Nice to see you around here Susan. I had wondered what you were up to, besides TE. :D
Veronica
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Nice to see you around here Susan. I had wondered what you were up to, besides TE. :D
Veronica
Come ride with SFR or SRCC some time! We have so many women doing our rides now. It's great. (And the Gus we have aren't so bad either. :p ), it would be great to have you join us some day. Maybe one of our double brevet weekends... (Put on by both clubs together). 200/200 or 300/200.
And - so exciting about LEL. I can't wait to read about it! (And about some of the build up.)
Sarah, I'd love to come down for a double brevet weekend. I need to do a mess of doubles in 2-3 months leading up to LEL. A did a couple back to back 200s in the fall, but so far in 2013 I've only done a 200/100 weekend. I'd like to work in some 300/300 weekends in June, too, when the days are longer and the temps are higher.
Do you know when your area's doubles are? It's a short flight to get down your way.
Susan
7/13-14.
Here are my two clubs' calendars:
http://www.sfrandonneurs.org/home.htm
http://srcc.memberlodge.com/Brevet
SRCC has some fall 200s this year which should be good.
Great photos, Anelia & Susan. You ladies are inspiring me. :)
Excellent!
I just had a new permanent route approved (RUSA # 1873) and rode it yesterday. Super fun! I wanted to make something a little easier than my first perm, and this one features FIVE possible bakery stops right in the cue sheet (3 are controls, the other 2 are optional). Not for those on a diet....
I wanna do this ride! :D
Veronica
Awesome! Reminds me of the local WOMBATS (womens mountain bike and tea society).
When's your fleche? Ours was this weekend - I actually bowed out due to illness. My husband stayed on the team and they had a great time and - this is a minor miracle - he is now talking about building up a brevet bike. I love the fleche.
May 3-5. Ours is usually later due to the colder weather. The later in the year, the better. Although, we did just have a stunningly beautiful and WARM weekend.
I've never done a fleche. Looking forward to it! Any words of advice? I should point out that we do not plan to be overachievers. We are going for the flattest route between two points, the minimum distance, and lots of tasty food along the way... ;-)
I love the fleche. You already know how you react to sleep deprivation and riding at night, which is huge. It's mostly about having fun.
Planning out realistic control times is huge so you can stay ahead of the controls and have plenty of down time. A flat route makes that a lot easier - sounds like you are right on track there! My team last year was always chasing the controls because the route ended up being a lot harder than we expected, so we never had more than about 30-45 minutes at our controls. My husband's group this weekend, by contrast, had about 8 hours off the bike and tons of time at the controls. They had a couple of beer stops along the way as well.
Yesterday we rode another 200k. On Saturday the others rode 300 and I was sorry that I didn't ride 300 instead of 200. Not because of the distance but the weather on Saturday was fantastic (20-24 degrees) and it completely changed on Sunday. We started riding with head wind and finished the last 40 km in rain. The temperature dropped to 6 degrees! Besides that, I had a side stitch that lasted about 2 hours!!! It was incredible pain and only sticking with the group helped me get to the gas station at 130 km where we had some rest and the pain stopped. Maybe I had my breakfast only 30 min before the start and that triggered it :( I felt like lying in the ditch near the road but I kept riding with tears. After that I was very happy that the pain is gone and the rain wasn't an obstacle. Because of the pain and because the other 2 people from my group were very tired, we didn't ride fast, my HR was about 110-130 and had a big rest at lunch but nonetheless, the speed overall wasn't too bad, we finished in less than 10 hours.
http://www.openrunner.com/index.php?id=2310887- this is the route, I'll post some pictures later (if there are any, nobody wanted to take pictures in rain :)
That's great Anelia. Good for you for riding out the side stitch. I have found that on very long rides, something will hurt for a while and then it will stop. And then something else will hurt. So it's good to know you can ride through it, even if it's something really painful (as long as you know it's not life threatening.)
There's this for your rest years: :)
http://blog.cascade.org/2013/02/erra...n-their-bikes/