T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2044.1 | :-) | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Mon Aug 19 1991 09:25 | 7 |
| Yeah, it's alright as long as you can be flexible and arrange for a
more or less clockwise route varying relative to the eye of the storm
and current location.
Go for it.
ed
|
2044.2 | | KAHALA::FOX | | Mon Aug 19 1991 10:17 | 2 |
| That'd be perfect for an out and back ride. Have the wind at your back
the whole way!
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2044.3 | the wind is picking up speed | JUPITR::M_NORTON | | Mon Aug 19 1991 10:29 | 9 |
| More news about the winds. The weather reports are saying the winds
could get up to 100+ mph. That would be one great ride. I was wondering
if my computer would go up that high. I might even think of taking my
rain gear. But that might slow me down.
I might have to get bigger gears. My 55-12 would not be big enough
to hold that speed.
Need for speed.
Michael
|
2044.4 | Cycle over the rainbow? | USMRM4::MREID | | Mon Aug 19 1991 11:03 | 9 |
| I can see it now; way up in the sky ...
"Doo de de dah doo doo ...
Doo de de dah doo doo ...
I'll get you Michael - and your little Trek too!"
;^}
|
2044.5 | Scum! Cowards! Moans! | KURMA::GGOODMAN | Number 1 in a field of 1 | Tue Aug 20 1991 01:03 | 26 |
|
Listen to you all! A little wind and rain and you're all upset that
you're training's going to be disrupted. Hah! I laugh in you're faces! Here
in our Scottish winters, we still train when the snow's 3 foot deep and the
polar bears are emigrating to the warmer regions of the North Pole. Do we
complain? Do we ever utter despair at the hardship of our existence? Do we
go around trying to gain sympathy? No, we are content in the knowledge that
at the end of our plight is a nice warming meal of Granny's home made soup
and black bread. For we still manage to go out and fit in our century rides.
On a fixed wheel. And only wearing a short sleeved woolen racing jersey that
has been passed down from generation to generation within our great cycling
club because everyone's too mean to buy a new one. And all this before
breakfast, just so that we build up a hearty appetite and warm up properly
for our proper training run.
Mr. Ellis, you may think that the RAAM's tough, but you've seen nothing
until you've witnessed an ill tempered, cold Scottish ram charge it's way
through a pack of club cyclists in the frozen moorlands that is our dear
home.
Well, I'm away to put some more lead weights into my water bottle. The
thermometer is reading a glorious 15 below, so I might even be able to wear
my shorts. I'll just have another bowl of watery, tasteless porridge before
I go out and bask in the sun. Never know, I might even get a tan this year.
Aye, we're a hard race, us Scots. Shame we're all dead before 30.
Graham.
|
2044.6 | Yer doant know yer born......... | IDEFIX::HEMMINGS | Lanterne Rouge | Tue Aug 20 1991 03:42 | 11 |
| When I started racing, we had to get up at 3 in the morning, ride 30
miles to the start in torrential rain, carrying our wheels on carriers. Once
there it was a major maintenance job under the hedge before 5,4,3,2,1 GO at 6 am.
After the event, still raining of course, spare clothes blown into the next
county by the wind, same thing in reverse. Then off to meet the rest of the
club for lunch and another 70 miles before tea and back home in the dark,
getting in at 9 pm. Mind you, you could get a bike, Dunlop 0's, go out to lunch
and have fish and chips on the way home and still have change out of a ten-bob
note......
Eat yer heart out, Tony Capstick..............
|
2044.7 | That were nothing | UKCSSE::ROBINSON | Just an endorphine junkie.... | Tue Aug 20 1991 06:35 | 9 |
|
>miles to the start in torrential rain, carrying our wheels on carriers.
Wheels?? You were lucky! When I were a lad it was always a force 10
blizzard on race mornings which made the cardboard disks we fitted
between the forks go really soggy after the first 200 miles....
Chris
|
2044.8 | | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Aug 20 1991 08:48 | 1 |
| I stand in awe.
|
2044.9 | Just show me the way | JUPITR::M_NORTON | | Tue Aug 20 1991 09:52 | 19 |
| re .5
Who ever said anything about training being disrupted. I
had my best day of bike riding in years. I was going so fast my wheels
where lucky to be touching the ground. I think this weather was the
best I have ever been in. I don't know to much about Scottish. But can you
ride into a head wind of a 105 mph, or have a tail wind that fast. But
don't forget the rivers you have to go threw. Yes the road out here
turn into nice little rivers. And one more thing you have to be able to
jump pretty high to get over those fallen trees in your way.
I don't know to much about Scottish, but with those winter
you guys get sound like fun time. I can only wish I was there for some
of them. To bad you guys don't get the affect of out running those
fallen trees.
