RIDES AGAIN
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In This Issue
Results & Reports from the 600 km brevet:
600 km Results
Report from Duane Wright
Report from Kent Peterson
Report from Jon Muellner
2001 SIR Super Randonneurs
Results & Reports from the 1200 km Gold Rush Randonnee:
GRR Results for SIR members
Report from Ken Carter
Results & Reports from the London-Edinburgh-London 1400 km randonnee:
LEL Results for SIR members
Report from Kent Peterson
Updated: 10 August 2001
RUSA #
Last Name
First Name
Time
109
TROUT
James
32:58
344
PETERSON
Kent
32:58
1082
MUELLNER
Jon
33:11
994
HUSTED
Orville E
33:17
592
CARTER
Ken W
33:30
167
ZMRHAL
Terry
34:35
1169
MCSWEENEY
Anne Marie
34:35
466
BRETT
Tom
34:50
484
HARKLEROAD
Don
34:54
777
PADO
Dick
34:54
BRUDVICK
Bob
34:54
497
KRICHMAN
Kenneth
36:59
1011
WINCZEWSKI
Peg
36:59
1041
FULLER
Andy L
37:11
64
THOMAS
Mark
38:15
679
HIMSCHOOT
Ron
38:15
442
WRIGHT
Duane
38:50
281
LEE
Ronald D
39:05
282
VIGESAA
Lynne Barber
39:05
752
MAGYAR
Robert
DNF
This was one mutha of a ride. It was my first ever SIR 600 km. Now I know why I generally
avoid them. But, the scenery
was spectacular. Andy Fuller 37:07 Ron Himschoot 38:20 Mark Thomas 38:20 Duane Wright 38:50 Ron Lee 39:08 Lynne Vigesaa 39:08 Anyway, I think we had a bit of a tail wind, on Highway 2. Andy announced that he would try to reach Winthrop (233 miles) by daylight, and off he went. He was merely doing this as a training ride for Mtn. Worlds (California). Mark was hurting a bit but climbed the pass (4,061') o.k., as did the rest of us. Then we put on our windbreakers for the descent (actually fairly gentle) east of Stevens Pass. The stretch through Tumwater Canyon was a spectacular as always. The sandwiches in Leavenworth were large and tasty. The weather was sunny and, by our standards, slightly hot (maybe 80). Wayne Methner met us, at Leavenworth, with another pair of shoes for Mark. We all felt better seeing him remove the injured shoe that he had wrapped with string to keep on his foot. Just before Wenatchee we headed north, on Alt. 97, taking a lot of serious headwinds. The five of us took one mile turns at the front. After Ephrata Mark and Ron Himschoot separated from us a bit. The climb, to the tunnel, after Ephrata, was quite serious. A thinking man would be tempted to take regular 97, instead, and hope there was no secret control! (We took a wrong turn and ended up in Ephrata! That's why we were late to the restaurant. I should have gotten a signature, in Ephrata. That would have been really impressive.) After Chelan it was time for lights. The Pateros control was open 'til 2 something a.m., but the actual control (restaurant/gas/mini-mart) closed at midnight. We got there about 22:10 (10 mintutes after the restaurant closed, sigh). It was quite somber getting dinner from the mini-mart. Ron H. and Mark had just made it in time to eat from the restaurant menu. I dined on wheat thins, pudding cups, and hot cocoa. I was somewhat heart broken to not have more to choose from. Then we headed off toward Winthrop, a 42 miles trip, along the Methow River, while we were all quite brain dead. It wasn't particularly steep, and there was almost no traffic. We were pretty wobbly (being brain dead) and didn't really draft. Its just that it was nice having someone be in front ... and no need for all of us to pretend to be thinking. We stopped at Twisp, to sit on the sidewalk and have a communal shiver. Apparently I fell asleep with food in my hand! Then we headed out for the last 9 miles. Somehow I was elected to take the front for the entire stretch, which was actually o.k. because the slight nod out, on the sidewalk, did improve my mental clarity (be it ever so slightly). At this point I noticed light in the sky. I asked Lynne what city that could possibly be. She informed me that that was called the sun rise. I remarked that we had had opposite goals of Andy Fuller. He had wanted to make Winthrop in the daylight. We, OTOH, had hoped to make Winthrop while it was still dark, in order to have enough time to get at least a little sleep before having to push on. It took us from 23:10 'til 03:30 to cover those 42 miles. The group had two cabins at the Virginian in Winthrop. Wayne had a spread of food waiting for us. We proceeded to eat and or take showers. I ate, then layed down waiting for my turn to shower. Next thing I knew my alarm was going off (from the Saturday morning setting -- I'd told myself to unset the thing but had forgotten!). So, I had gone to sleep at perhaps 04:00 and was awaken at 04:33 (unnecessarilly). At 05:10 Wayne was stirring, so I got up to shower. When I came out of the bathroom, everyone had assembled in our cabin (site of the food). We had a bit of breakfast. Ron H and Mark were down the road before us. Andy came up, a bit later, and chatted briefly before pulling away. He said his plan was to hammer on the climb, then take it easy on the rest of the ride. From Early Winters the climb gets serious. The last 7 miles is a 7.5% grade. We all made it to the top of Washington Pass (elev. 5,477'). Wayne was on top (in his car!) with more food and drink. Lynne was the last one to the top, lamenting that her horsepower seemed to be somewhere else. Wayne mentioned he had fallen asleep, on top, and Andy had gotten by without noticing him. It was truly amazing to see almost NO SNOW anywhere near the pass. I recalled doing some very nice spring skiing there, in mid June, once. The winter of 2000/2001 was truly a warm, dry winter. Mark and Ron H started the descent. I asked Ron L and Lynne if it was o.k. for me to head down a ways as I was getting cold. They encouraged me to go on. I was certain they would catch up to me, as they were riding fine. I started the descent but there was lots of chip seat on most of the pavement INCLUDING most of the shoulder. So I had to ride the brakes and keep way over to the right side of the shoulder. There also seemed a lot of turbulence. I squeezed the top tube, with my knees, but could hardly control the bike. So I had to descend quite slowly. I continued the descent but couldn't stay awake. This seemed like a dangerous combination, so I pulled over, found a sunny south facing bank, and took a slight nap. Then I headed down again. I went a few more miles but was again having trouble staying awake. I took another short snooze. By this time I assumed that Ron L and Lynne had passed me. I had the lane to myself, on the Colonial Creek descent, but didn't really feel like stomping on it. Still, I got the bike up to 46 mph here. All of my single bike speed records have been set here. I think the fastest was 52 mph. The Diablo climb caught my attention. Then I kept a steady pace to Marblemount (the last control before the finish). Here I dined on the terriyaki essential sandwich I'd been carrying (now a bit tart!), V8 juice, and banana bread. Then I did the stretch down 20 to the Concrete turn off toward Darrington. Somehow there is a state law that says it MUST rain any time one is near Darrington. This law was complied with, in spite it being a very sunny day. But the lone rain cloud only covered me for several miles, then it was sunny again. At Darrington I caught Ron H. and Mark just before they were leaving. They said they had NOT seen Ron L. and Lynne. Alas, this meant that they were behind me. Ron gave me some cantaloupe, which hit the spot. I had a bit to more to eat, (macaroni, and some mango nectar) then set out, not looking forward to this last stretch (34 miles) as now I was heading due west, into the head winds. Alas, somehow my rythm started to develop. The saddle started feeling tolerable again (I *should* had taken the Brooks, but instead had been lazy and just left the 24 year old Ideale on the bike!). Gradually I realized that I was TTing this last stretch. I was a little worried that I would run out of energy but kept cruising along. At one point I noticed a very large frog, hopping across the road. He stopped to hang out on the painted median. I was tempted to go back and shoo him across the road ... but I had a mission. I hope he made it. As everyone agreed, that last 3.7 miles, from Arlington to the motel, seem to take forever. But, I was cruising, so it went o.k. About 1/2 mile from the finish, Mark passed me, driving the other direction. Then I finished and a dapper looking Ron Himschoot shook my hand. He said that Mark had to get home 'cause it was father's day and the kids were waiting to do stuff with him. This gave the kids a chance to stay up late! Lynne had asked me to grab her room, so I did that. The clerk gave Ron and me a funny look at said "You know this is just one queen size bed, don't you?" I explained to her the randonneur bonding process! Actually, I clarified that the room was for others. Ron and I went to the room and were sitting, pondering getting a pizza or something, for the last two riders ... when they arrived! We agreed that there was no time for showering because IF there was even a restaurant still open (in Arlington), it most likely would close at 10:00 p.m., so there was a mass activity of throwing clothes everywhere and putting on clean civilian clothes (over dirty bodies). Lynne excused herself, for a moment, went into the bathroom, and heaved her guts out. Ron L said that she had been heaving all day long. Then she came out and announced "I think that dinner would be an excellent idea. Just let me brush my teeth first." Randonneurs are NOT without propriety. We jumped in the two vehicles and zoomed to the Mexican restaurant in Arlington. It was still open (closes at 10:00 p.m. on a Sunday night). Ron H asked me to NOT let him have a beer! I had an O'Douls because I figured I would need to make conversation with him to keep him awake. After dinner we said good bye to Ron L and Lynne. They would be spending the night at the motel (our base of operations for the ride). Ron Himschoot managed to drive home, dropping me off at my place. How he was able to stay awake, to drive, I do NOT know. I did a fair amount of nodding off. Once home I fed the creatures ... and went straight to bed! |
It's about 5:00 AM Saturday June 23, 2001 and Ken Carter and I are sitting in a booth at the
Arlington Denny's 24-hour restaurant. We're dressed in our riding clothes, sipping a pair of
hot chocolates and I'm waiting for my Grand Slam to arrive. It could be an Edward Hopper
painting entitled "Randonneurs" but we lack the glazed and gaunt look that only comes from
hard miles on distant roads. We're damn near chipper. But this is prologue and we drove up
