T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1066.1 | I'll start | DELNI::GRACE | life is unpredictable; eat dessert first | Mon Mar 27 1989 15:03 | 26 |
| OK, I'll start it off, seeing that it was my idea.
I rode on Sunday with the Charles River Wheelmen and meet Bill Sears,
a newly elected v.p. of the CRW. We started out from Wayland on
Rt. 20 and proceeded to ride throughout Sudbury, Stow, Marlboro
and back again. For those who aren't familiar with this area, this
is a fairly flat to slightly rolling hills area that is one of the
prettier 26 miles in the Eastern part of Massachusetts.
It was a sunny day from start to finish. It warmed up from the upper
40's F (9 C) at 10 o'clock to the mid 60's F (18 C) at the finish.
It was a great day to start of the outdoor season for one person at
least. My bike had little problem with it's shakedown cruise. The
body, unfortunately ran out of gas due to some operator error. I
missed one small detail--not enough calories in the old hayburner. So
I was a bit draggy for the last 45 minutes of the two hours. Still
it was a nice start and glad to have met some new people in the
process.
Anyone else care to share their weekend biking experiences, possibly
from either side of the big pond?
Russ
|
1066.2 | great cycling in Old Lyme, Conn. | USCTR1::PJOHNSON | | Mon Mar 27 1989 16:47 | 9 |
| I had a nice ride in Old Lyme, Ct. on Sunday. I started in East
Lyme and rode on the Boston Post road to Grassy Hill road. Proceeded
up Grassy Hill (nice climb) and onto Beaver Brook Rd. I took Beaver
Brook to Rte 156 along the Conn. River, back to East Lyme. It was
about 40 miles of beautiful, quintessential New England.
The 60 degree, sunny weather helped too.
Phil
|
1066.3 | Easter weekend - spring fever | KUDZU::ELLIS | John Lee Ellis - assembly required | Tue Mar 28 1989 15:05 | 18 |
| It was a good weekend here, too. Temps into the low 80's each
day, everything green and lush after a week of torrential rains
(they tell me), the pollen just coming out. I did rides into
the less inhabited spots of South Carolina each day - down to
Camden (near Columbia) on Saturday, over to Sumter National Forest
(talk about deserted!) on Sunday, and just around Great Falls and
the Catawba Valley yesterday (yes, couldn't resist taking a day
off). Mileage 213, 213, and 215 - hence useful training rides
as well.
This is a great time of year, because things are green, but the
bugs are not yet out in force, and the snakes aren't yet out lying
about on the asphalt. But the forsythias were in bloom, and so
were the out-of-state plates (Ohio, WV, Ontario, ...) heading
for Myrtle Beach. I successfully warded off the biggest danger -
with #25 sunscreen.
-john
|
1066.4 | ride w/triathletes | USMRM5::MREID | | Tue Mar 28 1989 18:12 | 33 |
| My first significant non-mountain-bike ride outside was this past
weekend; a 40-miler with two triathletes (my brother & his friend
Rick). (I am not a triathlete)
The weather was gorgeous on Easter morning as we tooled along thru
Hudson, Stow, Sudbury, Maynard, Concord, etc. The pace was brisk,
as is usual with triathletes, but not bad - no heavy breathing ...
until the "warm-up" was apparently over. All of a sudden I found
that I was no longer on anyone's wheel, and the pace had picked
up to 25-26 mph. Mile after mile my brother's friend hammered away
at this pace (on his Scott DH bars), and my brother behind me (also on
Scott DH's) rode off the back, not breathing that hard. Where were
MY aero bars when I needed them??!! These guys were hurting me!
After about 8 miles of this grueling pace my legs felt like lead,
my lungs were screaming for more air, and thoughts of getting
dropped kept coming into my mind more and more frequently. FINALLY
my brother decided to catch Rick, who was about 100yds off the front,
and I sucked his wheel all the way up to Rick, and the pace slowed.
Whew, they almost broke me. They were both impressed that I held
the pace on 'normal' handlebars, but I don't think either of them
knew how hard I was going. There's just something about getting
dropped by a younger brother ... I just CAN'T let that happen!
The really great think about riding with triathletes is that they
let you suck wheels for the whole ride if you want to, and they
never go looking for a wheel themselves. Next time out with these
boys and I'll make sure I'm on a wheel, rather than daydreaming
as the wheel disappears in front of me!
Now that it's over I can say it was a really good workout.
Mark
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1066.5 | Keep your experiences coming | DELNI::GRACE | life is unpredictable; eat dessert first | Wed Mar 29 1989 19:29 | 7 |
| Good description of fun competition. I felt like I was riding along
with you. While I don't keep that kind of pace, I have shared that
kind of experience with a friend that I've been riding with on an
annual basis for years.
Thanks,
Russ
|