

Lonely Roads - Approaching Elk Summit

The Three Volcanoes 300k has everything I love in a good long bike ride. The roads are as remote and car-free as anything you could hope for in this part of the world. Views of snow capped volcanoes and sparkling streams abound. A variety of climbs, some short and steep, some long and relentless, others with occasional rest stops as they step up in gentle stages keep you physically challenged. Thrilling winding descents pay you back (plus interest) for your sweaty investment in the climbs. Mossy old massive Douglas firs keep you shaded and cool when the sun comes out.

Descent from Babyshoe Pass

But in addition to the things I love in a ride, the 3 Vs also throws some challenges at you. About 10 miles of unpaved road as you climb up and over the summit of Babyshoe pass is rutted and dusty. 9% grades with loose gravel over nasty washboard make it tough to keep traction. On the unpaved descent from Babyshoe, the loose gravel gets deep enough in places to make a skinny-tired road bikes whimper. Occasional cracks and potholes in the paved sections hide in shade and threaten to swallow your front wheel whole if you don't pay attention.

Mt. St. Helens from Near Elk Summit

As I was struggling with the climb over Babyshoe pass I was thinking about how without the dusty unpaved 10 miles, this ride would be so perfect as to be downright boring. It would be like a rose without thorns. Like a big wad of cotton candy dipped in hot fudge, way too sweet to stomach. But there was Babyshoe pass with its deceptively innocent sounding name. The wasabi on the sushi. The olive in the Martini.

It's the the 3 V's imperfections that make it a perfect ride.

Wait a second... That makes no sense at all. Perhaps I should stick with randonneuring. My filosofer skillz aren't so great.

Anyway, whether you call it perfect, or perfectly imperfect, or just fabulously flawed (like most of my favorite people), I have to say that the Three Volcanoes 300k was among my favorite bike rides ever.

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

Remembering Michael Wang


This Saturday it will be one year exactly since Michael Wang was hit and killed by the driver of an SUV at the corner of Thomas and Dexter in Seattle. The driver left the scene of the accident but was eventually apprehended and charged.

Michael Wang was a husband, a father, a talented photographer, a great guy by all accounts, and he enjoyed commuting to work by bicycle.

Nearly every weekday I ride by the corner where Wang was killed, once on my way to work and once on my way home. A couple of days ago I was riding up the hill on Dexter on the wheel of another bicycle commuter. As we approached Thomas street the cyclist in front of me sat up a bit, crossed himself and then gave a little two-fingered salute toward the corner where Wang died. My mind was somewhere else at the time, so at first I didn't understand what he was doing. Then I remembered the ghost bike that had been chained to the street sign for much of last fall.

The ghost bike is long gone, and sometimes it's easy for me to ride by with my thoughts elsewhere. So, thanks to the commuter in front of me who helped me remember Michael Wang.

Monday, July 23, 2012

Look What Came in the Mail


One of the many fun things about randonneuring is that you can get some really neat shiny medals and trinkets as hard evidence of your suffering. It sort of reminds me of the merit badges I got when I was a Boy Scout except that there was usually far less suffering involved then. Well, actually I never really earned many merit badges because I discovered girls about the same time I got into Boy Scouts and quickly lost interest in knot tying, canoeing and coin collecting.

Anyway, it would seem I'm a better Randonneur than I ever was a Boy Scout (which isn't saying much). After signing up for the Golden Gate 1000 earlier this spring, I realized that if I finish it I will have qualified for the RUSA Cup award. The RUSA cup is earned by essentially doing one of just about every type of event that you can do as a Randonneur in the USA. To qualify you need to do the following within a two year period:

  • 100k populaire
  • 200k, 300k, 400k, 600k and 1000k brevets
  • team event (Fleche or Dart)
  • 1200k Grand Randonnée
  • other calendared events adding up to at least 5000k

I wasn't really going after the award but I managed to do all that over the past two years, so for my efforts (and $25 plus shipping and handling) I get the shiny mug pictured above with my name engraved on it. It's not exactly the Eagle Scout of Randonneuring, but then you can't drink beer out of an Eagle Scout medal, can you?