here. It's not my usual style to get a ride to the start of a brevet, but Arlington is about
100 kilometers from my home in Issaquah and I think I'll get in enough riding this weekend
to not feel too guilty. In an hour we'll be riding the 2001 SIR 600 km. After breakfast, we sign in and see who else is here today. Mark Thomas is our brevet administrator and he's collecting our entry fees, making sure we sign the right forms and giving out the route sheets. Last weekend Mark, Andy Fuller, Ron Himschoot, Ron Lee, Lynne Vigesaa, and Duane Wright did the official pre-ride of this event and they all had ugly tales to tell involving evil climbs and wicked winds. Duane Wright had written a particular vivid account of the pre-ride and Bob Magyar is generous enough to share Duane's gory tale of woe with the rest of us while we tweak our bikes, consider our gear and wait for 6:00 AM to roll around. After his warm and somewhat hyponatremic 400-kilometer ride last month, Ken Krichman is here with a new found appreciation of salt. Ken is a nephrologist (kidney specialist) and should know better but on that ride he'd gotten way too low on electrolytes. When he was recounting his woes to me a few days later he said, "I was hyponatremic (low on salt) and that can make a person spacey, you know. When I got to the Cliffdell control, I ate about a whole bag of potato chips and I felt much better." At this point I'd expressed the view that if hyponatremia makes a person spacey then it seemed to me that Ken's been hyponatremic as long as I've known him and maybe he should install a salt lick on the front of his GoldRush. At the time Ken laughed off my suggestion, but I note that today he is packing a pretty good supply of saltine crackers. Jim Trout is quite possibly the nicest guy in the world. He also happens to be an incredibly fast endurance rider. On last month's 400 km he finished literally hours ahead of the rest of us and last weekend he knocked off 419.6 miles for a fifth place finish at the National 24 Hour Challenge in Michigan. While many riders like to rest up between events, Jim's a little different. His idea of resting up is riding this 600 km. While the rest of us have goals like "just finish the damn ride in under 40 hours" Jim's plan is to do the ride entirely in daylight. He'll ride to Winthrop (getting there before dark), have a good, solid night's sleep, and ride the last 235 kilometers on Sunday. Jim's girlfriend Maryam is here to cheer him on and provide some support at the controls. I'd put out the word that I was looking for extra SIR jerseys so I'd have some souvenirs to give to my British hosts at next month's London-Edinburgh-London ride and Jim's brought me an unused SIR jersey that he'd had stashed away. Seeing that I'm riding without a drop bag, he says "you can pick it up in Winthrop or at the end so you don't have to carry it the whole way" but I figure it doesn't weigh much and I'd rather do this transaction while my brain is still close to clear. I take the jersey and put it in my pack. To square the financial side of things, I pay Jim's entry fee for this ride. Most of the other riders have bags that Mark will shuttle up to Winthrop. I've always held with the "drop bags make you weak" philosophy and I'm frankly astounded at the size of some of the drop bags the others are using. I comment to Mark that I won't be taking that much stuff when I go to England next month and he says "sometime, I've got to take packing lessons from you." My friend Jon Muellner is also doing this ride without a drop bag. This is Jon's first year of randonneuring but to look at him you'd think he'd been doing this all his life. He's decked out for distance with a small handlebar bag, a Carradice saddlebag and a Humpback. He's kind of striking the middle balance between Jim Trout's unfendered Ti-bike minimalism and Bob Magyar's "there's a place for everything and that place is somewhere on my bike" belt plus suspenders school of preparedness. At 6:00 AM, fourteen of us roll out along the back roads through farm country, the small town of Granite Falls, past Lake Roesiger and on to Sultan on Highway 2. I know most of this area pretty well, but nearly half the turns on the entire ride are packed into these first 60 kilometers, so we take it fairly easy and pretty much stay together as a group until Sultan. Terry Zmhral, Anne-Marie McSweeney, Don Harkleroad, Dick Pado and Bob Brudvik all opt to take a quick break in Sultan, while Jon Muellner and I press on. Jim Trout, Tom Brett, and Ken Carter are somewhere up ahead while Ken Krichman, Peg Winczewski and Bob Magyar are somewhere behind Jon and myself. It's a great day for riding, with non-threatening clouds keeping things cool but not cold. Jon pulls ahead just past Sultan and Ed Husted passes me as well, just as we're going by a large carved wooden Sasquatch. Ed comments that you see some mighty strange things along this road. I take a bathroom and snack break at the roadside park in the town with the unlikely name of Startup and then ride through the town of Gold Bar (home of a reptile park). Around the town of Index I ride by yet another carved Sasquatch. Along side from these somewhat questionable tourist "attractions" we have the spectacular mountains that make up the Washington Cascades. I've tried various times to take pictures on these rides but have been forced to the conclusion that I lack the talent to create images that come anywhere near capturing the true scope of these mountains. I roll into the Skykomish control (kilometer 108) at 10:07 AM. Terry, Anne-Marie, Bob Brudvik, Dick and Don are loading up on food and drink and I do the same. Chocolate milk is a popular choice, but I opt for regular whole milk, a chocolate bar and some salted mixed nuts. It's a pretty quick break for all of us, and then we're off and climbing. Stevens Pass (kilometer 133.4) is at an elevation of 4061 feet. It's been a dry winter and there's virtually no snow up here now. It's 12:06 PM and the temperature is about 60 degrees. Mark Thomas has his car parked here as a secret control and I have a banana and pull on my rain jacket for what I know will be a fast and chilly descent. I'm a pretty strong climber, but I'm not known as a fast descender and pretty much everybody from the Skykomish group passes me on the descent. I pull into the Nason Creek rest area because I know from past experience that one of the local service clubs will be serving snacks there for weary travelers. I put a dollar into the donation jar and have three excellent homemade cookies and a glass of lemonade. Refreshed, I press on toward Leavenworth. Riding through the beautiful Tumwater canyon I again rue my lack of photographic skills. The river tumbles beside me in a frothing white noise that sets up a perfect cadence. I descend like water. At 2:00 PM, I hit a miniature traffic jam in the touristy faux-Bavarian town of Leavenworth. At 2:05 PM, I'm at the Chevron Station getting my control card signed. This is the 190 kilometer point in the ride. The same riders I saw at Skykomish are here as well, but they take off a bit ahead of me. I wash down a bag of Cheetos with a pair of Mochachinos and head out. It's warmer now, around 75 degrees. Just west of Wenatchee, I turn onto Alt-97 a fairly low-traffic road snaking northward along the western edge of the Columbia River. The next 250 kilometers of this ride will be over roads I've never seen before. Phrases from Duane's pre-ride report buzz around in my head like the lyrics to a really annoying pop song: "Serious Headwinds, Serious Climbs" by Duane and the Downbeats. Somehow I manage to focus on the dry beauty of the land and think how lucky we all are that today's weather is actually very good. We still have some cloud cover and the temperature is only around 80 degrees. We've got it much better today than those poor blighters did on the pre-ride. Before Entiat, I see Terry and Anne-Marie pulled over with a flat. They've got things well under control, but I still do the courtesy "you got what you need?" call as I pass. They assure me that they're fine and in fact they're back on the road and passing me a few minutes later. They're still at the Entiat control (kilometer 248) when I pull in at 4:24 PM. Ron Lee is here with a tire pump, topping off the tandem's tire and he's intent on filling us in on the climb ahead. I drink an orange juice and eat half a bag of brownie bites before following the tandem down the road. Terry and Anne-Marie do a pretty good job of making that tandem move and they stay ahead of me up the climb and through the short tunnel. Then things flatten out a bit and they're gone. I ride through the town of Chelan and then up to our next control at Pateros (kilometer 308). I pull into Pateros at 6:55 PM. It's a little cooler now, back down to around 74 degrees. Terry and Anne-Marie are here and so are Don, Dick and Bob. I get myself a pint of milk and some chicken strips. I eat quickly, take a few pictures of my fellow randonneurs (these photos probably won't turn out either!) and head off to SR-153. SR-153 winds mostly north and a little west along the Methow River valley. This is apple-farming country and along the river there are orchards, fruit warehouses and clusters of harvester cabins. But the bridges to the right of the road spanning the river are what really catch my eye. The first bridge is rickety, the kind of thing you'd expect to see in Thorton Wilder or B. Traven novel, or maybe in an Indiana Jones movie. It's a few frayed ropes, a bunch of weathered boards and more optimism than engineering. Still, a very brave or very stupid pedestrian might make it across on this structure, assuming he's lead a good life and the fates are feeling generous. A bit later I see a second bridge that makes the first one look like the Golden Gate. This bridge has more gaps than boards, more frays than ropes, more holes than a Swiss cheese factory. Indiana Jones wouldn't cross this thing even if all the Inca gold were on the other side and Lara Croft was calling him a frou-frou girly-man. The final bridge is only recognizable as a bridge because the previous two had got me thinking about bridges. I could build a better bridge by sneezing on a pile toothpicks and dental floss. It is a whisper of a hint of a suggestion of bridgeness, something akin to a dream or a nightmare, but weaker and far less tangible. Filaments that had once been rope dangle uselessly while twisted boards sway like rotting corpses executed years