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Bahn Mi Brevet

02 Wednesday Apr 2014

Posted by Brian Hanson in Cycling

≈ 5 Comments

Tags

300k, acorn bags, brevet, Cycles Toussaint, cycling, harlequin wrap, nitto, noodles, rando, randonneur, Seattle, Selle Anatomica, SIR


190 miles in a day is a long way to ride your bike!  I don’t know if I’ll ever get over that part of randonneuring.  It’s a simple fact that most people will look at you funny when you talk about doing this sort of thing.  I hate to say it, but I feel that way when folks talk to me about running 20+ miles.  I think “why would you want to abuse your body like that?”.  I am a serious hypocrite.

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This guy doesn’t look particularly abused, right?  He was in great spirits for the first 100k while I rode with him.  He was chatting with me and several other riders.  Jason really loves these rides for the social aspect, I’m sure, as do I.  We were riding side-by-side for 10s of miles in the rain and wind when drafting would have been the prudent thing to do, just chatting about bikes, trips, rides, work, etc…  We were having a great time even after we bombed down a brutal climb (500+ feet at 13%) only to realize we should have studied the queue sheet harder at the control up top. We had missed the turn and ended up climbing up Lorde Hill again with 3 bonus miles and an extra half hour on our day.

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At the first control, an espresso stand, I realized I had forgotten my wallet.  After a short moment of panic, I decided the prudent thing to do was continue.  I had a lot of drinkable food (Perpetuem, Tailwind) and knew that I would be able to stock up on some goodies at the lunch stop.  Calories were not going to be the problem.  If I didn’t have a major bike issue, it was simply a matter of getting the ride done.  It did feel a bit strange to not buy anything at the couple of controls where I had a cashier sign my brevet card.  I’m sure this is really just my own issue, right?

BH-6.jpg

This seat continues to rock.  I had no saddle soreness.  When you are pedaling for 15+ hours, that says something.  There is no way any of my other seats would have been this comfy. As for the other contact points – no issues there either other than wetness.  Even with “waterproof” gloves and booty covered shoes, both were soaked by mid ride.  I am especially amazed that my hands were not numb with only a thin glove, and cotton tape wrapped bars.  The diamonds really help with hand comfort!  😉  As for my knees, they ended up not tightening and bothering me on this ride.  I would like to chalk it up to the 100k, 200k, and hip abductor exercises I’ve been doing, but I’m sure the Aleve helped.

Luckily we had sun on Camano Island at the apex of the route.  Several hours of dry weather, even.  That made things much more tolerable – I almost dried out, even…

BH-9.jpg

Turkeys were out.  Also, hawks, rabbits, lots of worms on the road, and a couple crazed barking rural road dogs that surprised the heck out of me and 3 others riding nearby.  Luckily we were at enough speed to get past without incident.  I would expect that Darwin will take care of those guys before we pass by that way again.

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As I was pedaling out of Arlington and joining up on the Centennial trail for a really nice woods ride, it started pouring again, and didn’t really stop until I was back in Seattle.  I’ve got to work out a better way to see the queue sheet at night.  With this much moisture, it was wet (from having to change it in the rain), and was fogging up the plastic cover on my rando bag.  The tiny light was OK, but my odometer was off enough at that point that the math I had to do in my head was becoming a chore for my weary brain.  I ended up teaming up with Bill and Patrick for the ride back to Woodinville and the Burke Gilman.  At that point I knew the way back, so it was auto pilot.  At one point Bill came up behind me after a bit of a weave and asked if I was OK.  That was a good wake up!  Shortly thereafter we just about ran into this tree/bush that had blown down across the trail.

flic.kr/p/mB5uDF

That last encounter kept me awake for the last few miles home…

 

2014 – Escape from Seattle Brevet

16 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by Brian Hanson in Cycling

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

200k, bicycle, bike, brevet, Cycles Toussaint, cycling, harlequin wrap, low-trail, nitto, noodles, rando, randonneur, Seattle, Selle Anatomica, SIR


BH-1.jpg

Yesterday was iffy.  I wasn’t going to do this ride if it was going to be starting out raining.  Luckily, most of the day stayed dry, so I went out and enjoyed it.  There were  99 folks signed up in the pre-registration, and I saw several folks there who hadn’t been on the list.  A 100+ turnout is huge (for me).  I started out slowly as my knees were sensitive after last week’s 100k.  This time I had a bit of soreness at the halfway point – nothing a bit of ibuprofen didn’t take care of.