Need for speed
Michael
PS. I thought I saw a witch on a bike.
|
2044.10 | winter report to follow.... | SUSHI::KMACDONALD | sushi: not just for breakfast! | Tue Aug 20 1991 10:12 | 4 |
| > I don't know to much about Scottish, but with those winter
> you guys get sound like fun time. I can only wish I was there for some
Ummmm, I *think* he was referring to the Scottish summers.... :-)
|
2044.11 | SW then SE then ... | NOVA::FISHER | Rdb/VMS Dinosaur | Tue Aug 20 1991 10:58 | 12 |
| I hope everyone who tried it caught the error in .1. As I started out
I remembered that I needed a counter clockwise loop. I had to head out
in a southwesterly direction and then swithc to sourtheasterly as the
eye passed overhead. Since this was all uphill, the return route was
easy when the winds died because I only had to turn around and ride 250
miles downhill. It was almost as fast as the 250 uphill with tailwind.
BTW, anyone else notice that this was New England's first Himicane?
:-)
ed
|
2044.12 | | STARCH::WHALEN | Vague clouds of electrons tunneling through computer circuits and bouncing off of satelites. | Tue Aug 20 1991 11:07 | 10 |
| re .11
I was going to point out your error in .1 (The winds are counter-clockwise
around low pressure areas and clockwise around high pressure areas.)
I didn't go out in it yesterday, but I did get a good day of riding in tailwinds
a couple of weeks ago. It rained that day too, but we were enjoying the ride
so much that we didn't care.
Rich
|
2044.13 | | YNGSTR::BROWN | | Tue Aug 20 1991 12:40 | 5 |
| Somebody was out... heard over the police scanner yesterday in Clinton,
right in the middle of it:
a cruiser: "some guy on a ten speed just passed me"
(no response from base; things were pretty busy)
|
2044.14 | Just a fly by | JUPITR::M_NORTON | | Tue Aug 20 1991 12:57 | 8 |
| This has to be the best time out. The only thing you run into was the
rivers that ran aross some of the roads. there was very few cars on the
road at the time. So you had the road to yourself. Great time to be
had.
The need for speed
Michael
|
2044.15 | All Were Having a Great Teim Being Had... | GIAMEM::JERICKSON | John Erickson, DTN 232-2590 | Tue Aug 20 1991 13:33 | 8 |
| > This has to be the best time out...Great time to be had.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
Do I detect a _pun_? In _this_ topic? NAW!
Later!
John
|
2044.16 | Rough all over | FSDB00::BRANAM | Steve Branam, DECcallserver Project | Tue Aug 20 1991 17:41 | 6 |
| Yeah, the weather was bad here in TX, too, 100 degrees F and sunny. Sat up on
the trackstand in the air conditioning eating a bowl of haggis with my trusty
Scottish Terrier MacDougal by my side. Oh, no, I didn't actually *ride* on it, I
just sat there watching TV.
Now I could tell you some stories about riding through tornadoes...
|
2044.17 | Course, we had it tough | KIRKTN::GGOODMAN | Number 1 in a field of 1 | Tue Aug 20 1991 17:58 | 18 |
|
Hah! You think riding into puffs of air is hard work? Try riding through
3 feet of snow with a snow plough attached to your forks. Then you'll know
what a hard days work is. You lot with your poncy aero-bars and low profile
bikes. Women! The lot of you! It's a man's life in Scotland. None of your
fancy disk wheels here. No, we have heavy steel wheels with solid tyres. You
lot me sick!
And what do you mean Scottish summer? Summer! You get a summer over
there? For 6 months we get no sunlight over here, for the other 6 months it
just rains. It stopped raining yesterday for 5 minutes and Scotland was
declared a national disaster area for drought.
Huh, we'll show you what tough is Mr. Hemmings, sunning yourself all
day on the Riviera admiring the pink flamingoes. Well I'll tell you, I'd much
rather sit on a damp dyke in the glens peering through the mist a highland
charging a car.
Graham.
|
2044.18 | Wind is relative | FSTVAX::HANAUER | Mike...~Bicycle~to~Ice~Cream | Wed Aug 21 1991 17:45 | 6 |
| Riding in a hurricane -- no big deal.
This note is where the wind really is.
~Mike (reading this note with helmut on)
|
2044.19 | DEBIS CAN BE A B*TCH | WMOIS::C_GIROUARD | | Thu Aug 22 1991 07:11 | 4 |
| It really is a blast. I just hate it when those '62 Buick's go
up your nose though... I hate it when that happens.... :-)
Chip
|
2044.20 | Ha! Chickens! | PAKORA::GGOODMAN | Number 1 in a field of 1 | Tue Aug 27 1991 07:05 | 5 |
|
Well how fast you riding now that Bob's gone away?
Graham.
|
2044.21 | Fast enough | JUPITR::M_NORTON | | Tue Aug 27 1991 08:58 | 13 |
| Re -1
You ask how fast we are going now without the big winds of
bob. Have you ever seen someone biking behind a big truck. If you do
nine out ten times it will be me. I train alot going 45-50 mph. I
wouldn't want other people trying this if they never did it before.
This is how I work on my sprint. I made alot of people see what I was
doing, was working. The only problem now is how to find a strong wheel.
I have broken, twisted, and destroyed couple of rear wheels already
because of to much stress.
