THE VISION BORED
VISION WHILE RACING isn't everything, but it's right up there with oxygen. We gotta breathe, we gotta see...
... to move forward.
I was thinking about that today while zipping down a twisty trail.
If I let my eyes start to focus on what's up close...
... my speed drops and I become much more reactive.
When I'm focused far ahead...
... I go much faster, slipping into a state of flow and things are magically easier.
The thing I was thinking about was my vision board.
Mulling over the things already accomplished, as well as what is in the works.
The vision board seems to work the same way...
... focusing on the outcome, not how I'm going to get there.
Some of you may be thinking Dude is nuts,
others nodding your heads That's right.
Either way, I'll leave you with this thought from King Salomon...
... Where there is no vision, the people perish.
===
166.2 lbs
8 hours sleep
620 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 100 push ups, 20 pull ups, hand gripper, shoulder press, curls
√ Lower Body: 100 ATG air squats and 20 split squats with 70lbs, nordic curls, box jumps, heel and toe raises
89/108/-19 per Strava
What I'm reading: Lions of Lucerne, Brad Thor
What I'm studying: The works of Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
TUCK AND ROLL!
AERO. The term is like a science fiction blob that oozes it's way into everything, eventually killing everything in sight and taking over the world...
... with no end of it's pervasiveness in site.
Can we escape the creepiness?
The thingaboutitis, once we go slip down the aero tube...
- positioning
- equipment
- apparel
... it's almost impossible to stop.
That list falls short of the whackiness...
- hands on the mtb fork crowns at Leadville
- hydration bladders stuffed in front of jersey
- dropper seat post for bombing road descents
... which actually works.
I was thinking about that this morning as I crested The Wall, about 15 seconds behind the leaders.
Pedaling till I was spun out...
- butt hooked on end of saddle
- hands next to the stem
- chin on the Wahoo
- elbows in
- knees in
... I assumed the position (I'm not a butt on seat tube believer).
Would I, could I catch before the bottom?
Being on my lessthanaero gravel bike...
- spun out with gravel gears
- rolling shallow depth road wheels
- rockin' a well ventilated KASK helmet
... I needed every aero advantage I could get.
After rolling up on the 3 in between the two leaders...
... we rotated, taking short and speedy pulls.
It took forever to catch,
all the way to the final curve.
I'm already thinking about next week...
- actual aero helmet
- clean shave on the legs, face, arms(?)
- and, yeah, gonna bust out the Speedsuit
... what else I can do to improve my aeroness.
On my previous road bike, I clocked 51 mph...
... today's set up shows 47.4 mph.
Tuesday can't some soon enough.
===
168 lbs
7 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: 150 push ups, 30 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 100 ATG air squats and 20 split squats with 70lbs
89/113/-24 per Strava
What I'm reading: Lions of Lucerne, Brad Thor
What I'm studying: Imagination, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
CUI BONO?
THERE ARE A LOT OF DEALS that get cut on the race course. Some are obvious, some hidden. Many between competitors...
... for money, glory and pride.
The worst deal of all?
Well, that depends on Cui bono?...
... Who benefits?
Deals between competitors kindasuck, but...
- hang on for camera glory
- work to stay in break
- straight cash
... we can usually tell who benefits,
and who pays.
No, the most insidious deals...
- staying up late
- backing off the finishing sprint
- starting the new diet "tomorrow"
... are the ones we cut with ourselves.
Because nobody benefits,
'cepting our competitors.
===
167.4 (Happy Fatter's Day - sheesh!)
8 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 150 push ups, 30 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: 100 ATG air squats and 20 split squats with 60lbs
85/90/-6 per Strava
What I'm reading: Lions of Lucerne, Brad Thor
What I'm studying: Imagination, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
MY INSANE CULT
FEW OF US HAVE BEEN TO AN AA MEETING, but we've seen TV/movie version many times. Hi, I'm Todd and...
... I'm an endurance junkie.
Hi Todd.
When we come clean with the general population, Today I...
- swam 10,000 yards
- rode for 5 hours
- ran 20 miles
... they think we're crazy.
We're not.
The adrenaline rush of ...
- 60 miles an hour in nothing but lycra
- the swimmers blue mind
- the runner's high
... we need that hit.
Regularly.
This risks we take...
- sending it down the mountain
- running along into the cold, dark night
- impossibly holding our breath one more length
... would freakout any life insurance company.
These sensations of pushing well beyond normal, reasonable, safe...
... are often all that's keeping us stable.
In all sincerity, because the allure of the lottery and dulling our senses with substances is so very tempting and tragically treacherous...
... stay dangerous my friends.
The sane kind.
===
164.6
7.5 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 60 push ups, 20 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: `100 ATG air squats and 20 split squats with 60lbs
86/98/-12 per Strava
What I'm reading: Lions of Lucerne, Brad Thor
What I'm studying: Imagination, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
TODAY WAS A ROUGHIE
SOME BIG TRAINING DAYS are better than others. The reasons are myriad. Which means when it goes sideways...
... it's up to us to figure it out.
Like today.
I knew it was going to be a big day...
- 7 hrs
- 87 miles
- 10,500' of vert
... on Monday.
There are only 8 weeks to get our Leadville legs, and me and Let's Go need(ed) to do some simulation.
For me,
today,
I just never got comfortable.
Never felt that feeling of being on top of the pedals and...
... smoothly moving like a Singer sewing machine.
It was much more like a broke down pumpjack one might see in the hot and dusty oil fields of Bakersfield...
... in desperate need of lube and love.
Clunk.
Clunk.
Clunk.
I've narrowed it down to a few things...
- going too deep on Thursday after solid Tuesday and Wednesday
- rolling the gravel wheels vs road wheels on Friday's BRO ride
- hitting the legs with resistance Sunday-Thursday
... and I should know better.
I'm gonna add to that...
- probs too much tire pressure
- def hotter today than our last attempt
- carrying a third bottle to be safe on hydration
... some I can control, some I can't.
In the end, I think it really comes down to not being sufficiently recovered.
On a positive note, given the fatigue level...
... we averaged 12.7 mph with zero drafting over a similar profile to Leadville.
Not bad.
Not great.
But, we can work with that.
Oh, and I'm feeling quite extra speedy on the downhills.
Time for...
- In-N-Out burger, fries and shake
- some good sleep
- and a day off
... to set the pins up to be knocked down next week.

===
164.6
7.5 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 0 push ups, 0 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: `0 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
89/113/-25 per Strava (someone's tired!)
What I'm reading: Lions of Lucerne, Brad Thor
What I'm studying: Imagination, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THAT TOPSECRET SECRET
THE IDEA OF A PUBLIC DECLARATION is not new. Lots of people have proclaimed they will accomplish X goal and gone on to do just that...
... because it works.
There is a hitch.
The haters,
the perceived haters,
hating the idea of haters.
There are plenty of famous athletes who have made the call and fallen flat on their face...
... sometimes by knockout.
Which is why most of keep our plans secret,
denying ourselves the power therein.
I'm onboard with that.
There is also power in keeping our intentions unknown.
Wherein lies another hitch.
If we're posting our stats with the Strava lords,
that might be considered a passive-aggressive statement.
Which begs the question...
... if we're keeping our mouths shut, do we keep our training private?
Personally, I'm open book on that, except for my top secret racing agenda which scrawled in code...
... on my vision board.
===
164.6
7iah hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 30 push ups, 10 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: `0 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
83/84/1 per Strava
What I'm reading: Lions of Lucerne, Brad Thor
What I'm studying: Imagination, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
IMAGINE THAT!
WHEN WE WERE CHILDREN, can ya even remember that?, we had tremendous imaginative powers. From games to friends to travel to faraway places...
... our lives were boundless.
What happened?
Did reality set in?
Did we set conditions on our dreams?
Did some kind old bag of wind tell us not to have our heads in the clouds?
The thingaboutitis...
... when we register for an event or race, all bets are off.
We've already imagined...
- the trainging
- the equipement
- the travel and accomodations
... to start.
More importantly, if we're really on our A game, and you and I are!...
... we can see the finish line, and exactly how we'll be at that moment.
Which isn't child's play.
It's actually...
- life
- business
- relationships
... how doers get it done!
As I'm writing this I'm reminded of the gloves I wore today...

and the shirt I'm wearing right now

This is gonna be a total marketing faux pas because we're neverever supposed to make too many offers, but...
... I imagine more than a few of you will want this reminder to Rip!
Order the Gloves, get the Shirt for FREE.
Use this code: LET'SRIP
https://pedalindustries.com/collections/lets-rip-buy-t-get-gloves-for-free
===
162.6
8 hours sleep
670 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 30 push ups, 10 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 30 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
85/91/-7 per Strava
What I'm reading: 7 Powers, The Foundations of Business Strategy, Hamilton Helmer
What I'm studying: Imagination, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
EMBRACING THE BURN, DAILY/OFTEN
WE'VE ALL FELT THE BURN. Some of us love it, some of us hate it. No matter where we are on the spectrum...
... the burn is coming for us.
Is it minimizable?
Maybe.
If yesterday is any indicator, I may have stumbled upon something.
For the last few weeks, I've been steadily increasing my ATG air squats.
From reps of 10 to reps of 30.
If you haven't done them lately, or ever...
- standing
- to full "ass to grass"
- to standing
... it's quite a shock to learn our trusty bottom half may not be as durable as we think.
When I started 10 burned,
then 20 really burned...
... the last 5 of 30 were a massive struggle.
Back to yesterday's hammerfest, when the burn came on it was like my body saying...
... Oh, we're gonna burn now. Buckle up buttercup, I've got this.
Rather than pulling the plug at the onset of burn, I embraced it and powered on.
Best I've felt in weeks/months.
Now, I'll be the first to admit it could just be that I was supertapered going into last weekend's BWR UT and I might just be having a good response to the taper followed by the 3.5 hours of racing across the high desert.
But, even if that's the case...
... the burn of 30 ATGs feels so good.
Gonna keep upping it,
apparently 100 is a thing.
(yes, on top of split squats and probably bringing back box jumps)
===
165.2
8 hours sleep
480 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 90 push ups, 30 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 90 ATG air squats and 18 split squats with 50lbs
85/96/-12 per Strava
What I'm reading: 7 Powers, The Foundations of Business Strategy, Hamilton Helmer
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
I CAN'T BELIEVE SHE TOOK ME BACK
IT'S REALLY HARD TO LET GO of something we love. The fear we won't get it back is legit. Yet, the opportunity of enjoying something new...
... is real, and tantalizing.
The known vs the unknown.
Once we move on, that thing we left behind might...
- forget about us
- reject our return
- change and move on
... it's risky.
No, Surfergirl didn't leave me or vice versa.
But!...
... I did leave my beloved TMWC (Tuesday Morning World Championships) for another ride: Wednesday Worlds.
The main reason, and it's very valid, waking up at 5am and rolling out in the cold, dark, pre-dawn was leaving me almost worthless for work the rest of the day.
The lesser reason, I was thinking the blazing intensity of WW would be a better work out.
Well, a funny thing happened when a downloaded the Tuesday vs WW data...
- significantly more time above threshold and VO2 max
- much higher average and normalized power
- and, the best, all my pals were there
... to smack me in the face!
For sure, it helped that the sun was up when I rolled out.
And, I was putting down power on the road vs battling dust, rocks and terrain.
The fellas were all welcoming...
... probably because they knew they'd dump me up The Wall and send me home with a good lycra whipping.
Gawd, I've missed this ride and these awesome cats.
===
165.2
7 hours sleep
480 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: 30 push ups, 10 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 30 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
84/83/-9 per Strava
What I'm reading: 7 Powers, The Foundations of Business Strategy, Hamilton Helmer
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
GIVE ME 10 WEEKS
HOW LONG DOES IT REALLY TAKE to get into top shape for an A race is a question we'd all like answered. For an Olympian, it might be years. For us...
... we might have a few months.
Or less.
Depending on when we sign up, and the vagaries of life.
But, let's just say we are fitter than most,
not as fit as some.
Then our focus will be...
- long climbs or power climbs
- slogs into the wind or a million turns
- finishing in ones and two or a ripping bunch sprint
... more on race specific training.
Given a good baseline of fitness, my general rule is...
- our bodies
- our equipment
- our travel and logistics
... it takes 10 weeks to really sharpen the saw.
For me, aiming for Leadville on 8.15.26, I've got time...
... but, no time to waste.
And, so it begins.
===
164.6
8 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level,
√ Upper Body: 60 push ups, 30 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 60 ATG air squats and 0 split squats with 50lbs
81/72/9 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: The Search, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE PREPARATION/EXPECTATION EQUATION
DECONSTRUCTING OUR RECENT PERFORMANCE is critical for improvement. The longer we wait, the foggier our recollection. Details we were sure of...
... become memories full of bias.
It's natural.
Who wants to remember what went wrong, when we can glory in all that went right?
Other than screwing up yet another sprint for the line, nothing really went sideways for me at BWR UT.
And, if I'm being honest, Billy tested my legs on the overpass coming into to town. Whether or not he knew it, and I stayed glued through the the pain...
... I was hurting.
There are a few things that went really right...
- The chef's pasta the night before at Chef Alfredo's, with Danny and Lisa, was delish and just what I needed.
- The AirBNB I found at the last minute - a 3-bedroom house was perfect and the beds wonderful.
- The 8:30 start was a little too late to skip breakfast, so I went with my gut and mowed down a couple of chocolate Entenmann's donuts, half an apple, and a couple of cups of my trusty mushroom hot chocolate.
- I picked up Skratch Super High Carb and ran 6 scoops in my 2-liter pack and another 3 in one bottle.
- To stay ahead of cramps, I ate a Salt Stick chews.
- For the bike set up,
- Ceramic Speed chain held up really well to all the dust, even after getting doused with cold water by Smitty at the final aid station.
- The tire pressure was pretty low, 22lbs in back 20lbs up front. I rimmed out a few times over the random chunky stuff while in a paceline. That's always risky. But, I also felt like I was much more comfortable than other competitors who dropped off the group over time.
... the last was mindset.
Preparation vs Expectation.
I came in pretty rested having spend the previous 2 weeks on my MTB in Park City.
Because of the altitude, it was difficult to put in hard efforts of any meaningful time. Hours in the saddle were solid, but even a lot of that was spent ripping down hill.
I'd give me preparation a B, which was fine for a B race.
Knowing that, my expectations were quite low.
Here's the point...
... poor preparation with high expectations is a formula for frustration and a crummy day on course.
Whereas...
... awesome preparation with low expectations always makes for a fun race and often surprising outcomes.