Sunday, July 8, 2012

Trek 560: A Racey Old Friend


I bought this '84 Trek 560 over a year ago, and though it doesn't get ridden as much as my other bikes, it has come to fill an important role in my vast stable of bikes (Ok, by "vast stable" I mean I have three rideable bikes and a few boxes full of parts). It's the indispensable sexy-sunny-day-go-fast bike. The 560 occupies the same sort of place in my bike collection as the "LBD" occupies in the wardrobes of a lot of women I know. For most serious cyclists these days an LBD bike is most likely going to be something modern, carbon fiber and quite a bit lighter than this old Trek. But for the non-competitive riding I do, I really don't think those modern carbon wonders have anything over my Trek 560 (says the retro-grouch in me...).

The 560 was designed to be a stripped down criterium racing machine so it just wouldn't be right to add fenders, racks and lights and load it down like a pack animal. Of course, being fenderless in Seattle means this bike spends a lot of it's time stashed away in the basement, but when the sun is out and I'm not expecting to be out riding after dark, the Trek 560 is usually my first choice.

From the original '84 Trek catalog

As with most bikes that pass through my hands, many of the 560's components have been switched a time or two since I've owned it. There's very little of the original bike left in this build. It's currently set up with a modern-ish drive train and wheels, and I wanted to be able to ride this in fast group rides, so brifters were called for instead of the original downtube shifters. The mix of parts is about as mongrel as it gets with the drive train including Campagnolo, Shimano, Suntour and SRAM. Yes, all four. And it actually works! I guess you could call it a "Campagsramanotour" drive train.

The cockpit

It started with the shifters. I've never owned a bike with Campy Ergo shifters before but I've always liked the feel of the hoods in my hands and way the levers work (thumbs to go faster, fingers to go slower). So I started researching what it would cost to switch the entire drive train over to Campagnolo. Shifters, derailleurs, cassette, chain, rear wheel... Wow! For a bike that I paid only a couple hundred bucks for originally I was looking at several hundred dollars to change it over to an older, used Campy group. That didn't make much sense, especially since all I really wanted was Campy shifters, so I started investigating cheaper options. That's when I learned about "Shimergo" drive trains.

There are a few variations of Shimergo but essentially it's a drive train with Campy ergo shifters and Shimano rear derailleur and cassette. Depending on how you mix and match the number of speeds, there are some different tricks for getting the indexing of the shifters to line up with the cogs on the cassette including 1) an adapter called the Shiftmate, 2) the "hubbub modification," or 3) just taking advantage of a "happy coincidence."

By happy coincidence I mean those cases where in spite of Campagnolo's and Shimano's best efforts to make their component groups proprietary and incompatible with each other, they stumbled a few times. With so many variations over the years (7 speed, 8 speed, 9 speed, 10 speed, 11 speed..., different models, etc.) there are a few combinations that just happen to work together. For example, Campy Ergo 10 speed shifters of a certain era just happen to line up perfectly with Shimano and SRAM 8 speed cassettes if you're using the right era of Shimano rear derailleur. Luckily there are generous people out there with more time than I have who have researched all of the different combinations and have posted their findings on the internet. Here are a couple of the articles I found extremely helpful:



For my build, I took advantage of the Campy Ergo 10 speed/Shimano 8 speed happy coincidence I described above. The shifters have a couple of clicks more than there are cogs in the cassette, but the limiters on the rear derailleur prevent you from going there, so the shifters behave exactly as they should for an 8 speed drive train. You can use pretty much anything you want for the front derailleur since the Campy Ergo shifters aren't really indexed for front shifting. I used the original Suntour front derailleur just so I could keep something original in this build.

Oh yeah, then there's the SRAM part. SRAM cassettes use the same spacing as Shimano, so they are completely compatible. (what were they thinking?) I used a SRAM cassette just because they had one with the range I wanted and that Shimano doesn't offer, and the price was right.