ago for long forgotten crimes. I try to figure out why these bridges are here, why time or fear of litigation hadn't torn them asunder years ago. I think about this for a long time, but I arrive at no satisfactory answer. Terry and Anne-Marie pass by me. A while later Don and Dick come chugging up and pull around. I settle in behind them, but Dick is kind of fading off Don's wheel, so I drop into the slot between them. Don is slowing down now and I feel guilty riding in his draft and I pull around to tow them for a bit. I'm a little guy and don't give much of a draft and the grade is going up now. When I look back, they're both dropping away. The sun is setting now and the sky is an amazing orange and blue mix. Again I try snapping some pictures but I'm sure the light is too dim. I see a deer come across the road and a few minutes later another one and then one more. I catch up with Terry and Anne-Marie as they pull over to put on their night riding stuff and adjust their lights. I snap on my headlight and taillight and ride on. I reach the cabins in Winthrop (kilometer 375) at 10:22 PM and I feel great. Tom Brett is there and so is Jon Muellner. Some of the others are there as well, but they've already settled in for the night. Mark and Ron have laid in a big supply of Mexican food and I have some beans and rice and tortillas and three big glasses of chocolate milk. While I'm eating, Don and Dick roll in. I ask Mark what time people are getting up to go and he says "around 4:30." "I don't think so," I reply and he says, "Well, when do you want to be woken?" "I'll wake my self up, but I'm not sticking around until 4:30!" I've got a couple of reasons for this. First, about three hours of sleep is plenty for me on a ride like this and second, I know Ken Carter is much faster than me and if I leave with him in the morning, he'll have to wait for me at the end. I don't like to keep people waiting. I wind up sleeping for a bit over three hours and around 2:20 AM I wander back to the control cabin to let Ron and Mark know that I'm heading out. I have a quick breakfast of chocolate milk and brownie bites and at 2:38 AM, I head west on Highway 20. It's cold now, and it gets colder as I climb up toward Washington Pass. It gets light around 4:00 AM and the temperature is around 40 degrees. I see a couple of more deer and some incredible mountains. Things get steeper as I ride toward the pass but this is a spectacular climb and it doesn't seem too bad. I'm looking ahead at the peak called Liberty Bell and I think how I've become accustom to some of the optical illusions you see in the mountains. Often, for example, you'll see what looks like a solid wall of mountains only to find that there is some narrow pass through them that you've overlooked. I'm sure this will be the case today, and I must be looking at some kind of illusion because it looks like the road just zig-zags over Liberty Bell in some kind of mark-of-Zorro fashion and that certainly can't be right. That steep gash must be some kind of a fault in the rock. It can't possibly be the road. A big white van rumbles past me and I get to track it as it grumbles up and over the mark of Zorro. As the van goes up, my heart goes down. "They've got to be kidding!" It turned out to be an illusion. The road really does follow the mark of Zorro but what looks like a 30 degree slope from below is in fact just a continuation of the 7.5 percent grade I'd been chugging up for quite a while now. I try to snap some pictures to properly capture the grandeur of this place and I fail miserably. I do notice a rider coming up behind me. Knowing that Jim Trout was going to wait until dawn to start, the one thought that goes through my head is "please, don't let that be Jim!" Mark Thomas snaps my picture as I ride up to the Washington Pass control (kilometer 425, elevation 5477 ft). I pull into the control at 6:50 AM and two minutes later Jon Muellner pulls in. It turns out he'd only left about fifteen minutes after me this morning. Ron and Maryam have set up a very cozy control here with kind of a three-sided tent facing the back of Ron's van. Earlier Jon and I had discussed the problem of cozy controls and how they make you want to linger and waste time. Jon's anxious to get going but I'm happy to enjoy the hot coffee, oatmeal, orange juice and wheat crisps. The propane space heater is pretty nice as well. Ron makes me a bagel for the road and I pull on my rain jacket and gloves for the cool descent Ron and Jon fill me in on what's ahead, a drop down followed by the climb up Rainy Pass and then another drop down to Ross Lake. Jon leaves and a couple of minutes later I too am headed down. It's a cold descent and the road is a bit rough. I shiver a bit on the descent so I can't get going too fast and I'm actually glad to see the road turn up for the climb up Rainy Pass. This turns out to be a very easy climb followed by some warmer and smoother descending. Before I get to the dam, I see Jon pulled over, peeling off his warm clothes and having a snack. I do likewise and head out. I'm completely running out of synonyms for gorgeous but Highway 20 will do that to you. Ross Lake is tucked into the mountains and is one of those amazing feats of engineering that looks spectacular, generates power and is a prime recreation area. I'm sure there are some hard-core monkey-wrenchers who want to blow up the dam, rip out the asphalt and restore the purity of this place but I'm perfectly happy to enjoy this impure intersection of engineering and nature. The lake is a deep jade green and the bridges today are solid, smooth examples of why I'm glad there are at least a few people who stayed awake in physics class. I stop at Newhalem thinking that I'll grab a snack and use the bathroom, but I'm thwarted on both counts. It's 9:40 AM and the store doesn't open until 10:00 AM and the public restrooms are closed for cleaning. I pull back onto the road just as Jon rolls by and I catch up with him. He's focused and mad. He tells me a truck towing a boat trailer nearly crowded him into a guardrail on the last metal-decked bridge and he felt the boat brush up against his left arm. It takes a few miles for his heart rate to drop down to normal. We pull into the market at Marblemount (kilometer 515) at 10:20 AM. We take a longer than usual break here, loading up on food and chatting. We figure the others would've caught us by now. Jon doesn't know what the route is like between Rockport and Arlington, but I assure him that compared to what we've done, the rest of the ride should be easy. I eat a Slim Jim, a packet of striped cookies, and a granola bar. I drink a pint of milk and get a white mocha from the latte stand. I'm not planning on stopping again between here and Arlington. While we're finishing up our feast, Ed Husted pulls up. He tells us that he's pretty sure that Jim, Tom and Ken Carter are behind him, but as is common in long rides, none of us are quite sure of that. Sometimes riders pass you when you're stopped and you never see them. Still, we're pretty sure that we're in the lead right now. Ed goes into the store to get his card signed and get some food. Jon's ready to go and takes off and I follow him about a minute later. Jon and I never really draft off each other. We're both fairly slim so neither of us offer much of a draft. After Rockport we turn down toward Darrington. The traffic is lighter now and we ride side-by-side for a bit. As is usual for Darrington, there's some rain but it's pretty light. I tell Jon that it pretty much always rains in Darrington and we'll probably ride out of it. We turn west at Darrington and now we're headed into a headwind. This is where I've got the advantage over Jon. I'm a little smaller, my baggage is a bit more aerodynamic and my Bike Friday is less effected by headwinds than a big-wheeled bike. Also, I think I might have a bit more left in my legs at this stage of the ride since I haven't been hauling around quite as much stuff as Jon. Whatever the reasons, as soon as we turn into the wind, I get real small and peel off the front. Jon can't keep up. It's the home stretch and I'm feeling fine. As we always say "brevets are not races" but it still feels good to look at my watch and see that I'll probably finish this thing in less than thirty-three hours. And it feels great to look behind and see nobody else back there. Well, I imagine that it feels great. Because in actuality, there's a rider back there and he's closing fast. Damn fast. And he's here. Five miles from the end and Jim Trout, the nicest guy in the world, pulls up along side me. "Hiya, Kent. What a great day. It looks like we're going to break thirty-three hours!" Despite the fact that there certainly is a part of me that would've liked to "win" this brevet, it's impossible to not like Jim. "Yep," I reply, "don't let me hold you back." But Jim won't hear of it. Even though he could drop the hammer at any time, we're not racing. We're just enjoying another fabulous day of riding. I am, of course, pedaling for all I'm worth because now I want to make damn sure I don't make Jim miss the 33-hour point. We pull into the parking lot of the Arlington Motor Inn at 2:58 PM (official Mark Thomas time). We've ridden 609.5 kilometer according to Mark's official calculations, while my computer calls the distance 616 kilometers. In any case, a great ride with great people. At the finish line I have a Coke, some potato chips and an ice cream bar. Jon Muellner pulls in at 3:12 PM, followed a few minutes later by Ed Husted. Ken Carter comes in a few minutes after Ed. After Ken grabs a snack and cleans up a bit, we load the bikes on his car and head for home. Postscript: Mark Thomas had to fly to Europe the next day, so I don't have the final results for everyone. I do know that everyone finished except for Bob Magyar, who ran out of time and wound up DNFing at Marblemount. Postscript 2: Mark emailed me the final results and reitterated the opinion that the preride was "ugly". |
I was a little unsure of how I'd
cope with this distance after getting battered in the 400 km, but I had vowed to complete
the series and so I loaded up and arrived at the Arlington Motor Inn Friday night. I got
all my stuff prepared and stocked up on food. I had just picked up a can of Endurox R4 to
try out (maybe not smart, but oh well). Not knowing how the weather would be I also packed
an extra vest and booties and warm tights. I opted to have no bag drop because my goal
is to always be self-supported on these events.
