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
>
THE FIRST TIME EVER I SAW YOUR FACE
THE FIRST TIME YOU SEE A KID, especially your own kid, pedal off on two wheels you know her life will never be the same. Her smile is ear to ear. She can fly. For a brief moment you’re cool… then she pedals off with her friends. You may not seem cool, you may not..
THE FIRST TIME YOU SEE A KID, especially your own kid, pedal off on two wheels you know her life will never be the same. Her smile is ear to ear. She can fly. For a brief moment you’re cool… then she pedals off with her friends.
You may not seem cool, you may not get public credit, but the two of you will always cherish the day you made this time just for her.
Each time she rides, she’ll be reminded of the love you have for her.
Kids, well most kids, grow out of bikes.
Some get back on in their 20’s, others much later.
The reasons why are countless but you can sum it up with one word: fun.
(goofin’ around at Deer Valley)

(this kid just bought himself a new road bike)

EL PISTOLERO GOES OUT WITH A POP
ALBERTO CONTADOR, AKA EL PISTOLERO, left us like a string of firecrackers instead of an M80. He was so close to astonishing, and I think it’s because he just mistimed his taper. I believe he could have beat Chris Froome in the 2017 La Vuelta, and I believe he planned his season around the biggest..
ALBERTO CONTADOR, AKA EL PISTOLERO, left us like a string of firecrackers instead of an M80. He was so close to astonishing, and I think it’s because he just mistimed his taper. I believe he could have beat Chris Froome in the 2017 La Vuelta, and I believe he planned his season around the biggest exit ever in the sport.
Bummer.
The 2017 Vuelta was the best grand tour of the year, by far. More drama, more suspense. Instead of Contador going out with a giant bang, Chris Froome proves his complete dominance.
(Note: Tapering is the training you do just before a key event, do too much and you are too tired/too little and you lose too much fitness. Doing it right will have you at maximum strength on the big day(s).)
To me, it’s pretty obvious Bert raced Le Tour de France as a tune up for La Vuelta. He underperformed to the point of embarrassment.
But, he had a plan…
he always does,
and it’s not what you think.
One, he just wanted to get the miles in and see how the other guys were racing. Two, he wanted to once again catch people off-guard… in this case, having his competitors underestimate his fitness for La Vuelta.
Everything was going exactly to plan.
Why then did he lose so much time on a early stage?
Based on the super exciting performances he gave us the rest of the way to Madrid, I think he came in a little undercooked. What I mean is, he started the Vuelta almost too rested with the plan being that his fitness would increase over the 3 weeks of racing. Part of that plan included banking on the other favorites to win getting more tired as the days accumulated because most of them had actually raced a lot more while he merely trained at Le Tour.
Ya follow?
It was almost so perfect… he nearly blinded us with explosive brilliance, instead it was a lovely Roman Candle of a performance.
Don’t get me wrong, only he could do what he did.
After his disastrous day left him 30 places off the podium, he attacked and attacked… when we least expected it he punched his fellow races in the face… day after day.
Finishing 4th after a start like that is masterful, but less than what he wanted to give himself and his fans.
Contador has either finished atop the podium or not on it at all at the grand tours.
So, maybe it was perfect after all?

LOTOJA – THIS IS THE END
A FEW THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT THE FINISH in Jackson Hole. You still have a good 30 minutes circumnavigating the city, once you’re there. The finish is on a closed road, very straight with a slight curve in the last 1k. Get off you bike and into that stream, it feels amazing. Check the results..
A FEW THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT THE FINISH in Jackson Hole.
- You still have a good 30 minutes circumnavigating the city, once you’re there.
- The finish is on a closed road, very straight with a slight curve in the last 1k.
- Get off you bike and into that stream, it feels amazing.
- Check the results – they had mine wrong… easily corrected in the morning.
- Nothing, and I mean nothing, tasted better than a crisp apple. A day later, I’m still craving fresh fruit and cold water.
- We stayed at the Golden Eagle Inn, an easy walk to the “downtown”.
- Lots of great food to be had in Jackson.
- Two trips to Hagen-Dazs, 1 before and 1 after pizza
- Pizzeria Caldera
- Café Genevieve – Belgian Waffles and Eggs Benedict were yummy.
- Stay a few days, I wish we had planned to do that.
ON THE WAY SOUTH, we stopped in Thayne WY to visit Susie’s cousins. For 6 generations they have owned the Preston Ranch.
Barley blows across rolling hills. Cattle wander. Everybody lives on a county road.
Introductions were made, and familial friendships rekindled.
All new to me.
Roger, started out a veterinarian in life and wound up moving back to take over the ranch. His hands are thick and strong, like shaking a marble statue. He and Bonnie, a California surfer, returned to save the ranch from inheritance taxes.
At the time, they were so poor they rented out their farm and lived on the ranch in the original 100-year-old ranch house.
The house is still there. Musty, tiny, rickety.
Bonnie told me it took 15 years of paying the government everything they made to clear the debt.
It’s homestead land, and the original ancestor starved out there for years. But, that’s how you got land back then. You lived on it, worked it, prayed you didn’t starve… to death.
Ron and Marcia were high school sweethearts. They married and lived all over the US. When it came time to retire, Thayne called them home. For a while they both worked with the Chamber of Commerce and coordinated with the LoToJa race organizer.
I can see why these good people stay here.
The air is clean.
The people are nice.
Just like LoToJa.
(dreamt of ice cream all day)

(hasn’t changed since the college road trip days)

(I’m glad we had our own photo finish, timing had me behind this black horse… FYI, the strength of timing chips varies)

(one of our stops along the Snake River)

(Cousins… Marcia, Ron, Susie, Bonnie, Roger… Preston Ranch in the background… it had been decades since Susie had seen some of these cousins… Find your family, they are interesting and will love to re-connect with you!)