With the Campagsramanotour drive train worked out, I was able to put this bike together using a lot of parts I already had. Here's the rundown of parts:

Wheels: Forte Titan wheelset
Tires: Conti Gatorskins 25mm
Handlebars: Nitto Noodles
Shifters: Campagnolo Veloce 10 speed
Front Derailleur: Suntour Cyclone Mk II (the only part other than the frame, fork and headset that's original to the bike)
Rear Derailleur: Shimano 105
Cassette: SRAM 12-26 8 speed
Brakes: Tektro R530 calipers
Crankset: IRD Defiant Compact (a copy of 1970s Campy Strada, but with a 110BCD spider so it can handle "compact" sized rings)

IRD Defiant Compact Crank with 50T and 34T Rings

Seatpost: VO
Stem: Nitto Technomic Deluxe
Saddle: Selle San Marco Regal

The main triangle of the frame is made of Reynolds 501 tubing which is similar to the venerable 531 tubing, but seamed and a bit more robust (aka, heavier). Stays and forks are Tange Mangalloy. The fork has a nice sloping fork crown and the frame has bosses for one bottle on the downtube, and no rack bosses or fender eyelets. No unnecessary doodads here; this bike was built to race.

The handling of the 560 is always a bit of a shock when I first get on it. It handles exactly like a racing bike ought to handle. Thanks to relatively steep angles and short chain stays the handling is quick and precise. The frame has the plushness of steel in the way it absorbs vibration, but it's also very tight and stiff. When you stand up on the pedals, it responds immediately. The 560 always inspires me to ride hard and aggressively. The ride is definitely rougher than my other two bikes (Trek 311 and VO Randonneur), but for rides of up to about 200k it's fine. Longer than that and the stiffness of the ride and the attention that the handling requires get tiring. For my typical 40 - 60 mile training rides the 560 is perfect.

Even with the strange mix of parts, this bike just feels right and works flawlessly. Shifting is spot on with that unmistakeable Campy "ka-chunk." The Tektro brakes grab far better than the original single pivot side pulls the bike came with. There's still some room for improvement, for instance the wheels aren't great. The hubs make a grinding sound similar to the sound my knees make when I walk up stairs, but inspite of the noise they seem to roll well.

As described here, the 560 weighs a little under 22 lbs (including pedals and bottle cage). Hardly a lightweight by modern bike standards, but it's still a blast to ride which is where it's really at.

Monday, July 2, 2012

Golden Gate 1000: Taking Time to Smell the Roses On a Death March

The other evening a friend asked me how the Golden Gate 1000 went and - without thinking at all what came out of my mouth was: “it was a death march… with nice scenery.” With these big rides, my feelings about the ride seem to vary wildly depending on the mood I’m in at the moment and the parts of the ride that are foremost in my memory. Obviously that evening, when asked, I was remembering some of the less pleasant parts of the ride. But to be fair, there was much more positive than negative about the ride. My friend just happened to catch me somewhere on the coast highway in the driving rain, climbing an 8% grade into a headwind with no shoulder and a semi blasting by.

Day 1
We gathered Thursday morning in downtown San Jose for a 5:30 AM start. There were 27 riders in total doing the Golden Gate 1000 and I was the only non-local, everyone else was from one of the four bay area randonneur clubs. Rob Hawks, the San Francisco Randonneurs RBA very kindly introduced me during the pre-ride announcements and asked the others not to make too much fun of the fenders on my bike seeing as how I was from Seattle and didn't know any better (which of course they immediately all did, but boy would they regret that later). After some more pre-ride announcements Rob led us in an oath that essentially had us promising to do nothing stupid out on the roads, and with that we were ready to roll.

Starting the Climb up Mt. Hamilton

The View from Mt. Hamilton

After a few minutes of meandering through San Jose, we were on the edge of town and starting the climb up Mt. Hamilton. I had spent some time prior to the ride worrying a bit about the climb, but the worrying was unnecessary as it turned out to be one of my favorite parts of the ride. The sun wasn't fully up yet, so it was cool and comfortable for climbing. The road up Mt. Hamilton was almost totally car free and twisted and undulated like the dancers in a Lady Gaga video. Never terribly steep, the road ascended at a moderate pace with a couple brief reprieves until we finally could see the Lick Observatory at the summit.