Got a pretty good night sleep, hearing the traffic on I-5 was like waves crashing on a beach. I woke up at 4:15 and started eating and getting ready. I put Endurox in one bottle and water in the other and in the Humpback. Light tights and a windvest (no purple leg warmers this time!) The people at the motel were nice enough to let me leave my truck there over the weekend and I rolled the bike over to the start by 5:30AM. I think there was about 14 people all ready to go and I chatted with Mark T., Ken K., Bob M. and Kent P. Bob brought the report from the pre-ride with all the gory details of headwinds and puking. It was amusing reading, confirming the lack of sanity in these endeavors...The official start time was 6:00AM and everyone was raring to go. We all headed out and rode in a pack for the first 40 miles or so till we hit US-2. I got to chat with Jim Trout and another rookie, Bob Brudvik (thanks Kent), who's been doing doubles in Davis and the like and it's all really friendly and calm, a nice way to start the day. Once we hit US-2 the pace picked up, Terry and Ann Marie and a few others stop at the store and Kent and I take off. In a short while I don't see Kent anymore and feeling the welcome tailwind decide to just put the hammer down and cruise. The Skykomish control is a quick in and out (9:57AM). I make it to Steven's Pass in what seems like a very short time and Mark is there at our first secret control. Just ahead of me are Ed Husted, Tom Brett, Ken Carter and probably Jim T. I'm feeling really good and decide to just keep pounding away. Leavenworth (1:15PM) is next and I stop in where Ed and Tom are. I grab some goodies and water and head out. Good thing too -there is a line of cars all backed up behind a marching band going down the middle of the highway! I skirt past all the cars and just as the band turns right I ride behind the tuba player and slip through. What excellent timing and all those past years of commuting have paid off... More tailwinds and the turn for US-97 looms ahead. CSN was the music in my head. The temps are still very tolerable on this side of the Cascades and I continue wearing long tights and a wind vest. Arm warmers are down though. Entiat (3:40PM) is the next control and Ed, Tom and I are still hanging within a mile or two of each other since Leavenworth. Continuing tailwinds bring us to Pateros (6:27PM) and we all stop for food. Ed and I get some pizza slices and take a booth seat to relax while Tom finds batteries. He looks anxious to get moving and soon he's off. Ed goes next and after I fill my Humpback I'm on my way too. Now the headwinds start and the tiredness has to set in. A cookie falls out of my bag and I have to flag a car to go around it so he doesn't smash it. The food is saved! The remaining miles to Winthrop are a bit slower now and the daylight is just starting to wain as I get to Twisp and Hwy 20. I stop at the Twisp Station for some chips and the lady at the counter tells me one of the riders just took a 20 minute break and was looking kind of rough. I later find out it was Ed. (That boy needs to eat more food!) Finally I flip on the lights for the final few miles and roll into the Virginian at 10:07PM. I'm still feeling pretty good and WOW -more food! (I love to eat). The support that Mark put together was phenomenal, burritos and oddles of other goodies were waiting and a bed and shower too! I ate and headed to Cabin #2 for a shower and sleep. Terry and Ann Marie had the bedroom and Tom B. and I had the pull-outs. I was asleep by 11:00PM. I had set my alarm for 4:15AM, as most everyone was planning a 5:00AM start. For some reason I popped awake at 2:15AM, decided I was too wired to sleep any more and started getting ready to head out. Went outside to pack the bike and saw Kent's Bike Friday was still there. I went back into the cabin and grabbed the final things before heading into Cabin#1 for some snacks to bring. I came out and Kent's bike was gone! Damn. I had a feeling he would be the first one out...I grabbed a muffin (which then fell into the dirt; I ate it anyway) and a banana and headed out. Kent was about 15-20 minutes ahead and we had a few hours to go before reaching the Washington Pass summit. It was dark and clear, the stars were out and a slight wind made a nice early morning ride. I had ridden this route west to east last year on tour, so I knew what it was like, but I really enjoyed watching the sun come up and hit the top of the peaks around 5:00AM. I stopped near Lone Fir Trail and listened to the birds for awhile. Very peaceful and the pines smelled so good. I saw many dear and rabbits along the road and slowly got to the final switchback. The pass looks a bit more intimidating then it really is as the slow climb from Mazama to Lone Fir is more tiring I think. I could see Kent above me with Liberty Bell looming above us both and tried to catch him before the top (knowing full well he would not allow that!) I got to the pass a few minutes behind him around 6:52AM. Ron Lee was there; our second secret control, and as usual he was the perfect host, making me some strange concoction of hot coca and oatmeal mixed together which actually tasted pretty good! I headed out a few minutes before Kent and for the first time was the first rider in the brevet! Whahoo! Well, it felt pretty special at the time... Climbing Rainy Pass was quick and then the long descent to Ross Lake. Music in my head had switched to Aerosmith. I had on my J&G jacket and heavier tights, but soon the temps warmed up and Kent pulled up as I was peeling off some layers before the dam. We ate a snack and he headed out. I fiddled with some stuff and finally got off a few minuted later. There are two climbs between Ross Lake and Diablo before getting to Newhalem. Before Newhalem is a metal grate bridge that crosses where the Gorge Creek waterfall is. I was just ahead of a pickup truck and boat trailer and right at the bridge he squeezed me nearly into the steel guardrail and I could feel the boat brush by my left arm. I was so pissed off! There was no one coming from the other direction and he could have easily been going slower and not crowding me. I picked up the pace in the hopes of catching him in town taking a senior moment. I was ready to truly bite his head off and cause a serious uproar. Do not mess with a tired rider who has just ridden 300+ miles on little sleep! Needless to say, I never saw him again. Kent found me "focused" through Newhalem, head down and cruising. It took awhile before I calmed down. Last control was Marblemount and Kent and I rode in at 10:37AM. We took a long break, ate and chatted. It was funny to think that we were the only self-supported riders of the group and here we were in the lead. Very amusing and we kept wondering where Jim, Ed, Ken and Tom were. Any moment we thought we'd see them barrel past. Soon Ed did show up as I was heading out, so we knew our places were tenuous. (I know it's not a race, but it is fun after so many hours of riding to see what happens to everyone!) Kent soon caught up to me and we rode together through the spitting rain after Rockport. I didn't really have any idea what the terrain was like, but Kent assured me that it was basically an easy run in, which it was, except for the winds. About 30k from the finish the wind was more than I could take and Kent pulled out ahead. I settled into a comfortable pace and clicked off the kilometers. Jim finally passed me and all I could think was "I wonder how close to the end he'll catch Kent?" Go Kent! Jim was cruising, headphones and aero bars and a fast cadence. Even considering keeping up with him was an illusion for me. I kept looking behind me, but no Ed. That was strange. I made the last turn onto SR-530 and arrived at Arlington Motor Inn at 3:12PM. Amazingly, I was the third rider in after Jim and Kent, who finished exactly together. (I love this sport!) Next came Ed, who said that he had just plain run out of steam and then Ken Carter. I drank a Coke and chatted with everyone and then packed up and headed for home by 4:00PM. I still had three hours and a ferry ride and I was a tired but happy boy. Thanks to Mark Thomas for a great route and support, Ron Lee and to all the randonneurs I got to spend time with --it was a great finish to my goal of completing the series! Now... about that 1000 km...
390 miles (620k) in 33:12 hours avg. speed 11.7 mph/18.8 kph overall (26 hours on bike;
avg. speed 15.5 mph/24.8 kph) |
Tom Brett Ken Carter Ron Himschoot |
Anne Marie McSweeney Jon Muellner Kent Peterson |
Mark Thomas Peg Winczewski Terry Zmrhal |
Rider #
Last Name
First Name
Time
20
Carter
Ken
73:56
48
Lee
Ronald
DNF
70
Vigesaa
Lynne
DNF
76
Wright
Duane
DNF
If anybody has ridden a DBC brevet before, you know that the support along the course is tremendous. Since I had heard
this from other riders, I was pleased to see that they lived up to their reputation for the Gold Rush Randonnee (GRR).