LOTOJA – MOCHA-CHOCA-LATA-YAYA
WHEN YOU WAKE UP WITH CHRISTINA AGUILERA BELTING LADY MARMELADA IN YOUR HEAD, you know it’s gonna be a great day. Those lungs, that bass, you know Joe come what may you’re gonna give it a go! Ride your bike long enough, stuff’s gonna happen. Prepare well enough, and enough will go right that it..
WHEN YOU WAKE UP WITH CHRISTINA AGUILERA BELTING LADY MARMELADA IN YOUR HEAD, you know it’s gonna be a great day. Those lungs, that bass, you know Joe come what may you’re gonna give it a go!
Ride your bike long enough, stuff’s gonna happen.
Prepare well enough, and enough will go right that it don’t matta what goes…
… flat, in my case …
So… here I am, rolling along with a great group of bike racers. Really good skills, excellent fitness. We’re out of Utah, into Idaho with a group of about 15 guys… down from 50, I think.
Strawberry pass is harder than I expect. Definitely some steep pitches. My lungs feel really good, my legs are only wincing.
We decided to go with transition #6 based on some very solid logic. Lots of religious folk in these parts + 3 feed zones… so I figure no one will want to run with the Devil, 666.
My pal Jeff is in his bright green RockNRoad shirt, as planned. He hands up the sweet musette bag we made out of a Walmart shopping bag, and I’m rolling. 1st out of the transition. Just like we planned it.
The next climb wasn’t too bad and our group stayed together.
But… before Salt River things start to go off plan.
Bountiful Mazda guy rides up to the front and yells Neutral Pee, Everybody stop.
Hallelujah.
Yeah, except… 1 of the 3 horseman (there were 3 guys in black kits, all strong and pulling hard) and little green spindly guy and one other don’t stop. Party foul. Oh, and there’s one big guy that rolled off the front earlier.
The chase is on.
5 of us go over the top together, everybody else is gone.
The Old Diesel goes to the front Superman style, drops everybody, sits up, tucks again… you could say I’m slightly peeved at this cheap move.
Important side note: This year I’m rolling on an inexpensive, aero, aluminum Specialized Allez so I could put the money into the 50cm Rovals with ceramic bearings. I coasted while others pedaled – true story. My Kask helmet is also super aero. My Speed kit is super aero. Aero matters, especially over 200 miles.
Of course, we catch those turds. It’s all good, part of racing.
I’m well into the farthest I’ve ever ridden in my life.
And,
I flat.
Awesomely, a support car stops. Unawesomely, the guys are well meaning but a little green on the tire changing.
I get it all set for air,
they start pumping,
I start peeing.
Fellas, is it ready?
60 lbs.
Lemme see it… it feels like steel.
That’ll do.
Thanks fellas, your’e awesome.
Now you can do one of two things here, cry in your water bottle or be the fire breathing beast God put you on earth to be.
I’m at mile 150, 54 to go.
Red kit guy, who the race ref told us was 5 minutes back, comes by.
Let’s go!
He’s cooked, gone after 1 pull.
5 miles later I Nascar into the third #6. Trophy wife is there with my bag. I grab it going about 110 mph. Of course, I drop one of my bottles don’t grab the pickle juice… but,
… she’s packed a Twinkie, hot damn …
A mile later race ref rolls up.
How far behind am I?
Behind? You’re leading.
What?
They all stopped for food and to pee.
No way!
Yep.
Well screw ’em, they didn’t wait for me. I go full gas. Kinda wish I had the bottle now, but when it dropped I was thinking I had one shot to catch ’em.
The tailwind is powerful. Nothing worse than chasing a guy with a tailwind. Sayanora suckers!
Uh oh.
There’s one of the 3 horsemen, flatted.
Crud. They must be ahead.
Oh well.
I’m just gonna go my pace. Top 7 would be amazing.
Oh, look at that bee… with it’s stinger deep into my arm!
Whatever, everything hurts any way.
Kind people hand me water and “Gatorade” at the last neutral stop. I don’t know what that red, fizzy stuff in the bottle is… but, it’s delicious.
Through the roundabout at Holbart (sp?) the traffic is heavy. I’m going almost as fast as the cars.
And I start thinking… what’s causing this traffic? I love it, but what is it? Heehee… it’s gotta be a group of riders and cars can’t get around. Maybe it’s mine!
About 3 miles later I see a group chugging up the last hill. Might as well burn the final match, it’s my group or it’s not.
It’s them: 2 horsemen, green spindly, the reigning champ, America First, and the big guy who snuck away before.
I sit in the back for a while, then do my rotations.
I’m bonking, but ya know…
… there’s nothing like a Twinkie… all sugar and fat…
We’re cruising, and I’m feeling better.
No matter what, this has been an amazing ride for me. Perfect weather, fun trip with good friends, the best support ever from Jeff and TW, I’m happy… but, I’m also a fire breathing beast, right? : ) in my dreams anyway.
So, it’s gonna be a sprint.
We are shells of ourselves.
It’ll be slow motion. The few times I’ve stood on the pedals weren’t inspiring. I figure I can go all out with 100 meters to go. Pathetic, but that’s it.
I’m in the perfect spot.
5th guy, right behind the champ. What could be better?
Well, not letting the big guy roll up the road, doh!
I can’t believe it.
Two horsemen let him go.
They don’t want to chase, because the champ is right behind. I figure he doesn’t want to chase because The Old Diesel is chugging.
Finally, we speed up. He has about 75 meters on us with 300 to go.
I almost catch him.
2nd place, and thrilled.
(best support, ever)

(by all means, get in that stream!)

(Orthodontist by day, musette maker by night)


WELP, THIS IS IT
I ALWAYS FEEL LIKE DOODOO, the day before some bigrediculousginormous “ride”. Leadville does this to me. Nationals does it, too. If it’s big, my body goes into hibernation. Lethargy sets in. Usually a little fluish. I have a headache. Sitting in bed, with the AC cranked. Allergies? All the smoke the past few days? Altitude?..
I ALWAYS FEEL LIKE DOODOO, the day before some bigrediculousginormous “ride”. Leadville does this to me. Nationals does it, too. If it’s big, my body goes into hibernation. Lethargy sets in. Usually a little fluish.
I have a headache. Sitting in bed, with the AC cranked.
Allergies?
All the smoke the past few days?
Altitude?
I’m taking Coldeezz, but it’s not a cold. It’s just The Old Diesel in the station, doing it’s thing.
Next up, Why did I commit to this? conversations. What was I thinking? It’s an impossible challenge. Just sleep in tomorrow and go eat a giant Belgian Waffle with whipped cream and real maple syrup from Canada.
Dinner is soon. I’ll have no appetite, and will have to force myself to eat.
Then, it’s time to hit the hay.
I’m going to sleep GREAT tonight. I can feel a big slumber coming one. Deep.
The alarm is set for 4am. I’ll get up, eat my sardines and beans and lay in bed. Sleep some more. Zzzzzzzzzzzzzz…
At 530, I’m up again.
I’d take a bath to heat up my legs, but we have a shower. I’ll take care of #1 and #2, pump up the tires, take care of #1 and #2, hit the chain with a final shot of lube, take care of #1 and #2, and so on…
… until about 6:00 …
… and I’ll feel great, rested, youthful and ready to ride with 2000 of my closest friends …
(my body, ready to deliver… I hope)

RED, RED, LIGHT
Dear Diesel, I don’t have enough experience to know what to do if I’m crossing as the light is turning when riding with a big group… should we slow,stop, go? I would like to learn… Dear Newb, Good question, and one that will be answered differently by different groups. Let’s start with this… nearly EVERY,..
Dear Diesel,
I don’t have enough experience to know what to do if I’m crossing as the light is turning when riding with a big group… should we slow,stop, go? I would like to learn…
Dear Newb,
Good question, and one that will be answered differently by different groups.
Let’s start with this… nearly EVERY, person I know who has been hit by a car has been a chronic red light runner. This is not scientific, just think about the habits you are developing as a person, and as a group.
We’ve all been on rides where every light is run, especially if the leaders have a chance to gap off the rest of the group. This is their norm. Personally, I stay clear of these rides as much as possible.
You, however, are referring to the most polite and social ride in the Northern hemisphere: The TMWC. The standard is held quite high to not run red lights, or ride dangerously in traffic.
Regardless of the ride culture you are in, running red lights is dangerous.
The leaders have a responsibility to keep the group safe.
Only a knucklehead attacks knowing the light is going to change… this is the same cat who doesn’t point out holes and glass hoping the rest will suffer the consequences.
Regarding the video footage in question, at the 1:06 mark the light is clearly red. The guys slow and go… my guess is that is because the leaders stayed on the gas. If the guys who went through first, sat up to wait the rest of the group probably would have stopped at the light.
It can also be equally dangerous to hit the brakes hard if you’re in the front as other riders may not have your quick reflexes, or worse, they may not even be paying attention to the lights.
If you happen to be at the front and you know the group has no chance to stop in time, just roll through and wait.
If you have a decent gap, no need to wait.
Ultimately, it’s a judgement call.
Same for the guys in back:
The myth that as long as your connected to the group you won’t get nailed by a car has been proven fatally wrong on Como Street.
If you’re kid/lover/besty was behind you what would you do? Probably stop, if possible. If not, wait on other side of the light.
Rules to LIVE by:
- Slow up if you know the light is going to change.
- Stop if you have time and think the group can stop.
- Wait on the other side of the light if the group gets split.
Most of us will fail at it more than we’d like… do your very best to get it right…
… let’s redline the green lights, and keep the asphalt black …

PLAYING IT SMART
I MAY NOT BE AS SMART AS I LOOK, but I’m still pretty darn smart. Dad, you don’t look that smart – is usually the reply. Want proof? Tonight we are going to see Fitz & The Tantrums open for One Republic. Why? Because that’s what the trophy wife requested. Why? Because that’s what she likes..
I MAY NOT BE AS SMART AS I LOOK, but I’m still pretty darn smart.
Dad, you don’t look that smart – is usually the reply.
Want proof?
Tonight we are going to see Fitz & The Tantrums open for One Republic.
Why?
Because that’s what the trophy wife requested.
Why?
Because that’s what she likes to do.
Why?
Because it’s smart to make a tiny deposit in the love account, before making a massive withdrawal.
Why?
Because she’s going to drive 250 miles Saturday so I can ride my bike at LoToJa.
Why?
I don’t know why she’s doing this, she already told me she never, ever, ever wanted to go to another one of my races.
Why?
… because she likes live music, hot beaches and good surf …