===
163.6
7.5 hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level,
√ Upper Body: 100 push ups, 20 pull ups, hand gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: 70 ATG air squats and 18 split squats with 50lbs
82/74/7 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO ABOUT IT?
IF THINGS AREN'T ENDING UP as we'd like them to, the obvious thing to do would be dong something different. But, that can be a hard pill to swallow because...
... we're comfy and don't wanna change.
Hope isn't a strategy.
Or, a tactic.
So, even though I was hoping I'd be able to fend off the change with a few hundred meters to go at BWR UT, the mofo I'd been working with for the last 30 miles...
... stuck a shiv in my back.
There was nothing I could do.
Had no answer.
Surfergirl, bless her little beating heart, could see I was frustrated with myself and...
... accidentally twisted the buried blade.
What are you going to do about it?
I think it was an innocent, honest, loving, caring question due to the fact that she's seen me frustrated with something...
... then, draw up a solution and make it happen.
Truthfully, does it really matter if close out a racing effort by taking some cat on the line who I may never see again?
Not even.
What matters, to me, is that I execute the plan.
In this case...
... having something left at the end, to rip a fast finish.
The kool kids call that durability.
I call it having your shift together when it counts, which means I'll be needing to...
... wrap up long rides with sprints that sting.
===
164ish no scale
7.5 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/86/-3 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
ARE YOU EXCITED FOR THE RACE TOMORROW?
THE NIGHT BEFORE any race is not a normal night. No matter how practiced we are there's always something different to our routine. Sometimes...
... we just make it up.
Why not?
It might work,
or not.
Surfergirl keeps asking me are you excited?
I wanna say yes,
and I know I will be tomorrow...
... about a millisecond after we start.
Until then,
my energy tends to be low.
Not depressed low.
Hybernation low.
Lethargic.
Slothy.
Trying to amp me up, she asks...
... have you looked at reg to see who's going to be there?
That's the kind of thing that...
- if I glanced at it now
- the night before the race
- when I'm trying to chill and sleep early
... would def keep me up and tossing and turning.
No, that's not my agenda.
I prefer to...
- lose all hope
- ditch all desire
- punt all pretense
... and shut 'er down with my favorite pint.
===
164ish no scale
8.5 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
81/70/11 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
NOSTALGIA
WE ALL STARTED this endurance journey somewhere, likely not where we are today. Introduced by a friend, sometimes on purpose, others inadvertently. While we may change locales, and the friends become distanced…
… we’re still here.
In the game.
We may have the opportunity to go back to where it all started.
For me, it was…
- my roommate’s bike
- a finagled purchase of my own
- secrets of sprinting revealed by Bret, who raced track nationally for San Jose Bicycle Club
… in Provo, UT.
I rearranged my classes…
- to start as early as possible
- so I could ride every afternoon
- before cruising the library to cruise the cubicles in search of a “study” partner.
… because I had priorities to attend to.
Today I hit a climb I’d always wanted to check out, Cascade Springs, but it was a battered gravel road back in the day.
Now, it’s pristine pavement all the way up over 8000’
Followed by a plummeting descent that is as magical now as it was 40 years ago.
I’ve moved,
but, I never really moved on…
… and, I’m quite okay with that.
===
164ish no scale
8.5 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
81/68/12 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
What I'm studying: Prayer, Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE TRUE PRICE OF FREE ADVICE
A WHILE BACK, I connected with the COO of a well-known bike brand. We were working on a collaboration at the time. I asked him for some...
... advice on what we're doing over here.
Today, we met for lunch.
Looked at from now to the end of the year,
the objectives I want to accomplish,
what I think is possible.
No different than...
- capabilities
- weaknesses
- peak seasonal events
... planning the race season with a coach.
After some yummy tacos,
and back of napkin calculations...
... we came up with a solid methodology to implement.
Like any great coach,
my friend made it so simple to understand...
... and gave me the confidence to go for it.
I was prepared to pay a minimum of $1,000.
In the end it could be way more expensive than that...
... if I don't take action.
It could cost me 100s of 1000s.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/77/5 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
ARE SUFFERING AND EPICCING TWO SIDES OF THE SAME COIN?
WE ALL KNOW that group workouts are torturous by nature. It's not a secret. Yet, we continue to show up beating after beating because...
... suffering loves company.
Alone, for most of us, is no good.
We won't see it through,
we'll ease up when we should be hardening up.
The bonds we end up forming are often unbreakable...
... we're in agony together.
Suddenly people who barely knew each other are fist bumping and ready for the next one.
What's the opposite bondforming experience?...
... when we're pushing geographic boundaries together.
Like today.
It wasn't the 90 minute climb topping out at 9160'.
Nope.
It was the 60 minutes of downhill...
- ripping through the trees
- sliding around gorgeous berms
- jumping rocks and roots and stumps
... feeling like we were cheating life.
Epiccing, like suffering, loves company.
We set off in search of adventures that will push beyond the comforts or riding around the block...
... the unknown and undiscovered beckoning to be shared.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/71/10 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
COOCOO FOR CLIMBING
IF WEIGHTED SQUATS are a lot better than air squats, is climbing a lot better than riding on the flats? And, if climbing is better...
... is climbing with a weighted vest mo' bettah?
Things one wonders.
And takes to extremes.
I remember backintheday, rolling out with 100oz hydration pack on my back and 2 large waterbottles filled with sand.
It seems so silly now,
almost as all the ruckers.
On a bike we can measure power.
So, we know.
We know we don't need to stress our backs with extra weight or stupid add ons...
... we can just pedal faster.
Velocity X Force - Power
Which taken a step further...
... climbing aint gonna train us any better than flats.
We gotta put out the power.
There is a caveat, if we like...
- climbing big mountains
- ripping punchy stuff
- pounding the flats
... our bodies will adapt and become more efficient at the one we love and gravitate towards.
Me personally?
I'm coocoo for climbing,
and bananas for bombing.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
80/63/17 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
HEAR ME OUT
SOMETIMES IT'S JUST PLAIN FUN to make fun of Velo, "powered by Outisde". Whether it's their clickbaity titles, AI drivel, or soulselling advertorials...
... there's at least one good laugh a day.
Here's my current favorite.
Stop Complaining About Sound, These Are The Best Headphones for Cycling
Roight!
Because decreasing our ability to engage with our surroundings when traveling 20+ miles per hour in our underwear on...
- trails
- gravel
- pavement
... is a great idea.
Genius.
Next up...
... Stop Complaining About Night Vision, These Are The Best Sunglasses After Sunset.
There is no best.
At best, assuming it's not clickbait or advertorial would be...
... These Headphones Least Worsen Your Ability To React To Danger When Riding.
Or, for the trailrunners...
... These Earbuds Reduce Getting The Shift Scared Out of You When A Bike Rider Has Been Saying 'Hey There' For 5 Minutes and Finally Gives Up and Passes You.
Now for you in the back jumping up and down ready to tell me to not be so closeminded...
... I hear you.
===
164ish no scale
8 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/72/10 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
>
POP TART POWERED, BEE STUNG... ATHLETE unINTELLIGENCE
SOMETIMES, we just gotta change it up. Do something different just fer fun. Go against...
... conventional wisdom.
I thought it had been a good week...
- 177 miles
- 17:26 hours
- 20951' of vert
... given I'd been knocked down by a 24 hour bug.
Mostly in the dirt,
mostly with friends.
Yet, every single ride Strava's Athlete Intelligence...
... scored it as recovery or recovery and endurance.
Apparently, the AI couldn't account for the fact this sea leveler was suffering at 7000-10,000 elevation.
Rolling out this morning...
- a few scoops of Envy
- 4 pop tarts
- 1 Carbs gel
... I grabbed what I had + 100 ounces of water.
While I hoped to put down some power, since all I'd done was "recovery and endurance" rides...
... I knew the truth.
Leaving with a simple plan,
ride until I ran out of food and water.
It was an epic day in the mountains...
... topped off with a bee sting in the gut a few miles from home base.
Memorable.


===
164
9 hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/0 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE ADVENTURE
SOMETIMES, the road really is better than the inn. We realize that whatever we are aiming for may not be all that great, but...
... putting in the work gives outsized returns.
Gratitude blooms.
Like today.
My pal Charles charts out this loop...
- 32 miles
- 4700' of vert
- topping out at 10,000'
... which seems really cool.
Until we hit our first massive fallen tree and bushwhack around it.
Then, patches of snow,
too long to ride.
Followed Puke Hill.