The route was an out and back course starting in Davis, Calif (# 1) and going to Goose Lake near the Oregon border. It
was relatively flat for the first 100 miles, middle 80 miles and last 100 miles. So all the 26,000 cum altitude gain was within
approximately a 470 mile section of the route. The weather was unusually moderate which was good for all us out of state
riders. The 75 to 80 degree weather in Oroville was hot, but not unpleasant as long as you were moving. The 6:00pm start was eventful due to an unexpected accident while everybody stood in the parking lot listening to instructions. I was bumped into by another rider who lost his balance, causing me to sit on my rear wheel and bending it. After a quick exchange of wheels by the SAG driver extraordinaire, Lee Mitchell, the ride started. The riders paraded out zig zagging through the flat countryside and spreading out as the faster riders picked up their speed. Somewhere before a water stop between Davis and Oroville I metup with Tom Parsons from the San Diego area. We had been in a larger pace line which dropped down to around 5 or 6 riders keeping a comparable pace. At the first stop in Oroville (# 2) there was a mechanic to work on the bent wheel, and someone to build a deli sandwich for you, or offer a pleasant comment. After the control, the climbing started up Jarbo Gap and then ascending into the Sierras by way of a long easy climb up the Feather River Canyon, passing Tob in (# 3), and coming to an open valley where the small town of Greenville (# 4) gave riders a rest from the long climb. After meandering around an open meadow the road turned into small rolling hills as we went up another canyon passing the small town of Genesee. I had driven down through this area earlier and had lunch at the Genesee store and learned that it was built in the early 1900's. The road now became a much steeper climb as we got closer to Antelope lake where a water stop had been established. As we continued climbing, we got a view of the mountain range, and could see a huge dark sky to the East with lightning every few minutes. This thunderstorm we learned, would continue reappearing over the next 3 days as our ride took us North. After refueling at Antelope lake, we reached the Top of GRR (6340 ft) on a curve along the road where a small sign on a stake was placed. This milestone would become monumental as all the riders passed it on the return leg home to Davis. The route continued a few more miles along the top ridge of the mountain range, and then reached the top of Janesville grade. This fast descent gave us a chance to see what we would be climbing on the trip back. After riding in the cooler Sierra Nevada Mountain range, we reached the bottom of the valley to Susanville (# 5) where the 85 degree heat came out to warm us up. Antelope Pass was a big six mile climb out of Susanville that could be seen from the town below. This led into rolling hills that gave riders a long roller coaster ride that descended to a high valley with a climb back up to a summit, then a second descent into Eagle Lake. Here, another water stop was setup to support the riders between the 40 mile stretch of road from Susanville to Adin. A rented U-Haul was used to hold 3 or 4 large water containers and some assorted snacks. This became a much needed shelter as the thunderstorm we had seen earlier finally caught up to us. It rained quite hard for 30 minutes, causing several riders to stop and wait it out in the van. This allowed Tom and I to regroup and continue riding together after being separated from the descent from Antelope Pass. After more rolling hills and a fun gradual descent thru a forested valley, we reached the small town of Adin (# 6). Here the whole town participated in helping the riders at the Community center where the control was setup. It was a large building with a cafeteria and sleeping quarters inside, and a semi-trailer parked outside that had showers. Several people stopped for their first sleep break here after riding approx 500k and staying up through the night and first full day. I opted for 3 hours sleep while Tom decided he wanted 6 to 8 hours. It was here that I was able to find a replacement for my seat post by borrowing Lee Mitchell's own bicycle seat post. Lee is an exceptional SAG driver. He had just finished SAGing for RAAM and has supported many other long rides in the California area. It was also a stop for Keith Fraser and Michael Lau (both Canadian) who were leading the ride, and now taking a food break. They had already been to Davis Creek (turn around point) and were on the return leg back to Davis. At this point they had done 700k without sleep and still looked strong. I got up around 10:30pm to leave by 11:00 for the 12 mile climb up Adin Pass. The climb gradually became harder the closer I got to the top. Nothing greater than 7 percent, but enough to create an enjoyably long descent to the high valley region where pastures and sage brush grew around Alturas. From here the short 20 mile ride to Davis Creek, the turn around point, was mostly flat and open. A Best Western was used at Alturas (# 7) where the DBC setup a canopy right outside the motel rooms in the parking lot. Support was tremendous as usual, plenty of hot chocolate, deli sandwiches and drinks. I napped for a half hour and then rode to Davis Creek (# 8)and back with the inconvenience of a pack of dogs. It must have been fun for the dogs chasing riders going out and coming back, but it was stressful for the riders. I remember passing riders at 7:00 in the morning and having them yell out to watch for the pack of dogs ahead. The route back was busier now that it was daylight and those riders who had opted to sleep more in Alturas (# 9) or Adin for their first sleep were coming out and enjoying the second full day of riding in sunny weather. On the return trip I was pummeled briefly by a hail storm and then rain by a thunderstorm between Adin (# 10) and Susanville. It hailed so hard most riders stopped and stood under trees along side the road. Continuing on, I reached Susanville (# 11) by mid afternoon and showered for the first time. A motel was used for the control, and riders could come up and drop their bikes in the grassy front yard of the rooms reserved for DBC and lay down to savor the cool grass. After eating, sleeping and then eating again, I proceeded to ride out at 10:00pm to tackle the toughest part of the route, Janesville grade. The hill is outside of Susanville by about 20 miles and is immediate and unrelenting for 5 miles. I met two riders at the bottom of the grade and said hi without stopping. One of them seemed to be trying to motivate the other by urging him on, telling him to just take an easy pace. I don't know any other way to climb a hill as steep as this grade, just slow and easy is the only way. After the first 3 miles at 6 percent, the climb abruptly went to what I perceived to be 10 percent, then 14 percent. This was suddenly the toughest climb I had done on any brevet after riding 500 miles/ 800k. It was a surprise because it was around midnight and pitch black except for the small battery light I had on (generators don't work at 4 mph). The sky was perfectly clear with stars shining out against the light blue background and framed in by the blackness of the trees lining the road. The climb became a struggle, and then, it became a challenge to ones pride. While resting at Susanville I had discussed this climb with a rider who had left ahead of me. He had mentioned that he has never had to walk up a climb since doing brevets over the last 20 years. I don't recall having walked either, but after seeing this climb in the daytime on the descent, it became clear that the articles written about the route had over rated it. It didn't appear to be 15% or greater, as stated in the article I read. So I continued climbing and then started zig zagging to keep my pace up. The 39 x 25 was working fine for me as long as I used the whole road. After about 50 - 75 yards of doing this, the road finally became an easier grade of 2 - 3% and then became undulating hills until reaching the Top of GRR. The sign along the road on a quiet wooded section of the Sierra Nevada mountain range was now indicating the route would be mostly down hill for the remaining 200 miles. It was cool out now that it was about 2:00am, and we were riding at the top of the mountains. After a tremendous amount of sweating, it became cold with the descent into Antelope Lake. A handful of riders arrived together at the water control at Antelope and we all shivered until the support people started up their heater in the Jeep nearby and let us warm up. The warmup was short lived, since we had to get out and descend a 10 mile section down to the high meadows around Taylorsville and then travel another 15 miles before riding the relatively flat road around the perimeter of the meadow to Greenville (# 12). After an hour and a half of sleep at the Hideaway Resort Motel in Greenville, I started riding around 6:30am on the third day for the final push into Davis by dinner time. It was another sunny clear blue sky out and the road was still quiet with only a few riders out on the road who I had descended with earlier this morning. The Feather River Canyon was easy going and I was in the best mood of the whole ride. The route was now going down the long grade to the small control of Tobin Resort (# 13), where we would fill up with water for the last climb of the ride and the descent into the hot summer heat around Oroville. After the Tobin Resort control, the climb up Jarbo Gap was hot and slow, with cars, logging trucks and RV's passing bike riders that were on the road. Upon reaching Oroville (# 14) I metup with two riders, Paul Guttenberg from Davis, and Glenn Smith from Saskatchewan. We decided to ride in together for the last 100 miles and enjoy the scenery. We putzed along telling stories and sharing experiences from work, rides and life. About halfway to Davis a control was setup in a farmers front yard with food, beverage, cots, chairs and plenty of grass and shade. We were greeted with applause and given plenty of attention by the DBC volunteers. Glenn took the offerings seriously and had ice bags put on each knee and one ankle to help ease the pain from the ride. The volunteers took pictures and then after some joking about us taking advantage of their hospitality, we decided to ride off before they had to kick us out of the control. The remainder of the ride was mellow and uneventful except the head winds we had about 15 miles outside of Davis. We finished at 7:56pm at the historical Boy Scout Cabin in downtown Davis (# 15). The route was challenging and beautiful for anyone who hasn't been in this part of the country. All the controls were well staff and the amount of SAG support between controls was unbelievable. I have never been on a ride where a broken pedal or handle bars could be fixed/replaced by SAG drivers between controls during a 1200 km ride. The approximately 150 Davis Bike Club volunteers, B & L bike shop and all the other sponsors were superb in putting on a great ride. A special thanks to the mechanics at Tobin, Oroville and of course, Lee Mitchell, who kept me from DNF'g not once but twice. Cheers to DBC volunteers, I will see you in 2005! |
Rider #
Last Name
First Name
268
Peterson
Kent
332
Thomas
Mark
343
Trout
Jim
Photograph courtesy of Kent Peterson. For more photographs of the ride, please visit his web site at http://www.mile43.com/peterson/LELIndex.html.
