Tuesday, February 27, 2018

Climbing Everett Road...

Monday, February 26, 2018
There was a certain crispness to the air as I mounted my bike that told me though it was reasonably warm at the moment, I would be cold before I finished.  It was probably in the high forties and the sun was shining brightly as I rode out of Indian Springs onto Riverview Road.  I was headed for the closed section of Everett Road and the most difficult climb I would be undertaking since riding in southern Ohio during TourOhio.  I reached the bottom of Everett and said a prayer to the cycling gods that I would be able to climb the 2-mile ascent without having to stop.  I can think of only two times in my life that I was forced from my bike on a hill, one being while suffering from heat stroke during TourOhio and I did not want this to be the third.  I had been feeling quite strong on previous rides and had confidence because I knew I had the gearing to ride the hill – conditioning was all that was missing. 

I began the climb slowly, looking closely at road conditions that might cause my tires trouble.  As I climbed through this silent, heavily wooded section of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, I experienced that sense of calm and freedom that often accompanies time on a bike for me.  It has always been there and is maybe the reason I so enjoy riding.  Even as a child, I remember the feeling of escape and freedom it delivered.  Then, it made me feel like an adult.  Once out of sight of my house, no one knew what I was doing or could supervise me.  Adventure, mischief, freedom awaited.  And it still feels that way.  No one along to tell me where to turn or jobs that I have to do.  I just ride and make all the decisions.  My brain is free, as well.  And I think about many things, especially when climbing, to take my mind off the pain I feel in my thighs with each revolution of the pedals.

I looked up the road to see two people with dogs descending toward me.  As I reached and passed them, the woman turned to me and with arms outstretched as though to offer praise said, “I’m sooo impressed!  This is a tough one.”

I thanked her and continued to spin.  I was halfway, but still in the saddle.  I was on the smaller crank, but still had several gears to spare and meant to keep it that way, challenging my thighs to handle a harder pushing required.  I rose from the saddle for a minute to change the emphasis on my legs and continued to climb.  There were orange construction barrels on the side of the road where erosion was occurring and I eyed them thinking ‘one more barrel behind me’ with each one I passed.

I returned to the saddle as I approached the top.  I knew I’d make it and I knew I still had plenty in the tank for a long ride.  I passed the ‘road closed’ barrier thinking ‘it ain’t closed to me’ and pedaled on.

I stayed on Everett as it took me west towards Hinckley.  It had a very small shoulder and numerous pot holes.  Traffic was coming by at the posted speed of 50mph plus a few and the road rolled in such a way that visibility was poor.  I continued for several miles before turning and concluding it was not a good cycling road.

My return trip put me on Brecksville Road, which offers a fantastically wide shoulder and smooth riding.  As much as I want to find those wonderful country roads I had to ride when living in Highland Heights, I was starting to feel like that magic was gone and this was my new reality.  It wasn’t a bad one as I felt entirely safe with several feet between me and the cars.

My hands were freezing as I descended back into the valley.  I had to hurry to beat Heidi to the house.  She was coming for Amish casserole and Strickland’s ice cream and some father/daughter time.  I reached home having pushed hard up every hill, and there were several challenging ones, feeling strong and tired.  I’m amazed at how quickly I seem to return to a semblance of cycling shape and was looking forward to the next day when sunshine and fifties are in the forecast.  If it happens, it will be the first time in forever that I've managed consecutive riding days. 
Bike duration: Two hours.
Training Heart Rate: 135 bpm.
Calories Burned: 1,500.
Bonus: 22,000 steps.

Monday, February 26, 2018

Lowe's or Home Depot...

Sunday, February 25, 2018
My phone chimed indicating a text so I pulled it from my pocket to check it.

‘I’m heading for Loew’s to pick up some supplies.  Do you need anything?’

It was from Kathy and she meant Lowe’s – the builder’s supply place.  I was working on my cabinet doors and although I had measured several times before cutting, still managed to screw up and make two doors too small.  I figured it would be easier to call than text.

