Four days of cycling squeezed in between Thanksgiving and Christmas...what more could you ask for?!
A little less traffic. All of the routes started out on a pretty busy thoroughfare, but at least that part of the ride was on a four-lane road. The scary stuff came later each day, when we were sharing two-lane country roads with traffic moving at 55 mph (or more). Some scary stuff.
A little warmer weather. Starting off each day in the upper thirties to the low forties made for a cold ride. It would eventually warm up and the riding became much more pleasurable. Staying warm in the tent at night was another challenge.
Better food. The food was mediocre. Frogmore stew and steamed oysters at the nightly movie was fun and tasty, but the entrees each day were not very good. Sadly, the seafood night was probably the worst :-( The best food we had was actually at the rest stops. The vegetable soup, cornbread, and pistachio cake at a local church and the shrimp and grits at the turnaround point on Day One were memorable. So was the Italian wedding soup, cheese and crackers at beautiful Mepkin Abbey (where we were greeted by Santa with some minty chapstick).
My goal was to get a December century done and I accomplished that on the first day, despite my head cold. Would I do Festivelo again? Maybe. Not many other bike rides going on in December.
Wednesday, December 31, 2008
Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Hell of the North
Here's the trailer for a film about Paris-Roubaix, the Queen of the Classics, The Hell of the North, arguably the toughest single day road race in the world.
Thursday, July 31, 2008
On the MP3...summer running tunes
Made in China by Juliana Hatfield
Consolers of the Lonely by The Raconteurs
(gets my vote for best rock album of the decade!)
Monday, July 28, 2008
RAINSTORM
After last years bike tour, Bicycle Illinois, I definitely wanted a tour with more varied terrain. The miles of endless corn fields was enough to drive me mad. This year I rode in the inaugural edition of RAINSTORM, a touring ride through southern Indiana that culminated in the Ride Across Indiana (RAIN). RAIN is a "one day, one way, 160 mile" bike ride from Terre Haute to Richmond.
RAINSTORM preceded RAIN with 5 days of 100+ mile riding through the beautifully rolling Indiana landscape. Road conditions were superb, the drivers were unbelievably courteous, and the ride organization was near perfect. We stayed in state park lodges/inns or hotels every night, which really helped with the recovery, and recovery was the name of the game.
Other than couple of brief showers, the weather for the 6 days of riding was excellent. Dogs were the only nuisance on the trip, with at least a couple of chasers every day (though no bites!) It was as near perfect a bike trip as I could have ever hoped for! Hope to find something similar for next years tour.
RAINSTORM preceded RAIN with 5 days of 100+ mile riding through the beautifully rolling Indiana landscape. Road conditions were superb, the drivers were unbelievably courteous, and the ride organization was near perfect. We stayed in state park lodges/inns or hotels every night, which really helped with the recovery, and recovery was the name of the game.
Other than couple of brief showers, the weather for the 6 days of riding was excellent. Dogs were the only nuisance on the trip, with at least a couple of chasers every day (though no bites!) It was as near perfect a bike trip as I could have ever hoped for! Hope to find something similar for next years tour.
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