WHAT’S IN A NAME?
RACER GIBSON IS THE ONLY GUY I TRUST to work on my bike. Tyler didn’t even hesitate. I’m in a bind. 600 miles from my local bike shop, and I got a problem I can’t fix: outta true rear wheel, creaky BB, misadjusted derailleurs. This is unpleasant at any time, and magnified with the whole..
RACER GIBSON IS THE ONLY GUY I TRUST to work on my bike. Tyler didn’t even hesitate.
I’m in a bind.
600 miles from my local bike shop, and I got a problem I can’t fix: outta true rear wheel, creaky BB, misadjusted derailleurs. This is unpleasant at any time, and magnified with the whole point of being out of town being to race that darn bike.
I need someone I can trust, and Tyler is a local friend in the area.
Racer Gibson, that’s his real name – legally changed. Look him up.
He’s easily found on the web.
I shoot him a text. He promptly replies. We set up a time.
He shows up. Super nice.
I gotta know… Is Racer really your name?
Yep. Worked at a bike shop with 3 Jareds and I was the only one that raced. It’s legally changed now.
I gotta know this too… How’s the mobil business?
Great. I owned a shop for 15 years and some developers bought the building.
Of course, you have to go with a guy named Racer, who races, and has owned a shop for 16+ years.
But, that’s not why I didn’t hesitate to call him.
It’s not his name, it’s the “name” he’s built by being awesome…
… let’s see you dot com that …
(he really test rides his work)

(If you’re ever in a bind in Provo, UT)

IT’S A TOTAL GEEK FEST
IT’S A TOTAL GEEK FEST at the moment. Sometimes you know there will finally be a break in the action to get _____ done. That happened today. Finally had time to plan out next Saturday’s logistics. The house is vacant. The phone is off. I’m consumed with all the information LoToJa puts out to help..
IT’S A TOTAL GEEK FEST at the moment. Sometimes you know there will finally be a break in the action to get _____ done. That happened today. Finally had time to plan out next Saturday’s logistics.
The house is vacant.
The phone is off.
I’m consumed with all the information LoToJa puts out to help us prepare for 204 miles of silliness. It’s a great packet.
They’re pros.
Great maps. Great advice. Great tips for the highly-recommended personal support crews. And I’m banking on their great neutral support – water – too.
Spreadsheets are helpful for me to visualize what needs to happen for a successful day.
Warning: you have to be a special kind of weirdo to love this.

I’ll take white electrical tape and Sharpie in the stops and miles (top 2 lines), then apply it to my top tube. When the Cuckoo clock chimes, and it will chime for nearly all of us, this will keep me sane enough to finish.
As of now, the weather looks outstanding. Good temps, favorable winds. So, I’m plugging in the fastest time estimates for me and the crew.
It’s important to give the crew a good idea of when I’ll be rolling in. Beating the crew to a feed would be a bummer for all of us. My crew has sacrificed a beautiful Saturday for me to go ride my bike.
I’ll get up early the day of and have my usual sardines and beans for breakfast. Mmmmm.
Each feed zone has 110% of what I think I’ll need. Better to roll out with extra fuel than run out of calories.
Gone in 60 seconds is the goal for the 3 stops. That seems better than fumbling around with a feedbag. I hope I’m right, and I don’t get jumped by the rest of the guys at the stops.
Will we stop and pee? I don’t know. But, I do know this: don’t crack the seal, unless you want to be peeing all day.
I’m still debating on one of my Speed kits, or the Dominator.
Also up in the air, my vented helmet or my aero helmet.
#aeroiseverything
… not necessarily, especially in a pace line with a tail wind …
… but, that’s all part of getting geeked up for a big ride or a race …
… and a last second #2 at 6:16am, 9/16/17 …
(how’s this for detail?!)


Still with me?… well maybe you can recommend a place for steak fajitas the Friday night?
170.6
FAMILY FIRST
FAMILY FIRST, before riding… always. Inviting family to ride, 2nd. Explaining riding, 3rd. Re-inviting to ride, 4th Re-explaining riding, 5th… … I love my sister …
FAMILY FIRST, before riding… always.
Inviting family to ride, 2nd.
Explaining riding, 3rd.
Re-inviting to ride, 4th
Re-explaining riding, 5th…
… I love my sister …

LOTOJA – LAST TRAINING RIDE/I CAN’T BREATHE
TYLER ASSURES ME YESTERDAY’S ALL-DAY DRIVE + ALTITUDE is making me s-l-o-w. I hope so. He doesn’t know, I was late and hustling to make up time. Oh, and the stiff headwind going up the start of the canyon is a special treat. My h.r. is okay, I’m just short of breath. We are high,..
TYLER ASSURES ME YESTERDAY’S ALL-DAY DRIVE + ALTITUDE is making me s-l-o-w. I hope so. He doesn’t know, I was late and hustling to make up time. Oh, and the stiff headwind going up the start of the canyon is a special treat. My h.r. is okay, I’m just short of breath.
We are high, and getting higher.
The Alpine loop is perfect today. 60 or so degrees. Lots of water flowing down. We are kind of early, long shadows reach across the western slope of the Wasatch Front.
Above Tibble Fork, I finally start to settle in. There are fewer cars. We ride side by side and catch up on life, family and promoting races.
Tyler is the force behind The Vision Relay. He shares some of his ideas going forward – ways to keep his super unique race fresh, other events and concepts. Fun stuff.
The summit is just over 8000′ above sea level – I wheeze.
A group of BYU students are kitted up in school colors taking selfie shots by the summit sign: 4 girls, 1 guy. I feel like Trevor just missed the blossoming of an actual cycling scene on campus.
Quaking Aspen wave and whisper alongside the curvy plunge down to Sundance.
This
could
be
the best cycling road ever.
Someone has a car just like mine parked at the resort. CA plates, just like mine.
… Back up folks, give him some air!…
Sheesh, that is my car. Someone’s driven up to hike Stewart Falls.
I’m going to get a giant cookie, some ice and mountain water. The stream sings.
Heaven.
Refueled, we hit South Fork and an unconversational speed – PRs are popping. Just testing the legs.
To sum it up, I’m pretty sure I disrespected the climbing involved next Saturday. That was dumb. Oh well, I’m smartish… I’ll think of something.
When I roll in the driveway, Nana is in the car. Passenger side. She recognizes me. Then we go to lunch, and she has no idea who I am.
Kinda puts things in perspective.
I miss Nana.

There’s no climbing like this anywhere near home.

Look at that beautiful pavement.

Hold that gut in buddy!

On my way back… the bridge that almost ended it all one snowy winter night.

Can’t miss a cruise through campus on a Saturday

169.8
I SEE WHAT YOU’RE DOING, AND I LOVE IT
RETAIL IS CHANGING, retail has always been changing. I love it. From the general store which had to compete with the Sears catalog which had to compete with Woolworth’s then Walmart now Amazon. Who wins? The consumer, AND THE RETAILERS THAT GET IT. Who is that in cycling? From my travels, I can tell you..
RETAIL IS CHANGING, retail has always been changing.
I love it.
From the general store which had to compete with the Sears catalog which had to compete with Woolworth’s then Walmart now Amazon.
Who wins?
The consumer, AND THE RETAILERS THAT GET IT.
Who is that in cycling?
From my travels, I can tell you unequivocally that the shops who are embracing the cycling lifestyle are doing great. They are busy. There are plenty of customers in the store finding what they want.
What do they want? An experience… today’s consumer wants to drink deeply of your waters: knowledge, experience and passion. They want to be told what you recommend, what you ride, where you ride, how they can improve their ride. They want a friend, they can trust.
I was reminded of this on my way to Utah today. For the last 5 years I’ve been stopping along the way and visiting shops. Some are gone, those that remain or who are new are providing more than just a bike.
Take Las Vegas Cyclery. When you get there, you’ll see good looking logo’d vans ready to carry you and your crew into the wild via guided bike tours. Go into their beautiful showroom and you see a huge selection of accessories, lots of new bikes, an immaculate service area with trained techs in plain view. Best of all, you’re made to feel like part of their posse – even if you’re there to sell : )
Can everybody do what they’re doing? Yes.
… I’m pulling for you all! …

I’M LEAVING
WHEN I PACK FOR A CYCLING TRIP, I pack for 2. Me, and me. Human me, and cycling me. Tomorrow I head to Utah for the big race. Currently, it’s 9:21pm, and I want to leave at 5am. I’m not sure why I don’t have a master list for big trips. They’re all different, so..
WHEN I PACK FOR A CYCLING TRIP, I pack for 2.
Me, and me.
Human me, and cycling me.
Tomorrow I head to Utah for the big race. Currently, it’s 9:21pm, and I want to leave at 5am. I’m not sure why I don’t have a master list for big trips. They’re all different, so that’s probably part of it. Sometimes I just like the mini-drama of getting ready.
For sure, I need:
Kits
Tools
Socks
Race food.
Vitamins.
Snacks for the road.
Winter clothes – the race is at high altitude.
A cooler, chairs, and flags for my crew.
Swimsuit
Pack it all tonight.
Wake up.
Load bikes.
Hit road.
… I’ll remember everything – hopefully before I leave.