“I need two pieces of 2’x4’ birch plywood.  Three-quarter inch,” I said.

She delivered it to the house when she returned and about a half hour later, realized I’d screwed up more than two doors and would need two full sheets of plywood.  Damn.  I called her back.

“I need that receipt.  I’m going to return what you got me and get two full 4’x8’ sheets,” I said.

I rode my bike the short distance to her place.  She handed me the receipt and loaned me her SUV so that I could pick up the material.  I also had a Lowe’s gift card for $50, so the return, the purchase should be a net zero.

I went to Lowe’s carrying my wood to the Customer Service desk to conduct the return.  I pulled the receipt from my pocket when my turn came.

“This receipt is from Home Depot,” the clerk told me.

“Umm…is there two pieces of birch on it?” I asked…confused.

“Yup,” she said while scanning the tag on the wood.  “It’s the same price here as there.”

We agreed that she’d let me return the wood to them even though Kathy had actually been at Home Depot and so I went to get the wood I needed.  I called Kathy as I walked.

“At any point did you notice that everything in the store was orange (Home Depot color) and not blue?” I asked.

She was sure she’d been in Lowe’s and suggested maybe I had an old receipt in my pocket that just happened to have an identical purchase on it.  “Maybe the Lowe’s receipt fell out of your pocket and is in the car?”

This seemed almost impossible, but she had me thinking.  She called back in several minutes to admit she had in fact been in Home Depot.

“I’m such a ditz,” she concluded.

Ya think?

I brought my new purchase to the Customer Service desk and went over what had happened with the new clerk.  She scanned my return and said, “$34 for the return.”

Now…it had only been five minutes since I’d walked in the store and come to this same desk and the wood I was returning was scanned at $54 – their price being the same as Home Depot’s.  I said this, but she was adamant. 

“Well, I guess I’m going to Home Depot then,” I said – and did.

I did my return and took my new purchase to the SUV, which I’d taken the time to measure before leaving to be sure it would fit in the back only to find that while measuring the interior and finding it over four feet wide, I’d failed to measure the back gate – the way in which I’d have to put the wood into the vehicle – and regardless of how I turned and angled the wood, it wouldn’t fit in. 

I took the wood back into the store and had an attendant rip the sheets into sizes that would fit in the SUV before finally loading and heading home.  A trip that should have taken me 20 minutes took an hour and a half.  Ah…the beauty of home improvements.

Because I took all that time to correct a screw-up, I ran out of daylight to ride my bike, which killed me.  It was 60 degrees and sunny and I was dying to ride up the closed road Dakota and I had investigated on our 8-mile hike Friday.  I’ve been looking for a way out of the valley and Everrett Road, now closed due to a lack of use and poor condition, seemed like the perfect opportunity.  It was steep and long and went right through a very scenic, forested stretch of the Cuyahoga Valley National Park, leading to country roads that I relished for longer rides.  Well…it wasn’t going to happen but I consoled myself with the knowledge that the forecast for the next two days was sunny and warm enough to ride.  Maybe tomorrow…

Friday, February 23, 2018

"Do they have Sherpa's in the Adirondacks?"

Thursday, February 22, 2018

“I said can you hire a Sherpa in the Adirondacks,” Kimberly repeated.

I began to laugh, but noticed she didn’t think it a funny question.

“I want to climb all those mountains you talked about and be a member of that club…what’s it called again?”

“The 46’ers,” I said, referring to the 46 peaks of the Adirondacks above 4,000 feet of elevation.

I had told her how I was planning on taking them all in eventually – I have summited 34 to date – and she, looking for a long-term, physical challenge, was interested. 

“What will you be bringing up there that you’ll need a Sherpa to carry?” I asked.

She laughed and said, “I need someone to show me the way.”

Well, that could be true.  I told her what she already knew, that I go up there several times a year and plan to go this fall to walk the Northville/Placid trail, which is around 140 miles.

