Monthly Archives: July 2015

Tour de Steamboat

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On Saturday, I rode the Tour de Steamboat along with 800 others.  It was a blast.  It was 111 miles of shear enjoyment.

The ride goes over Rabbit Ears Pass, then heads over to Gore Pass and then back to Steamboat Springs through Yampa.  The last 50 miles is generally downhill, with a little tailwind.  What a way to finish a ride.

I rode pretty much the whole way with Catherine and Bill.  And lots of others.  Kent Eriksen rode a tandem with a friend, Joanie, and we sat on them as much as we could, especially on the downhills.  Kent is an amazing athlete.  He is standing on his feet 15 hours a day, rides his bike sporadically, and can still sit beside me, on his road bike, at 28 mph, for long periods.

Catherine and Bill had just driven to Steamboat on Friday, 11 hours, and they were a little stiff. Catherine was dragging a bit for the few couple hours, until the top of Gore Pass, then she did an 180 degree turn around.

From the top of Gore Pass the last 55 miles or so, Bill and I rode pretty steady hard.  We had a15 mph average up until that point and ended up with a 19.3 mph average.  But, like I said above, it was generally downhill and sometimes tailwind.

The last couple hours we had groups of guys sitting on us.  We were cruising along pretty good, normally in the upper 20’s.  I was surprised that Bill kept coming by and doing his share so long.  I guess his collapsed lung issue is officially over.

Rolling back into Steamboat Springs it started looking rainy, like stormy rainy.  We kept going hard, even though it started rolling up some.  We were going way harder and Catherine wasn’t having any issues at all.  It was mildly depressing losing our governor.  Sometimes nursing someone along actually makes you ride better.  Some psychological deal I suppose.  But we weren’t nursing Catherine, so both Bill and I started feeling our legs.

It started raining about 3 miles out.  Lightening, thunder, the whole deal.  It sort of turned into an ever-man-for-himself situation, with our group splintering up just through town.  We hightailed it back to my van to get out of the cold rain.

But, like normal in Colorado in the summer, the rain only lasted 30 minutes or so.  The storm really played havoc on the venue, the after race BBQ and expo area.  Pop-up tents flying etc.  But, Katie, Kent’s wife, who was running the event, was on the ball and everything worked out great.

Afterward, there was an BBQ and the raffle for the Kent Eriksen bicycle.  Us Kansans just threw some blankets on the ground, in the shade, and napped.

The event was super fun.  It’s on my annual ride schedule now.  We stayed around Steamboat and rode with Kent and Katie on Sunday, then started driving towards Denver, but the traffic sucked, so we stopped in Silverthorne and drove back down to Arvada yesterday morning.

Catherine had a flight to Seattle to catch mid afternoon, but we got out for a short ride, 1/2 way up Lookout Mtn. before she had to go.

Bill, Vincent and I rode again, this time all the way up Lookout.  I ended up riding the last 1/2 pretty hard, just trying to see if my heart rate and power were different at 6000 feet than 9000. I’ve been wearing a heart rate strap for the last few days and am surprised how low it is at altitude. My max heart rate on Saturday was 156, but I wasn’t drilling it or anything.  Yesterday it got up to 172 and that felt pretty hard.   When I stopped for a flat Kent had, my heart rate dropped to 47.  That is pretty low considering we’re out in the middle of a ride.

Today we’re heading out early to ride mountain bikes.  It is supposed to rain on and off all day. I’m feeling a little tweaked, but that is fine.  I’m trying to ride a little harder for a while and riding MTB bikes in the mountains is always hard, no matter how you do it.  It is virtually impossible to ride easy off-road, especially when there is a bunch of climbing.

Bill and Catherine heading up Rabbit Ears early Saturday.

Bill and Catherine heading up Rabbit Ears early Saturday.

A little open range detour around Gore Pass.

A little open range detour around Gore Pass.

Kent and Joanie before the ride.

Kent and Joanie before the ride.

Kent and I out riding on Sunday.

Kent and I out riding on Sunday.

We ate steak on Saturday, after the ride.  We split two between the 4 of us.  Bill cooked them.  It was one of those cook your own meat places.

We ate steak on Saturday, after the ride. We split two between the 4 of us. Bill cooked them. It was one of those cook your own meat places.

Vincent finishing the Breck 68 mile race.  That is Brian in the background.  They both missed a turn, plus Vincent flatted a bunch.  They ended up 6 and 7th overall, which is pretty good considering.

Vincent finishing the Breck 68 mile race. That is Brian in the background. They both missed a turn, plus Vincent flatted a bunch. They ended up 6 and 7th overall, which is pretty good considering.

 

Wasting Time

This entry was posted in Just Life on by .

I really don’t consider myself someone that wastes that much time.  Sometimes I’m doing things that others don’t consider important, but each person has their own thoughts on what they consider quality use of their own time.

We all “own time”.  We’re allotted a certain amount of it when we are born.  At some point in our lives, we get to decide how and what we’re going to do with the time we’ve been allocated. I look at time like money.   It is very important and wasting it, is just that, wasting it.

I don’t watch very much TV.  Pretty much none, other than sporting events, the weather sometimes and a movie every once in a while.  I’ve watched two movies on Apple TV since I’ve been out in Colorado.  Both have turned out to be a total waste of my time.

Last night I was ready to go to sleep at 10:45.   I was washing my cycling clothing and there was 19 minutes to go on the wash cycle.  I made the mistake of turning on the TV in the room I’m staying in Vincent’s basement.  Next thing I know I’m watching a movie.  The movie had no redeeming qualities.  I’m not sure why I think a good movie is a less waste of time than a bad one, but I do.  Anyway, I watched it to nearly 2 am.  This is one reason I’d never have a television in my bedroom.

Now, this morning, I’m all tired from lack of sleep.  I rode over 4 hours yesterday on my MTB bikes and could have used that extra 2 hours.  Plus I missed all the action in the Tour’s stage today.  By the time I got up, everyone was split up, Contador had already fallen down and was chasing, so there was nothing left except everyone to ride across the line.  I have a hard time thinking about trading that shitty movie for a good Tour mountain stage.

I rode twice yesterday, both off-road.  The 2nd ride I ran into a guy on a tri-bike that was all wearing a total Specialized kit.  He saw me and rode up to me and told me he followed my website and used to race “with me” back when I rode for Specialized.  He told me he had been a loyal Specialized customer every since (I guess sponsorship works sometimes).  Then the guy starts asking me a ton of, what I consider a bunch of stupid questions, wants me to help him with his seat height and more stuff that seemed somewhat odd.

Of course I did most of what he wanted – Selfie with him, looked at his seat position, (like I know what seat position is good for a guy I meant 10 minutes earlier), and such.  Normally, the guys I meet out on the road are great.  One of the reasons this sport is so cool.   This wasn’t great. Not even close.  So not close I’d consider it  a waste of time.  Lisa had told me that dinner was going to be early and I was on a time restraint, so maybe that came into play, but whatever the reasons were, I wish I had that time back.

Anyway, like I said above, time is valuable.  And it is finite.  And one of the big problems with time is we don’t know how much of it each of us has.  So, we need to treat time with respect.  If you think you are doing something that has a high potential for falling into the waste category, then, in my opinion, you should stop doing it and do something that would be a better use.  No one likes to look back and consider what they’ve done to be a waste.

time