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Monday, February 26, 2007

Comments

Pete Danko

You guys ought to start your season a couple of months later, and ride into November. 'Roiund here, better chance of good weather in October than in February....

Pete Danko

Then again, I notice now that your weather horrors are strewn throughout the year. But I'd take excessive heat over cold/rain any day.

Dan

Well, that's the thing: You sign up for an event that happens on a fixed date -- say a brevet or the Napa Valley Marathon, whenever that happens to be -- and you have two basic options: take what you get weatherwise at the appointed hour--rain, snow, cold, wind, or balmy sunshine -- or let common sense (that's what it is, despite the inner voice that calls it weakness) talk you out of a day of uncomfortable riding or running. There are few days I'd look outside and see it raining and say, "Hey, I'm going for a ride.""

One thing I found surprising about the event Saturday was that out of 100 people signed up, 83 (I think) started. Four out of five people were either ignorant of what was coming up (that didn't seem to be the case from the way folks were dressed) or were willing to try to deal with it. Of the 83 who started, 12 dropped out along the way. Again, given how difficult the conditions were, I'm surprised how many people stuck it out. I suspect most people were like me, though: At some point, riding became a way of getting closer to the finish, to a hot meal, to home, and a nice shower.

Pete Danko

Speaking of the Napa Valley Marathon -- not that I'm obsessing about the weather outlook or anything -- I happily note this final line on this morning's latest forecast discussion from the boys in Monterey: "WITH THE LATEST 12Z OUTPUT...THE LONGER-RANGE PORTION OF THE GFS HAS NOW COME INTO SIGNIFICANTLY BETTER AGREEMENT WITH THE PREVIOUS RUNS OF THE ECMWF AND UKMET IN INDICATING SIGNIFICANT UPPER LEVEL RIDGE DEVELOPMENT AND DRIER AND MILDER CONDITIONS BY THE END OF THE WEEK AND INTO THE WEEKEND."

Marie

That 1969 ride explains a lot. Rain seems to make the cold feel colder. And, well, now that I think about it, the hot, cooler, too.

Congraultions on making it the whole ride. You have endurance that most of us can only wish for.

cb

Nice job. But if I recall correctly wasn't there another ride you took from Crete? My recollection is you borrowed a bike, from John or I, a single speed Schwinn "Racer" and rode out to the Indiana Dunes. Perhpas I am wrong about the destination, but I sure do remember waiting all day to get my hands on that bike.

Rob

I envy your endurance, too, Dan. If I get more than 15 or 20 miles from home, I start worrying about all of the things that could go wrong while I'm out by myself ... and I haven't fixed a flat in 35 years. Wasn't very good at it then. I'm not as fearless as I once was but I'm working on it. Tip of the cap on finishing.

zheem

Funnily enough, Elaine Astrue, whom I was riding with, had a flat in the exact same place you and Rob did. Must have been some serious glass in the road.

A flat tire was the one thing I was really dreading all day long. We, too, fixed it in the dark of the forest with the rain pouring down. Something every randonneur should have to do once -- and only once.

jb

Hey Dan, Sounds tough. But it is amazing what a determined person can accomplish.

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