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The bike functioned flawlessly, and I was comfortable to the end.  Great frame, saddle, pedals, tires, and fit.  I can’t wait to test this on a longer ride.

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The amazing thing about a brevet – it seems like 10 miles out, you hardly see anyone anymore.  Folks spread out quickly at these distances.  There is a lot of time to catch up with old and new acquaintances, and meditate (as I did on the beautiful mossy green forested road along Lake Roesiger between Granite Falls and Monroe).

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At the finish, there was chili and beer, and then a short 1 mile hop back to my home.

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Great day to be outdoors!

Full set of photos here: http://www.flickr.com/photos/stonehog/sets/72157642413443174/

Ride map: http://cyclemeter.com/51cfa6724f84c700/Cycle-20140315-0657?r=e

Cycles Toussaint

19 Wednesday Feb 2014

Posted by Brian Hanson in Cycling

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

650b, biking, Chilly Hilly, Cycles Toussaint, cycling, low-trail, Rawland, rivendell, Seattle, Soma Grand Randonneur, stag, Velo Routier


http://flic.kr/p/hmdmkS

I have been awaiting the Soma Grand Randonneur frame I had ordered a month ago, and suddenly got a wild hair to re-think the decision.  Actually, I lost patience as the rando season is swiftly approaching.  

Late last year, my LBS built up a few newer arrivals in the steel bike, low-trail, 650B vein.  I did some test rides, and came away with a definite feel for how these bikes differ from my existing rides.  In my weekly after-work stop, I was chatting with owner Kathleen, and discussing ordering a Rawland Stag (one of the bikes in this club I hadn’t ridden) when she suggested I look at the Toussaint again.  I quickly dismissed it as I recalled it being a 57cm frame, and feeling that was too small.  But the seed was planted.  I looked up the geometry again, and noticed it was not much different from my A. Homer Hilsen – 1cm less top tube, but the same stand over.  Hmmm – that’s why it felt so right when I rode it after the Soma.  

After much soul searching and pondering alternatives, it sounds like the bike I’ve been looking for was the Cycles Toussaint Velo Routier that was right under my nose for the past few months.  Kathleen is pulling some of the original build off it so I can use my existing cockpit and crankset.  I will pick it up this week, and I can’t wait to get it built up and out on the trail.  I may try to ride it on the Chilly Hilly this weekend – that would be amazing, but possible if the chips fall in my favor…

Surprise Routes

02 Sunday Feb 2014

Posted by Brian Hanson in Cycling

≈ Leave a comment

Tags

ballard locks, bicycle, Centennial Park, cycling, golden gardens, Myrtle Edwards, Super Bowl, Super Bowl Ride, Winter commute


I wanted to get up and do a different route to work today (had to go in on a Sunday to support Super Bowl mobile TV traffic).  I thought the route would add a few miles to my commute, give me some extra hills, and maybe take a lot longer.  Surprise – it was the same 12ish miles as my normal “long” route – ha!  It’s amazing how deceiving route planning can be.  It was a cool morning, and there were icy parts on the road, but the sun was out, and I knew it would be a good day for a ride.

BH-3.jpg

I went straight west a few miles to the Puget Sound.  I stopped for a few picture of the frosty beach.  It was vacant at 9am on a Sunday.  The mountains were trying to peak through the clouds, and we had a nice foggy inversion happening south of Seattle.

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Going across the Ballard Locks (also empty but for a few runners), I noticed the 12th man flag.

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The water was so gorgeous, I found myself looking for fish in the locks.  Nothing today, but with more time, I would have checked the fish ladders.  I’ve heard the steelhead are running now.

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I found a new route from the locks to the railway cut that allowed me to miss a short, steep rise, and then it was on to the Centennial and Myrtle Edwards and down the waterfront.  The sun really makes a day in Seattle extra great!

