Independence Day 14er

This is my first TR with my new (to me) Canon 30D. I really like the pictures compared to my old P&S.

Independence Day this year was spent on a 14er (again) and fun (more so than last year). Lacking this time were skis. We brought everything based on some photos from a week ago showing substantial snow left, nearly top-to-bottom. Unfortunately, we drove up and immediately saw that our intended line had substantially melted out.

Our group was myself, Nate, Matt, Katrina, and Andrew. Friday morning we all woke up at 3am (except Andrew, who lives in Glenwood), got ready, and piled into my car around 4. We were heading up to Kite Lake to hike Mt. Democrat, then have some beer and BBQ burgers. We picked up Matt along the way, then headed for the hills.

As you can see, the car was pretty full.

The plan was to meet there at 6am then head out. Andrew’s always late so we weren’t too concerned when we got there a little before 6:45. He wasn’t there yet, so we started unpacking and got ready to head out.

The view from the parking lot, showing a distressing lack of snow:

Unpacking:

Nate ready to go:

Since I was driving and had to be not drunk for the drive home, I got the party started with Silver Bullet #1 at 7am. We finally got sick of waiting for Andrew and left at 7:30. There’s no cell service so there was no way to try to reach him, so we just left, hoping he’d show since he had the grill.

And up we go:

Taking a quick break:

Nate’s very sweaty back:


The dogs were really enjoying themselves.


Matt and Nate pushed on to the summit while I hung back with Katrina. I arrived a minute or two behind them, where they were already celebrating.


We all grabbed a seat and had a couple beers, when a sudden, evil chill filled the air. Andrew had arrived:


He had overslept and started at the trailhead at 8:45. He summitted at 9:45. Andrew has picked up some speed in the past year for sure.

Even one of the dogs was taking part in the fun:

Just hanging out:

Before we left for the summit, it was time for a quick restroom break. Andrew of course had to find the most ridiculously scenic spot to go.


We booked it down, then fired up the grill and had a few beers, just joking around for a few hours. The drive home was uneventful (fortunately) despite my exhaustion. Everyone else in the car passed out. Made it home, smeared some aloe on our horrible sunburns, I hopped in the shower and passed out.

The burn on my shoulders has since blistered. My forehead is bright red, hopefully things will cool off a little before I have to bike to work tomorrow – I don’t think it’d feel too good otherwise.

Bee update

I have conducted some research on bee velocities this morning as a follow up to yesterday’s kamikaze bee attack. It seems that bees can fly on the order of 15-20mph. Add that to my speed just under 25mph and a slight headwind and we can see that the bee targeted and attacked at a net speed of approximately 40mph. Impressive.

Update to the update: we now have an artists’ rendition of what took place

Friggin’ Bees

As I was riding my bike home (for the 6th consecutive business day, starting with Bike to Work Day last Wednesday), going along at 24.8mph, I felt a sharp pain on the inside of my left elbow. I looked down and there was a bee stuck in there. Frig! I slapped at it a few times to make sure it was dead and gone, then started pulling the stinger out. Son of a bitch it hurt. I looked down and saw I was down to about 23mph, so I stepped it back up and then finished the job. I couldn’t stop, I was making record time (54:27 ride time).

Ouch.

THE END

Bike to work

Wednesday was Bike to Work day. Preparation started Sunday with a proof of concept ride in. Nate broke a spoke and so we had a bit of a detour for repair. Wednesday went well, especially the free breakfast right across the street from the office. That evening biking to work was discussed, and after a couple beers a goal to not fill up the car with gas prior to going on vacation (a couple weeks) was made. Things get a little fuzzy, but it somehow turned into trying to bike to work as much as possible. It’s not too bad, doing it I get two full-hour workouts each day, and it only takes up an extra hour of my time (which would be spent half sleeping and half doing nothing). On top of that I save on the order of $6 a day in gas alone, not to mention the wear and tear on the car.

By and by, it looks like this ridiculous stunt will end up featured in the next round of the company newsletter.

Disc Golf

Just finally loaded the pictures from the past couple weeks. Not much came out other than these, when Andrew was in town for a few days. Enjoy.

The Solstice was celebrated this weekend with beer. Might have some shots of the aftermath later. The days are officially getting shorter now, and winter is on the way.

