melissam
03-20-2004, 09:08 PM
Today we had our last training ride for next Saturday's Cinderella metric century. What a day for a ride -- we were already peeling down to minimal clothing layers before we left the parking lot. Even I wore a short sleeve jersey and biking shorts (not tights) for the entire rides, and I'm one of those people that would rather be too hot than too cold.
Our group's ride leaders gave each of us a note telling us how proud they were of the progress we'd made over the ten weeks. A very nice touch!
Today's ride was a fifty miler -- across the Dumbarton bridge to the Peninsula (west side of the SF Bay), where we rode thru Menlo Park and Woodside. Not much climbing, but plenty of time in the saddle, and a bit of heat to contend with. Beautiful scenery -- this is why they invented recreational cycling. :)
At the end of the ride, the ride coordinator had gotten us cake to congratulate us on finishing the training series.
If anyone reading this is in the San Francisco Bay Area (well, close to Fremont, at least) and is thinking about doing this training series next year, I give it an enthusiastic thumbs up! Great people, great leaders, very educational and confidence-building, and just plain fun.
I can say that, and frankly, today wasn't one of my best days on a bike. Let's see, it all started before we went over the Dumbarton Bridge. Someone's tire kicked up a stone, and it hit my right thumb knuckle. OUCH!!! It's gonna leave a bruise. And then, while we were riding along Atherton Ave. in Menlo Park, I had the blow out from h*ll. It was LOUD -- KA-POW -- some people in the group thought it was a gunshot. Fortunately, my tire wasn't seriously damaged. (The tube is toast -- about an 8 inch split.) The second fortunate thing is that I didn't have another blow-out, as I'd only brought one spare tube on the ride, and I have 650C tires.
Oh, and then, towards the end of the ride, I caught my back tire on a curb while we were starting off from a stop light, lost my balance, didn't clip out, and fell. In front of a lot of people. Made 'em miss the light. Boy was I embarassed. :o
Oh well, as I mentioned to jobob, if that's the worst thing that happened to me, life's not very bad, is it?
So, after the ride, I bought a new tube, new tires, and Mr. Tuffy liners. I just got done installing the lot, so I'm ready for the next ride. :cool:
-- Melissa
Our group's ride leaders gave each of us a note telling us how proud they were of the progress we'd made over the ten weeks. A very nice touch!
Today's ride was a fifty miler -- across the Dumbarton bridge to the Peninsula (west side of the SF Bay), where we rode thru Menlo Park and Woodside. Not much climbing, but plenty of time in the saddle, and a bit of heat to contend with. Beautiful scenery -- this is why they invented recreational cycling. :)
At the end of the ride, the ride coordinator had gotten us cake to congratulate us on finishing the training series.
If anyone reading this is in the San Francisco Bay Area (well, close to Fremont, at least) and is thinking about doing this training series next year, I give it an enthusiastic thumbs up! Great people, great leaders, very educational and confidence-building, and just plain fun.
I can say that, and frankly, today wasn't one of my best days on a bike. Let's see, it all started before we went over the Dumbarton Bridge. Someone's tire kicked up a stone, and it hit my right thumb knuckle. OUCH!!! It's gonna leave a bruise. And then, while we were riding along Atherton Ave. in Menlo Park, I had the blow out from h*ll. It was LOUD -- KA-POW -- some people in the group thought it was a gunshot. Fortunately, my tire wasn't seriously damaged. (The tube is toast -- about an 8 inch split.) The second fortunate thing is that I didn't have another blow-out, as I'd only brought one spare tube on the ride, and I have 650C tires.
Oh, and then, towards the end of the ride, I caught my back tire on a curb while we were starting off from a stop light, lost my balance, didn't clip out, and fell. In front of a lot of people. Made 'em miss the light. Boy was I embarassed. :o
Oh well, as I mentioned to jobob, if that's the worst thing that happened to me, life's not very bad, is it?
So, after the ride, I bought a new tube, new tires, and Mr. Tuffy liners. I just got done installing the lot, so I'm ready for the next ride. :cool:
-- Melissa