T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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2633.1 | crewin' | NOVA::FISHER | US Patent 5225833 | Fri Aug 06 1993 10:56 | 7 |
| I'll be at the Middlebury checkpoint all the hours that it's open.
Linda will be in Ludlow. At least that's the plan currently. :-)
I'll ride The Gap either Thursday or Friday while the checkpoint is
closed.
ed
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2633.2 | | 3D::ROTH | Geometry is the real life! | Mon Aug 16 1993 09:07 | 14 |
| I saw some riders that must have been returning yesterday in Hudson.
They looked tired (I know the feeling... :-)
I wish I'd been able to ride it this year but haven't had time to
get in shape.
I also noticed that the roads thru Hudson/Berlin... were marked
with BMB markers. Sort of surprising, I thought Charlie didn't
like to use spraypaint.
How many folks entered this year? Are Charlie and Hauke still the
ones organizing the event?
- Jim
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2633.3 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Aug 16 1993 09:16 | 33 |
| In the base note, I said I thought Ed Kross' idea of finishing
744 miles in 48 hours or less ambitious. Well, he almost made
it.
He rode 744 miles in 51 hours, 36 minutes. Someone told me there
was something like 35,000 feet of climbing. Ed Fisher probably
has a better idea.
Anyway, I couldn't believe the hills. I was driving Ed's Toyota
pick-up truck. On a couple of the hills, I had to shift all the
way down to 2nd, and that was with a running start up the hill.
Ed was pretty tired and achy when he got in. He said he felt
worse after BMB than RAAM. Of course, he didn't have any
massage therapist with him for BMB, so everything was expected
to hurt more.
The people that worked this thing really did a good job. Each
of the checkpoints had food and facilities. Most had places to
shower and sleep. BMB requires a lot of logistics when you have
~90 people (of varying age and cycling skill) to deal with.
Ed's main "competition" (remember, this isn't a race) came from
Mitchell Lesack. He faded toward the end due to lack of sleep.
Ed got to sleep a whole hour and 20 minutes.
Vic (Ed's dad) and I probably got about 3 to 4 hours of sleep.
Ed Fisher was nice enough 8-)> to let me sleep on "his" basketball
court.
More later about checkpoints, etc.
Scott
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2633.4 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Aug 16 1993 09:33 | 5 |
| I didn't see or hear anyone mention Hauke. I did see Charlie
Lamb. He was riding the course with Lindy King. Her husband
was at the Rouses Point (NY) checkpoint.
Scott
|
2633.5 | Route and Checkpoints | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Aug 16 1993 15:52 | 48 |
|
1993 Boston-Montreal-Boston
Route and Checkpoints
1. Wellesley High School to Bullard Farms, MA, 73.5 miles (Total -
73.5 miles).
What a mess trying to get out of the urban sprawl of this area. I
was glad to get up to Bullard Farms.
2. Bullard Farms, MA to Brattleboro, VT, 37.5 miles (Total - 111.0
miles).
Cathy Ellis (RAAM 1991 winner) was at the Motel 6 in Brattleboro.
BMB had two rooms rented for showers, etc.
3. Brattleboro, VT to Ludlow, VT, 55.1 miles (Total - 166.1 miles).
Ed Fisher's wife was at the Trojan Horse Guest House (American
Youth Hostel) in Ludlow. She's an ultramarathon cyclist who opted
to work rather than ride this BMB. Nice place, with plenty of
food, showers, and beds.
4. Ludlow, VT to Middlebury, VT, 65.2 miles (Total - 231.3 miles).
Ed Fisher was at Middlebury High School. Ed's an ultramarathon
cyclist who opted to work rather than ride this BMB. Riders had
access to food, showers, and the gym floor (for sleep).
5. Middlebury, VT to Rouses Point, NY, 84.9 miles (Total - 316.2
miles).
Rouses Point was the last checkpoint in the U.S.
6. Rouses Point, NY to Montreal, Quebec, 52.5 miles (Total - 368.7
miles).
This section to (and from) Montreal was the only flat section on
the course. The rest was a lot of up and down.
On the return trip, I met Nancy Raposo (RAAM 1990 winner) at Bullard
Farms. She even let me take her picture.
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2633.6 | | DELNI::CRITZ | Scott Critz, LKG2/1, Pole V3 | Mon Aug 16 1993 16:27 | 10 |
| I forgot to mention the gearing Ed Kross was using fo BMB.
He used a low of 42x21 until Middlebury, VT, which was 505
miles. At Middlebury, I changed rear wheels so that he had
a low of 42x24.
Some fairly high gears for all the climbing he still had to
do.
Scott
|
2633.7 | | NOVA::FISHER | US Patent 5225833 | Mon Aug 16 1993 17:42 | 17 |
| To answer a few questions. Yes, Charlie and Jeff are opposed to
arrowing. However a few rides were added to the offering: a century
and a twin Century (Saturday out, Sunday back, overnight in
Brattleboro). Thus 100 miles of the route was arrowed both ways for
the Century crowd.
In general, riders who had done the event before were 10 hours faster
than previously. about 10 riders have now completed the event 3 times,
there are no 4 time finishers and BMB has been held 5 times.
I think the numbers were: 95 BMB registrants, 88 starters, 5 dropouts,
2 MIA. Film at 11:.
Oh, and my car had no problems whatever with any of the hills, even
fully loaded. :-)
ed
|
2633.8 | off the subject a bit, but what ride was this? | 3D::ROTH | Geometry is the real life! | Tue Sep 07 1993 13:41 | 15 |
| > I also noticed that the roads thru Hudson/Berlin... were marked
> with BMB markers. Sort of surprising, I thought Charlie didn't
> like to use spraypaint.
I've also noticed a bunch of lavendar arrows, some on parts of
the BMB course, but mostly meandering thru Hudson, Berlin, Stow,
Bolton... and nearby areas - they're on a lot of my favorite back
roads that I usually ride during the week. It seems to end in a Maynard
elementary school lot off of 117.
Just out of curiousity, what ride was that? Maybe the arrows
have been there a while and I only just noticed them because
of the BMB markers. But they seem to be everywhere.
- Jim
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2633.9 | | LOWELL::GUGEL | more like myself than ever before | Mon Sep 13 1993 13:46 | 11 |
|
re .8:
Could the 'lavendar' arrows really be pink? The 'Jamie
and Lindy' show from CRW lead a ride through that area
that starts/ends at some school in Maynard on Rte 117.
Pink arrows are their trademark. This ride has a bunch
of route/length variations, they go to the Nashoba Winery,
out around Wachusett Reservoir and by the Fruitlands Museum
among other places.
|
2633.10 | | 3D::ROTH | Geometry is the real life! | Wed Sep 15 1993 09:44 | 11 |
| Re .9
That must be it!
Re the resevior, annoyingly RT 70 has been torn up lately and I haven't
gone around it in a little while.
Those pink arrows are all over around here, now that I've started
noticing them.
- Jim
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