ALL I SEE IS RED
LA VUELTA IS MY VERY MOST FAVORITEST grand tour of the year – always. It’s 21 days, but it’s usually 21 chaotic days. It may not have all the star appeal of Le Tour, but it always has future stars. Do good at La Vuelta, you get a shot at the biggest races. Most guys..
LA VUELTA IS MY VERY MOST FAVORITEST grand tour of the year – always. It’s 21 days, but it’s usually 21 chaotic days. It may not have all the star appeal of Le Tour, but it always has future stars. Do good at La Vuelta, you get a shot at the biggest races. Most guys are a bit tired, but some have come off an early season crash and come in rested.
Mix all that up and you get unpredictable racing.
Sure Sir Froome is doing his best to feign drama, but in the end he’ll make it boring… the race for 1st. Who cares though?
All those other cats are come bearing claws, showing fangs.
The tired, dangerous like the wounded animals they are.
The young, full of piss and vinegar.
The recovering, bleeding passion.
Spectacular mountain top finishes have riders throwing haymakers daily… including the toughest climb in Spain, the awesome and feared Angrilu.
watch video before bed, nightmares guaranteed

169.8
TIME
MARTY YELLS TO ME, HEY TODD you know how to say what time is it in Spanish?…Que hora es?… No! Pointing wildly to his watchless wrist, Yougot da TIIIINE?! Dad says, You have all the time you need. Plan your work, work your plan. Einstein teaches time is slower for the person that is moving...
MARTY YELLS TO ME, HEY TODD you know how to say what time is it in Spanish?…Que hora es?… No! Pointing wildly to his watchless wrist, Yougot da TIIIINE?!
Dad says, You have all the time you need. Plan your work, work your plan.
Einstein teaches time is slower for the person that is moving.
… maybe there’s something to staying younger by riding?

MERINO WOOL
I’M GONNA CONVERT YOU, Mike tells me. Wool stays cooler on hot days, warmer on cold days, and is odorless… I won’t wear anything else. I go to this co-op, hidden away in a top secret store, buy ’em by the dozens. For cross, they’re the only way to go. Road, too. MTB, I’d never..
I’M GONNA CONVERT YOU, Mike tells me.
Wool stays cooler on hot days, warmer on cold days, and is odorless… I won’t wear anything else. I go to this co-op, hidden away in a top secret store, buy ’em by the dozens. For cross, they’re the only way to go. Road, too. MTB, I’d never do anything but wool… and not just any wool, Todd… MERINO wool…
… he’s preaching now, and I’m nodding my head…
Tomorrow I’ll repent of my ignorant ways and be baptized a Merino.
Funny thing is, we’ve been making Merino wool socks for 5 years… I’ve just never converted… I get so passionate about what we make, because for the most part I design it all then abuse the heck out of it.
But, I can’t design sheep like the Merinos, which are extra-super-soft-and-fine… from the continent of weirdo animals – Australia, of course!
Good thing I’ve got samples ready to rock… let me know if you want to join the congregation.

TOUR DE DONUTS
ON SEPTEMBER 30th, I’m going to celebrate the end of the “racing” season – because there is no off-season in SoCal. How? By riding to the 10 best donut shops in the county. Which ones? I hope you’ll help me decide. There are a number of lists on the interwebs – see below. It won’t..
ON SEPTEMBER 30th, I’m going to celebrate the end of the “racing” season – because there is no off-season in SoCal.
How? By riding to the 10 best donut shops in the county.
Which ones? I hope you’ll help me decide. There are a number of lists on the interwebs – see below.
It won’t be a race, but we’re competitive – right?
Maybe we’ll honor the most donuts consumed? Most weight gained? Best donut-themed kit? Best napkin collection? (Is Krispy-Kreme the only one with branded nappies?) Trust me, we’ll think of something.
Stay tuned.
Please send us your top 3, here are some recommendations:
The Donuttery – Huntington Beach
Friendly Donuts – Orange
M&M Donuts – Anaheim
Poqet Donuts- Irvine
Seaside Bakery – Newport Beach
Sidecar Doughnuts and Coffee – Costa Mesa
Sweet Bubba’s Donut Cafe – Anaheim
U Jelly – Fountain Valley
Zombee Donuts – Fullerton
Rose Donuts & Cafe – San Clemente
Surin’ Donuts – San Clemente
Halfsies Doughnuts – Tustin
DK Donuts – Orange
The Doughnut Parlor – RSM
Royal Donuts & Burgers – Mission Viejo

LOTOJA TRAINING RIDE #10 – HOW MANY DAYS IS THAT?
WHEN ARE WE GONNA GET OUT AND SURF? Soon man, I just have one more event on the calendar. What is it? It’s this retarded race from Logan, UT to Jackson Hole, WY. How far is that? 204 miles. How many days? 2 weeks. To go 200 miles? No the race is in 2 weeks,..
WHEN ARE WE GONNA GET OUT AND SURF?
Soon man, I just have one more event on the calendar.
What is it? It’s this retarded race from Logan, UT to Jackson Hole, WY.
How far is that? 204 miles.
How many days?
2 weeks.
To go 200 miles?
No the race is in 2 weeks, we do all 204 in one day.
That is retarded.
The anticipation is killing me now. Wondering… will my body hold up? This is 70 miles further than I’ve ever ridden before. Racing. Helmets on. Cleats locked in. No rest stops. No ice cream breaks. Racing. I know my body, and I know unanticipated problems can show up over a long day of riding.
Here’s to all of us riding smart, safe, and mechanical free…
… and getting a little more balance in our lives…

… like riding with the kids …

… and more lazy rides like this …
A HARDMAN IS GOOD TO FIND
HE LOOKS LIKE A FAMOUS JEW who roamed around 2000 years ago. But, he’s a heartless bike racer. And, an even more evil bike event promoter. The HARDMAN Invitational is a horrible bike ride/race. It’s always in an infernal month, it mixes road and gravel and lots of plain old dirt. But, it’s in sunny..
HE LOOKS LIKE A FAMOUS JEW who roamed around 2000 years ago. But, he’s a heartless bike racer. And, an even more evil bike event promoter.
The HARDMAN Invitational is a horrible bike ride/race. It’s always in an infernal month, it mixes road and gravel and lots of plain old dirt. But, it’s in sunny Southern California where nobody is actually all that tough. Right?
Nope.
If you’re lucky enough to get invited you’ll be there. Because it’s hard. Because it will challenge all your skills. Because it goes right up Maple Springs and down Harding Truck Trail – two iconic dirt roads on Saddleback Mountain. Because the field will be whittled down to small groups of comrades who end up riding the entire distance together – returning battered and beaten and better than when they started.
All that terribleness, and you’re going to pay for it too.
Why does Mike do it?
Not for the entertainment.
He does it as a fundraiser for Community Outreach Alliance, specifically so at-risk youth can participate in bike riding activities.
Will this earn him forgiveness for his heartless racing and evil promoting?
I doubt it.
But who cares?
He’s putting in the time and effort to make you a HARDMAN
(PS… if you’re reading this, you’re invited.)

SWAMI’S, I C WHAT YOU MEAN
75 RIDERS SHOWED UP FOR THE SWAMI’S RIDE, on a foggy August morning at 6:30. They left in waves: A group, B group, C group. Self-selected or self-inflicted, A fastest. All ride the same route. This means, depending on the time of year or phase of our training you have 3 options. Should you get..
75 RIDERS SHOWED UP FOR THE SWAMI’S RIDE, on a foggy August morning at 6:30. They left in waves: A group, B group, C group. Self-selected or self-inflicted, A fastest. All ride the same route.
This means, depending on the time of year or phase of our training you have 3 options. Should you get dropped another group is coming – unless you’re in C.
Pretty cool.
No pressure.
Just decide, and go.
I did the B with club president Fred Muir. Typical… the B was closer to most group’s A. That’s Swami’s for ya. Fred is friendlier than most riders… also typical of the Swami’s team.
If you’re ever down that way, it’s a beautiful ride: 24 miles along the Carlsbad coast with a fair amount of rollers thrown in. Get there early, choose your wave.
La Costa Roasters was the place to be after.
Yum.
Which brings me to my question.. at our local group ride, The TMWC, we start all together and there’s an A-loop of extra credit about halfway through. This works well for most of us, but I’m wondering if it’s time for a C option… something that leaves 5 minutes early for those that want the camaraderie but want an easier ride.
Thoughts?
(mid-pack in the B group)

AND HELMETS OFF TO ALL THE DADS
WHEN YOUR NEPHEW’S KID GIVES YOU KUDOS on Strava you know _____________. Don’t say it. Don’t even think how ancient… Just relish how cool it is that a middle schooler is out riding and posting. He’s pumped for the middle and high school MTB season which starts next month in UT. Actually, that makes two..