I've never ridden through a castle before. Actually I'm not riding through the castle proper, but rather through the grounds of Castle Howard, a sprawling 18th century estate in Yorkshire, England. As I roll up to the massive outer wall, I have to stop and take pictures and gawk like a tourist. In England, history isn't just locked away in museums or musty books, it's right here, right now, beneath my wheels and all around me. I'm riding London-Edinburgh-London, a 1400 kilometer brevet held once every four years under the auspices of Audax UK and the Randonneurs Mondiaux organizations. It's early in morning of the second day and I'm getting my first taste of what Mark Brooking had cheerily called the "lumpy bits" of the ride. I'm beginning to understand the British talent for understatement. Back home, we'd call these things hills. Of course, back home we wouldn't have called yesterday's 296 kilometers "flat" either. While there certainly were some flat places, especially in the peat lands around Thorne, there also were some definite climbs and descents mixed in as well. But yesterday's ride had gone extremely well. A hundred and fifty of us had signed up for the Harlow start and somewhere close to that number had actually started at 10:00 AM on a day that featured welcome cloud cover, no rain and an actual tail-wind. At the same time we started out, a slightly smaller group of riders began at the Thorne Rugby Club, headed out along the same course, but offset 296 kilometers. That group would ride north to Dalkeith just outside Edinburgh before returning south. Later, back at Thorne some of those riders would stop, having chosen the shorter 800 kilometer option while the rest would venture down to Harlow before looping back up again to Thorne for the full 1400 kilometer circuit. In taking the Harlow start, I was in the group containing most of the foreigners. Harlow, just north of London, is only 20 kilometers from Stansted airport, so it afforded the easiest access for those of us flying in from overseas. I'd had the great fortune to connect up with an other American, a fellow named Greg Zaborac via the internet and we'd coordinated our travel plans. Greg had contacted Mark Brooking, a member of the Willesden Cycle Club, and Mark had generously opened his home in Waltham Abbey to serve as our pre-ride and post-ride staging area. Mark, a genuine legend in audax circles for his various exploits including riding all four Raid Alpines and setting numerous trike and tandem-trike records, picked us up at the airport on Wednesday and his family had made us feel right at home. Mark's wife Alison had proven that, contrary to the stereotype, the English can cook and made us tea and scones and lovely breakfasts and dinners and generally made us feel like royal guests. Mark's parents and Alison also proudly filled us in on various rides that Mark had done but that he was too modest to mention. Mark and Alison's lovely three year old daughter Wendy had cheerfully accepted these two American's into her home, making sure we played lots of games of balloon bounce with her, read all the Thunderbirds comics and gotten to know the little frogs that lived in the garden in the back of their flat. The Brookings also took us on a walking tour of Waltham Abbey and instructed us on the ways of the buses and the train so that on Thursday Greg and I were able to venture into London, tour the Tower of London and see the Crown Jewels. Greg and I met up in real life in the airport in Amsterdam where we'd both changed planes for the final hop over to Stansted. I was leaned back in a chair with my feet on my duffel bag when this tall fellow with close cropped hair and a lean Lance Armstrong-esque look about him comes up to me and says, "You wouldn't happen to have any Payday bars in that bag now would you?" Greg proved to be the perfect travel companion: laid back, not too chatty but thoughtful with interesting things to say and a genuine curiosity about this strange old part of world we were both exploring for the first time. The Brookings answered all our questions with patience and good humor, although I could tell some of our inquiries provided them with a good deal of amusement. Early on we learned that you go clockwise through the roundabouts, that pubs stop serving food just about the time you are getting hungry, that Toad-in-Hole is some kind of sausage dish and that there isn't a border check-point between England and Scotland. On Friday, Greg and I bicycled from Waltham Abbey to Harlow, a small journey that allowed us to accomplish many things. First, it provided us with a chance to check out our bikes, to make certain that we'd reassembled them correctly and that everything was working properly. Second, it gave us our first chance at navigating British roads, understanding the signs and remembering to ride on the left. Third, it let us find the starting control point and test ride the first section of the course, verifying that we did in fact understand the notations on the cue sheets. Finally, this trip let me deliver a lamp to my friend Mark Thomas, who was also riding LEL but whose head lamp had been crushed in transit. Mark had been vacationing in Italy prior to LEL but he'd called me prior to my departure once he'd discovered his problem and now I was serving as an international courier. Greg and I completed all our Friday missions and made it safely back to Waltham Abbey for our final pre-ride feed and briefing. At dinner we met Mark's friend Simon Doughty, the guy who has literally written the book on long distance cycling. Last month, Simon had been a member of Cassie Lowe's RAAM support crew and he entertained us with many tales from RAAM, including sharing with us the psyche-out tidbit that whenever Cassie would pass someone in RAAM the crew would make sure that the support van's stereo was blaring out Z.Z. Top's "She's Got Legs!" Early on Saturday Mark, Simon, Greg and I piled the bikes on top of Mark's car and drove over to the Harlow control. Mark and Simon were handling check-in duty and Greg and I headed over to the Greyhound Pub for the pre-ride breakfast. In general the food was pretty good but the sausage had a suspiciously toad-like taste. I filled up on toast and scrambled eggs. At 10:00 AM we launched out into the English countryside. The day passed in a blur of colored jerseys and good spirits. Knots of riders formed loosely affiliated packs and I was seeing old friends. Sharon and Chip Bole, Americans who I'd first met in Paris at PBP, were riding strong. Jack Eason was there with a bunch of his fellow Willesden Cycle Club riders. I know Jack always finishes these things, so I knew as long as I was seeing him, I couldn't really be off track. But I also figured that since Jack must be at least thirty years my senior, at some point I should be able to finally leave him behind. But Jack is a relentless rider and even though I'd make it to each control ahead of him, he'd inevitably pull in just a few minutes later. The first control was the Longstowe Village Hall, about 62 kilometers into the ride. The Italian group was ahead of me and the most notable member of that crew was Mateo Luzzana, a tall fellow riding a tiny three-speed Brompton. I'd first met Mateo and his father Luigi last year on BMB when Luigi had been riding a Moulton and Mateo had been piloting a gorgeous custom titanium Moulton replica. Most of the Italians didn't speak English, so they rode together and counted on Mateo to be their main translator. They tended to ride quickly but the dynamics of the group slowed them down at the controls. On the other hand, I rode slower but was mostly on my own so I didn't have to wait for anyone. The net result was that I saw a lot of the Italians. While Mateo probably had the smallest bike on the ride, there were a few other unusual machines as well. At least three folks were riding fixed gear bikes including Alan "Pedals" Pedliham with his amazing psyche-out 64-tooth front sprocket. As a sometimes fixer myself, I knew that it's the overall ratio that counts and Pedals had a fairly rational rear cog to match that monstrous front ring. Still, his bike did cause more than a few double-takes. There were a couple of recumbents as well; an Optima Baron with a neat custom tailbox made from foam camp mats and the light and lovely Mike Burrow's designed RatCatcher 9 with it's funky monoblade front fork, stub-mounted rear wheel and a custom fiber-glass tailbox. And one of Mark Brooking's buddies was riding an upright trike. There was even one other fellow besides me riding a Bike Friday NWT. I was riding my green Bike Friday New World Tourist, the bike I'd ridden on PBP back in 1999. I'd been planning on taking my newer NWT, a blue one I'd picked up last fall but two weeks before LEL, I'd cracked the rear triangle pivot on Cannonball, a 275 mile race across Washington State. I couldn't quite figure out why my first half time on Cannonball had been fairly fast and my second half time had been rather dismal. Of course, that troubling creaking sound from the rear triangle should have tipped me off. When I went to fold up the bike, it came apart in a way it's not supposed to and the mystery was solved. The Bike Friday folks would fix the bike, of course, but there wasn't time to get the work done before LEL, so I'd transfered my lights and other rando gear to my tried and true older bike. The feature of my Friday that caused the most interest were the mudguards. Over the course of several years of riding in the damp Pacific Northwest, I've evolved some pretty sophisticated mudguards that are made entirely of coroplast and zip-ties. These are light and rugged and the Brits seemed to think that my mudguards were the greatest thing since beans on toast. Apparently mudguards are a religious issue here in the UK and various people stopped me to take pictures of the mud-guards and ask if I had a patent on the design. The food at the controls was variable and it'd been one of my concerns in doing this ride. Along with my doubts about riding on the left side of the road and navigating a ride with no on-the-road markers, the food issue was weighing heavy on my mind. It was also weighing heavy on my bike, since I was carrying my