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HOW TO CURE TRAINING BURNOUT

AFTER TEN WEEKS FOCUSED ON BUILDING BACK SOME FITNESS, I was feeling quite burned out.  We're two weeks away from the Surf N Summit...

... not the time to quit training.

The last few days have been just what the doctor ordered.

  • No agenda
  • No plan or route or group
  • No focussing on the computer readings 

  • Yes, let's explore a new area

Fast, slow, long, short, easy, hard.

Mountain biking is the perfect antidote for me.

It's not what I'll be racing this summer,
or needing for the 120 miles and 16000' of vert of the upcoming challenge.

Just fun and playful.

Still riding.

Still spinning.

Still filling the lungs with air,
and the legs with lactic acid.

But, with some jumps and berms and slides mixed in. 

Burned out?

Change it up. 

---

165ish?
8.5 hrs sleep
No Strength work
0 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
87

 


>

HOW TO PRETEND IT’S NOT A BIKE VACATION.

THE FIRST RULE OF BRINGING THE BIKE on a vacation is key.  It’s not hiding it the back of the van or car, and it’s not saying…

… I’ll only ride if the amazing doll house tour falls through.

Rule No. 1: Make sure the important stuff is the priority.

Today, that meant a 3.5 mile hike out to Observation Point.

Fully appreciate it’s awesomeness.

Hike back 3.5 miles,
loving it.

Even if you have a nice blister brewing,
because you never hike or wear these shoes.

Follow that up with plans to grill up some dinner at sunset.

Once everything is taken care of…

… totally cool to check out the sweet local single track.

Exactly how my day went.

Perfect.

The single is a new addition the land here near my grandpa's cabin, which is the only reason a lugged the bike up here...

... to give it a more thorough inspection in the morning.

"May the 4th be with you"

---

The view down into Zion Canyon

One of my favorite things is my folding fire pit.  Folds down, easy to travel with.

Found a place to do pull ups.

---

165ish?
9 hrs sleep
Pullups Pushups Airsquats
0 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
86


>

SOME RIDES ARE MORE EXPENSIVE THAN OTHERS

I SHOULD HAVE TAKEN IT AS A SIGN OF THINGS TO COME.  I’d just crushed my phone in the van’s door jamb.  Ouch.  But, not as big as the ouch that precedes…

Is my bike okay?

 And, too think, I was really enjoying a playful moment on challenging single track in Southern Utah.

Feeling good,
confident,
and fast.

Shoulda stayed humble,
cautious,
aware. 

Going down a rocky ledge, my front wheel caught in a hole.

The bike stopped.

I arced high through the air. 

We both landed among the jagged boulders.

Nothing on me was broken.

A few tears in my fuselage.

In flight, I’d been hyper aware of my recovering cranium.

Surfergirl got to see it all.

We laughed…

It’s only a flesh wound!

Back at the trailhead, loading my bike into the van, I noticed the cracked seat stay.

It had taken a direct hit.

Cracked halfway through.

First day of our trip.

Ugh.

Drove straight to O’Reilly Autoparts.

This is gonna sound stupid, but ya got anything to repair carbon?

Like carbon fiber?

Just like that.

We’ll let’s see what JB Weld has.

Music to my ears.

I know JB Weld can fix a cracked radiator.

Tomorrow, I’ll see how their carbon repair formula holds up.

Wish us luck.

---

165.3
6 hrs sleep
No strength work today
0 minutes recovery 
10 minutes reading + Journaling 
88

 


>

DO YOU HAVE ATOMIC HABITS

IN ATOMIC HABITS, the great James Clear, made a point about how to write a best-selling book.  He's sold 15,000,000 copies to date.  His directive?...

... Be the book.

The point isn't that we should quit our day jobs and write a book,
though that would be a good excuse to ride, run and swim all day long.

However, as I think of my miraculous progress since coming out of ICU in January...

... two things are pretty obvious.

  • I'm basically following my own protocol from The 30-Day Rip On RaceDay Challenge.
  • I've made a few updates since I wrote the content for the challenge

For example, for the last 10 weeks I've been in the base-building phase.

It's gone pretty well...

  • Fitness is up
  • Weight is coming down

... but I have lots of top-end to recover.

True power has been offline since the last races of the previous year.

How am I going to get that back?

How did I build the base?

What are next steps?

Since I'm being the book,
I think I ought to write the book....

... take all the content, update it and put it in book form.

To do it right, I think I need a huge challenge.

Something ridiculous,
that would be a real test.

A reason,
a Why?

Something you might even want to get in on.

I'm not sure what it is yet.

But, it's percolating.

Stay tuned as the rehab continues.