The view...
- The Great Salt Lake to the west
- Park City to the East
- Not a soul around
... stunning.
Somehow the goals seem weak, lacking...
... when beauty abounds.
If we'll just stop to look.
===
165ish, no scale
7ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/72/10 per Strava
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHEN TRAINING ISN'T ACCORDING TO PLAN
THE BEST LAID PLANS can go sideways for a variety of reasons. I'm not gonna list 'em since I don't want to poison your mind and have you...
... manifesting awfulness.
'Cause I'm questioning just that about myself.
Did I manifest...
- 3 days off at I Do Epic
- riding with friends short on time
- puking my guts out last night after a miserable 70 minute ride
... or, is it just life?
Doesn't matter too much,
except part of my GrandMasterRipOnRaceDay plan...
... was a massive training week this week to make up for last week
and leave me slightly buried for BWR next week.
I consulted AI all night...
- possibly caused by using pure table sugar on my rides
- hydration via room temp peppermint tea
- a few Tums
... while Surfergirl laughed at me and secured the remedy.
Arose after 10 hours, feeling a lot better.
Energy seems good enough to day...
... to meet up with the local slayers.
The prudent thing would be to skip the meet up,
spin at most, or sleep...
... a proper adjustment.
But, screw it...
... I've got plans, too.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
80/57/22 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: Cry Havoc, Jack Carr
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
HE'S A GENIUS
WE ALL HAVE, or should have, wish we had, that friend who can fix anything. Even though we've upped our skills over the years there's always that...
... next level repair.
We can't do it.
Like my SID fork, today...
- packing in on descents
- rebound slower than a sloth
- adjustment dials backing out and loose
... I was in a bind.
Turns out the great C Gonzer lives where I'm visiting,
racing pals from a decade ago.
Within about about 20 minutes,
he had it working nearly good as new.
How'd you learn how to do this?
I just really like working on my bikes.
That's it?
Well, I am a mechanical engineer by trade.
That's it...
- love what we do
- study the basics
- achieve mastery
... genius level work.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
80/57/23 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: Feeling Is The Secret, by Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
GETTING HIGH
TRAINING AT SEA LEVEL is no way to prepare for high elevation activities. Sure we have extra oxygen to go hard, which is always nice. But, it'd be even nicer...
... to be able to rip when high.
Which begs the question...
... why am I working so darn hard, putting out so little power?
Nah, that's obvious.
Kinda.
90 minutes into the ride today,
we'd been ripping up Big Mountain Pass (f'real).
Challenging?
Yes.
Wheezing?
Yes.
Gapped?
Indeed.
Here's the rill dill...
... even though the power is relatively low,
the breathing is labored.
Which presents a realhonesttogoodness truth...
- breathing too hard
- not thinking 100% clearly
- focusing on staying on pace
... it's hard to stay on top of the hydration and nutrition at altitude significantly above our normal.
We, me especially, gotta force it.
Another important consideration at high elevations...
... it's better to pace on HR than PWR.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/71/12 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: Feeling Is The Secret, by Neville Goddard
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
SETTLING...
THE IDEA OF SETTLING, for most of us, is repulsive. We'd never do that because our standards are too high...
... or, so we think.
Because we don't know better.
Welp,
today I realized
I've totally been settling.
While we do have trails to ride near home...
- skinny single track with rain ruts
- weeds elbow high
- punch climbs
... it's nothing like Utah..
Today, outside of Kamas was incredible.
My pals, PViddy and TimmyV, had been telling me it was great up here.
But, c'mon...
- smooth, fast and flowy
- adorned with greenery and trees
- berms so perfect the suspension compresses as you no-brake it
... expertly engineered trials.
Waywaywaywayway better than my home trails.
Once we know we're settling the only question is...
... what are we gonna do about it?
===
165ish, no scale
8ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
82/61/21 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
A GOOD BREAK
TAKING TIME OFF can be restorative. Sometimes it's on purpose, other times its an unplanned forced situation. Either way...
... we're anxious to get back at it.
Like right now.
Being that I was committed to be all in at the biz conference...
... I skipped the last few days.
Including the typical epic Saturday.
Everything feels really good except my gut, which is feeling quite bloated...
... after lots of good food.
I suppose that's part of the anxiety, not...
- the drop in fitness
- the packed on pounds
- the connecting with the crew
... the sensation of being a caged animal.
Some might caution,
don't over do it.
A fair warning if working back from an injury.
But, this belly is yellin' at me,
get after it,
right now.
Can't wait to start shedding and shredding manana.
(I've got 10 days to turn it around before BWR UT)
===
165ish, no scale
78ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/63/20 per Strava - very rested
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
>
AI DRIVEN?
AI could be all it's cracked up to be, if we can only learn how to use it to our benefit. But, new things can be...
... a challenge to learn.
Even scary.
One of the take aways on day 3 of I Do Epic was regarding AI,
and it got me thinking about racing...
... because as we say, Racing is life!.
My grand takeaway is AI's ability to deliver what we are looking for has much to do with regarding the prompts.
For example, knowing what you know about me...
... create a training program as if you were Javier Sola
Just like us at a race,
AI needs its head screwed on straight in order to deliver.
And a proper prompt is the starting point.
Making it human...
... what is the main prompt driving our training?
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/73/12 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WE CALL IT SPOOKED
THE UNMISTAKABLE ENERGY of the start line can be overwhelming for the uninitiated. We feel it the moment we arrive at an event, and when we line up the vibe can take us...
... from confident and courageous to literal shaking.
Plans melting.
Rather than the controlled missile launch we'd imagined, we are overcome by the complete chaos of undirected explosions.
And, that's okay,
until we want a different outcome.
On Day 2 of I Do Epic, we spent much the day in a massive barn learning how a master horse trainer teaches and guides the beasts with energy vs force.
Demonstrating the animal's sensitivity to each other in the herd as well as to us humans, as we approached and worked with the horses.
Thankfully, the inanimate endurance tools we depend on...
- bicycles
- helmets
- shoes
... cannot sense our moods or energy.
Can you imagine mounting a spooked bicycle?
I've often wondered how I am able to reach a place of calm and certainty with hundreds, sometimes thousands, of my "closest friends"...
... so close to losing it?
I don't have a good answer other than...
- a safe race
- an unleashing of the training put in
- finishing knowing there was nothing left in the tank
... experience and expectation.
But, the old cowboy did share one nugget that really resonated with me...
... We create what we anticipate.
===
165ish, no scale
8ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
87/84/3 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
START WHERE YOU ARE
TRAVEL BRINGS IT'S OWN CHALLENGES when it comes to maintaining our fitness. Will we have time, will there be space, do we have the equipment...
... will we even want to?
Have the energy?
When I signed up for I Do Epic Live in the hinterlands of Idaho, I figured we'd be starting early and ending late so...
- 27 hours
- 380 miles
- 27000' of vert
... I made sure I'd put in a large training block prior.
Taking a break made sense, but...
... a funny thing happened when I woke up.
I had two and half hours to kill,
while situated on the shore of the Snake river,
with a lovely and lonely gravel road echoing my vibe.
My original plan was out...
- a long walk
- a ton of push ups
- a million air squats
... a quick and glorious spin was in.
===
165ish, no scale
7.5ish hours sleep
690ish anti-oxidant level, no scanner
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
89/97/-8 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
I WANTED TO STOP SO BAD
GETTING AFTER IT for a long period of time can be a beautiful thing, if we are in the right mindset and our bodies are prepared...
... and we're used to it.
Even addicting.
But, if our head's not into it,
our bodies not prepped,
it's been a while...
... quitting looks might tasty.
Like today.
There we were, riding up one of the most beautiful climbs in Utah, the Alpine Loop...
- few cars on the road
- perfect spring weather
- forever views up into the snowpack
... a coupla dudes riding a good fast tempo.
And, about 45 minutes in...
... I wanted to pull over.
Have a smoke, errr bite of my bar,
dip my toes in the stream.
It would have been so easy,
and lovely.
Which is why I didn't do it.
Because I know from experience pushing through these moments is...
... what it takes to finish anything strong.
Well, and the reward of a chocolate chip cookie at Sundance...
... would be that much sweeter.
===
165.8/12.7%
7ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
91/107/-17 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE OTHER CROSSTRAINING
IF WE'RE IN A RELATIONSHIP of any kind we're most likely going to be exposed to activities which don't perfectly align with...
... our primary objective.
Got it?
Yeah, we get it.
The thingaboutitis...
... it's usually more than okay.
Surfergirl loves to hike.
Any time we're roadtripping and I'm in a hurry to get to the beddown...
... she's plotting a once in a life time hike.
Like today,
just after 6pm
3 hours from our destination...
... we absolutely had to hike Kolob canyon for no less than 2 hours!
Yes, that's an explanation point because...
... old diesels need their beauty sleep
Her "reward" for this detour is me stretching out while she drives, which I'm pretty sure...
... she purposely fakes like she's tired and unnecessarily jerks the wheel so I'll get behind it.
While I have to admit the hike was outstanding, and served to remind me that I should do some regular hiking to prepare for the potential to be hiking at Leadville...
...it's pretty clear I have not properly trained her on driving in a relaxing and soothing manner nor bowing down to the needs of her old man's sleep.
===
165.8/12.7%
7.5ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
no Stretches
88/98/-9 per Strava
What I'm reading: How To Fail At Almost Anything and Still Win Big, by Scott Adams
>
BECAUSE I ASKED...
MEMORIAL DAY IS A BUSY ONE around here. All kinds of people out enjoying the day: runnin, bikin, swimmin, surfin, paddlin...
... things were chaotic.
I got a late start.
Preferring to get some work knocked and start prepping the van for our road trip...
... I slipped out just past noon.
There is a steep hill above a picturesque beach that attracts locals, nonlocals and everyone in between.
At the top, I saw an older woman lugging two chairs for her and her ancient father.
Normally, I'd just wiggle around them and the rest and go on about my day...
... but I remembered.
Hi there, can I help you with those chairs?
Oh, yes, please.
Leaned my bike on a palm tree.
Let's go down a little bit more, where it's a little flatter.
C'mon dad, over here.
This looks pretty good.
Thank you.
No problem.
How did you know we needed help, nobody else noticed?
Oh, I prayed I'd be useful today.
With that, I was off on a lovely tour of the southern part of our county...
... pavement, gravel roads and single track.
You're probably thinking Nice virtue signal Todd...
... to which I'll say, thinking of others is not my default or my strong suit.
I have to work at getting my heart to be fully functional.
===
165.8/12.7%
8.5ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
91/113/-22 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE RANDOMNESS OF PROGRESS
NICHING DOWN is a legit way to go about maximizing results. We study the experts, learn all we can, put it into practice. The goal is...
... supreme mastery.
But, is narrow and deep the only way to get it done?
The best way?
Personally, I think I've learned more studying endurance athletes and coaches from other sports than I have focusing on bike racing.
Maybe, probably, there is more literature and research available.
Here are a few of my favorites
- running - Born To Run, Christopher McDougall
- triathlon - anything by Phil Maffetone
- swimming - Total Immersion Method, Terry Laughlin
- natural fitness - Natural Born Heroes, Christopher McDougall
... because they introduced me to new ways of thinking about endurance and fitness.
Bringing in randomness to our experience...
- events
- people
- travel
... can deliver game-changing progress hacks.
If we'll just open our ears, eyes, hearts.
===
165.8/12.7%
7.5ish hours sleep
690 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
88/99/-11 per Strava
>
AFTER TAKING SEVERAL READINGS
SIMULATING OUR 'A' EVENTS months in advance can be quite revealing, in bad...
... and good ways.
Once, isn't enough.
Every weekend is too much.
It's not a damned if we do,
damned if we don't situation.
More like a...
- damn?
- damn!
- hot damn!
... outcome.
With that in mind I turned to Grok to help me assess today's simulation because...
- what happens if I cut ballast?
- what workouts would improve my time?
- are there supplements that aid lung function at altitude?
... AI is damn fine when it comes to crunching numbers.