WHEN YOUR NEPHEW’S KID GIVES YOU KUDOS on Strava you know _____________. Don’t say it. Don’t even think how ancient… Just relish how cool it is that a middle schooler is out riding and posting. He’s pumped for the middle and high school MTB season which starts next month in UT.
Actually, that makes two surprise riders for the day. Trevor Brown claims he’s ready to get fast again – CPA tests are over and passed… I’ll try not to jinx that by getting too geeked up.
But there’s more… how about all the dads and moms who hauled their kids out to OverTheHump all summer. Amazing.
TMWC’s own Kevin rolled out to OTH and crushed all the pro’s and his teammate Andrew took 5th… they’re 16, and I personally know how involved their parents are… from motorpacing to independent study.
Some of these dads have seen their kids like Danielle and Mikael go on to race on premier college teams.
Some of these dads own bike shops, some feel like they do.
And no… it’s not just the dads. The moms are there every pedal stroke of the way, even if they can’t help saying “be careful” every time the kid leaves to ride. It’s a team effort.
Not every kid keeps riding. Many of us have got ’em started, had fun and seen the kids go on to have other interests.
The memories will last forever.
Driving today, I popped into some AM radio on KFI and heard some pop psychology… “What was the happiest moment of your youth?”… silence… “I don’t know”… “Was any of it happy?”…
On Christmas, when I got a bike.
(Kevin started last, finished first)

IN ANOTHER’S BIBS
READING RIDE TITLES IS SO ENTERTAINING, it’s like the proverbial riding in another man’s bibs… … Austin pointing out that this morning’s ride was so easy he could do it on his full-suspension mountain bike… … my brother from another mother concurs with a smiley face and grade of “more tolerable” … … Brett, while..
READING RIDE TITLES IS SO ENTERTAINING, it’s like the proverbial riding in another man’s bibs…
… Austin pointing out that this morning’s ride was so easy he could do it on his full-suspension mountain bike…

… my brother from another mother concurs with a smiley face and grade of “more tolerable” …

… Brett, while on the same exact ride gets a little dramatic… I’m not sure why, most people can do the drag strip in 1:03… ‘nt …

… Chris shares his 1st Group Problems… poor guy, hasn’t seen the back of the group since ’14…

… yet, Jake finished about 5 minutes behind Brett… apparently there was a lot of murdering on the ride…

… add Jim’s pyromania to the murdering and well, maybe it wasn’t all that tolerable after all…

… but, we see a little, grandmother was able to not only finish with the dead and burning but also improve on her previous times…

… shoot, Bud didn’t even need a big chain ring – SuperDave would be so proud…

… Sean loves murdering and burning so of course it was friendly enough for some extra credit…

… then there’s young TJ, modestly sharing he did the A Route … isn’t that awesome?!

… so thank y’all for letting me briefly ride in your bibs as I drift off to sleep…
YOU, WHO ARE ON THE ROAD
MUST KNOW THE CODE: It’s a social ride… I like you, and I like hammering the snot out of you even more. It’s a no-drop ride… Don’t get dropped, or you won’t be on the ride. I’m worn out… This is a glimpse into your near future. It’s a super hard ride… It’s not really..
MUST KNOW THE CODE:
It’s a social ride… I like you, and I like hammering the snot out of you even more.
It’s a no-drop ride… Don’t get dropped, or you won’t be on the ride.
I’m worn out… This is a glimpse into your near future.
It’s a super hard ride… It’s not really that hard for me, but you should turn around now.
I haven’t been riding much… I’m totally tapered, fresh and ready to crush it.
It’s a kinda technical trail… I can ride the whole the whole thing, you’ll be walking and bleeding.
Less obvious:
Dude is breathing hard… someone is about to get dropped.
Dude takes off early on sprint, you pass him early… someone is about to get smoked.
Dude rolls up sporting a super old kit… someone is going to get schooled.

CAMEL OR THOROUGHBRED?
It’s so tempting to get everyone’s buy-in on your next kit/t-shirt/event… etc. But you know what they say: Committees design camels, Leaders design thoroughbreds. Be brave. Have faith in yourself. Polarizing is memorable… don’t do it for polarizing’s sake, do it for you and the people you lead. Then bring it to life.
It’s so tempting to get everyone’s buy-in on your next kit/t-shirt/event… etc. But you know what they say:
Committees design camels,
Leaders design thoroughbreds.
Be brave.
Have faith in yourself.
Polarizing is memorable… don’t do it for polarizing’s sake, do it for you and the people you lead.
Then bring it to life.
LoToJa TRAINING RIDE #9 – END OF THE ROAD AKA BETTY CROCKER TIME
DID YOU KNOW A 20 OZ BOTTLE OF DR. PEPPER CONTAINS 250 DELICIOUS, REFRESHING CALORIES? After 6 hours on the two-wheeler the cupboard was empty – 6 waffles gone, 6 bottles of GQ6 drained. The Shell at Crown Valley and Niguel is a trusty dealer of sugar and fat. I cracked open the bottle and..
DID YOU KNOW A 20 OZ BOTTLE OF DR. PEPPER CONTAINS 250 DELICIOUS, REFRESHING CALORIES? After 6 hours on the two-wheeler the cupboard was empty – 6 waffles gone, 6 bottles of GQ6 drained. The Shell at Crown Valley and Niguel is a trusty dealer of sugar and fat. I cracked open the bottle and settled on 2 Tiger’s Milk bars vs BBQ Lay’s.
So cold.
So good.
So many calories.
My formula, well Paul’s CTS formula, was perfect. 300 calories/hour. With the Dr. P and 1 bar, 400 more calories would get me to Kaylani’s… where all great rides end in celebration.
Garmin says today was my longest day ever. It wasn’t, but it was close. LoToJa will take about 3 more hours, and I felt like I could easily do that… but there’s no point. I’m ready, well as ready as I’m going to get.
It’s Betty Crocker Time now.
What I mean is, all the ingredients have been mixed and it’s time to put the cake in the oven: nutrition is dialed, bike is dialed (got my rear wheel warranteed and back, shifting perfected, saddle figured out, etc.)
3 weeks out, I’m not going to get any faster or fitter… but I can certainly get slower.
No more big, long rides like today.
I’ll be resting more.
Trying to sleep a lot.
Maybe a few efforts, and a couple of sprints.
But right now, it’s so easy to overcook the cake. You can undercook it too, but it’s much more like to be overcooked. It’s time to really trust the training, and let the body heal and recover.
Work on your brain, too.
Everything for the next 3 weeks is going to be about feeling fresh. Building mental confidence that I’m going to have a great day.
I’ll go over the bike. Inspect the tires, pads, chain, etc. Replace anything that could go bad next week, and have 2 weeks to break it in.
I’ll stretch a lot.
Roll the legs.
Get a massage, or 2.
But mainly, and this is the hardest part, resting will be the big focus.
Days off.
Days spinning.
Days surfing.
Long walks on the sand at sunset (wait, that’s my Tinder profile).
One last way to really screw up all the hard work… blow the diet. It’s gonna be hard to stay on track there. But, a little discipline never hurt anyone.
Feeling hungry?, drink water, eat a few minutes later, eat slower.
That’s it.
The end of the road.



SOMETIMES THE BEST RIDE
SOMETIMES THE BEST RIDE is no ride at all. It’s just thinking about the next ride. Charting the route. Packing the food. Prepping the bottles. Checking the bike over. Setting out the favorite jersey and bibs. Just day dreaming all day on Friday about how great Saturday is going to be. Meeting up with the..
SOMETIMES THE BEST RIDE is no ride at all. It’s just thinking about the next ride.
Charting the route.
Packing the food.
Prepping the bottles.
Checking the bike over.
Setting out the favorite jersey and bibs.
Just day dreaming all day on Friday about how great Saturday is going to be. Meeting up with the crew.
Doing some drafting.
Sprinting the city limits signs.
Climbing a little.
Carving the turns.
Outside all day, if you want.
Wrapping it up with sugar and fat at Kaylani’s or wherever you’re at.