Lick Observatory

At the Summit

After the summit the sun was up in the sky and the temperature quickly rose from the 50s to the 80s almost completely skipping the 60s and 70s. The descent down the back side of Mt. Hamilton is like an E ticket ride at Disneyland with banked hairpin turns and bumps and dips galore. Eventually the road levels off some and starts meandering northward toward Livermore. When I say "levels off" I mean that in a macro sense rather than micro sense. That road is constantly going up or down, but doing it in fairly equal amounts.

I mostly rode alone through the morning and early afternoon, occasionally seeing other randonneurs and chatting briefly, but with the constant ups and downs it was difficult to form any lasting alliances. After Livermore the route dipped into the suburbs here and there but still spent most of the time on quiet rural roads and slowly worked its way past Pleasanton, Dublin, Castro Valley, Moraga, Orinda, Pinole, and finally across the Carquinez Bridge to Vallejo.

The Carquinez Bridge

By late afternoon I was entering wine country, through the Suisun and Wooden Valleys and then over the ridge and into the heart of the North American wine universe, the Napa Valley. I haven't done any research to prove or disprove this theory, but I suspect the average blood alcohol level of Napa Valley drivers late in the day is similar to that of sailors on shore leave. I had no close calls, but did notice a couple drivers who seemed to feel overly constrained by the lines on the road.

Entering Wine Country

Coming Over the Ridge into the Napa Valley

As always happens somewhere on a long ride, time began to slow to a crawl as the sun was sinking over the Napa Valley. The vineyards were all looking alike and my cycle computer was counting the distance travelled in inches rather than miles. At least the riding was easy as it was flat and windless through the valley, but every minute seemed to take a week.

Sun Setting Over the Napa Valley

One thing that's helped me in the past to get through these randoneuring time warps is to have a mental "project" to work on. So, I went looking for a project. This is a little embarrassing to admit, but there was a time in my life when I knew every lyric to every song on Elton John's Goodbye Yellow Brick Road album (come on we were all thirteen once, right?). Those song lyrics were buried deeply, but with hours to kill it seemed like the perfect project to attempt to dredge up every verse, every chorus, every bridge from Love Lies Bleeding to Harmony... beginning to end. Dirty Little Girl, Candle in the Wind, Roy Rogers, Sweet Painted Ladies... the whole double album. I can't say I was successful in remembering every song, but the project accomplished exactly what it was intended to accomplish. Time started to fly by as I meandered through the valley belting out "Some punk with a shotgun... killed young Danny Bailey... in cold blood... in the lobby of a downtown motel..." into the darkness. I stopped for a quick convenience store dinner in Calistoga and then continued on into the night, "Your sister can't twist but she can rock and roll... she out bucks the broncos at the rodee-doe-doe... she's only sixteen but it's plain to see.. that she can pull the wool over little ol' me..."

"Goodbye Norma Jean... Though I never knew you at all you had the grace to hold yourself..."

When I finally pulled into the overnight control at the Best Western in Cloverdale a few minutes after midnight, I was almost disappointed that I had to stop singing Elton John songs. Almost. I chatted with the volunteer support team while gobbling a couple bowls of chili and then made my way to my hotel room for a quick shower and all the sleep I could manage to squeeze in between then and when my alarm would go off at 4:30 AM the next morning.

The numbers for day one:
Distance: 241.2 miles
Rolling Time: 16 hours 12 minutes
Total Time: 18 hours 40 minutes
Climbing: 14,206 feet

Day 2
After three blissful hours of sleep my iPhone reminded me that I had another full day of riding ahead of me and this was no time for sleeping in. I dug out the clean clothes, grabbed some breakfast, loaded up my bag with food for the day, grabbed a quick look at the forecast for the coast and... crap! The forecast was for temps in the mid 50s and rain all up and down the coast all day. Oh well, I'm a Seattle randonneur! I can't let a little rain ruin my day. Besides I've got fenders on my bike! So I added a couple more layers to my kit and headed out the door.

Awake, more or less

After a couple of false starts (first I headed the wrong direction from the hotel for about 10 minutes, then after I turned around, retraced my route and got back on course, I realized I had left my phone back in the hotel room) I was on my way toward the California coast on CA-128 with the sun just starting to peak over the hills. At least in Cloverdale it was shaping up to be a nice day.