Because I'm a true and proud supernerd...
- 2 previous attempts in last 7 years
- body weight on those days
- power numbers as well
... I have the data, going back years.
I put Grok to work...
- I can improve
- I'm in a pretty good place already
- This is gonna be a heckuva lotta fun
... and came out with what I already sensed.
Grok thinks I can beat my previous PR,
which seems absolutely ludicrous...
... mainly because I have a lot of higher value things I want to accomplish this summer.
This is a typical use of AI for me...
- confirm/test/explore what's possible
- learn how to do things I can't figure out
- assist in leveraging my tiny helmet covered bean's processing power
... are you using AI to evaluate and make moves?
As the great Wille Nelson sings...
... After taking several readings I'm surprised to find my mind's (and body) still fairly sound.






















===
167/12.7% oof!
7.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
90/114/-24 per Strava went kinda deep today
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
IT'S A LONE WOLF'S WORLD
NO MATTER HOW MANY friends are planning to do the A event with us, regardless of how many weekends we link up to train together...
... the bulk of our efforts are alone.
Unseen.
By nearly everybody, except that neighbor who we pass by at the same...
... godforbidden time each dark morning.
We're on the hunt...
- miles
- skills
- fortitude
... for more.
And even when we do link up, if we're truly committed...
... we might breakup, or off.
For example, I'm committed to ride a spritely tempo between all the worthy climbs tomorrow...
... where I'll move into the bottom to mid-threshold.
Because that's gonna be my pace at the A race,
and I've really got to train it now,
to maintain it then.
So, yeah, 7 miles up the climb I'll probably be alone...
... just like I'll most likely be on raceday.
Which is why I'm working on this jersey to where in in Leadville.

Personally, I feel like an inspirational, personalized jersey is good for...
... a 1-2% increase in performance.
If you're of the same persuasion...
- super aero jersey
- amazing imported Italian fabrics
- no minimum order required, make just 1
... go here: https://pedalindustries.com/pages/start-a-project
===
165.6/12.7% (time to start trimming blubber)
8.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
85/82/2 per Strava (time to bump these numbers up)
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
13 WEEKS SHOULD BE ENOUGH
AT SOME POINT, the training for the A event has gotta get real. Sure we have our base miles just because we are base-ically addicted, but...
... that's not gonna cut it.
Gotta get specific.
As of this moment, I'm 13 weeks out from starting the Leadville Trail 100.
It'll be my 8th time.
While I know the drill, I also know...
... I'm nowhere near ready.
Haven't done an hour long climb...
... since I don't know when.
Haven't ridden over 5 hours since October.
Haven't ridden my MTB more than twice a week in ages...
... haven't
haven't
haven't
haven't
haven't.
Equally overwhelming and energizing...
... the challenge is elephant-sized.
And, I'm gonna attack it one mile at a time.
===
164.6/12.5%
8.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
86/89/-4 per Strava
>
STRETCH GOALS
STRETCHING seems to go in and out of popularity. When, how long, which moves are a essential...
... and that's not counting yoga and pilates.
Where to start?
That's a good question.
I'm no expert, which is why I check in with my physical therapy pal, Scott, from time to time.
Mostly when I'm miserable
or injured.
Which got me thinking.
The last couple of days my bike fit felt like it had changed...
... which is impossible, right?
Then, I thought...
... could my body have changed somehow?
Thinking back on my many visits with Scott...
... and how stretches had fixed various aches and debilitating pains.
It hit me like a ton of lycra!
I haven't been stretching regularly,
at all.
Got back at it this morning...
... dang, I'm stiff!
But, guess what...
... the bike fit felt back to awesome.
Stretch goals are the kind that have us reaching to our limits to accomplish what seems nigh impossible...
... I like setting those.
New/old stretch goal...
... stretch every night as part of my shutdown sequence.
===
163.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
680 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
√ Stretches
86/91/-6 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
WHAT MASTERING THE BASICS LOOKS LIKE
THE VERY BEST PROS have mastered the basics. From techniques to tools, from sleeping to sprinting. They have it...
... all down cold.
How do we know?
Because at the very the very best are still practicing the basics...
... only the output is at a much higher level.
Duh!
Yeah, I know.
But, the real question is are we chasing...
- fads
- trends
- shiny objects
... or working diligently on mastering the basics?
===
163.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/83/1 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
FROM FLOOR TO CEILING
BUILDING FITNESS can appear to be a mystery to the uninitiated. For the reasons, holding onto it is illusive. And losing it...
... downright easy.
It's a shame.
If the unwashed simply established a floor...
- a minimum daily commitment
- built over weeks
- and months
... they'd find their ceiling to be nearly limitless.
Instead, they get the bug or come clean with their naked selves...
... and progress rapidly for a short season.
Get thrown off track,
and start over.
We know different.
Our floor maybe is simple as getting outta bed and kitting up...
... knowing it's easy to get out the front door at that point.
After that, it's just a matter of raising the floor...
... to see how high we can fly.
Things I think about while riding zone two for 2 hours...
... because that was my floor today.
And, I always ride on Mondays.
===
165.6/12.7%
8ish hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
86/90/-4 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
PRISONS WE CHOOSE TO LIVE INSIDE
>
HOW FAR SHOULD WE TAKE OUR BRO-SCIENCE?
ONCE WE FIGURE OUT the gear and products that work for our bodies, it's, honestly, just amazing. It fits. It works. And we stick with it...
... because we rip.
Easy.
We don't want to change.
That can be a problem if what we love goes out of stock or worse...
... out of production all together.
A few years back, when Wahoo acquired Speedplay they dumped my tried and MTB pedals.
The Frogs.
Had I known, I'd have purchased at least 10 pair of pedals and probably 100 sets of cleats.
To my horror, I logged on and learned the sadsad news.
No mas.
When I woke and realized I was out of my favorite carb mix today...
- water
- plain ol' sugar
- and Liquid IV for flavor and electrolytes
... well, yeah, I took a stab a making my own.
You should witnessed the...
- disgust
- concern
- warnings
... from the crew when we stopped to refill our bottles midride.
I shared my mix was 4 tablespoons of sugar...
- you're gonna get diabetes
- go into a coma
- die early
... I could only laugh.
Just what exactly do you think is in your favorite powder or gel?
I got the idea from an ultra-trail runner I follow on YouTube.
He'd wanted to experiment and discovered how sucrose...
- quickly absorbed glucose
- more slowly absorbed fructose
... breaks down in the small intestine.
It's a 1:1 ration,
most high end mixes are 1:.8.
Ever look at the ingredients of what you're drinking?
My 4 very level tablespoons = 50 grams of carbohydrate.
But, isn't that gonna kill ya?
It's about the same as a can of Coke,
or a couple of candy bars.
So, yes, it will absolutely...
- crush our health
- give us that orange with 4 toothpicks look
- and lead to all kinds of degenerative diseases
... unless we are ripping and burning it up.
That 50 grams is about 50% of what I consume per hour...
... when getting after it.
How'd it work over 3 bottles?
Flawlessly.
Gonna test full strength this week.
This is bro-science...
... so take it with a literal and proverbial grain of salt.
===
166/12.7%
8ish hours sleep
660 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/88/-3 per Strava
>
FIRST (TASTE OF) BLOOD
WE'RE LIKE WILD ANIMALS. Once we get the first taste of adrenalin, charging through the countryside...
... with reckless abandon.
We're hooked.
The thingaboutitis...
... we gotta get that first taste.
16 years ago, my pal Dr. Jeff couldn't keep from...
... slobbering all over me.
About gravel riding.
You would love it.
Seems kinda lame.
Trust me.
Tell me why.
Well, it'a a combination of two things you love: road and mtb.
And it's fun?
Oh yes!
It took me 5 years to finally see a signal...
- steel
- heavy
- leather bags
... a lonely gravel bike on sale at the local bike shop.
I thought it was radical to ride the tires at such low pressure...
- 38mm
- 60 lbs
- with tubes
... now I'm on tubeless carbon hoops, rolling 18 up front 20 in the back.
So much has improved!
For the first year or more I rode gravel alone...
... like a lunatic in the wild.
It took 5 more years till a few of us were getting together...
... and another 3ish to do what we did today.
Ruckus URBN GRVL group rides.
In town for the weekend, Jeff joined us for today's masterpiece...
... I'm not sure he made the connection on the impact he's had on us.

