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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2001
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    898

    Exclamation Windy in the Midwest !!

    I know there are some of you on these boards that live in the midwest......... Have you been riding in miserable, windy conditions lately? It is ALWAYS windy during the spring here in Iowa. Usually, I just convince myself that it's good training. If you wait for a day with little wind, you won't be riding much. Just spin and keep going. All sorts of things I say to encourage myself when I'm out there battling the gale.

    Today, tho', was a real kicker. I started out in weak sunshine, but at least it was there. Temps in the high 50's. Winds at about 20-25 mph. Got about to the halfway point of my loop when it all went to he**. I'd been heading mostly into the wind to get it over with. Turned and had a crosswind and then it picked up speed. (The wind, not me!) It was difficult to stay on the road. The temp started dropping. The sky was getting darker. I was fighting with the wind to keep the bike going straight, especially when trucks went by. It was a bit scary.......... I could just see me getting sucked into their wake. My imagination is worst than reality, I guess. Having no other option, plus being determined and stubborn, I kept going.. Did my ride. By the time I got home, it was only 46 degrees out, the wind was gusting up to 35 mph. My last 8 miles were tailwind. Awesome! I think I'd earned it after the previous 36 miles. It was good to get home. And I am glad I got out there. :::::::::::::::sticking toungue out at wind:::::::::::::: nah, nah, nah

    Now I got all that complaining off my chest. I just wondered how others were faring out there and what you do on these very windy days.

    annie
    Time is a companion that goes with us on a journey. It reminds us to cherish each moment, because it will never come again. What we leave behind is not as important as how we have lived." Captain Jean Luc Picard

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2004
    Location
    Nebraska
    Posts
    1,192
    Was that Friday? I was out there on an 18 mile ride from hell. I think at one point the wind was gusting at 40+ mph. Of course, the gusts timed themselves to when I was going up the steepest parts of hills (headwinds, natch).

    About halfway through, I did an attitude check, and found that, Wow, I'm having fun! Cold, check. Headwinds, check. Snot dripping, check. I'm having a blast.

    I'll be whining when both temp & humidity are in the 90's, though.
    Give big space to the festive dog that make sport in the roadway. Avoid entanglement with your wheel spoke.
    (Sign in Japan)

    1978 Raleigh Gran Prix
    2003 EZ Sport AX

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    Norman, OK
    Posts
    158
    I just moved from Houston to Oklahoma and goodness it's windy here! I've never experienced anything like it. I just started riding a year ago and didn't stick with it through the winter so I'm just now starting back. It's hard to adjust to the wind and the hills but I keep telling myself it will make me stronger. Hopefully I won't get blown to Kansas!

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2004
    Location
    DuPage Co IL
    Posts
    865
    You guys are tough!!! I stayed inside Sat and Sun because of it spitting snow and being so windy (my new road bike is up on the trainer so I can get used to the seat). I commuted yesterday (Monday) and it was so windy, it actually nudged my bike sideways at one point on the way home, like the front tire did a little bunny-hop sideways all by itself! Sometimes I wish for an actual sail attached to my bike so I could make all that wind work with me instead of against me.

    Try to stay low in the saddle!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    North Andover, Massachusetts USA
    Posts
    1,643
    It was pretty windy here in the northeast too - but I don't think we can compete with your winds! I was out late Sunday afternoon after the wind very nicely dried out the roads following an epic weekend of water falling from the sky, and when I first turned out onto the road I was moving so slowly I thought there was something wrong with me! Nope, just the wind. Luckily I headed into the wind to start...

    I remember one day on my Hawaii tour - I was heading up Kohala Mountain Road when a sidewind pushed me all of the way across the road! Luckily there were no cars in sight at the time. I'd like to think I would have been smart enough to deliberately lay the bike down rather than get blown into traffic, but I don't know if I would have had the time to pull that off.

    I've got to hand it to you midwest gals for fighting with that wind!

    --- Denise
    www.denisegoldberg.com

    • Click here for links to journals and photo galleries from my travels on two wheels and two feet.
    • Random thoughts and experiences in my blog at denisegoldberg.blogspot.com


    "To truly find yourself you should play hide and seek alone."
    (quote courtesy of an unknown fortune cookie writer)

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    West Milwaukee
    Posts
    281
    I went out Sunday. Had hoped to go for a longer ride than I did, but got really tired of battling the wind.

    Those gusts that hit from the sides made me sway a few times. The combination of a big gust and the backwash from a passing bus was enough to make me decide to do a shorter route.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2001
    Location
    Iowa
    Posts
    898
    Quote Originally Posted by DeniseGoldberg
    when I first turned out onto the road I was moving so slowly I thought there was something wrong with me! Nope, just the wind. Luckily I headed into the wind to start...
    -- Denise
    LOL! I know that feeling well. You stop, check your tires 'cause you're sure you have a flat, or that your brakes are rubbing. But, no, it's just slow going into the wind!

    I hate it when the wind blows me around on the road, the bunny hop effect. But once I get outside, I just cannot bear to ride the trainer inside so I try and choose routes without too much traffic, or pick a direction where, at the very least, if I get blown by the wind, it will blow me OFF the road and not onto the road and into the traffic.
    Alos, I use my mirror on my sunglasses all the time, to watch for traffic from behind. With the wind whistling (more like roaring) you certainly can't hear cars coming from behind. If there is a huge semi bearing down, I will get totally off the road if need be. Better safe than sucked into the wake of a truck.

    Oh - it's an adventure out there!!!

    annie
    Time is a companion that goes with us on a journey. It reminds us to cherish each moment, because it will never come again. What we leave behind is not as important as how we have lived." Captain Jean Luc Picard

 

 

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