On Friday, Hirakikubou and I rode 35 miles (for me) into the hills of Harvard. It was a great day, and probably the last sunny day we will be seeing here for a week or more. Quite depressing.
Yesterday DH and I led our annual "new members" ride for AMC. It's about 22.5 miles around Concord, Carlisle, and Acton. Of course, it was cool and cloudy. I was worried that my base layer, jersey, arm warmers, leg warmers, and vest wouldn't be enough. So we give our big speech about choosing the correct group. DH and I lead the "faster" group, usually averaging about 14-15. We have 2 other leaders who lead a ride that averages 10-12? Eyeballing the group, I can see most of them belong in the slower group. I am the sweep, so I end up with the people who overestimate their ability and then get pissed at me when I suggest they pull over and wait for the second group. Two people gladly went off on their own, as one is also a leader. But one guy was just hanging in there, speeding up, but slowing down to about 10 mph on the flats. I get behind him (by then I couldn't even see the others) and settle in. This was after he told me he was "staying with this group," rode down the wrong side of the road and proceeded to ride down the left side of a busy street and cross it, to get in the correct lane
. I yelled at him to please follow the rules of the road, but he just growled at me. So he comes to a turn that a lot of group rides make, and I said "no, we are turning at the next street." He replied that he was "going that way," so I said OK, you're off the ride... and i sprinted at about 20-22 to catch the others. I did it, but it was hard. I later found out that this guy does this all of the time. He goes to a group ride, acts like a jerk, and does his own thing. The rest of the ride was pleasant, with me following and coaching 3 others up the hills. They were slow-ish, but we still had the others in sight. All of them, even the ones riding behind DH had difficulty on the small climbs, which is typical for those who only ride around Boston... they just have no experience on hills and typically have bikes with traditional doubles.
God knows when I'll get to ride again with the weather.



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. Two people gladly went off on their own, as one is also a leader. But one guy was just hanging in there, speeding up, but slowing down to about 10 mph on the flats. I get behind him (by then I couldn't even see the others) and settle in. This was after he told me he was "staying with this group," rode down the wrong side of the road and proceeded to ride down the left side of a busy street and cross it, to get in the correct lane
. I yelled at him to please follow the rules of the road, but he just growled at me. So he comes to a turn that a lot of group rides make, and I said "no, we are turning at the next street." He replied that he was "going that way," so I said OK, you're off the ride... and i sprinted at about 20-22 to catch the others. I did it, but it was hard. I later found out that this guy does this all of the time. He goes to a group ride, acts like a jerk, and does his own thing. The rest of the ride was pleasant, with me following and coaching 3 others up the hills. They were slow-ish, but we still had the others in sight. All of them, even the ones riding behind DH had difficulty on the small climbs, which is typical for those who only ride around Boston... they just have no experience on hills and typically have bikes with traditional doubles.
). Con is that I usually run and bike alone. 