===
165.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
6200 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
88/101/-14 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
STOP BEING MEDIUM
THERE'S A REASON so many of us struggle to improve. Especially the newest of us...
... doing all we can to hang on.
Never improving.
I heard it said so well and succinctly today by one of my fave running coaches, the great Fred Duncan.
The question how much work we can survive in one session, it's...
- hard
- easy
- hard, again
... how many high quality outputs can we stack over weeks and months and years?
If we aren't resting, active-recovering we can't go hard enough on our hard days to see any improvement...
... we become really excellent at medium.
And, stay there.
Which is fine, if you're into that sorta thing.
But, I know you're not.
Which brings up today's ride...
- 23 miles
- ave HR 93
- ave PWR 102
... we did the impossible.
I say impossible because it's nearly impossible to get a group of athletes together and not start pushing...
... we pulled it off by setting the tone ahead of time.
The BRO ride is a super easy conversational cruiser...
... because bros need bro time.
Before slaying it on the weekend.
If you want to do a deeper dive on Fred's post it's here: https://x.com/Fred__Duncan/status/2055274916199502322?s=20
===
164.6/12.5%
7.5ish hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
83/75/8 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
ZONE TWO MUCH
ANYBODY CAN RIDE ZONE 2. It's easy. Zone 1 is easy. Coasting is easier. The trick is...
... to stay there.
For a long time.
The past few months I've been doing my Z2 on the mountain bike,
on kinda steep trails.
Not spinning,
a lot of torque...
... then completely off when descending.
Which is somewhat easier than what I did today...
- keeping on the pedals
- with high cadence
- limited coasting
... Zone 2 on mainly flat, with a few rollers.
Turns out 2:80 spend doing...
- 90 minutes Z2
- 31 min Z1
- 9 min z3
... is it's own kinda hard.
1261 calories burned ain't nothing.
The mental game to stay at a given pace and basically never stop pedaling...
... regardless of the terrain.
I know you zwifties are wanting to mock me,
and I'm totally down with how much harder
it can be on a trainer.
I get it.
The real point is this kind of training...
... is extremely effective at building physical and mental endurance.
===
165.2/12.4%
8ish hours sleep
630 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/83/1 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
THE EMOTIONAL ROLLERCOASTER OF MID-WEEK RACING
MID-WEEK RACING has been around for ages and continues to endure because it's great training, fun to bring the community together...
... and get in some ripping intensity.
400 showed up to race Over The Hump last night.
A very healthy number of age group competitors...
... ready to battle.
I've missed the last two seasons,
so it was exciting to finally make it out.
I entered Elite 45+ looking to see how I'd rate.
Warming up,
I saw a lot of friends.
But, I was missing one.
My pal Eric was senselessly killed last year while riding his bike early in the morning, by a druggy.
After a decade of racing together...
- bro hugging each week
- seeing his babies grow up
- and turn into fine little racers
... there was a hole in my heart.
On the start line,
the energy was high,
the confidence eager.
We shot out.
I maneuvered leading into the first single track,
thinking okay this feels right.
There was only one solid climb,
20 minutes of redlining.
From leading,
to wheezing,
to 7th.
Ouch!
The downhill was a couple of miles long,
and it felt good - even PRd it.
Sliding out onto the double track,
I could see 5th and 6th,
and closed the gap.
Two of the three of us were pulling hard back to the finish line.
Just as we're about to hit the final single track before the finish,
we're caught by some of the guys we'd dropped.
At the same time,
we enter the tight turns we merge with the Beginners and Sport racers.
It's not pretty.
Some of us give the slower riders space,
others mob through.
I go from 5th to 8th.
Frustrated.
Upset about getting beat by the dude who wasn't pulling with us.
Finishing,
I stormed off.
Not my finest moment.
After a recovery drink and some spinning...
- reveling in my anger
- knowing it would motivate me
- looking forward to some specific training
... I realized how great it is to be racing.
Once I'd changed into my tshirt and jeans, I had time to reflect...
- we live in a free and prosperous country
- have the time and energy for mid-week racing
- I'm feeling 100% recovered from my TBI, while Eric is riding in the heavens and his family navigates life without him.
... and be extremely grateful.
===
165.2/12.4%
8ish hours sleep
590 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/83/1 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
CONSISTENCY IS BORING AND...
THERE'S BEEN A LOT OF CHATTER on the interwebs regarding what happens by simply being consistent. What is often left out is the biggest battle...
... which must be won.
Boredom.
That's what the naysayers are thinking as we head out into the morning sunrise doing the unfathomable.
Sure, it can be monotonous to do the same workout over and over.
But, we aren't newbs or drones and know how to counter that by mixing it up, and socializing with likeminded beasts.
With unholy motivation we focus...
... on the rewards.
Months and years later,
we're nothing like the person we started out as.
Consistency might look boring to an outsider, but...
... we know it's lethal.
===
165.6/12.6%
7.5ish hours sleep
710 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/-4 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
DANGEROUS ENCOUNTERS
THERE'S DANGER just crossing the street. But, people do it and a lot more because it's part of life. We, on the other hand...
... like to raise the stakes.
Ignoring the warnings.
For years, I have casually read the signs regarding mountain lions and rattle snakes on our local trails and all over the western US.
In the process I've...
- a close up encounter with a big cat
- run over many sunbathing snakes
- stared down coyotes
... had one real scare and many thrills.
The cat was the most shocking.
I thought I was seeing a large loping coyote way up the gravel road.
Not uncommon.
Keep going.
Kept seeing as elevation changed.
Rounded a corner only to see a giant cat perpendicular to the road.
Staring at me.
Didn't do what you're supposed to do...
- stand your ground
- make yourself look bigger
... back pedaled and ripped up a single track, braking to make the turn at the top.
Went back to that spot many, many times,
raced up that hill as fast as possible...
... never came close to needing to brake to make the turn at the top.
That my friends is living.
===
165.6/12.6%
7.5ish hours sleep
710 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
84/80/4 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
TIMING
TIMING IS EVERYTHING, and there is so much to be timed when it comes to racing. To time anything to perfection necessitates...
... starting very early.
Ultimately, requiring less energy.
We saw this today at the Giro.
The winning sprinter producing fewer watts than 2nd or 3rd place...
- 1480w
- 1870w
- 1580w
... making it look easy(er).
Because he timed his acceleration perfectly.
Not unlike sprinting for the line, the great Scott Adams stated...
... the secret to success is energy management.
Which helped me lean into doing my best and most important work early in the day when I'm most alert and creative.
What else...
- workouts
- relationships
- spiritual exploits
... can we improve with better timing?
===
165.2/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
680 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
√ Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/87/-2 per Strava
>
BLAME IT ON THE DONUT
STAYING ON TOP OF THE RECOVERY is super easy to skip. Especially, if we are really on top of it...
... day after day.
We're rested.
When the opportunity presents itself to overdo it...
... we do it.
We think we'll be fine.
We aren't going to do die, but...
... we will be less than fine.
Like today.
After shortchanging myself on sleep two nights in a row,
getting talked into more than easy spinning,
skipping the hyper-ice sessions...
... all variables I couldashoulda controlled,
I suffered today.
The sting of ripping,
felt stale and suffocating.
When looked back on the data...
- on trails I've ridden
- raced up
- stomped
... I actually set some PRs.
The difference when between being fatigued vs fresh is stark...
... longfaced-droopy vs JUBILANT.
Eventually, I succumbed to the efforts,
pulling the plug halfway up a steepytechy...
... and limped to the donut shop.
Where, after a few moments and calories and water I miraculously...
... felt very fauxfresh!
===
165.2/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
6500 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
87/100/-13 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
BRO!
ALL RACING AND TRAINING ain't the way to do it. The ubersuccessful connect with others on a deeper level, it's the glue we need...
... to help us hold it all together.
Not the training and racing.
Life.
Some say getting out and getting after is...
... cheap therapy.
I won't argue with that.
Getting out, and away, for a conversational workout...
... can be life changing.
Lifesaving.
But, we already know that.
Most of our friends don't,
or don't make the time,
or have the friendship.
Which got me out on the road way earlier than I wanted to today,
because I knew my pal had been traveling a ton,
and could squeeze in a ride.
And got me thinking...
- early start
- easy terrain
- all bikes welcome
... why not create a BRO ride?
Details in the image.
(Surfergirl has had this going with the Trail Angels for decades).
===
165.6/12.6%
7.5ish hours sleep
580 anti-oxidant level
no Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
85/84/0 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>
BEST EFFORTS OSCILLATE
DOING OUR BEST. We hear from the time we take our first steps, through our teens, into adulthood. Then we preach it...
... to anyone who will listen.
Because it works.
As the great Tony Horton used to say on the P90X videos...
.. do your best, and forget the rest.
It's a legit way to live, except...
... our best oscillates.
We can get better at our best...
... is there anything more exciting than knowing that?
I found a fun features on Strava today.
The Best Efforts Power Curve has a little box we can check and...
... Show Estimated FTP.
The last 6 weeks I've been pretty dialed.
According to the app I've raced FTP 10 watts.
The feedback is helpful.
Knowing we can improve...
... is a devine gift.
===
165.6/12.6%
7ish hours sleep
680 anti-oxidant level
√ Upper Body: push ups, pull ups, gripper, heel and toe raises
no Lower Body: ATG squats and split squats
86/91/-5 per Strava
https://www.strava.com/athletes/10248
>

INTERMITTENT FASTING
ALL MY FORMERLY LEAN FRIENDS ARE NOW SUPER-EL-SKINNEO. They're fasting intermittently.
It's not intervals on your bike. But, it is intervals.
The idea is go to 16-18 hours without food. So, eat dinner at 7pm and don't eat again until 11am. It's not that hard. I did it today. Ate up until 9pm last night and didn't eat until 1pm today. Surprisingly, my energy was awesome to the point of my padawan making note of it.
I wasn't hungry at all. But, I did forget to take my vitamins this morning.
At 12pm, I hopped out for a quick 30 minute bike ride. I'd already started my day with a single rotation through the weightlifting routine.
At 1pm, I ate. We went to The Habit where I probably blew it. Santa Barbara burger and onion rings and a DC. But, they say you can eat a ton during the 8 hour window.
We shall see.
(There are ton of videos to watch - who know's if any of it's true.)

THIS IS US
Chipper and eager,
Fist bumping and
G'mornin's.
Heads hanging,
Gassed and trashed.
This is us, at the end.


LUNCH RIDIN'
Readin'.
Exercisin'
Showerin"
Breakfastin'
Gettin' ta work.
Wakin'
Readin'
Workin'
...
Ridin'
Quick Lunchin'
...
Workin' summore.
... guys like Chris who popped down to join me today.
Am I last to the party?
Really, are you lunch ridin' too?

IT RUNS IN OUR FAMILY
A FEW TAKES, THE FIRST IS AGAINST SURFER GIRL'S ADVICE.
On race day, it's pretty obvious we're all part of the same family - The Gottapu's.
Toddy Gottapu.
Andy Gottapu.
John Gottapu.
To be sure, we have sisters too... but that wouldn't be polite.
_____
Speaking of sisters. How about Lori doing her first USAC race?... not the best part... How about her winning?... still not the best, at least for me... check this: 2 miles from the finish she runs over a tack and can hear the sealant coming out her front tire. Naturally, she goes all out before the tire is flat and drops everybody while she's at it!
_____
This dude kept edging over on me. There was nowhere for me to go so I gently touched his hip to let me know I was there. He kept coming over, I was less gentle. He came over harder, I'm bigger so back he goes. Then he drops the F bombs and threats. I laughed.
That's racing.
___
Props to Celo Pacific for putting on San Luis Rey RR. What a classy group of racers they are! If you missed it, do it next year.
____
Saw some HUNKR t's. Lots guys wanting to know the next course... and quite a few votes to bring back the Boulevard course as a HUNKR race. You like?



JUST RANTING
HAD A CUSTOMER DROP BY TODAY AND START RANTING ON TERRIBLE SERVICE AT A BIKE SHOP. I know the owner, and I know he tries hard to please everybody
His top complaint was, If you're one of the cool guys you get great service. I guess I'm not.
On a very related note, I've just finished Lady Gaga's Monster Loyalty. She's a marketing genius and the book is very insightful. The main takeaway is that she focuses on the 1% that are rabid fans - make them feel like rockstars and insiders and they'll bring in the other 99%.
What's that have to do with my customer - who happens to be great?
Well, there's no point in focusing on your 1%,
if you're not going to take care of the rest of their posse.

SAN LUIS REY RR
BY THE WAY, I'M RACING SATURDAY. It's a great course, just not a great finish for me anymore.
Hill? was all she said.
I'd like to be disgusted at her quick conclusion. But, she's right.
Pre-her, SLRRR was a great course for me. The climb was still there, but it went higher then did a harrowing plummet back to sea level. My Avenir computer reported 61mph.
That's fast. Great for me. The skinny dudes may have left me behind but after that romping descent was followed by about 5 miles of -1% downhill. Which means the Young Diesel was back on, rested and ready to bring home the hardware.
It's also dangerous, and someone eventually had a very bad day.
So they re-routed while I was away doing my dad/mtb years.
The new course is still awesome, still beautiful. The crazy drop is gone and rather than a loop we race an out and back, starting and finishing on the lower slopes of the climb. That -1% false flat is now proceeded by the +1% to get to the turnaround. The laps are 14 miles long.
The last 2 years I've cramped on that final climb.
I just wanna hang on and finish strong.
And, that's okay.