The need for speed
Michael
|
2044.22 | I only use a 53 tooth ring | AD::CRANE | I'd rather be on my bicycle | Tue Aug 27 1991 09:10 | 13 |
|
Hey Mike (aka Mr. Modesty)
If you can't get a wheel to hold up give Branford bike in conn. a
call. They will build up a 36 spoke 4X wheel that even you should have
trouble hurting.
Oh by the way how did you do at the "Lemond challenge" last
wednesday?
John C.
|
2044.23 | Bionic human exists... | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Wed Aug 28 1991 11:06 | 18 |
| Re .21 ---> Gracious gratuities extended...
Standard contradictory text follows:
You're blowing more wind than Bob did ever did.
If it's so, YOU are the next savior for american cycling.
What Category racer are you?
Whatever the heck, PLEASE don't get hurt drafting any trucks.
It's *dangerous* stuff. Besides...
We NEED you: to win the Tour next year.
Or as a domestique for GL...
P.S. Truckers HATE human-powered parasites. D'at ain't no lie...
|
2044.24 | DEC's Abudjaparov | CIMNET::MJOHNSON | Matt Johnson | Wed Aug 28 1991 17:30 | 6 |
| Mike's probably gone to Killington for the annual 5-day stage race.
He's a CAT III (unless he upgraded recently). If he performs as
he has in the past, Mike should pick up the lion's share of
sprint points in his category....
MATT
|
2044.25 | This guy is faster than Bob | NQOPS::CLELAND | USIM&T Data Center Services | Thu Aug 29 1991 07:20 | 16 |
| Fight the power!
Wish him the best, may he increase his performance two-fold.
May he upgrade his category, etc.
Without actually meeting face to face, it was simply too easy
to assume rectitude, without redress. Notes has that effect...
By the way: Six coastal Massachusetts counties that felt the
wrath of hurricane Bob were declared federal disaster areas
on tuesday the 27th, clearing the way for federal relief $$$.
According to the Boston Herald, federal aid will be on its way
to Barnstable, Bristol, Dukes, Essex, Middlesex and Plymouth
counties as a result of the declaration made by President Bush.
Lt. Gov. A. Paul Cellucci said it is possible that two others -
Nantucket and Worcester, could still receive disaster designations.
|
2044.26 | Killington Stage Race | JUPITR::M_NORTON | | Tue Sep 03 1991 09:19 | 74 |
| To whom it may concern,
My GL TT time was 11:19. I just came back from Killington
stage race. I raced this as a Cat III, I am now upgraded to Cat II
This is what I and my team did.
First day One team memeber came in 9 in the 3.4 mile TT, the time was
around 11:45, I did it in 12:40
Second day Pepsi Road race 54.6 mi total climbing 1650 ft
I took the only Hot Spot for that day It was worth 7 points.
My team mate took third in that hot spot. worth 3 point.
also I took that stage win, with my team mate coming in
second. Great sprint. The speed was around 50 mph I came
from about 50th place to win that one.
Third day Brandon gap Road race 45 mi total climbing 2120 ft
I made over the first 5 mile climb pretty good Had my team
give me a great lead out for the Hot spot and I took 1st
for another 7 points. My team mate took 3rd for 3 points.
Then we chase all the breaks down for our theam GC leader we
control the pak pretty good. our team had 6 good riders.
Over brandon gap my team GC leader took the KOM for 7 points
and took 3rd place in the second KOM then him place 5th for
the stage. I on the other hand blew up aty Bear MT. It was a
two mile climb that I lost 4 minutes. all that time was lost
in a mile and half.
fourth stage Criterium 800 ft of climb 16 mi
I took one of 3 hot spots wich gave me 3 points. the points
for the crit was less than the road races. My team mate took
third in the kom which gave him one point. then the sprint.
we lap a field of 30 people. they did not pull riders. when
we were lapping these people one man took off. we did not
know if he was a lap rider or in our race. there was only
one lap to go. So on the sprint we were sprinting for
second. There was only four of us sprinting for this. we all
came across the line at the same time. what a picture. They
had two camras. filming the finish. they need both to tell
who won the sprint. It was me. There was a crash at the
finish of that sprint. there was nothing said at that time.
So they gave me flowers and took pictures. then that night
they said we had a power play going on. so they took away
second away from me.plus they took third place away from the
other guy. That gave my team mate third. he was fifth in
that sprint. That was the first time I ever saw that happen.
But that gave my Team GC leader 5 sec off his time. for
being third.
So far as a team. we have the following.
Hot spot 17 point all wrap up closes person is 7 points.
KOM 11 points. the leader has 14 points and only one more kom left.
team GC leader
A man in the top 3 for GC.
last day Road race 55 mi 2325 ft of climbing
We tried to get our man the KOM but did not work. he lost
out we controlled the pack pretty good. then there was the
8 mi climb. my work was done I got my man to the front.
he came in 10th that day 6th over all.
The out come was
Won one stage
Second in another
and won the Hot spot.
Michael
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