170
THE HORTON COLLECTION
Brett is in town and dropped by the office. Aside from catching up on life, we spent a few hours scouring 3500 of his amazing pictures from The Horton Collection – there are hundreds of thousands in the collection. The pictures themselves are revealing of different times. Some are post WWII, with cyclists racing through still..
Brett is in town and dropped by the office. Aside from catching up on life, we spent a few hours scouring 3500 of his amazing pictures from The Horton Collection – there are hundreds of thousands in the collection. The pictures themselves are revealing of different times. Some are post WWII, with cyclists racing through still devastated towns. Others capture the innocence of a champion’s wife running along side him handing up a bottle.
They are black and white. Well they started that way, but typically have faded to yellow. The true richness comes from listening to my friend share the background behind each picture.
The details we all miss are vividly shared.
For example, in the pictures from the 1920’s the race director’s all wore white lab coats. It’s the kind of thing that is easy to categorize as part of the times, and not ask who are those guys in the white lab coats.
Oh my irony… white lab coasts on race directors who’s riders are doped… sorry Sammy but history’s not on your side… it goes so far back.
Back to the goodness of the collection and what we have planned.
We’re going to make at least 2 limited edition runs of RaceDay Bags. One will feature exceptional vintage photos. Not the typical guys with cigarettes, or the shot from the front of a group climbing. Those are great photos too, but we’re planning something more unusual that captures the romance. The other will be for the Eddy Merckx fans, pure Eddy like you’ve never seen him.
Damion is working on two really cool t’s featuring Brett’s pics. I’m excited to add these to our collection as well. Brett’s art will be the 3rd person who’s art we’ve licensed, Radical Rick and Derailled being the others.
It’s a tough job, but someone’s gotta do it.

DON’T EVER TAKE NO FOR AN ANSWER
IT’S EARLY, AND I WANT TO SLEEP BUT I GET UP TO LIFT THE WEIGHTS and my body says no. No buddy, don’t do it. We’re still sleeping. You’re feeling sleepy. Skip today, for tomorrow we lift. And so starts the battle. I stumble downstairs. Grab the few tools I have. Do some jumping jacks...
IT’S EARLY, AND I WANT TO SLEEP BUT I GET UP TO LIFT THE WEIGHTS and my body says no. No buddy, don’t do it. We’re still sleeping. You’re feeling sleepy. Skip today, for tomorrow we lift.
And so starts the battle.
I stumble downstairs.
Grab the few tools I have.
Do some jumping jacks.
Push ups.
Pull ups.
Core stuff.
Light weight shoulder stuff.
20 minutes later. I’m pumped. Ready to go.
… they say no, but I say now…

DO YOU MIND IF I SLEEP WITH YOUR WIFE?
Can I ride your bike? feels just like, can I sleep with your wife? I can relate to you not relating, but can you relate to my answer? Can you get a sense of what your asking me man? Try and understand. This bike didn’t just show up one day. I scoured the interwebs, drooled..
Can I ride your bike? feels just like, can I sleep with your wife? I can relate to you not relating, but can you relate to my answer? Can you get a sense of what your asking me man?
Try and understand.
This bike didn’t just show up one day.
I scoured the interwebs, drooled in showrooms, visionboarded this lovely into reality. She arrived a virgin. Pristine and pure.
(AND YOU WANT TO TAKE HER FOR A RIDE?!)… shame on you.
I didn’t even ride her at first. We took an intimate trip to the fitter, essential for us to get to acquainted. We went for a gentle glide together, just the too of us.
(AND YOU WANT TO TAKE HER FOR A RIDE?!)… you filthy %$@.
I took her home, and introduced her to the family. Her name is Flashy Jack, because though timid she has a wild streak. We made a special space just for her, off to the side where she could rest unmolested. My little princess.
(AND YOU WANT TO TAKE HER FOR A RIDE?!)… have you gone mad?
Over time we became one: climbing up and getting down, charging hard and easing into the sunset. We glisten and listen only to each other.
(AND YOU WANT TO TAKE HER FOR A RIDE?!)…
…. do you mind if I sleep with…

WOULD YOU LIKE SOME FRIES WITH THAT?
By the time I got to my not regular bike shop I was only focusing on my most pressing need: tubes with 80mm stems. I walked in, was greeted by a friendly smile. We quickly found just what I needed. Maybe I had that iknowimforgettinsomething look on my face? Do you need any lube? It..
By the time I got to my not regular bike shop I was only focusing on my most pressing need: tubes with 80mm stems. I walked in, was greeted by a friendly smile. We quickly found just what I needed. Maybe I had that iknowimforgettinsomething look on my face?
Do you need any lube?
It wasn’t scripted.
It was caring.
Yes!… I need levers.
Here you go, Pedro’s are the best.
He rang me up. I took 3 steps towards the door, thinking about how much I appreciate professionals.
I turned around.
I need tiny box of those press on patches.
He was back and ringing me up some Park Tool patches. Also, the best.
Just one dude helping another dude.
It’s not salesmanship.
It’s empathy.

GOOD.
Being good has nothing to do with talent. It has everything to do with time. Focus. Energy. Want to be good? Ride your bike, more. Want to be better? Ride with faster riders. Want to be your best? Hang on to… (Photo from The Sausalito Bicycle Company) 172.4
Being good has nothing to do with talent.
It has everything to do with time.
Focus.
Energy.
Want to be good?
Ride your bike, more.
Want to be better?
Ride with faster riders.
Want to be your best?
Hang on to…
(Photo from The Sausalito Bicycle Company)

172.4
LOTOJA TRAINING RIDE #8 – RANDOM THOUGHTS
Random thoughts: Bring an extra tube and air cartridge… didn’t listen to that. Fateful. Where else will you ride with or see 3 Olympic cyclists on 1 ride? Hi Steve Hegg, Nelson Vails and John Howard. If we had invented texting before voice calls, would people be watching the road and talking instead of texting?..
Random thoughts:
Bring an extra tube and air cartridge… didn’t listen to that. Fateful.
Where else will you ride with or see 3 Olympic cyclists on 1 ride? Hi Steve Hegg, Nelson Vails and John Howard.
If we had invented texting before voice calls, would people be watching the road and talking instead of texting?
Is hitting a couple of 15 minutes climbs going to be of any use when there are multiple hour long climbs at LOTOJA?
Speaking of seeing, how the heck do I manage to run into so many friends on a ride?… Hi ProEcos.
I asked Steve if he knows Chris? Oh you mean Tube Top. Tube Top? He used to wear a little tri, sleeveless thingy on the rides.
Am I the only knucklehead who’s been racing since January and is still foolish enough to think I can be remotely fresh in September?
After another low-mileage week and my legs still feeling like doodoo… will they ever come back?
I wonder if the cashier will recognize me as the guy that was here less than an hour ago filling up water bottles with ice and pouring a mysterious powder into the bottles?
Why don’t I ride down to my parent’s house more often?
It takes about 135 minutes to ride from San Clemente to the start of Swami’s… why don’t we ever ride down, do Swami’s long and ride home? We could break it up and eat in Oceanside – chocolate shakes and fries at In-N-Out. Oh my epicness.
The black kit in the coast fog was fine, when the sun finely broke through it was “hot in, so hot in here”.
If I call Andy, will he dust off his bike and pedal with me? Can’t believe he’s back to running… what is Boston?
Hegg said he’d train for HUNKR. Is that a sign? He also said Kal was a real Mr. America! Wow.
If I roll my legs twice a day, take ice baths, get a few massages, quit doing any intensity… will, it, help?
Is double flatting a sign that I’m flat?
I’m going to the beach.
949-SRFR-GRL

ROLLIN. ROLLIN. ROLLIN’ ON THE SAN JUAN!
Mike’s my bro-in-law… at one point all my bros and bros-in-law rode bikes. There’s 7 in total, and he’s the last one who still rides regularly. When they drop in from NorCal, it’s only a question of when are we riding. I’m bringing the mountain bikes. Can we do San Juan? I want to take..
Mike’s my bro-in-law… at one point all my bros and bros-in-law rode bikes. There’s 7 in total, and he’s the last one who still rides regularly. When they drop in from NorCal, it’s only a question of when are we riding.
I’m bringing the mountain bikes. Can we do San Juan? I want to take the boys (Zach 13, Ben 17, Jess 21) on something epic, and I remember what a great trail that is.
Of course!
… of course, we’re going to shuttle it – leave a car at the bottom and drive to the top. Who wants to ride up with 90 degree heat beating you down? The boys are fit and athletic, but they don’t ride much. The purists scoff on shuttlers… I get it, but this is one of the few trails you can bring an athlete out for a humongous afternoon and come back big-grinning.
It’s bucket list worthy.
12 miles down.
All single track.
Views of the ocean.
Canopy covered.
Lot’s of poison oak.
Lot’s of sharp rocks.
Lot’s of slippery decomposed granite.
Mix all that in and you bound to pull off a few crazy landings, leave a little blood and live to ride another day.
And we did.
(3 bros and a bro-in-law)

SWEET STEPHANIE
This little lady dragged the four of us around town, across the country, even across the ocean. And everywhere we went, Neil’s voice rallied our spirits… whenever he was in town she’d go see him play, sometimes finding ways to bring us too. When you’re tiny, it’s hard to appreciate someone could reach into another’s..
This little lady dragged the four of us around town, across the country, even across the ocean. And everywhere we went, Neil’s voice rallied our spirits… whenever he was in town she’d go see him play, sometimes finding ways to bring us too.
When you’re tiny, it’s hard to appreciate someone could reach into another’s heart without knowing them. But he did, and that brought so much unentangled joy. You know it’s good, but you’re not sure why.
There was no doubt what we were going to do tonight. The sibs flew in from left and right coasts.
Mom’s 29th birthday.
Riding melodies, stories and memories.