“I’ll be climbing the Seward Range on that trip.  It includes for trailess peaks I haven’t been on yet.  Those are peaks without marked and maintained trails so it’s best to go with someone so you don’t get lost.  I think John and maybe Paul will be joining me on that trip.  You’re welcome to come along,” I said.

I gave her the information on the book and corresponding trail map she would need, ‘High Peaks Region, 14th edition, by Tony Goodwyn, to execute her plan, but also promised to bring in some literature she could begin to read that described the region and helped people looking to get into hiking, camping and climbing in the Adirondacks discover the best approach to take.  If she is anything like me, having this kind of a goal, something that will likely be executed over several years, will do so much to maintain focus on getting and staying fit.  That, and lead to a discovery of the beauty of this region and the serenity it has to offer.

I picked Heidi up after work and we drove back to my place to get Dakota and do our hike.  “I’m tired and only want to do about two miles,” she said.

I needed another 9,000 steps to hit 20,000 for the day and would have none of that.  I figured I walk out until I hit my halfway point – two miles away – before she’d be onto me.  We started out, gabbing away about everything under the sun and were almost to my turnaround before she noticed what I’d done.

“You cheated, dad.  We’re walking a lot farther than two miles,” she said.

“Oh…did you say two?  I heard five,” I said.

Which is what we did.

We went to ‘Larry’s Tavern’ in Akron for dinner where I told her more about my plan to walk the North Country Trail.  “You can come and meet me on parts of it since it walks right through Ohio,” I said.  She thought it was a much better plan than being all the way out on the west coast doing the Pacific Crest Trail.

Jack called as I was heading home and we had another interesting conversation about ‘badass’ flyboys in the military (I reminded him how my lifelong friend, Todd Miller, had been a Blue Angel pilot in his day), Jordan Peterson, what freedom in America looked like today, and minimum qualifications for the Commander in Chief ought to include.

“I’m not comfortable with an actor or sports figure being able to become President with no kind of formal training or experience.  I would hate to think that a General could get to that level of command without being completely qualified to give orders and lead men,” he said.

“And yet, you’re arguing against what you just said about having freedom and how it is dwindling in the United States as compared to the rest of the world,” I said.  “You’re suggesting that the population doesn’t have the right to elect whoever they want – like, let’s say, Donald Trump.”

“Well…I’m just not comfortable with a lack of qualifications for that job.  Being 35 years old and born in the United States isn’t enough for me,” he concluded.

We agreed that we’d have to come up with those minimum qualifications and talk about it some more.  That young man continues to impress me.  Maybe someday he’ll be on a ticket for that job.  I’d vote for him.
Bonus: 21,000 steps

Thursday, February 22, 2018

Learning to listen...

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Jack called last night and as our conversations tend to do after covering LBJ and the Cavs, drifted to deeper, intellectual stuff.

We discussed abortion, gun control, transgender issues, and the alpha male mentality of the Army, but more importantly the necessity to listen to what another person is saying instead of trying to prepare what you are going to say as soon as they stop speaking.

“You have to hear their argument and what they’re trying to communicate – or get a clarification.  And do it agreeably, which is the biggest challenge,” I said.

He agreed – and, knowing from personal experience, puts it into practice.  He has a deep, inquisitive, and probing mind with the important ability to reflect on what he has heard and learned and then change his position.  I know from living my life how difficult that can be.

“I’m taking this test with Jordan Peterson, a psychologist.  It’s all about identifying your deficiencies, and writing about what you’d do differently in a situation if you could eliminate them,” he said.

I may not have that entirely correct, but shared with him how much of that I’d done when the most catastrophic event of my life…losing his mom…was playing out.  Though difficult to accept, I reflected on all that I had done and didn’t do that led her to want to dissolve our marriage of forty years.  To that point, I had thought I was pretty clever and a good and loving husband, but ignored so much of what I was doing to push her away.  There were many improvements I should have made and maybe would have if I’d had the chance with her, but she was done and so those improvements, if I’m making them, will serve me in future  relationships.