Sunrise Over Cloverdale

CA-128 would be a lovely cycling road if not for the fact that it generally has no shoulder, and lots of logging trucks, semis, RVs and the like blaze by at 60 mph refusing to yield more than a few inches of the road to us annoying cyclists. For the first hour or so the traffic wasn't too heavy, but by a couple hours into my day I was routinely getting strafed. It was a welcome respite when I pulled into Boonville around 8:15 AM where the town was absolutely hopping. Boonville was hosting a Roots Reggae/World Music festival and every hippy, former hippy, hippy wanna-be and hippy-like person from several western states had converged there and was at that moment crawling out of their tents and VW vans in the Mendocino fairgrounds and wiping the schmutz out of their eyes. The smells of frying bacon and dank bud filled the morning.

My Favorite Sign

After breakfast #2 in Boonville I pushed on, braving the aggressive truck traffic. As CA-128 entered a grove of coastal redwoods, the rain began to fall, lightly at first, but with bigger and bigger drops as the coast got nearer. By the time I reached the junction with CA-1 and turned north toward Fort Bragg, it was neither misting nor sprinkling nor showering intermittently. It was just plain raining.

The Coast at Last

In spite of the rain and the continuing heavy traffic, I made great time up the coast to Fort Bragg where I stopped in at the Safeway for lunch. I had been attributing my blistering pace to good genetics and exceptional physical conditioning until one of the other randonneurs I met there pointed out the fact that we had been riding with a brisk tailwind for the past 40 miles. That was a bit of a downer for two reasons:

1. It meant I wasn’t really pro peloton material.

2. Fort Bragg was the northern most point on the route. From there we would head south into a headwind for the next 100 miles before the route would finally turn inland and give us any hope for a break from the wind.

Fort Bragg Harbor

Typical CA-1 Traffic

Scoping Out Potential Burial Places

The trip down the coast highway from Fort Bragg to Jenner stands out as the longest, slowest 100 miles (well, actually only about 97 miles but who's counting?) I’ve ever traveled by bicycle. I left Fort Bragg at 12:30 PM, and it was 10:30 PM before I finally made the turn inland on Hwy 116. Nine of those ten hours were filled with a Sisyphean pattern of slowly climbing the 7% – 8% grade of the shoulder less highway up and over a 100' – 300' high coastal headland, where once on top and fully exposed, the headwind would reduce my already slow progress to an even slower crawl, and then as I’d start descending the twists and turns on the other side of the headland, trailer towing motorhomes would do their best to force me off the road at every opportunity. Then you repeat the process about 30 more times. And did I mention it was pouring rain for most of this? To make the last few miles particularly memorable, after the sun went down the rain was replaced by impenetrable pea soup fog.

Elevation Profile - Fort Bragg to Jenner

Of course, the whole point of a randonneuring ride report is to take this awful stuff and make it sound even worse than it really was. So to be fair, that ten hour stretch wasn't entirely without some rose smelling and rainbow pots o' gold. For example, my dinner stop in Gualala was a little taste of rando heaven. About the only choice for food in town was something you might get if you put a Mexican taco truck in a blender with a pizzaria, a road side burger joint and a French bakery. The menu offered burritos, chili cheese fries, bacon cheese burgers, pepperoni pizza and much more. For dessert you could have pain au chocolat, chocolate chip cookies, churros... It was like the United Nations of fast food. I ordered the chili cheese fries without hesitation and had no regrets.

The Best Chili Cheese Fries in Gualala

After leaving the coast, the journey back to Cloverdale was mostly uneventful. The rain and wind had stopped, the fog had cleared, the truckers and RV captains were snug in their beds, and most of the day's hills were behind me on the coast where they would give hell to a new batch of cyclists tomorrow. I arrived back at the Cloverdale Best Western feeling more than a little beaten down at 2:45 AM.

I rode alone for the entire day, only seeing other randos briefly when I stopped in Boonville and Fort Bragg. But apparently I wasn't the only one who had had a tough day. The next morning I heard that of the 27 riders who started in San Jose, ten chose to abandon the ride on Friday.