New Camera

I purchased a used Canon 30D a couple of weeks ago, and wasted plenty of time deciding what to do about lenses. I finally settled on ordering a 50mm f/1.8 first, due to the low price and great image quality. Without further ado, here are a few boring test shots. It’s time to get familiar with
this thing before I get out taking some real photographs.






Item #1 on the list: figure out white balance.

The Road to Hell is Paved

Today was the day of the Elephant Rock Cycling Festival, down in Castle Rock, CO. There are several course options, ranging from very short up to 50, 65, and 100 miles. My roommate Nate brought up the event, and signed up for the 65 mile (aka metric century) option on Wednesday. I had intended to do the same, but a couple beers and a little machismo let to me signing up for the full blown century ride, complete with 3,500′ of cumulative elevation gain. Oops.

I was out of bed at 4:30 this morning, threw down some breakfast, and we were on the road about 5am. We followed the convoy of Subarus with bikes in/on/behind them all the way down, got our registration packets, and started pedaling at 6:10am. Not long in, we came to the first substantial hill, and the pain kicked in for the first time. I was thinking I’d probably be better off just not taking the turnoff for the Century, and doing “just” 65.


I blew past the first aid station at mile 8 (seriously?), and started feeling pretty good. I had figured it out, I just needed to get the blood pumping and I’d be good to go. Another 14 miles and I was rethinking things. The first text message in a series of many to Nate – 7:46 am, aid station #2 (22.4mi):

At aid station. Thinking metric

As I was leaving the station, I sent the next text message:

If you check this let me know and I’ll try to hold up

Keep in mind the longest ride I’d done before today was on the order of 27.5 miles in one shot. After some fruit, refilling my water bottles with energy drink, etc, I started feeling better. Two miles later, I made the fateful decision to turn left, sending myself on a detour on the order of 35 miles long. The next text message came an hour and a half later, at aid station #3 (36.9mi):

Disregard. On century course.

I was starting to tire, but every aid station gave me a chance to jam bagels, fruit, gu, and energy drink in my mouth, and to rest for a few minutes. What followed was an absolutely gorgeous ride through the plains out to the east of Black Forest. The clouds were creating spectacular lighting – I wished I had my camera (though I’m glad I didn’t, I didn’t need any more weight or distraction). This is an area I may have to return to for a nice ride someday. There was an unfortunate headwind/crosswind most of the way, which drained me even faster than I otherwise would have been. The text message from aid station #4 (48.3mi), 10:10am:

OMFG

Such powerful emotion conveyed in four simple letters. The climb continued from this point, although it was largely through the forest so the wind at least was broken a bit. An hour later at the next aid station (61.2mi), Nate’s phone received this gem:

Kill me now

The hills had been getting to me, and I was wondering if I could finish at all at this point. They constantly rolled on and off, too short to gear down and pick up any real speed, but long enough to hurt on the way up. Around mile 67, I went blind from sweat, possibly mixed with sunscreen, running down into my eyes. They seared any time I tried to open them, and wiping was less than worthless. I rode blind for a couple minutes, then pulled off the side and sprayed my eyes out with water. At the next aid station (68.2mi) I saw that Nate had finished the 65 (and felt spectacular – his words, not mine) and sent me a note saying the last hill wasn’t as bad as the map showed. I certainly hoped so; I also hoped I was just about to the top of it. I (incorrectly) remembered almost constant downhill from around that point.

I got more and more drained as the constantly rolling hills continued, and eventually reached what I thought was the final hill. I tore down at 30-35mph, thrilled that it was finally over. Then I reached the true final hill. It was a long, constant, painful gain at roughly miles 89-92. I had to stop several times, dismount, and lean on my bike just to breathe and let my legs get a little bit of energy back. At some point Nate had asked if I was alive via text. This is the final text, sent from near the top of the hill (but not quite there). It was 1:37pm, and my bike computer said 93.0 miles:

Ducking liar. Seven miles out

Thankfully, I finally reached the top of the final hill, put it in top gear, and rode the tailwind most of the way back. The final stretch has you going under the highway, and up one last, very small hill – then you turn off into a gentle downhill, and coast across the finish line. Pure agony:


My computer said 101 miles, with a total ride time of 6h50m. I hit the brakes, clumsily unclipped and unmounted the bike, and painfully hobbled the bike back to the car. I’m still in pain, and expect to be at least tomorrow, probably through mid-week. I’m amazed that I stuck with it, as painful as it was, and I’m glad to have done it.