“It’s hard to look in the mirror and admit you’re wrong or that you have a character flaw that you can improve.  You’re following a structured program to do something about it early on.  I tend to do that as I walk alone in the woods or on isolated camping trips,” I said.

And I do.  What I have to be careful about is my tendency to beat myself up mentally, concluding that I’m a louse overall.  It can spiral down instead of creating an awareness that leads to self-improvement and particularly when going through a gut-wrenching, life changing event like a divorce from someone you truly love.

Oh yeah.  Exercise.  The rains continue to fall.  It was swampy when I arrived home to a light drizzle.  Cool, too, with the temperature dipping back down to a more seasonal low thirties.  I grabbed my umbrella and called to Dakota.  She was anxious to hike and didn’t really care about the rain.

We went five miles and with the steps and activities I’d put in at the farm, felt reasonably accomplished for the day.  The rains are supposed to continue for the next several days and with my biking mojo in full swing, I may need to hop on the trainer to satisfy that itch. 

Wednesday, February 21, 2018

Septic tanks...yuk

Tuesday, February 20, 2018
I’d received a text at home Monday evening saying that the urinals in the men’s room appeared to be backing up.  ‘Jinene thinks it could be the septic tanks are full’, it suggested.

Typically, with to 1,000 gallon tanks, I can go an entire year between emptying’s.  I was pretty sure it was May or June when it had last been done and so when I arrived and looked up the invoice to confirm, found it had been May.  Still…I needed to check.

There is a large, round cement slab covering each of the tanks.  They probably weigh around fifty pounds and aren’t too difficult to move.  Sealing the actual tank though is another, heavier one.  It runs a hundred pounds, is cone-tapered to fit snuggly into the opening to the tank, and is down two feet from ground level.  Kneeling on the ground in soggy grass, I reached in and tried to pull it up.  It was wedged and not budging.  I retrieved my flat bar, loosened it, and tried again.  It gave slowly and began to rise, but I could only pull with one hand from a squatting position and was sorely tested to get it above the hole to swing out of the way.  Once that was done, I could see into the pit with my head lamp as it was still dark.

“Holy shit,” I muttered to the shit three feet below me.  An 8” drain pipe brought all refuse from the toilets and sinks of the farm to this point.  Well…it tried to, at least.  The pipe was plugged with toilet paper and, well, other stuff, and wasn’t emptying into the tank, which was full to the bottom of the pipe.  In my cleverness, I returned to the shop, grabbed a hoe, and returned to free the drain pipe of its clog.  With lamp fixed on the problem, I probed and poked at the clog and it began to loosen.  Then, quite unexpectedly and with over 200 feet of water pressure built up behind it, the plug broke loose and rushed into the tank.  As it hit the dividing wall in the tank, it sent a spray of debris upward and in the direction of my face.  In those fleeting seconds, I envisioned my own death, drowned in a septic tank of unknown depth for I was sure I would fall in after being doused, I moved with the speed and agility of LBJ attacking the hoop for a dunk.  It missed me, thankfully, and I am here now to tell you of this near life-altering event. 

When Ed from Geauga Septic arrived later that morning to pump out the tanks, he told me how he’s seen those spouts reach six feet high.  “You were lucky it missed you,” he said with some admiration.

“Someone else would have been calling you if it hadn’t.  I’d be in therapy right now if it had,” I responded.

As I drove home praying the rains would hold off, I saw that the temperature registering on my car dashboard was 68 degrees.  In February.  I got home just as the sun was peeking through overcast skies and my hopes were buoyed.  I changed quickly, patted Dakota and told her I came first, and headed out on my bike.