The numbers for day two:
Distance: 222.7 miles
Rolling Time: 17 hours 18 minutes
Total Time: 20 hours 33 minutes
Climbing: 12,256 feet

Day 3
It doesn't seem right that you should pay full price for a hotel room when you only sleep in the bed for an hour and a half. There. Got that off my chest.

Day three's route started by retracing the previous evening's (or morning's) journey in reverse, back out to the coast on Dry Creek Rd, Westside Rd and River Rd/Hwy 116. It was nice to be able to do this in the daylight since it had all been in the dark on day two. Westside Rd was especially beautiful as it moseyed through vineyards and passed dozens of wineries.

Back on the Road - Day 3

Westside Rd. - Winery Central

As I was approaching the coast I was feeling pretty good (I mean that in the relative sense, of course), except that I was noticing a little twinge of pain in my right Achilles tendon. The twinge was getting worse and worse until it got to be downright painful whenever I really pushed on the pedals. I tried pedaling one legged for a while, but that made my left leg tired very quickly so I realized that with over 100 miles remaining, my only hope was to just take it easy and soft pedal my way into the finish control in San Francisco.

Once back to the coast the soft pedaling idea was not working out so well since the coast highway continued its "lather, rinse, repeat" cycle of climbing 100' to 300' headlands over and over again. Every climb taunted me to stand up and attack. But every time I tried to ignore the pain and push on hard, I was reminded that my 52 year old Achilles would have no part of that crazy "HTFU" thinking. So, with plenty of time in the bank (I essentially had 20 hours in which to complete the last 100 miles) I finally settled into to rose-smelling mindset and started just enjoying the scenery.

Unfortunately the scenery was pretty much lost in the fog.

Fog on the Coast

The fog disappeared as I headed inland toward Petaluma. Approaching Petaluma I realized that I was in the bay area's weekend warrior training ground. Every few minutes I was passed by another dentist on a $10,000 bicycle. I have nothing against dentists or $10,000 bicycles, it was just a little hard to let them all pass me without putting up a bit of a fight. But with my Achilles tendon still complaining there was nothing I could do but let them go by and admire their Dura Ace drive trains and laterally-stiff-yet-vertically-compliant carbon fiber frames.

You'd think with all those dentists on $10,000 bicycles roaming the Marin countryside that the locals would be pretty numb to the sight of cyclists in their funny lycra get ups, wouldn't you? Apparently not. In the town of Petaluma I had stopped in at the 7-11 to get my receipt for the brevet card. As I was heading out the door to get back on my bike, a tall thin young man in cowboy hat had just hopped out of his pickup truck and was headed into the store (probably for a half-rack of Coors Light). He puposely stopped right in front of me, semi-blocking my way, gave me a sort of sideways wise-ass grin and said, "do you sometimes feel like you're Lance Armstrong?" Of course, in this kind of situation I always think of about a hundred extremely witty comebacks, but I tend to think of them all about a minute or two too late. All I could come up with at the moment was, "yeah, a little."

After Petaluma I made my way back to Tomales bay where I was tempted by every oyster shack I rode past. I wanted to stop to enjoy some oysters and a big pile of french fries, but at the same time I was starting to smell the barn so I decided to push on and just be done with this big adventure.

Tomales Bay

Approaching Inverness

I got into Fairfax at about 9 PM and mistakenly thought that from there it was a short trip to the Golden Gate bridge and then a few blocks to the finish. Point of fact: there were 37 cues remaining on the cue sheet from Fairfax to the finish in downtown San Francisco. And as it turned out, that wasn't nearly enough cues to tell me what I still needed to do to get to the finish. The last ten miles was by far the most complicated maze I've ever had to navigate on a brevet of any kind. The nice folks of the San Francisco Randonneurs had warned me that this part of the route would be a bit complicated, but oh my, I had no idea. I ended up riding most of the last ten miles with my iPhone in one hand, watching the little blue dot as it moved from one block to the next and trying to figure out how to get that blue dot over the bridge from Marin county into San Francisco.