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Blinkie Lights are Obnoxious

24 Sunday Nov 2013

Posted by Brian Hanson in Cycling

≈ 7 Comments

Tags

B&M, bicycle commuting, blinkies, blinky, commute, cycling, flashlight, FUD, night cycling, safety, Schmidt, visibility


Lights at Night are Nice

For a few years on my commute from North Seattle into Downtown, I was often annoyed when an oncoming cyclist held up his hand to block my light from his eyes.  I noticed that it was the same guy, and my reaction was initially anger.  I was like how dare you act like my lights are annoying you when they are necessary for my safety in the darker times of my commute.  I am just now starting to understand this fella’s angst…

I bought into the common wisdom that more must be better, and so was on the path of MORE wattage, MORE blinks, MORE patterns, etc.  These lights are bright, so they must be MORE safe since drivers have to notice a blinking light in a sea of steady night lighting.  FUD.  It seems that in search of constant upgrades for new sales, “excessive” products are often pushed here in America – the land of fake safety.  When does this really end?  When cyclists are relegated to wearing bright lime-green reflective strobe encrusted LED sumo safety suits?  I can just see the headlines.

“Cyclist killed.  Was not wearing the ACME strobe suit.  No charges for the motorist who explained – I never saw him…”

Nice Focused Beam Headlight

After using blinking lights front and rear for a few years, I’ve now switched to steady dynamo lights powered by my front hub.  Besides the amazingly better light coverage and visibility I get from my Schmidt and B&M lights, I’ve formed into the opinion that blinking lights are, at best, less effective than steady beams, and most of the time just pointlessly dangerous for both the rider, and the people they are approaching.  Most of the popular “blinky” lights are toys for the uninitiated fearful commuter to waste money on and throw away after a season or two.  It has also been argued that blinking lights can actually draw drivers (drunk?) into collisions with cyclists, much like moths to a flame.  Update – another link on the “moth effect“.

If you are using a blinking front light, I would question that you have any ability to see what you’re riding toward.  Judging distance is greatly impaired under strobe light.  Just try playing baseball, football, soccer, or basketball under a strobe.  Tennis would be hilarious.  So would car racing.  Hmmm – or bicycle commuting.  I’m actually surprised people manage to keep it together as much as they do, though I would bet that most folks turn off the forward strobe after doing this for a few months, and the people I see using them are just the endless stream of the newly initiated to the glory of the new commute method where they also get exercise.

Saw it a mile away...

OK – for those that graduate from using blinking lights, what’s with the flashlight beams?  Why do manufacturers continue to just repackage flashlights into a bike mount?  This type of light has no cutoff to keep light from being directed directly into the eyes of oncoming traffic (or cyclists).  This is completely idiotic – it’s relatively simple and cheap to use mirrored reflectors to put all that nice light below head-level and on the road in front of you where you need it.  Cars haven’t had these kinds of lights for 40 years.  If normal traffic (which even on a bike path, we are a part of) used circular beam flashlights, everyone would have to have tinted front windows, and we would likely have many accidents caused by oncoming blinding lights.  When someone with a 600 lumen flashlight beam is coming at me on the Burke-Gilman path, I have to look away from them, and not track their progress as I approach.  That’s just not safe.  I always worry that I’ll miss the unlit pedestrian that is between us, or worse, veer into the approaching cyclist or their buddy pedaling next to them.  Wow – how annoying are these devices!  Wake up folks – you are just pissing off your fellow bikers and making things less safe.

Courtesy and common sense can make cycling a lot safer and more enjoyable:

  • If you are on a bike/pedestrian path, use a steady beam and point your flashlight at the road to keep the beam beneath oncoming cyclist’s eyes.
  • Better yet – get a good European focused, purpose-made bicycle light.
  • If you have folks riding behind you, turn off the blinking red lights.  My steady red twilight is visible a mile away too.  It doesn’t need to blink.  Get some real fenders, too.

Some questions to ponder:

  1. Is your priority seeing the road in front of you, or merely being as visible as possible from the front?
  2. If you are worried that cars won’t see you and turn or pull out in front of you, can you take other action to minimize the accident potential here?  Maybe not just bomb the hill with a big light to protect you?
  3. Don’t you want to see the road obstruction that may take you down?  Steady light in front of you is pretty useful.
  4. Do you feel that your need to be seen should be at the cost of your fellow riders safety?  It’s not.
Don't do this

Don’t do this

Give steady lights a chance.  If you are really concerned with your safety, read the stats.  You are 33x more likely to be killed in a passenger car, and 7x more likely to be killed as a pedestrian or on a motorcycle.  Bikes are a safe and healthy method for commuting.  Your visibility and view of the road ahead is made better with good, safe, focused European standard dynamo or battery lights like those made by Busch & Muller or Schmidt.  These are not too different from the modern lights on automobiles that keep the light focused and bright where you need it.  Think about your fellow cyclists, too.  It’s a growing community, and we need to be kind and safe around each other.

Use this!

Use this!

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