I climbed out of the valley on SR 303 once again and rode straight to the bike/hike trail at the top of the hill.  Once there, thirty minutes after leaving the house, I rode north for thirty more minutes.  There were many hikers, runners and other cyclists on the path, which dismayed me, but I made the best of it.  At my turn-around, I spoke to another cyclist about country roads I could ride in the area.  He steered me towards Hinckley, a rural community west about ten miles, but was perplexed that I didn’t want to ride these paths or the towpath.

“Too many people walking dogs, jogging and paying more attention to their cell phones than approaching cyclists.  I don’t want one of them to step in front of me as I’m riding and send us both to the pavement,” I said.

I headed home lathered in sweat.  It was a very good sensation for a February day and I had to note that my legs and lungs were getting stronger already from the rides I’d been doing.  I’m climbing more easily and with power from the saddle.  Muscle memory from fifty years of riding, I suppose.
Bike duration: Two hours.
Training Heart Rate: 135 bpm.
Calories Burned: 1,500.
Bonus: 24,000 steps.

Tuesday, February 20, 2018

More 'shut up and dribble'

Monday, February 19, 2018

Yesterday I wrote about the ‘shut up and dribble’ debate between Fox News reporter Laura Ingraham and superstar basketball players LeBron James and Kevin Durant.  I made a couple of mistakes in what I wrote by believing what someone told me instead of researching the story myself.  I had limited access to the internet at the time of writing, but that’s no excuse.  The discussion reported by Ingraham did not happen in a taxi to an unsuspecting LeBron and Kevin, but was unrehearsed.  I don’t know if they thought it was going out on social media or not, but I suspect they did.  She did slam LeBron for not having an education appropriate enough to offer an opinion, as if there was a qualifier, but did not say that all should go to college – though it was implied.

Much back and forth since with NBA stars – current and former, the NBA commissioner, hosts of sports analysts and reporters and public figures in general supporting what LeBron and Kevin were trying to articulate – essentially that Donald Trump was a disappointment as a president and was demeaning their understanding of what office should represent.  A majority of Americans agree with this sentiment and voice their opinions verbally and through social media on a regular basis…as is there protected right – and duty.

I have told all of my children and have always exercised this myself, that if someone is voicing an opinion on something that challenges their fundamental belief system, they have two choices – leave the room or speak out.  Otherwise, through their presence and silence, they are endorsing the speaker and his or her views.  I understand the need to ‘get along’ in polite society, but if someone is espousing racist views or attacking anyone or any group on anything they find repugnant, choices are limited for me if I am to be able to live with myself.  I’ve left the room more than once and spoken up more often to challenge what I disagree with.  Uncomfortable?  Sure.  Do those same strong-minded individuals resent me after?  Yup.  Do I give a shit?  Not really.  I can live with myself and that is the one I’m stuck with forever.  So…don’t ‘shut up and dribble’ LeBron – not that I thought you ever would.  I admire a man that stays true to his convictions.  I try to do the same and hope I’ve taught my children the same.

The rain never stopped.  It wasn’t really that warm, either.  There was no way I was riding and instead of hiking in the mess, I worked building the cabinets into my ‘man cave’.  Tomorrow should be warmer – sixties – and I’m hoping, drier as well. 

Monday, February 19, 2018

"Shut up and dribble"

Sunday, February 18, 2018

I listened to a disturbing news report recently.  Laura Ingraham, a reporter on Fox News, outraged that basketball stars LeBron James and Keven Durant, caught on tape in a taxi discussing Donald Trump and what they view as his racist politics and leanings, said ‘shut up and dribble’ to her audience.  She made statements about their poor grammar, inarticulate delivery (not a press conference or were anything they were saying supposed to be aired for anyone else to hear), lack of a college education and earning over $100 million somehow disqualified them from offering political opinions about the president.  Everything else aside, two things bother me about what she said and seemed to feel.  One – that any American citizen, regardless of their standing in society, does not have the absolute protection of free speech to voice their displeasure with the actions of their president.  The other – that somehow a college education is necessary to success in life and that it raises the standing of the individual to the point where they can voice their opinions.  Well…horseshit to both of those ideas.  Even if LeBron and KD can have an influence over the minds and actions of young listeners and fans, it is the job of parents to help them understand the weight that such opinions should carry and the understanding that in America we have the absolute right to speak our minds.  College doesn’t change that.  College doesn’t guarantee anything to anyone and isn’t right for everyone and no one should be made to feel any remorse over not having achieved ‘higher learning’.  Oh well…off the soapbox and on to other things.