SAN LUIS REY RR
BY THE WAY, I'M RACING SATURDAY. It's a great course, just not a great finish for me anymore.
Hill? was all she said.
I'd like to be disgusted at her quick conclusion. But, she's right.
Pre-her, SLRRR was a great course for me. The climb was still there, but it went higher then did a harrowing plummet back to sea level. My Avenir computer reported 61mph.
That's fast. Great for me. The skinny dudes may have left me behind but after that romping descent was about 5 miles of -1% downhill. Which means the Young Diesel was back on, rested and ready to bring home the hardware.
It's also dangerous, and someone eventually had a very bad day.
So they re-routed while I was away doing my dad/mtb years.
The new course is still awesome, still beautiful. The crazy drop is gone and rather than a loop we race an out and back, starting and finishing on the lower slopes of the climb. That -1% false flat is now proceeded by the +1% to get to the turnaround. The laps are 14 miles long.
The last 2 years I've cramped on that final climb.
I just wanna hang on and finish strong.
And, that's okay.

HANGING ON
I'M NOT SURE WHERE I LEARNED TO HANG ON. But, I'm glad I did.
It wasn't from tennis, which I played through high school.
Nor from riding my Stingray all over town.
BB guns had nothing to do with it.
Somewhere as a kid I learned to hang on.
Past the initial pain.
Beyond the wretched aches.
Through the final infernal burns.
What's so great about hanging on?
On the others side is goodness.
A stronger you, a stronger me.
Not a crowd, only the best.
Then things get better.
Easier.
Hanging on is a known.
Our personal fortune teller.
Climbing a big mountain and getting gapped...
hang on.
Totally out of synch with a loved one...
hang on.
Pushing the company to a new level...
hang on, hang on, hang on
Soon you'll crest the top and enjoy a new, wonderful ride...
... if you'll just hang on.
(Actually, as my fingers wave and click across the keys I know exactly where I learned it. Surfing big waves. To catch a big wave you have to paddle for all your worth to get up to speed. An hesitation and you'll either miss the wave and get pummeled by the next wave coming or you'll be going to slow to stand up and get sucked "over the falls" and held under the ocean until you think your head will explode. So you paddle and paddle and paddle until you catch that beast and you stand up and own it. These days it's pedal and pedal and pedal.)

CONNECTING THE PEEPS
ON THE WAY TO TMWC, JAKE ASKED ME HOW I MET HIS NEW BOSS GREG. We were college buddies and we met as Brickers, a club on campus. One year I was elected the Social VP. Part of this entailed planning epic parties with a sister club... and the best part of that was deciding which girls lined up with which boys for the party.
Would the rides/races be any fun if we weren't all there?
What's in a reputation?

BORN TO RIDE A BIKE
People ask me why
I never find a place to stop
And settle down, down, down
But I never wanted all those things
People need to justify
Their lives, lives, lives
Yes we were born, born
Born to ride a bike
Time was on my side
When I was riding down the street
It was so fine, fine, fine
A Stingray and canvas vans
It's something I need to occupy
A mind like mine
Yes we were born, born
Born to ride a bike
Save the dates: HUNKR 6/9, 11/10 – TMWC 7/10
171

BENEFITS OF SHOP RIDE
ONE OF THE REASONS WE STARTED THE SHOP (SATURDAY HOUR OF POWER) RIDE was so that the young guys could get home to their little kids. It turns out it's good for the old guys, too.
I'm home 2-3 hours earlier. At 9:45.
Because it's a "shorter" ride I'm fresher.
Which give me time for others besides myself. This is not my default.
Today I had time and energy to help a friend move her things from storage to a new apartment. Then, had more time and energy to mentor a young, high school MTB racer. Plus, a bit of time to help around the house.
(in ascending order)
riding with my pals
helping a friend
giving back

I'LL PUT MY MONEY ON HARD
IF I HAD TO BET WHICH RIDE WOULD HAVE STAYING POWER, I'd put my money on the hard ride every time.
There are lots of nice, cosy, chitchat sorts of rides all over the place. I've never seen one last.
It's the rides and races that make you see stars and huff-n-puff slobber all over your top tube that stick around for generations.
The granddaddy of OC is Como Street, a ride so old the street doesn't even exist anymore. And the original riders... forget about it... they were WWII vets. But, what they started roars every Sunday. In another lifetime, me and a 100 other guys were "going long". This was late 80's - black bibs and bright jerseys. Local pros and visiting pros would show up and cut us down.
It was terrible.
And awful.
And we loved it...
... because it truly tested us. Told us where we stood. Pushed us beyond anything we thought was possible. It was before HR monitors and Power meters. You knew you were going hard as hell because all you could hear was you... blowing up.
So, when I posted this "If you are looking for an easy ride tomorrow, this isn't it" I knew I'd get takers.
For some of us,
only legendary rides
will help us comprehend
the legend inside.

WELL, THAT WAS CLOSE
IN 28 SECONDS MATT'S CHAIN WOULD SKIP SENDING HIS REAR WHEEL 6" INTO THE AIR. We were in the final wind up for the Market Ride sprint. We'd come roaring down the train overpass on to the very long, very straight finish.
There's always a prevailing wind coming off the ocean to the left. The sprint train lines up on the white line and the winner often gambles with life itself blasting up the fence line to the right. It can get ugly real fast.
The charge was on and Matt and I were winding it up from about 10 guys back. Up front, legs were seizing. They were going 20mph, we were closing in on 35+. Matt was behind green guy, I was behind Matt. A perfect spot. One of us should get the V.
Big Reyes blows and I have to go around his left and end up windy side of Matt. I know he likes to swing left, so I'm planning to launch right and accelerate in his and green guys' wake on the leeward side.
---> I hate talk about crashes. Hate watching the videos. Hate any talk of danger. What you think about you bring about. Two nights ago on this same ride Jim and his chain skip. He lost control of his bike. Went down on his face. Mike ran him over and crashed too. The picture above shows the goriness. It was the talk when we started out. <---
So there I am.
Unleashing my once-mighty fury.
His chain skips.
His wheel jumps up 6" and sideways.
I shut it down.
He stays upright.
I roll across the line,
ahead of him and smile...
just like I saw it in my mind.

IT WON'T BE LONG
AROUND HERE THE TRAILS ARE PERFECT.
The dirt is in great shape, not too dusty.
The days are getting longer.
And, the spring greens haven't take over yet.
But they will, and soon.
Tonight as I rode, tall mustard week slapped my knuckles.
I figure we have maybe two more weeks until Spring does it's thing and the trails disappear for a few months... until the summer sun scorches them and the hills turn to brown.
That's life.
Enjoy it all.

BIRTHDAYS DONE RIGHT... AND... WELL?
and he started the day on The TMWC.
and he also started the day on The TMWC.
doing things dudes do.

DON'T I KNOW YOU?
their bike,
their helmet,
their style...
and kid status...
or not going...
and any potential personal conflicts...
at Costco?
THE GOOD FLAT
WE'RE STAYING AT MY OTHER BROTHER BRANDON'S FLAT. Downtown San Diego. Gas Lamp District.
It's flat here, unlike our town.
From my perch, the tree top jiggles in the breeze. Quiet people walk and buildings hum.
It's early.
Single cars stop and move on.
We're going to pop down to ground level where we hope to find two of the many free bikes that roam the streets.
Then, gentle-pedal to breakfast.

30TH TIME'S A CHARM
THIS IS GONNA BE QUICK BECAUSE WE’RE CELEBRATING.
Ain’t it fun to upload a ride you’ve only done a handful of times… like 3?
I got 96 cups today on Swami’s A loop.
LOL.
Was it really that fast? Am I just slaying it today? IDK. But it's fun to do those rides and see so many cups. I'll dig into it later.
Usually, we do Swami's long... parking at Oceanside.
Today, I woke up in San Diego's Gas Lamp District. On purpose.
Susie and I are celebrating 30 years of me falling short of her expectations and her exceeding mine. Naturally, I got up and went for a ride that had the potential to leave me pooped. I was going to do the Pre-Ride which is harder than Swami's A and leaves at 6:40, but that seemed even stupider.
I shot over to the top of Torre Pines. Parked across from Scripps Green Hospital, where I parked so many times during my dad's final days. Thought about him a lot. Got to Nytro just in time.
30th time's awesome.
Feeling lucky.


DROPPED NEVER FELT SO FAST
IF YOU CAN GET DROPPED LIKE THIS, DO IT! It's so stinking fast and fun. I resisted forever, because it seemed like an awful idea. But, it's not. You'll be PR'ing and Cupping as soon as you get dropped.
My neighbor is a fireman, and he looks like SuperMan and he's married to WonderWoman... oh, and he's super fast downhill on a MTB. So, based on his good looks and awesome wife I take whatever tips he has.
Todd, I have dropper that would fit your hardtail.
But Matt, I'm a weight-weenie XC dork. Besides I'm pretty fast.
No you're not. You need this post.
Okay, here's a hundy... I want it back if this doesn't work.
I had one of the first droppers back when I was racing SuperD. Even at a meager 4" drop, it was an unfair advantage. A game changer. But, now I'm said leg-shaving XC dork. Why would I want a dropper.
Well this isn't just any dropper. It's hydraulic, made by Bontrager for downhill and enduro racers. It really drops... a full 150cm. When I first hit it I felt like I was riding a kids bike.
The first ride was weird. I'm used to leaning on my seat in the turns but the seat is so far down I don't feel it. I'm also used to hanging my buns off the back on the super steep stuff (and wondering if I'll get stuck back there) which really unweights the front wheel.
But, I got used to it quickly.
Now I LOVE it.
It's revolutionized my riding.
I'm flying down stuff, PRing and big Cupping the sections. It's so much more fun. The bike is much more balanced because my center of gravity is so low.
Wanna go faster?
Get dropped.
Save the dates: HUNKR 6/9, 11/10 – TMWC 7/10

WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE?
IF I GO TO YOUR SHOP WHAT'S THE DIFFERENCE? That's a pretty fair question to ask of any bike shop, any business.
How that question is answered is a good indication of things to come.
We are known for X and we're amazing at it.
If I'm in the market for X we'll make a love connection... you'll my best friend, and I'll be your best customer.
If I'm not... isn't it a lot better for both of us to move on?

MONSTROUS
ripped the trails,
chased the sun...
the shadows swept me up
and the monster went to bed.