I DON’T NEED NO DOCTOR
I don’t need no doctor Sayin’ ride your bike. I don’t need no doctor Sayin’ ride your bike Been workin’ dusk to dawn Feelin’ a big ride coming on I just need a doctor Que sabe my ask I just need a doctor Issue a haul pass Been workin’ dusk to dawn..
I don’t need no doctor
Sayin’ ride your bike.
I don’t need no doctor
Sayin’ ride your bike
Been workin’ dusk to dawn
Feelin’ a big ride coming on
I just need a doctor
Que sabe my ask
I just need a doctor
Issue a haul pass
Been workin’ dusk to dawn
Feelin’ a big ride coming on
Come on now my doctor
Don’t you let me down
Come on now my doctor
S’time to pedal ‘round
Been workin’ dusk to dawn
Feelin’ a big ride coming on
LET’S PLAY BIKES
When 80+ people show up for a group ride on a week night you know there’s something special going on. I had to go check it out for myself, and I’m glad I did. This really is a social ride. It begins at Bill Barber park with Junike buzzing around like a bee, pollinating conversations..
When 80+ people show up for a group ride on a week night you know there’s something special going on. I had to go check it out for myself, and I’m glad I did. This really is a social ride.
It begins at Bill Barber park with Junike buzzing around like a bee, pollinating conversations and welcoming incoming cars with bikes. At 530ish, Jason gathers the troops in for a group photo… we needed a drone to get everybody in. He’s taken the time to learn all the newcomers names, and introduces each of us individually by name to the group.
After the intros, the ride sponsor – PEDALindustries in this case – asks 3 trivia questions and rewards the winners with prizes. It’s a great way to get to know new people and for people to become acquainted with your brand.
Then we ride the streets and bikeways of Irvine, up to the end of Portola and back. The pace is conversational and the conversations are fun. It’s warm. The evening light is pleasing. Irvine is a great cycling town, and for the most part the group is able to stay together.
Back at the park, the sun floats down.
Butts rest on top tubes.
Selfies are shot.
We’re happy.


170
SMALL RING, DINGALING
The big ring is for hammering, the small ring is for spinning. The big ring is to go fast, the small ring is to go slow. The big ring is for flats, the small ring is for climbing. This is so hard, I bet you won’t do it: roll down the driveway and leave it..
The big ring is for hammering, the small ring is for spinning.
The big ring is to go fast, the small ring is to go slow.
The big ring is for flats, the small ring is for climbing.
This is so hard, I bet you won’t do it: roll down the driveway and leave it in the small ring until you get back.
Great big ring sessions are built small.
(pre-MTB?)

171.6
SPECIALEYEZD
4 years focusing on the road, Got my sprint and jump back. 4 years focusing on the road, Lost all my MTB skills. But I still remember this… … the body always follows the eyes. (There was a time I’d be dead center, no brakes)
4 years focusing on the road,
Got my sprint and jump back.
4 years focusing on the road,
Lost all my MTB skills.
But I still remember this…
… the body always follows the eyes.
(There was a time I’d be dead center, no brakes)

LOTOJA TRAINING RIDE #7 – THE NON-DOT WAY
Here I am at NON-DOT MTB race #3, Aliso Woods. It’s 630, and I’m scrambling to put up our canopy and bike rack so I can get registered for the 730 start. I want to spin a bit to warm up before I get slayed… there will be 4 current or former National Champions lining..
Here I am at NON-DOT MTB race #3, Aliso Woods. It’s 630, and I’m scrambling to put up our canopy and bike rack so I can get registered for the 730 start. I want to spin a bit to warm up before I get slayed… there will be 4 current or former National Champions lining up plus the rest of the gang. The Aliso course features Rocket a 1/4 mile trail of very gnarly rock, we get to hit it 3 times.
What could be better for LoToJa prep?
90 minutes at the limit.
On my hardtail.
Pretty much any road ride could be better. I’m fatigued from Thursday’s Market Ride, I should be out for a gentle spin.
But, I love the NON-DOT crew. The name NON-DOT comes from their forays into Moab. The Slickrock trail is marked with white dots… going non-dot means going your own way, where the essence of Moab calls you. I get that, and these guys put on a fun MTB series I like to support.
It’s kind of like my training. All my experienced LoToJa friends are out doing 100+ mile rides at tempo every weekend. I’ve done a few, not enough according to them.
We’ve been racing every month since January. I’m super burned out, just wanna park the bike and surf. Little motivations like the MTB race get me out…
… I need to get more miles today…
… It’s 1pm. I’ve got 5 hours before taking my mom to the movies…
I’m going to head out for a few more hours, just spinning… spinning over to the bike shop to get my front derailleur adjusted. On Thursday’s Market Ride it went whackadoo and was clicking on the crank each rotation in the big ring… I had to small ring it at 30+mph, right up to the sprint, it probably helped keep my cadence really high… dumped it into the big ring for the final mile. #worthit.
Do these LSD miles even help?
I dunno.
…LoToJa, could be once in a lifetime…

169.6
HOT AUGUST NIGHTS
It’s snake season, has been for a while. Lots a posts ’bout sitings. Haven’t seen but one this year. Seen plenty in the past. Ivrun’em over. Dodged ’em. Jump’d ’em. There’s something about being on a bike that gives courage. I’d never pick one up. Not my thing. The snakes are durable. The tarantulas aren’t,..
It’s snake season, has been for a while. Lots a posts ’bout sitings. Haven’t seen but one this year. Seen plenty in the past. Ivrun’em over. Dodged ’em. Jump’d ’em. There’s something about being on a bike that gives courage.
I’d never pick one up. Not my thing.
The snakes are durable.
The tarantulas aren’t, they’re quite fragile.
These big spiders will be out soon, in the afternoon. You can find them on most skinny single-track trails in these parts, when it’s hot… towards sunset.
Creeping along.
No danger.
Elegant.
… Neil Diamond’s in down next week.

170.8
WHY ISN’T STRAVA BETTER?
If STRAVA is social media for endurance athletes why isn’t it more social? It seams like with just a few tweaks it could be so much better and useful. A lot of riders aren’t on any other social media, they might be on more if the STRAVA experience was better. For examples: Why can’t the..
If STRAVA is social media for endurance athletes why isn’t it more social? It seams like with just a few tweaks it could be so much better and useful. A lot of riders aren’t on any other social media, they might be on more if the STRAVA experience was better.
For examples:
Why can’t the app and browser versions have the same functionality?
Why can’t I like a comment?
Why isn’t there a widget to give STRAVA kudos on people’s websites?
Just because we all love STRAVA doesn’t mean we’ll always love STRAVA.

WHAT I WANT TO TALK ABOUT IT
I truly believe we get what we focus on. Equally, I believe you cannot see a negative. When you say ride safe, I listen. When you say don’t crash, I tune you out. If you persist, I will stop talking to you all together. Our friendship could easily end. That’s how serious it is, for..
I truly believe we get what we focus on. Equally, I believe you cannot see a negative. When you say ride safe, I listen. When you say don’t crash, I tune you out. If you persist, I will stop talking to you all together. Our friendship could easily end. That’s how serious it is, for me.
When I hear a caring loved-one say to my friend “don’t get hurt”. I look right at that person and say stop jinxing him. Stop planting those negative seeds. What do you think we all see when you say that?
We see dear old Loverboy in a pile, hurting in the worst way.
What should you say to the people you care about as they venture out to any activity?
See you later, have a great time, come back smiling…
…we all want to talk about that.