Cold returned on Friday and prohibited me from going out for a ride over the weekend.  I did manage a six-mile hike with Dakota on Saturday, though.  We headed on our Hale Farm trail and as I descended from the woods to the road below, couldn’t help but notice a group of people trotting over the field towards that same road.  As I drew closer, I noticed they were in Army green and carrying rifles.

I hit the road and walked in the direction they were moving.  Obviously, they were members of the Reserves or National Guard and running some kind of practice drill, assaulting Hale Farm and Village.  It was fascinating to watch and though we were close enough to see, paid us no mind at all.  Fortunately, Dakota did not think she should run over and visit them.

We continued on and had an opossum contact, which Dakota did take an interest in.  I called her back and she returned without too much difficulty – she does not seem to have the canine instinct to kill critters smaller than her – and we walked on. 

This week’s forecast is for temperatures in the fifties and sixties, but loads of rain.  I have to decide about riding in the rain – I will admit to be over anxious to ride.  We will see how dedicated I am…

Friday, February 16, 2018

Toughing out a ride...

Thursday, February 15, 2018

I pulled my sweatshirt over my head and tossed it on the tractor sitting next to my desk (it’s an unusual office).  I was warm.  It was February, at least according to my computer calendar, but it was also 58 degrees.  I had accumulated many hours of comp time over the past several weeks trying to keep ice and snow from hampering our operations at the farm and was now looking forward to taking advantage of a couple of them by leaving early and going for a long bike ride on ‘Locke’.  I had hoped to do that the day before, but the rains had set in as I left work and never relented.  Today’s forecast was similar, my weather app on the computer said ‘rain in late afternoon…or earlier if John tries to leave early’.  Bastard!

I was on the bike by 2:45 and riding under overcast, foreboding skies.  I said a prayer to Thor, God of Thunder, and he answered with a misty drizzle.  Screw it.  I rode on.

I headed north and east out of Peninsula, riding four miles up SR 303 with the intention of working my way on roads I’d never ridden towards Hudson.  We’d see from there.  I crested the hill out of town and was prepared to continue east on 303, which did have an excellent riding shoulder, but cars moving past at 50mph plus, when I noticed a parking lot on my right with a sign that read ‘Summit County Metroparks bike and hike trail’.  I turned and rode in to check it out. 

From where I sat on my bike, under a kiosk with a map designating the ride/hike trails from the ‘you are here’ point on the map, I realized that there were many miles of trails in all directions.  The question in my mind was whether they were blacktopped or not.  I did not have tires on ‘Locke’ that would favor the hard crushed surface of the towpath and I was thinking these paths were of the same construction…at some point.  From what I could see from that kiosk though, they were paved.  I headed south to find out more.

I managed about five miles before the paved path dumped onto a road and apparently ended.  I returned to the kiosk and with closer scrutiny, realized I should have continued a short distance on the road after which I would have picked up the bike trail again.  Oh well…another day.  I was soaked at that point – over an hour into my ride – and was thinking I might head home.  Another look at the map on the kiosk bulletin board though, and I found myself heading north along another paved section of trail that was completely surrounded by woods and rock ledges that climbed to the east and fell into steep ravines to the west, towards the Cuyahoga River far below.  Occasionally, I found myself riding over hard packed pieces of ice that had not yet melted and were the result of cross country skiers and hikers traversing these same trails and packing down the snow.  I rode another twenty minutes before reaching a point on the trail that was too icy for riding and turned for home, cold and soaked to the bone.

