
Originally Posted by
OakLeaf
It really depends on the club.
I belong to three clubs.
One has leaderless rides that follow the same route on a fixed schedule. Who shows up, rides.
Another club has two weekly rides; one person for each ride is responsible for posting the route each week to the club forum. I'm one of those people. I'm not really a ride leader and this is made clear on the forum. I watch the weather, etc., ahead of the ride, and post if I'm not planning to make it, but if anyone else wants to ride it's up to them.
The third club I belong to is a large and well-regulated club. Every ride has a leader who's been through a training that lasts at least one day and I think two. Every rider has to sign a release and the leader is responsible for making sure everyone gets back okay.
So there's really a range.
That's an enormous undertaking. I mark routes for the ride one of my clubs puts on once a year, and this past year I coordinated the marking teams. My estimate is that it takes about 10 person-hours per 30 miles of route. And I insist that my marking teams go out in pairs for safety. You don't want to be kneeling down in the road without someone else watching for/signaling to traffic.
I was assuming this was a fixed route, so it would presumably only need to be painted every so often as the paint wears off. All of our club's weekly training ride routes, which average 25 miles, are marked and it is not a huge undertaking to maintain.
I've lead a club ride for the past five years that has four route options, the longest being 65 miles. It takes 3-4 people the better part of six hours to mark. It's a PITA, but once it's marked, it's good for at least a few months, especially if I use white paint. It seems to last the longest. Of course, these are rural roads that get less traffic.
Live with intention. Walk to the edge. Listen hard. Practice wellness. Play with abandon. Laugh. Choose with no regret. Continue to learn. Appreciate your friends. Do what you love. Live as if this is all there is.
--Mary Anne Radmacher