HUNKR #2 - OC '18
SATURDAY, 3/17/18, WAS HUNKR #2. Could our second edition be better than the first? Months out confidence was high, but as the day approached we were all apprehensive regarding the weather. If it rained it would be an epic day, if not it would be awesome.
Either way, it would be a who’s who of Southern California cycling: Olympians and World Champions Amber Neben and Thurlo Rogers, national champions Rahsaan Bahati and Charon Smith, ex-Continental Pro Jon Hornbeck… I’m sure I’m missing names… let me just say their participation is humbling and gratifying and a tiny bit nerve-racking – we want to deliver a professional product for them.
The idea that “normal” people… really, what’s normal about racing your bike 100k?… nothing!… it’s so outrageous truly normal people don’t get it… yes, the idea that normal people get a chance to line up right behind the talented riders at the front is what makes HUNKR special.
The FUNKR team competitions were even more popular this year. We had more teams in more categories going for top level prizes like Shimano Durace pedals (for the entire team).
With some creative thinking we managed to simplify the start from last year while still using the private roads only available to HUNKR. This was a huge improvement.
Mother Nature didn’t seem to care that we had so many stars ready to race, so many improvements. 50% greater participation – over 22% of whom were female (that’s huge).
Each day showed rain.
Each day didn’t actually rain much at all.
Packet pick up at Shimano headquarters was dry. A beautiful Mazda signaled where to go. Many competitors were so excited they were arriving hours early.
By 4pm we were ready to get them checked in. The line was long, but quickly got up to speed. It was fun chatter as racers met up… a lot friends saying high to friends. After they were checked in they were able to see historic Shimano product as well as all the new shiny gear we drool over.
We went to bed hopeful. We woke up around 4:30 to get an early start. A 4 hour squall moved through and flooded our parking lot in the wee hours of Saturday morning. Ugh.
We had a contingency plan, and put it into action. The backup parking was a mile down the ride. It would prove to be a nice warm up for the racers, and a chance to see part of the private roads they’d soon be racing on. Part of the contingency was pushing the start back 15 minutes.
By 8:30 the racers were in their respective corrals – they lined up based on projected finishing time, fastest up front. 8:35 final instructions were being given. Passion poured through the group. 8:40 we all sang the Star Spangled Banner a cappella. 8:44:55 the 5 second count down and final instruction…
HAVE FUN!
What could be more fun than racing with over 300 of your closest friends?
Because we are always racing for 100 kilomters, there is a race within the race which is “How fast can I do this?” TJ Eller posted:
“I went 26 minutes faster than last year: a substantial improvement that I’m very proud of!“
How did he do this? No doubt he trained, set goals, etc… but somewhere out on that course he made some friends. Together they were all working hard. For sure, chasing the riders ahead, and desperately fending off the riders from behind played big parts.
Those riders ahead included the main bunch. Over 50 riders came through lap 1 together. On lap 2 it became 40ish. Andy Schmidt reported, “It was the fastest race I’ve ever done. Guys would attack and we’d bring them back. The pace was tremendous and never let up. It was so fun! ”
The drama is in the details… heading out for that last lap in the lead group were the best of the best, many flanked by teammates: Methods to Winning, Cannondale, Davis Phinney, Freakshow, Red Monkey with a hungry pack of lone wolves ready to tear up the final kilometers.
Just before the turnaround 4 riders went clear and blasted out of the tunnel. They had 15 seconds on the bunch by Cook’s Corner. Present were pro/ex-pro racers Coulton Hartrich, Stefano Barberi, Marco Arrocha and 17 year old local Andrew Vollmer.
This is Andrew’s home climb. Nobody knows it better.
Stefano knows what it’s like to launch a long range attack. Last year, he was off the front the final two laps only to be caught and passed in the final meters.
By the top, Marco had lost the group.
They were now 3 against 30 with 10 miles to go. Most of it was downhill, favoring the group. But, there was a tail wind… negates much of the big group’s advantage.
At the finish line we saw 3, then 1, then the bunch. They roared onto the private roads out of our sight.
We could only wonder.
It seemed impossible to stay away.
But, it’s a technical finish with rises that would seem easy at the start and now had to be stinging their legs.
Who would win HUNKR #2?

1st Place Coulton Hartrich
2nd Place Stefano Barberi
3rd Place Andrew Vollmer
15 seconds later Marco came in for 4th.
15 seconds after that teenager Ama Nsek won the bunch sprint for 5th.
The top women were able to finish with men in the main bunch – we don’t have a good photo of that, as they came through in a swarm.
1st Place Chrystal Anthony
2nd Place Amber Neben
3rd Place Larissa Conners
4th Place Esther Walker
5th Place Rhonda Quick
How fast are these racers? They covered 100k, 62 miles, with 4000′ of climbing in 2 hours 35 minutes, an average speed of 24.5 miles an hour. That’s blazing speed.
But, HUNKR isn’t just about the fastest or the equal cash pay out for men and women. It’ s about racers like the father and son duo of Eric and Vincent Ngheim, who battled the course together in 4 hours 23 minutes and teenage brother and sister Luke and Sarah Swan. It’s about 22% of our riders being female… we aren’t to our goal yet, but we are far closer than I had imagined we would be.
In the end, it’s about friendly competition. We are so happy with the HUNKR Nation… as a whole, you are a classy bunch we are thrilled to be part of.
There are lots more pictures for you to check out and download free from MSD Photography here.
We look forward to seeing ya at HUNKR 3 on June 9th.

Save the dates: HUNKR 6/9, 11/10 – TMWC 7/10 -

FRIENDLY. COMPETITION.
MY BROTHER RECOMMENDED THE PODCAST BUSINESS WARS. At the end of the saga between Nike and Addidas the narrator concluded with how much better each company has become because of the other.
The are hardly friendly.
In fact, they're ruthless.
The same kind of ruthless my son Trevor was yesterday playing chess. I've practiced for a month. He hasn't looked at a board. It's tax time, and he's a CPA.
I planned to kill him. How better to spend his carefully carved out play time?
I was dead in 60 seconds.
That hurt.
But he was such a graceful killer I didn't care. I could only be proud of his actions and happy for his instincts. Indeed, I was grateful for his taking time out to teach me a lesson.
And yes... I look forward to laying waste to him on our next bike ride.
Want to know what you're trying to improve?
Take a look at what you're reading and listening to.

THE EARLY BIRD
(Reposted from an article I wrote on HUNKR.com)
I'VE NEVER NEEDED AN ALARM ON RACE DAY. I always set it, but sleep is evasive the night before. The bigger the event the more alarms and the less likely I'll sleep deeply or need them. Nothing is bigger for me than HUNKR.
There is nothing I want more than to have HUNKR go off without a hitch. Months go into the preparation, and the daily percentage of time devoted to HUNKR goes up as until the final day of 100%.
Yesterday was an awesome day for HUNKR - 50% more racers - 22% of whom were women (that's huge), a who's who of Southern California bicycle racing, and a dude on an elliptical bike.
We had to fall back on a few contingencies... the main one being our parking lot turned to mud by a late night squall. We had planned for them and things worked out well. I'm very proud of our production team. We all worked so hard.
Our volunteers were amazing. Some drove down from LA just to help out. They were all so proactive and caught up in the energy of the day. When promoters say they couldn't do it without volunteers that's true, because volunteers bring their time AND their energy AND their experience. They aren't punching a clock, they are there to serve. It's humbling.
As I pulled up the corral flags,
the wind was blowing and the sun was setting.
It was just me.
Alone at the starting line.
Reflecting on how this concept began.
Grateful for those who caught and supported the original concept.
It felt like we have some momentum now.
I drove home,
and slept
and slept
and slept

WE CAN'T ALL BE WINNERS
and that's what makes winning so sweet.
I wish you the best of luck to everybody tomorrow
and an epic tale to tell.

ISN'T GREAT THAT SOME THINGS ARE HARD?
... and if they did, would it still be easy?
would everybody do it?
would everybody do it?
would everybody do it?
and so will I.

WHERE'S THE RACING?
I KNOW A LOT OF MY PALS LOVES ZWIFTING. The courses are cool, and the pros have laid down fast times which allows my pals to see how the measure up. Time crunched, weather trapped friends keep the fire burning for when it's time to get outside.
My pals will be on the same course as real pros, at the same time, up to the same challenge. This Saturday we'll have...
Pros,
Olympian
and World Champions lining up.
The pros will be racing for cold, hard cash... well it will probably be a soft, warm check. We've put $2500 up for the fastest men and women to split... EQUALLY.
While the pros are chasing dollars... my pals
who train hard and work hard
and really just want to have fun and ride their best 100k
Will be inspired and sucked along in the pro's wake.
---> SO MANY LADIES ARE REGISTERING... I'M SO EXCITED ABOUT THIS BECAUSE IT'S ONE OUR PRIME GOALS TO GET MORE LADIES INVOLVED IN COMPETITIVE RACING... WOOHOO! <--

50-50, IT AIN'T REALLY 57
I SAW 57 DEGREES ON WEATHER.COM AND WAS SO RELIEVED. NOW I'M FREEZING. WHAT HAPPENED?
The prolonged cold spell had broken... kinda.
About 25 of us showed up in the dark... again. Again, because the time changed Sunday and we were back to gathering in the dark of dawn.
The clouds had settled in a 800'. We were riding at 800'.
We were riding in the clouds... moisture was collecting on everything, like the window of a plane as you descend through gray, pregnant clouds.
The glasses were tucked away about a mile into the ride and stayed there.
And the bike... oh the bike... she left shiny and returned filthy with an aerodynamic dusting of grime.
So when young Zach made that comment above it came to me.
You got a 50-50 chance
of 57 being 57.

BUMP OR JUMP?
lose control?

IT WAS A DRY RAIN
I'VE TRIED TO WRITE FOR AN HOUR... BUT THERE ARE NO WORDS FOR THE EXQUISITE EUPHORIA THIS RIDE PRODUCED.
I knew it was going to be good because the texts were coming early and fast. The only question was, Would we break the hour?
Starting about 9pm:
CH: Potential to be a wet one. We still on? 7AM in the harbor?
TB: Yep!
JA: Hope I can keep up with you animals
MS: Does any one have an extra tube, please bring one. Just had to change a flat and I'm out
KM: I do and will bring it. I owe you.
JM: Looks like we will be riding in the rain by 9 FYI based on radar. What time are we back?
TB: 930 if we hustle.
Then 5am more:
CH: I forgot my vest. can you bring out an extra one for me?
TTB: Any chance you could make me two bottles?... I'm getting off freeway.
Races had been cancelled today.
Guys were tapered.
The promised rain came early. Just about 7am. But, it was a dry rain. Not enough to drench us. It would keep us cool. And no wind. Few cars were out, we made all the lights... ALL of them. All we had to do was take the corners easy.
At 730 the hour of power/pain/torture begins. In Laguna.
For 30 minutes we'd been pulling the bow back. The group shot up the 133 at record pace. A pace line of 14. All in. By El Toro we'd lost at least 4.
The Bull and Frosty taking long meaty pulls. The rest of us off the front as quick as possible.
Gaps started to open... I'd schemed this in my dreams... those two go, then Big Kev. Now or never.
...
4 became 3.
We were on pace to shatter the hour.
It reminded me of the first time we cracked an hour on TMWC. 5 of us just slaying it, watching the clock with 1 eye and the butt ahead with the other.
We turned right on Tesla, and I was on my own. Adrift. With reinforcements coming up from behind.
Up Church hill I prayed, begged for a red light... it was too much. The Diesel was going to blow. No luck. I chugged on over the top and hit 52mph on the down hill.
About 5 guys had cut through at the church and united with the crew ahead of me.
But I've got girth, and I'm aero.
I connected on Aliso Creek.
Then, ejected.
I spun and spun.
There is a point in rides like this where if you hesitate for one moment you'll loose the endorphins you're mainlining. Half the crew went straight at Westwing. I didn't even consider it, turned right. The endorphins were flowing, I was spinning. Keeping the gap manageable for another bombing descent.
Unbelievably, we made the light below Soka University. Also unbelievably, Matt tore up the climb and left us wondering... then they all sped up and left me, again. But, this ride is like a roller coaster and my ballast like a magnet.
We were all back together at the bottom of Highlands, the final climb. As we rounded the turn I could see Trevor - my son, a retired Cat 2. This is humbling and motivating for him. He's getting passed and dropped, he knows he's done less than 10 rides in '18. It's just a matter of time, the desire is returning. I enjoy every pedal stroke as I pass him.
One by one we cross the "finish line".
I collapse.
58:27.
We were tapered.
We made all the lights.
It was a dry rain.


