I was talking to someone the other day about the cross-country solo bike tour that he did years ago. He had wanted to do it in college but couldn't afford it. So after he'd been working for a few years he got his boss to allow him to take a long vacation, 6 weeks I think, and cycled from east to west, camping along the way. Of course this was before smartphones and gps devices. He said he learned a lot about being independent.
I don't remember if I mentioned -- I took my bike to the shop on Friday night for a derailleur adjustment because the shifting was off, and they said the rear hub needed maintenance. I was planning to do a 50-mile charity ride on Sunday and they said I could probably do that okay, but I got the impression that the bike would not be rideable if it failed while I was out there.
I was going to do the charity ride (a fundraiser for a volunteer fire department) with a friend, but her plans changed so I rode it on my own. The start was about a 90-minute drive from my house. Due to the continuing heat wave I wanted to start early, so I woke up way before dawn in order to be on the road by 6:00, arriving around 7:30, ready to roll at 8:00. A couple of months ago I had worked out a way to short-cut the 100-mile route down to about 76 miles and had hoped to do that, but it turned out to be too hot for that. I also had a thought about adding a detour on some really nice roads to lengthen their 50-mile route a bit, but it was even too hot for that. In fact I was so worried about the heat that I figured out a way to shortcut their 50-mile route down to 35, just in case. But it didn't seem too hot when I reached the decision point for that, so I continued on the 50-mile route.
I was fine when I reached the first rest stop, about halfway through the ride. I was there for a while, chatting with a few other riders, then talking to the volunteer bike mechanic about the shop where he works. When I started to ride again it seemed to have gotten hotter. I had brought three water bottles with me -- two for drinking and one (a collapsible bottle) for pouring water on my head and back and on the sleeves of my Cool Wings. I had put one regular bottle and the collapsible one in the freezer overnight so I'd have cold water for as long as possible. And for a while I had the collapsible bottle on my back under my jersey to cool me down.
The second stop was for water and ice only, no food. It was 10 miles after the first stop and 15 miles from the end. It seemed like more than 10 miles to get there -- the sun was starting to feel pretty hot and there was not much shade. There were plenty of trees in every direction but very few were anywhere near the road. But I knew it would be this way, hence the third bottle and ice. I stayed at the second stop for a while, too, chatting with the same riders that I saw at the first one plus one other man. We had an interesting conversation. It turned out that one of them got engaged to his wife at a restaurant in my hometown. While I was there I saw someone from my bike club riding past.
Once I got going again it was very hot. Since there were long stretches without shade, I had decided in advance to be proactive and stop several times when I did find a shady tree just to cool down for a few minutes and pour water on me. This seemed to help. I didn't feel great when I finished but was much better than I normally would be after spending so much time in the sun with temps in the high 90s.
At the end I saw the fellow club member who had passed me at the water stop. He had done the full century. He sat with me while I ate, and after a while we were joined by a couple of other club members. I was glad to see them, since I didn't think there would be anyone that I knew on the ride. The post-ride lunch was in the air-conditioned fire station, so we all had a chance to cool down before the long drive home.
I dropped my bike off at the LBS for the hub maintenance yesterday. I'm not sure how long it will take so I might be off the bike until the weekend.
- Gray 2010 carbon WSD road bike, Rivet Independence saddle
- Red hardtail 26" aluminum mountain bike, Bontrager Evoke WSD saddle
- Royal blue 2018 aluminum gravel bike, Rivet Pearl saddle
Gone but not forgotten:
- Silver 2003 aluminum road bike
- Two awesome worn out Juliana saddles