standard stockpile of PayDay candy bars along with some granola bars and a small flask of honey. The honey was my second-to-last anti-bonk ration. The ace up my sleeve was a small pile of chocolate-covered espresso beans. With these foodstuffs, I figured I could survive in this savage land. It turned out that I found many recognizable and edible things at the controls. Bananas, rice pudding, milk, eggs on toast all went down easily. At the third control in Lincoln, there was a Burger King and I had some lovely chicken nuggets and at Thorne I got brave enough to try something called Custard and Sponge which proved to be wonderful. I'd pulled into the Thorne Rugby Club at 10:54 PM on Saturday and I figured that that was a good day's riding, so I took a break and slept for three hours. The official sleeping area wasn't very comfy, so I wandered back to the main area and found a nice padded bench. One of the things I'd learned from Jack Eason was that if you cover your eyes, it's easier to sleep and on BMB I'd realized the wisdom of packing ear-plugs. With my black fleece earband pulled over my eyes and my plugs in place, I had a virtual private room and slept very peacefully. I'd hit the road at 2:45 this morning and that meant I had good light for taking pictures at Castle Howard. Now I'm rolling on toward Hovingham. While yesterday had gone very well, today was showing what LEL is really all about. It's about the lumpy bits. I'm still making pretty decent time when I pull into Hovingham at 7:06 AM, especially considering I'd had to stop to fix a rear puncture just outside of Stamford Bridge. I have some vegetable lasagna and a thing called triffle (a mix of fruit, jello and a creamy pudding-like topping) but neither of these things really seems right as a breakfast. I head out at 7:50 AM. Now things are definitely getting lumpy. My average speed is dropping and the wind is picking up. It's not a favorable wind. I'm continuing to ride on my own, although I do wind up riding with people for brief sections when our paces happen to match up. I ride some with a couple of Americans that I knew previously via email, Larry Midura and Ed Felker. I miss a turn in Middleton Tyas and waste about twenty minutes getting back on course. I pull into the Barton Truckstop at 11:50 AM and order a decent breakfast, a double order of eggs on toast and two pints of milk. It turns out I couldn't down quite all that toast and eggs, but Ed Felker helps me out. At 12:40 I'm back on the road. Now I feel like a slug. The hills definitely a major feature of the landscape now and the wind is brutal. It's lovely scenery and I get to appreciate it at an average speed of 16.1 kilometers per hour. I decide to stop looking at my average speed. I also rethink my optimistic thoughts of making Dalkeith my next sleep break. Heck, that Tibetan temple at Eskadalemuir sounds interesting, maybe I'll stop there! I'm not feeling great when I pull into the Youth Hostel at Langdon Beck. When they stamp my control card I notice that the stamp mentions that this is "the highest youth hostel in England". Well, that would explain why it felt like the uphills far outnumbered the downhills today! Langdon Beck is an absolutely lovely control. I have some orange juice and coffee and rice pudding and peaches and a couple of choco things and I feel like a new man. At the start of the ride we'd been issued a pear-carob energy bar and while I thought at the time the thing sounded revolting, once I'd eaten it, I felt like I had more energy. They had these things for sale here and I bought a couple. The Langdon Beck control workers briefed me on what lay ahead, an 11 kilometer climb up Yad Moss followed by a descent into Alston. Alston features a 16% descent on rough cobbles. Thinking ahead, I realize that tomorrow this will mean a 16% climb up those same cobbles. The climb up Yad Moss is fabulous. There are loads of sheep everywhere: beside the road, on the road, everywhere. I've never seen so many sheep. The hills are wind-swept and the grass and heather are sheep cropped. While the climb is definitely up, it has a rolling, up and down nature that for some reason reminds me of the climb up to Windy Ridge on Mount Saint Helens back home. Alston is beautiful and I roll out of the Pennines, down the cobbles and through the center of this 17th century town. Now I turn onto an A road, roll through Brampton and on to the truckstop at Carlisle. At Carlisle I scarf down a jacket potato with cheese and then press on to Eskdalemuir. I'm feeling good and it's dark now. I've crossed over into Scotland. I really only see the road ahead of me, but the cool air off to my right lets me know I'm passing by a river and even in the dim light I can see the hulking curves of the hills. I pull into the Tibetan temple at one minute before midnight. The temple at Eskdalemuir is called the Samye Ling Tibetan Centre. "Samye" is Tibetan for "the inconceivable place" and indeed the idea of a Tibetan temple nestled in a valley in southern Scotland is somewhat inconceivable. Founded in 1967 by two refugee Tibetan abbots, this place is the first Tibetan Centre in the west and it's now an international centre of Buddhist training. And tonight, it's serving as a control point for Audax UK's LEL ride! Greg Zaborac and Mark Thomas are at Samye Ling and they great me like the prodigal son, "where have you been, we've been worried about you!" "Uhh, I've been riding my bike...," I'd been feeling pretty good until now. "We'd heard you'd gone through Barton at 4:00 AM, so we figured you were ahead of us, but nobody at any of the other controls had seen you." "No," I reply, "I slept in Thorne," I check my notes, "I didn't get to Barton until 11:50 this morning." We eventually figure out that the info they got must have been for Ken Bonner or some similarly speedy fellow. It turns out Mark and Greg had connected up back at Thorne and have been riding together ever since. "Your buddy here doesn't sleep," Mark informs me. For guys running on virtually no sleep, they're still looking pretty good. "Well, I'm sleeping," I declare. I grab a couple of pieces of delicious ginger bread and settle in for a great four hour sleep. Of course Mark and Greg are gone when I get up but I have a breakfast of gingerbread and coffee and at 5:00 AM, I'm back on the road. Around 9:00 AM I roll into Dalkeith and I see Mark and Greg heading south. Mark recommends the omlette and when I get to the control I follow up on his recommendation by having a big cheese omlette. I also have some rice pudding, juice and coffee. It's nice to be half done with the ride. At 9:50 AM, I head south. It's windy now and it's not a favorable wind. At 3:17 PM I'm back at Samye Ling. I have one of the control workers snap my picture in front of the temple and I buy a postcard that gives a large overview of the temple. I dine on some fabulous mushroom pasta, a banana and some more of that wonderful gingerbread. At 4:00 PM, I'm back on the road. I'm feeling good and I blast on to Carlisle. Well, at 19.8 kph I'm not exactly blasting but I am moving and that's the important thing. I pull into the Carlisle truckstop at 6:45 PM and feast on a jacket potato with cheese. I wash this down with a half liter of milk and a half liter of chocolate milk. I head back out on the road at 7:25 PM. My goal for tonight is Langdon Beck but twelve miles out from Carlisle as I'm climbing yet another of the approximately seventeen billion hills that make up this ride, my handlebars swing sickenly toward me. I have just an instant to think "that's not right..." and I quickly pull to the side of the road. This is not good. A Bike Friday has a very small frame and to get the bars and seat up high enough the bikes feature a long seat mast and a riser stem. On some Fridays this riser stem is a single piece and on others it's a straight section of tubing with a conventional stem placed in the top. My green Friday is set up with the straight tube and a conventional stem. Actually, the riser section isn't standard Bike Friday issue. I'd gotten the bike used and since I needed I higher stem, I'd fabricated my own riser. And it had been fine for several years, including a full brevet series and PBP. It had been fine until now. Now, the cumulative effects of lots of miles and lots of climbs has fatigued the steel to the point of failure right where the riser clamps into the head tube. The good news is that I didn't crash, the riser didn't cut loose on one of the many 50 kph descents and I've got at least an hour of daylight left. I get to work. I quickly realize that this isn't really too bad. A section of the riser about three inches long is still embedded in the headtube, but I loosen the stem from the rest of the riser tube and I extract the riser stub by using the stem wedge as a lever. While I'm repairing things, a couple of my fellow randonneurs ask if I'm OK as they roll by. I assure them that I have everything under control. I undo my light assembly and invert the remaining piece of stem riser. Even though it's three inches shorter, it's still long enough to work as a riser. I just have to insert less of the tube into the headset and put less of the stem quill into the tube and I can get my bars into a close approximation of their original configuration. By inverting the tube, I figure I've moved the most stressed section of the pipe up to where it's re-enforced by the stem. I reconnect my light and I'm ready to go. The whole operation took about 20 minutes. I'm cautious for the first few kilometers, but I gradually become convinced that my roadside repair will probably hold up for the rest of the ride. I think back to the failure of my other Bike Friday and I realize that in both cases the areas that failed were at points where a lot of force is concentrated via a long lever. I begin to contemplate my next bike and it won't have any folding pivots. Yes, a folding bike is convenient for travel but I need something that can take lots of abuse. Prior to this ride I'd been thinking that maybe Sandiway Fong was onto something -- go with a little light titanium bike. I'd even priced and speced out an Airborne Carpe Diem. But, something still didn't seem quite right. Then it occurred to