When I hit SR303 on my return, it was raining hard, the temperature was down 10 degrees and the bike was hydroplaning on the wet roads.  I was descending at 40 mph and thinking it wasn’t the best idea in the world, but I was a cowboy, after all.  I arrived home after more than two hours of riding, cold but elated.  It was my longest ride in a very long time and I felt good…and strong.  I had overcome elements that should have kept me in a warm, snug house, which was essential to getting a real exercise mojo back in place.  I spent ten minutes cleaning ‘Locke’, determined that it was not going to rust.

John stopped over for a spaghetti dinner and baseball movie.  We watched ‘42’, the riveting story of what baseball great Jackie Robinson was forced to endure to exercise his rights as a free American citizen, which he’d fought in WWII to preserve (he was a Lieutenant, but was dishonorably discharged after the war when he refused to move to the back of an Army transport bus, as the unwritten code of the Army required of all blacks).  It reminded me again of my decision about the naming of my own son after this American icon and hero and made me glad that I had.  I told John of my riding exploits, encouraging him to buy a similar bike, and laid out a rough plan of my thinking for hiking the North Country Trail.  “Only sixteen people have thru-hiked it to date.  Maybe I’ll be seventeen?” I said.

Just keep thinking, Butch, that’s what you’re good at.
Bike duration: Two hours and 15 minutes.
Training Heart Rate: 135 bpm.
Calories Burned: 1,700.
Bonus: 22,000 steps.

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

A satisfying ride on 'Locke'

Tuesday, February 13, 2018

I had managed two colder rides on ‘Locke’ prior to yesterday and loved the new bike.  It has the climbing gears I need to handle difficult terrain on long journeys and the steel frame is forgiving and responsive.  I can feel the difference it makes as I bump over the crappy roads in the valley.

I came home from work thinking about a ride and how cold my feet were likely to get.  I stopped at Horseshoe Pond to check on the trail conditions and was not surprised to find them extremely icy.  Dakota looked longingly at me when I opened the front door, but seemed to understand when I explained to her that hiking in the ice was just not an option.  It was that or guilt over eating another box of Kleenex.

I looked at the box and back at her.  She was cowering under my newly constructed counter in my office.  “Does it really taste that good?” I asked.  She hid her face.  Apparently, it did.

I pulled on my regular riding gear and supplemented with tights, riding mittens, my new head/face covering and a second set of socks.  I decided against the booties since it was forty degrees…a veritable heat wave.

Kathy had been warning me that she needed to do some training on hills for an upcoming ride she was going to do and so I climbed out of the valley in a heavier gear, pushing hard from the saddle and getting a good thigh burn.  As I reached the top I knew I’d be dropping down and then climbing out again.  I needed it.  I rode past Boston Mills and watched the ski lift carrying customers to the top for the brief glide down the hill.  Still, it was an interesting backdrop for a bike ride.

I passed two other riders as I cruised through the valley…both giving me enthusiastic ‘thumbs up’.  We were the few, the brave, the stupid…

I climbed once more out of the valley thinking I was doing myself some real good with the second effort.  I know I’m a very long way from good conditioning, but I could also feel the old determination that leads to difficult efforts and excellent results.  As I finished the climb, sweat coming down my face, my already cold feet and I knew what was coming.  The descent completed the foot freeze and I turned for home – thirty minutes away. 

I pulled into the driveway, dismounted, and walked on feet devoid of feeling.  It would take several minutes for the thaw, but I’d managed almost two hours of riding and felt fantastic.  ‘Locke’ is a hell of a bike and tomorrow is supposed to be in the forties, so I’ll hopefully hit the road for a second day in a row, which hasn’t happened in over a year!
Bike duration: One hour and 45 minutes.
Training Heart Rate: 135 bpm.
Calories Burned: 1,400.
Bonus: 21,000 steps.