THEY RAN ME OVER
First off, nobody who calls themselves Robot is normal. It’s no surprise that he prefers to race in the single speed category at a mountain bike race. But… looking at his bars all twisted, the yard of dirt on his shoulder I could tell this was going to be special. They ran me over. What..
First off, nobody who calls themselves Robot is normal. It’s no surprise that he prefers to race in the single speed category at a mountain bike race. But… looking at his bars all twisted, the yard of dirt on his shoulder I could tell this was going to be special.
They ran me over.
What do you mean the ran you over?
They ran me over.
Who?
The guys behind me. There was this little g-out and I flipped over the bars, then they ran me over. Look at my back, pull up the jersey.
The skin is all rashed and bruised.
That’s where one guys pedal just dug into me. Another guy ran right over my knee, see it’s all flippyfloppy now. Look at my bars, some dude plowed across them too.
They ran me over.
What are you going to do?
I’m gonna get my bars fixed, get out there, and chase ’em down.
That’s just one of 500+ stories that will be told tonight after Over The Hump.
… what’s your story?

HEY TODD: WHICH BIKE SHOULD I BUY?
Dear Chris, You’re not alone. This is a difficult topic to broach, especially with you spouse or partner. Here is my proven formula for getting the proper bike: Find a used bike that you can easily afford to throw the money away on. Ride it and see if actually like riding regularly. If you..
Dear Chris,
You’re not alone. This is a difficult topic to broach, especially with you spouse or partner. Here is my proven formula for getting the proper bike:
- Find a used bike that you can easily afford to throw the money away on.
- Ride it and see if actually like riding regularly.
- If you do, go see a bike fitter I recommend so your next purchase is the right size.
- Now you know you like the cycling lifestyle and you know what size bike to get, what you need to know now is how much is this going to cost?
Whether you buy a beater or a quality bike, it’s going to cost you about $3/day.
If you buy a bike from Walmart for $500, it’s going to last you about 6 months. 180 days X $3 = $500.
Right now, you can get an amazing bicycle that will last you 3 years for about $3000. 1095 days X3 = $3285.
“I don’t ride every day”… well guess what Bucky, seeing that bike there costing you $3/day is gonna get you riding a lot more than you otherwise would.
“$3285 is soooooo much money!” Compared to what? First, there’s no fee every time you want to go ride the bike like there is in golf, or skiing. Second, you spend more than that at Starbucks every day.
Look, justifying the expense is stupid. You’re gonna lose on this… even though it’s less than a Starbucks a day.
You gotta flip it.
Let me tell you how you’re going to save:
- You’ll never need a shrink
- You’ll be in excellent health
- You’ll be in a significantly better mood
- … and so on
But the best part is, you’ll have no money or time or energy left over for a mistress.
PS… give me a call and I’ll tell you where to go and who to talk to.
171.4
I’M NOT EVEN TRYING
I’m not even trying to compete with you. I show up to see all the different ways you can destroy me. I show up to gaze at your vast arsenal. I show up to see what real talent looks like. I show up to know what’s possible. I show up… … just for the inspiration. 170.4
I’m not even trying to compete with you. I show up to see all the different ways you can destroy me. I show up to gaze at your vast arsenal. I show up to see what real talent looks like. I show up to know what’s possible. I show up…
… just for the inspiration.
170.4
LOTOJA TRAINING RIDE #6 – EZPZ
It’s going to be hard today. We’ve hammered 5 out of the last 11 days. My legs are cooked, but we are getting very close to the big day and we can’t waste any time. It’s going to be so hard to… … ride very easy. Matt and Ty will there, Cat 1 MTB racers...
It’s going to be hard today. We’ve hammered 5 out of the last 11 days. My legs are cooked, but we are getting very close to the big day and we can’t waste any time. It’s going to be so hard to…
… ride very easy.
Matt and Ty will there, Cat 1 MTB racers. Jeff is down from Park City, he just snagged a KOM from Levi. Plus, Steve and Dr V and Chris and Chris saw the Strava “club” post and will also be there.
The easiest thing to do as the big day approaches is to error on the side of exhaustion, to dig that grave a little deeper. It’s so stupid, so common, so easy to do.
We’re not gonna do it.
We’re gonna ride easy, cruise the beach, be tourists. We’re gonna keep it flat. We’re gonna hydrate. We’re gonna cut it short.
The hardest thing to do, is to ride easy.

(Lots of people in Laguna early, it’s going to be a beautiful day)

How many cyclists does it take to change a tire?

Kevin at 7-11

See you soon

171.4
IT’S NOT A TRAINING CAMP
Paul and I think it would be fun for our snowbound friends to fly south for the winter and join the locals for some epic rides in SoCal. Think of it as a chance to start the year off different. We’ll all learn a bunch of new stuff about bikes and going faster… I mean,..
Paul and I think it would be fun for our snowbound friends to fly south for the winter and join the locals for some epic rides in SoCal. Think of it as a chance to start the year off different. We’ll all learn a bunch of new stuff about bikes and going faster… I mean, if you’re into that sort of thing.
The rides will include HUNKR OC, HUNKR GMR, and Swami’s Long on the road and San Juan Trail off road.
The learning will be from the Carmichael Training Systems vault, and others.
Pencil it in for last week of January, 2018… and don’t blow getting your haul pass by calling it a training camp…
…start the year different.
Nothing says put me on FB Live like flannel in July.

HOW TO GROW CYCLING
It’s starts with a friendly “hi, my name is Todd.” Within a few miles you’ll know if you like to do the same kind of rides and if you do… then, “hey, we are all riding the Market Ride on Thursday. Join us.” We’re humans. We like to do stuff with like-minded people. There’s nothing..
It’s starts with a friendly “hi, my name is Todd.” Within a few miles you’ll know if you like to do the same kind of rides and if you do… then, “hey, we are all riding the Market Ride on Thursday. Join us.”
We’re humans.
We like to do stuff with like-minded people.
There’s nothing better than geeking out over cycling with your pals.
Embrace the new guys and gals, especially if they are lacking skills.
You’ll soon have friends for life.
… and a growing community.

171
MTB WDNSDY
I once hired Gibby Hatton to coach me. Google him… there’s 55,000 references to America’s greatest track racer. I wasn’t going to race track, I wasn’t even racing road at the time, I was prepping for Leadville and wanted to see what I could learn from a new perspective. He had me come over, get..
I once hired Gibby Hatton to coach me. Google him… there’s 55,000 references to America’s greatest track racer. I wasn’t going to race track, I wasn’t even racing road at the time, I was prepping for Leadville and wanted to see what I could learn from a new perspective. He had me come over, get on a trainer and ride.
You hear that?
What?
That… the trainer.
Yep.
Do you always pedal like that?
Yep.
You ride BMX? A lot as a kid.
Mountain bike? Yes, a ton.
That explains it.
Oh…
Listen to the trainer, the sound is even.
BMX’rs have the best pedal stroke because the aren’t clipped in.
Mountain bikers are next because they have to put the power down evenly to keep the rear tire hooked up.
Roadies are usually awful, just mashing away.
It was a short lived experience. Mainly because he was very serious, and I was a little low on dough. But sometimes, just getting confirmation that you’re doing the right thing is worth the price of admission.
That popped into my mind tonight riding with 17 yr old Reed on a pretty beefy trail bike, and 47 yr old Brent on a Specialized electric bike, and me clipped in on my hardtail.
Different bikes, different styles, same passion.
Some of the drops we did were so steep the back of my saddle was nailed to my sternum… controlled skids. We loped back to the top and did more trails, found some good jumps I came up short often enough to bust a spoke.
Can’t wait ’till next week.


172
OUTLANDA-ISH
Oh Mikel!… really? Granted, the editors at VeloNews might be making you look bad to back up their sensational headline. So, I read on… “When you start to think about where you could have taken back a second … ufff, que rabia!” Dude, you sound like every whiner I’ve ever heard. I woulda one, but…..
Oh Mikel!… really? Granted, the editors at VeloNews might be making you look bad to back up their sensational headline. So, I read on…
“When you start to think about where you could have taken back a second … ufff, que rabia!”
Dude, you sound like every whiner I’ve ever heard. I woulda one, but…
…but nothing bro, look at the scoreboard.
You lost by one second.
That’s all.
Did you have the legs to drop everybody? Maybe. But. you didn’t and you didn’t have the weight of team leadership in your jersey pockets and there’s probably a reason you aren’t a team leader yet.
I hope you do get to lead a team, and I hope you do win. Winning is awesome…
…whining is for losers.



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