Archive for July, 2010


Ride MI: Day 1

July has been so busy there hasn’t been a free minute to post, but there is always time to ride. The most notable ride since the last post was the bike course of the Mass State Sprint triathlon where my bike split was 24th overall out of a field of about 270. I attribute this to the course’s elevation profile. With more than 50% of the course’s length laid out over uphill grades, speeds were limited, reducing the penalty I normally experience for lacking race bike aerodynamics. Cranking my scratched up commuter rig up hills past time trial bikes is satisfying even if I know they will blow by me as soon as I’m spun out it top gear on the descent.

I’m finishing out July with a trip to Michigan with my bike. Yesterday provided a relaxing first ride from a Y camp in Montigue to dinner at a pizzeria in Fremont. The scene here is a different kind of rural that is typical of midwestern farmland. Straight roads travel over gently rolling terrain with vast views of corn and hay fields at every rise. It appears hay is done here, as every field is low and speckled with identical perfectly rolled bales. Corn, on the other hand, is still approaching peak, showing high fields of countless parallel stalks. Interspersed Amish community completes this textbook display of Americana. I particularly enjoyed spinning back to camp on a full stomach of “Spanky’s Famous Breadstix” as I am wont to be absorbed into a summer night’s ride on a quiet road. Next up: investigate local trail development.

Cadillac

A few recent events have been lagging the blog updates. This weekend, the Fourth of July was celebrated a bike/hike combo at Acadia National Park’s Cadillac Mountain. Starting at sea level about 25 miles away, the ride was past tourist serving roadside lobster pounds and onto Mount Desert Island following the typical automotive route onto park roads. While there were some hills on the approach, the road touched sea level again approximately five miles before the peak. Ascending 1500 feet to the Cadillac parking lot was accomplished via a fairly regular grade such that no particularly steep road feature was encountered. It isn’t the most challenging climb of the season, but a satisfying effort with prime season. View full article »

New seat, new shoes, and LOTS of wind!

Happy 4th to everyone! I got a new saddle two days ago and I knew that I needed to give it a good ride. Today I set out for a gentle ride due to extreme heat in Boston. I started out on my normal 10 mile loop to work then I was planning on catching the Charles River Bike Path and head downtown then loop around back home. Well, about 1 mile into the ride with the wind at my face, I decided to go down some side roads to avoid the wind. How is it possible for the wind to be coming at a cyclist’s face when she turns another direction? I still don’t get it.  Still managed to get in a 15 mile ride.

The new seat feels good. I do feel like more of a “real” cyclist now that I don’t have a large, cushy seat. I was ready for an upgrade. The new shoes did okay. I had some pain but I think I still need to break them in.

Well, I hope everyone is enjoying the long weekend! I’m am in for a lot of cycling this week and so I’m sure I’ll have a story or two to post.