me what had seemed wrong: I'm not a Ti-guy. I'm a bodge-together-a-bike-out-of-spare-parts kind of guy. I'm the guy who makes mud-guards out of coroplast. Buying a brand-spanking new bike isn't exactly my style. Having a bike I know and the tools I need to keep it going, now that's my style. Still, I'm thinking this is going to be my last big ride on a Friday. I begin mentally reviewing my stock of bike parts back at home. Maybe something based around a mountain bike frame. Something really tough... My reverie is interrupted by Alston, that lovely market town with the cobbles and the 16 percent grade. It's dark now but there are still villagers in the square as I make the right hand turn up the hill and charge the cobbled grade. I can hear them yelling something as I pound up the hill, something like "go you crazy American" and when I look up I see the lights of a descending lorry bearing down on me. I think something like "what's that idiot doing driving on the wrong side of the road?" and in an instant I realize that I'm the idiot and that's what the townspeople had been yelling. At the last second I dive left. The lorry misses me by inches. It's cold now, with a bitter wind whipping across the Pennines. The sheep are all sleeping now and most of them are off the road. The rabbits are out in force, however. It's not hard to avoid them while I climb slowly, but I'm nervous about the descent. At the summit of Yad Moss it's astoundingly windy. I stop to pull on my rain jacket and long-fingered gloves for warmth. With the cold wind snapping at the fabric and my numb fingers I'm terrified that I'll drop my jacket. The wind speed must be around 30 mph and I know if I drop the jacket, I'll never see it again. Very carefully, I manage to pull on my jacket and gloves. I try to flip on my Cateye high-beam for the descent but it's decided not to work. I'd foolishly tempted fate a couple of days earlier when Greg had asked me about the light. He and I run a similar set-up, a SON hub pushing a Lumotec for our main light with a small AA-powered Cateye serving as a back-up light and high beam. Greg had asked if I'd ever had any trouble with the Cateye and I'd foolishly said, "no, it's always been super-reliable." I should know to never say such foolish things and now my Cateye was misbehaving. I'm not about to try any major surgery in the dark, but I do give the light a few good whacks to try to coax it back to life. The light doesn't respond to my persuasion. I descend as quickly as my low beam and the local rabbit population will allow. It isn't one of my fastest descents. At 12:40 AM, I reach the Langdon Beck Youth Hostel. I find a comfy bench, cover my eyes and ears and go to sleep. I wake up at 2:30 AM and have a wonderful breakfast of scrambled eggs on toast and hot rice pudding. While I'm drinking my coffee and juice, Jack Eason and some of his Willesden companions roll in. "Is it still cold up on Yad Moss?" I ask. "It's bitter," Jack tells me as he sips his tea. I'm working on my Cateye light now. The human tongue can work as a crude volt meter and it tells me I've got juice in the cells. I futz with the battery holder and notice that one of the contacts had slid out of its channel. Probably got shaken up on the cobbles. I set things right and reassemble power unit. The light shines out beautifully. I finish up my coffee, buy a couple of Snickers and three pear-carob bars for the road and head out. It's 3:00 AM. It's raining lightly as I leave, but it's a light Seattle-style rain and it stops after half an hour. Soon the sun rises and at 6:10 AM I take a quick break at the Barton Truckstop (by the way, why don't they call them Lorrystops here?). My Langdon Beck breakfast and Snickers bars have done a good job of keeping my fueled so I only stop long enough to get my card stamped and swig down a pint of chocolate milk here. I press on to Hovingham. Of course there are hills but I'm in Hovingham a bit before 11:00 AM and I have a great lunch of pasta and cheese, some lovely cream of chicken soup, coffee and orange juice. At noon I'm rolling again, climbing up and over the grounds of Castle Howard and finally leaving the worst of the lumpy bits behind me. Now the land really is flatter. I roll by the big nuclear plant and through swarms of tiny little midges. The last section into Thorne seems to take forever and I'm pretty darn tired when I pull in. It's hot in the control and I have a sponge custard and a banana. I chat for a bit with Ian Humphries, an Australian recumbent triker who I'd first met back on PBP. Ian's one of those wise fellows who'd chosen to ride the 800K northern option and he's done and happy. I still have kilometers to ride, so I indulge in one of my luxuries and switch to my spare pair of socks. At 5:55 PM, I head out for the Lincoln control. I pull into the Lincoln control at 9:50 PM and this proves to be a fortunate thing as the control worker there tells me that the Burger King will close in ten minutes. I hustle over there and get some chicken nuggets, a large fries and and orange drink. I eat the nuggets and half the fries, saving the rest and part of the orange drink for breakfast. I inquire about the sleeping arrangements here and I'm told that I can share a room with the Germans and Austrians and they'll be getting up around 4:00 AM. This is perfect. If there hadn't been any room at the inn, I was perfectly willing to camp out in my thermolite bivy but having a room with a real bed was a welcome luxury. I got up at 4:00 and breakfasted on the cold french fries and orange drink. I see Mark and Greg's bikes and deduce that they pulled in sometime after I had. I think I'd slipped past them by taking a short sleep break at Langdon Beck and I'd been running slightly ahead of them all yesterday. At 4:30 AM I roll out. Cold french fries don't make much of a breakfast and I'm dragging. All along the trip I've been fueling en route with PayDay bars, the pear-carob bars, granola bars and the occasional shot from my flask of honey but now I could really use some coffee. Britain isn't known for its coffee shops and our rural route, while scenic is a little short on the accoutrements of civilization. Then I remember that I have a stash of chocolate-covered espresso beans buried somewhere in my pack. I dig them out and down a handful. Now it feels like morning! I'm not to far from Thurlby when I see a rider stopped at a corner. He's looking down at his fender and when I stop to see if he needs anything and he looks up at me I see he's scraped up and bleeding. "I don't know what happened," he says in German or Austrian-accented English and I can see he's looking kind of dazed. I look at the gravel in the corner and piece it together. "You must've slipped on the gravel and crashed. Are you OK?" He's more concerned about his rear fender which has gotten knocked out of place and is rubbing on his rear tire. We get that fixed and while we're working on it, he looks at me and says "Kent Peterson?" "Yeah..." I say not sure where this is going. "I've been to your website!" Somehow knowing me through the web seems to make this fellow feel better, or maybe it's just having anybody around. "Will you ride with me to the next control?" "Sure," I reply, "no problem." Mark and Greg pull up while we're still working on getting the fender right and my German-or-Austrian friend cleans his wounds. The four of us ride off together and make our way to Thurlby. At Thurlby the control workers take care of our injured companion and the rest of us dig into the food. I have more eggs on toast and a couple of helpings of rice pudding and two cups of coffee. I also buy four more of the carob-pear bars which Greg declares to be "disgusting". "Yeah," I agree, "but the damn things work. They've really grown on me!" It's warm now and getting warmer. At 10:00 AM I blast off toward Longstowe, the penultimate control. I manage to hit heavy traffic in St. Neots and I get a bit lost but I get things sorted out and I make it to Longstowe at 3:28 PM, a bit ahead of Greg and Mark. They come in with a fellow named David and we're all looking a little ragged at this point. The bearings are going in Mark's front wheel and he's doing way too much work now. One of the control workers helps him out by loaning him a wheel. Since Mark's front wheel is one of those famous (and expensive) SON generator hubs this means his main light is now gone, but we're going to finish up in daylight so this isn't a problem. As usual, I don't wait around and blast out of the control a bit ahead of the others. I get a little off course, miss the turn to Much Hadham and wind up in the village of Little Hadham. I realize my error and navigate my way back to the course. I think to myself "Little Hadham, Much Hadham, heck, I've had 'em all!" After nearly 1400 kilometers this strikes me as amazingly funny. When you spend this much time on the bike, you take your amusement where you find it. David and I connect up for the very last bit of navigation into Harlow. We pull into the Harlow control at 7:35 PM on Wednesday July 25, 2001. According to the route sheet, I've covered 1416.7 kilometers in the past 105 hours 35 minutes. The time limit for the ride is 115 hours. My odometer lists the ride I made, including a few episodes of getting lost, at 1440 kilometers. As all the Brits will tell you the time doesn't matter, just finishing within the limit is the name of the game. Mark Brooking is there at the end and he stamps my control card for the last time and gives me my finisher's patch. I let him know that Greg and Mark aren't far behind me and sure enough a few minutes later they roll in. LEL is an amazing ride. The terrain is beautiful but brutal. It's not just longer than PBP or BMB, it's tougher. In fact I'd say that the northern 800K of LEL is about as hard as doing the 1200 km of BMB. But it's definitely a ride worth doing. I'll probably be back in 2005. Post ride note: Mark Thomas is more observant than I am and he informs me that I'm no good at identifying foreign accents. The injured rider was Jukka Salonen of Finland. Jukka recovered nicely. I was only a few kilometers past the Thurlby control when I saw him blast by me on his way to a strong finish at Harlow. |