But eventually I got onto the bridge, and yes - the trip across all by myself at 11 PM was absolutely glorious, with angels singing from the bridge towers and all.

The Golden Gate Bridge - At Last

I pulled into the final control at the Motel Capri at 11:15 PM. The last 15 miles had taken me over two hours, so it wasn't my best pace ever, but hey this is randonneuring, it's not racing. Done under the time limit is all that matters.

The numbers for day three:
Distance: 173.05 miles
Rolling Time: 13 hours 52 minutes
Total Time: 17 hours 08 minutes
Climbing: 7,581 feet

Epilogue
It's a week later now and my Achilles tendon is fine; a couple of days off the bike seemed to be all it needed. Looking back on this ride, I'm amazed by the beauty of the landscape I rode through. Bay area cyclists have so much great riding in their back yard!

The San Francisco Randonneurs put on a great event. The route was definitely a challenge, but it was also an excellent showcase of the wide variety of riding the bay area has to offer. I've always been impressed by the organization and support on Seattle Randonneur rides, but without any basis for comparison I just assumed that no other club could compare. Now I know that San Francisco randonneurs are easily as spoiled as we are in Seattle (excepting the fact that they are total wimps when it comes to rain ;)). Thank you to the San Francisco Randonneurs and your great volunteers who took such great care of me for three grueling days!

Monday, June 11, 2012

Next up: Golden Gate 1000k



Now that I've completed a Super Randonneur series I have just one more big ride on my agenda for the year. That's not to say that I won't be doing other brevets, but at this point there's only one that I'm definitely committed to riding. Any others beyond that will be on a more ad hoc basis--if I happen to be free that weekend and the route looks interesting... if not, no big deal. The big ride yet to come is the San Francisco Randonneur's Golden Gate 1000k. I'm really looking forward to this ride. This will be my first US brevet organized by a club other than SIR. I'm excited to ride through some new terrain with a new group of randonneurs. This will also be my first 1000k, and 1000k is the only brevet distance I've never done. I suspect it will be a lot like riding a 1200k, but still it will be nice to be able to say I've done them all. Plus, if you do all the different types of randonneuring events within two years, you can get a really cool trinket.

RUSA Cup[

Since I rode the SR series this spring on my single-speed Trek, it seemed obvious to me that that's the bike I would use for the Golden Gate 1000k too. But that was before I had really looked into the route (Day 1, Day 2 and Day 3). The route starts from downtown San Jose and immediately spends the first 25 miles climbing over 4,000 ft to the summit of Mt. Hamilton (home of Lick Observatory). That's a brutal climb on a single-speed. Maybe I could make it to the summit of Mt. Hamilton, but I'm afraid I wouldn't have much left for the remaining 600 miles of the ride (which also have a few ups and downs). Since the idea is to have fun and ride with other people, I've decided to ride a bike with those new-fangled "derailleur" things on it. I've been told the derailleurs and "gears" make going up hill nearly effortless.



So, it's time to dig my Velo Orange Randonneur out from the basement where it's been sitting behind the Christmas tree ornaments and 1990s bank statements. To be honest I did ride it once back in February, but just once. Out of nearly 4,000 miles I've ridden so far this year, all but about 100 of those miles were on my humble, devoted, always-eager-to-please, single-speed Trek.

Which brings up a source of a little bit of anxiety for the GG 1000k. It's sort of like getting a new bike two weeks before riding 1000k. Rule number one of randonneuring is you never change anything about your bike immediately before a big ride (or maybe that's rule number two, rule number one having something to do with being discreet about where you stop to pee). The VO Rando and I have a history together, but it's been a while. The fit is pretty different from the Trek, and I haven't had the spring SR series to make sure I've got all of the mechanical bits properly lubed, adjusted, tightened, lock-tited, duct-taped and zip-tied. Oh yeah, I also got a new saddle for it since the one that was on it before gave me saddle sores on PBP, and the corollary to rule number one (or is it two?) is "especially don't mess with the saddle!" So, I guess I'll set to riding the heck out of the VO over the next couple of weeks to try to sort out any issues and get acquainted again.