CAN YOU FLY?
THE WHOLE CAT 5 THING OF USA CYCLING IS JUST PLAIN WHACK. Putting a guy like the Bull who's been laying waste to local group rides and is an excellent bike handler in with the 5's for 10 races just makes no sense. He's raced 3 times and won all 3 going away. Not even close.
Surely there is someone in the USAC Kingdom that is able to recognize when a rider is more than ready to move up.
Is the 10 races requirement to make sure the bulls get bored before moving on and gunning down the 4s, 3s, 2s and maybe 1s? The higher categories deserve it, and The Bull deserves a worthy opponent.
Or, maybe the purpose of the 10 races is to get all the money out of The Bull possible? But, that doesn't make any sense either... because you've got that boredom factor.
I dunno... If I were Inspector for a day, I'm pretty sure I could tell who was ready to take flight and who needs a little more practice time.
But, I'm not.
I'm just a dude with an opinion,
and a bull for a friend.

THE DIE-CHOTOMY OF US
WENGNUT AND I WERE RIDING ALONG THE ROAD TALKING. He's not a roadie. Clearly. You'd need a weed whacker and sheep shears to find his legs. But, his observation of road riding is accurate:
Road riding is very social.
It's true. It's so easy to ride along shoulder to shoulder chatting.
It's also true that when the city limit sign is approaching the chatting simmers down and the blood boils because whoever gets there first is king for a mile or two or twenty.
We'd rather die than get beat,
Mostly though, we're the best of friends.

IT'S NOT BUSINESS, IT'S PERSONAL
MATT SHOT ME A PICTURE OF HIS BABY. He'd been telling me about his plans to freshen up his existing bike... but really, what could he do? Lamentably, we aren't hot rodders by nature. No chrome pipes or outrageous fenders hiding superwide rims. No insane bass warping the windows.
We just rid the rigs the corporate gods gave us as they were born off the assembly line.
And that's kinda sad isn't it?
And boring.
Unimaginative.
Shameful, if we're honest.
We've got custom kits and socks and gloves and and and and... and if we aren't custom, we're scouring the earth for just the right pair of striking socks, gorgeous gloves and juicy jerseys.
So what's with all the boring corporate bikes?
I know, you'd paint your frame but don't want to void the warranty...
but would you, really? Are you that daring?
I know you'd like some stylish streamers flying from your bars...
but, the haerodynamic slowiness keep you from doing it.
I know you'd rather have a name plate swinging off your saddle...
but, the horror of added weight would be unbearable.
I'm as guilty as most,
but Matt's not,
are you?

VOLUNCHEER GET $25
They bring all kinds of cheer.
We clothe
and feed
and drink
them...
we are including a $25 gift card to any of our other events:
HUNKR, OverTheHump and Revolution Bike Fest.
or you're a little banged up
or just not ready to HUNKR down
we'd love your help... you'll get:
a t-shirt, great Brazilian food, a beer and a $25 promo code

I'LL GO IN CHAINS
Now we're back in the fight
We're back on the train
Oh, back on the chain gang
You will never love me again
I can still hear you sayin'
You would never break the chain.
Unchain my heart, 'cause you don't care about me
Unchain my heart oh
Please set me free.
Feels just like a ball and chain.
Now, love's just draggin' me down, baby, yeah,
Feels like a ball and chain.
I thought you were my man
But I found out
I'm just a link in your chain
And they ain't the kind you can see
Whoa, these chains of love
Got a hold on me, yeah.
Where'd we be?
Cut free.
Coastin'
Pedalin' pain free
Goin' nowhere
I'll go in chains.

I'M GOING TO VISIT MY BIKE
... silence...
I'm going home to visit my family,
see if they remember me.
I'll say Hello to my bike, too.

THEY LIED TO ME
CASHIERS SAY THE DARNDEST THINGS. I have a lot of cycling themed t's - from a peloton of Storm Troopers to pithy quips. For some reason, cashiers love to comment more than any other group of people... it's not weird, just unexpected.
Like today... on my way back from a meeting at Shimano I pulled into Sprouts for a quick lunch.
100 kilometer bike race. How far is that?
62.14 miles.
Wow. I rode 50 miles before.
You could do this (shameless promoter, I know).
I did the Rosarito to Ensenada bike race. That's 50 miles. I was going up this hill. It almost killed me. The said it was the only one... but there were 5 more. They lied to me!
Did you go back?
Yep, 6 years in a row.
That's awesome.
Yeah, but I couldn't do that now. I haven't ridden my bike in years.
Well, maybe it's time to get back at it?
Oh, I don't think so... but, you have a nice day.
You too.
And, it got me thinking... what would it be like to be a cashier? Would I be checking everybody out too?

IT'S NOT HOW YOU START
THERE'S NOTHING LIKE A FINISH LINE. It marks the end of the effort. There's nothing beyond it, nothing to conserve for. This is it.
Everything that went before is moot, sunk costs.
It started when I put it on my calendar.
Then I trained.
I worked on my bike.
I got signed up.
I drove to the venue.
I lined up.
Off we went, me and 400 of my closest friends.
The energy was savory and electric.
We were going all out for 100k.
I surfed up to riders my pace.
We worked together.
A bond of brotherhood/sisterhood formed.
The speed was beyond anything I could do on my own.
All along, it felt like I could throw down my fastest 100k EVER.
As the end neared, it seemed to get farther away.
My legs ached, my lungs burned.
Could my bike be getting heavier?
Do I have a flat?
Are my brakes rubbing?
Questions only a loser would ask.
I'm a winner and I'm wringing every ounce out of my body.
Because I know this is what it feels like to do my best.
It's not how I start, it's how I finish!

I HAD THIS PERFECT RIDE ALL PICKED OUT.
I INVITED MY FRIEND TO GO MOUNTAIN BIKING WITH ME. He was new to the area. I laid out what I thought was the perfect route for him. About a quarter of our way in he wanted to go down a different trail.
The fact that I've been riding these trails for years didn't seem to matter much. Well, to him. It mattered a lot to me because I knew the consequences.
He was young.
I told him I'd been down that trail and it was terrible. There were all kinds of peril waiting if we went that way.
He didn't care.
We parted ways. He assured me he'd be fine. I assured him I wasn't so sure about that.
He's was on his own.
Worry set in on my part... and it never really left. I wondered what I could have done different. I believed in agency... and experience... I hoped for the best.

YES, YOU CAN BE FAT AND FAST!
nobody will out do you...
in. your. dreams.
Spring is coming,
FAST!

I'M A TWOWHEELPHILIAC
THERE'S NO DOUBT ABOUT, I love getting around on two wheels. I was corrupted at a young age. My red tricycle was the gateway. I was 3.
At 4, I got a two-wheeler from my grandfather. I rounded corners completely wrong. My scant body gravity pressing hard on the tiny outside wheel.
At 5, dad's crescent wrench and I mangled the large nuts that secured the trainers. Intuitively, I knew there was only one way to be truly free.
On two wheels.
On two wheels I flew from the nest. No need to kick me out. No way to hold me back. Just me and the breeze through my hair.
Martha Street was my kingdom. It was long and steep and curved.
Over to Jamie's. Down to Cindy's.
Brakes. No brakes.
Speeding down.
Feeling control. Losing control.
Losing skin. Bleeding knees.
None of it mattered.
And when things get serious, and all the world bears down, I get back on those wheels. Just me and the breeze.
None of it matters.

JUST ME N BOB
BOB IS STILL RACING THROUGH LIFE. Maybe not as fast as you, but at 82 he doesn't appear to be slowing down. Each Saturday, me and the crew blow by him too fast to chat.
I just yell, Hi Bob!
He waves from his perch.
Today I was alone, so I slowed to to chat a bit.
He asked where the gang was. I joked they'd slept it. Too wimpy to brave the unusual 30 degree weather. I let on they were racing. He asked why I wasn't with them. Darn flu. As if to acknowledge life itself and my relative youth, They'll be other races.
Life goes so fast
if we don't slow down and say hello
we may be left with goodbye.
I MISSED YOU
I missed your cheerful banter.
I missed the way you wave to all.
I missed your safe approach to traffic.
I missed the way you point out hazards.

I WANNA GET PHYSICAL
IT WASN'T THE EARLIEST START, but it was a start. It felt good to be pedaling easily again, and I wanted to go hard. But, I resisted. I had to since there's no substitute for actual riding when it comes to my mental sanity.
The air was still a frigid 44, and I'm on the mend.
I cannot afford to deplete my body riding the road to recovery and push things back again. Got to be patient.
Still, my soul nagged at me: I wanna go fast! ... which lead to flipping ONJ's I Wanna Get Physical popping around my snotty skull.
This could be the worst music video of all times. Am I right?

THE WORST DIET EVER
I'M SETTING ALL KINDS OF WEIGHT LOSS RECORDS. It's the worst diet ever. I'm down 5 lbs in the last week. Which for me, is nuts. Total anomaly.
What's next?
Will it plateau?
Do I have a tape worm? No.
It's the flipping flu of 2018. In my case, no appetite. It's just weird. Body aches. And, my brain feels scrambled.
No doubt, I'll get my hungriness back and pack it all on in one sitting at Wood Ranch Grill.
Time to shop for some heavier shoes lest I float away.

THIS OLD JACKET


AROUND THE BEND
Riding a bike,
you can slow down,
but, you can't stop.
That's not riding,
not living.
So, we go around the bend and see what's there.
Often, what we thought.
Other times, not.
Different, by a lot.
That's riding,
living.
Sometimes bends are better rounded with friends.

I NEVER SEEN THIS KIND OF POWER
WE HAVE THIS LITTLE RIDE GOING ON SATURDAYS NOW, and we keep getting new guys showing up. They don't all come back. I'm not sure why, well I am, but let's pretend I'm not.
The name that seems to be sticking for this ride is The SHOP Ride. SHOP is an acronym for Saturday Hour of Power. It's actually just over an hour, and it requires crazy amounts of power.
That's the profile above.
The start of the hour is at the bottom of Laguna Canyon where Forest intersects. We leave there at 730am, sharp. But, none of us live in Laguna. Most of us have been riding a fair number of miles when we get there. Which means, at 730, it's full gas. We average over 24mph, up a 3-4% grade and typically with a headwind.
Those strong enough to hang on up the canyon are then faced with multiple 2-6 minute climbs, back to back to back to back.... the pace is relentless, and oh so sweet - if you like the taste of blood.
Today was particularly hard for me. I'd had the flu for about 3 days. But, when I woke up after 8 hours and no alarm clock... I figured that was as good a sign as any. Time to either kill this bug, or have a big relapse. I managed to make up the canyon, and was able to take every single short cut possible to not finish too far behind the gang.
The virgins were aghast.
Mouths hanging open.
Eyes crossed.
Collapsed on their top tubes.
Jorge threw up these words:
I never seen power like that.
Is this ride for you?
Maybe.
It's for anybody that wants to give it a try. It's only an hour.
____
Jorge's power numbers... I'm not sure what it means, but I see red.

Does this look the face of a man who's ready for more?... Jay apparently has recovered.

C-Hill, looks chill.

Matt having a meal.

Charlie smiling.

Sean cool as a cucumber

Bret licking his chops

I need a nap


WHAT DO YOU SEE?
The climber sees the hills,
The TTr sees the flats and winds,
The sprinter sees the finish.

HEALTH
JAMES BOND GOLDENEYE NINTENDO 64, is the best game ever... at least that was the sales pitch I got one Christmas. In about 15 minutes, my two little warriors had mastered the bloodbath masquerading as a game for kids.
I settled in for a round.
In seconds my health was down to zero and I was dead.
Dad, you gotta take care of your health.
What do I do?
Don't get shot, and go over here.
Simple enough.
So, when I woke up achy and feeling fluish today... I stayed off my bike and went to the pharmacy. #donttrainwhenyoursick