---

165.8
7.5 hrs sleep
PullUps and PushUps and Dead Lifts
20 minutes recovery 
90 minutes reading + Journaling 
89

 


>

TAKING TIME TO RIDE FAST

TO BE FASTER THAN 99% of the competition, we need to value our 1%.  Or, maybe several 1%s.  Assuming we sleep for 8 hours, Do you?...

... we have 960 waking minutes.

One measly 1% block of our waking hours is 9.6 minutes.

What can we do with 1% of our day to get faster?

  • Chop and prep a fresh salad
  • Stretch
  • A massage or Hypervolt session
  • Meditate
  • Clean and lube our chains
  • Check our tires and brake pads
  • PushUps and PullUps and Squats

Most of the things, like those above, we can do in less than 10 minutes...

... yet, we act like it'll take hours.

I do.

Maybe you don't.

It's not a question of if we have the time to get faster, but...

... will we use what we have correctly?

 

---

166 
8 hrs sleep
PullUps and PushUps and Dead Lifts
20 minutes recovery 
90 minutes reading + Journaling 
86


>

MOMENTUM IS EVERYTHING

IT'S NOT THAT WE NEGLECT MOMENTUM, it's that we often don't respect it enough. As the great Sir Isaac Newton said, A bike in motion will stay in motion unless...

... acted upon by an outside force.

In other words, our legs move us forward, everything else...

... conspires to slow us down.

Everything.

Take turns.

Being able to carry our momentum through a turn means we spend less energy exiting the turn and getting back up to speed.

If we're really good,
we might make those behind work much harder.

If we're unskilled,
we spend all kinds of energy struggling to catch back on.

We get worn down by momentum suckers.

Remember, the corollary is Our parked bike will stay parked unless...

... acted upon by us.

---

166 
8 hrs sleep
PullUps and PushUps and Dead Lifts
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
87


>

I DO NOT THINK YOU KNOW THE MEANING OF THAT ZONE

THERE ARE FEW GUARANTEES IN LIFE.  One, however, is a lock.  Invite your veryfast friends to do a recon ride where everybody is "committed" to ride zone two.  Then...

... let the mayhem unfold.

Here's the bad and the good of it.

I felt bad right away.

Yes, I was suffering, sure.

But I was really feeling bad for all the suckers like me who thought this would be chill with a few efforts.

Instead, the first three hours...

... was one massive effort.

  • 248 watts normalized power
  • Average HR 150 bpm
  • 3000' elevation gain

Probably nothing for you, 
definitely something for me.

The gravel roads are shift right now.

Ruts all over the place, 
stutter bumps everywhere else.

Fortunately, I decided to do some tire pressure testing today.

I aired down.

26 lbs vs my normal 30 up front.

28 lbs vs my normal 32 in back.

I rimmed out a handful of times, both wheels.

Mainly sharp edges or rocks.

Tires held up great - Conti Terra Speed 45s.

I think I can go lower.

No doubt when the trails are as nasty as they are it is muchmuch faster.

I also tested having breakfast before riding.

What?

Yeah, true.

I usually wake up at the last second and eat as soon as I start riding.

This morning, I was so excited I woke with tons of time.

A full hour.

I fired up a bowl of oatmeal,
dropped in frozen blueberries,
plus macadamia nuts for some fat.

It stayed down great.

Shocking given the hideous zone too-dang-fast we were pushing.

Definitely going to try that again because I felt really good.

That's it...

... hope your weekend is epic.

---

---

165.1 
7.5 hrs sleep
PullUps and PushUps only
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
89 (fitness still down 30% from last year, and darn happy to be back at it) 


>

HOW DO YOU STACK UP?

BEING A COMMITTED ATHLETE pays all kinds of dividends.  Which is cool. What's cooler is deconstructing what we do and...

... seeing how we stack up.

Not against each other.

Just riding
or running
or swimming

won't do it.

For example, we also...

  • Eat
  • Sleep
  • Maintain our equipment
  • Study the latest info
  • Might have a coach
  • Make sure we have proper fit of all our gear
  • Fine tune our body mechanics
  • Get as aero as possible
  • Test hardware
  • Train with other committed athletes
  • Challenge ourselves, long and short-term
  • Have our "day jobs" squared away and thriving
  • Prioritize family and friends

... and all that plus a lot more stacks,
compounds and
combines.

What can we add, refine, improve so we are truly...

... Ready To Rip On RaceDay.

...

By the way, I'm getting ready to launch dog tags with one of our sayings on one side and personal info on the other.

Would you like to know when they are ready?

--- 

165.5
8.5 hrs sleep
PullUps and PushUps only
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
82


>

IN A MOOD FOR VIOLENCE

IT'S BEEN JUST OVER TWO MONTHS since being able to start training after my mishap.  Prior to that, it was 6 weeks off the bike or anything but walking...

... my fitness was zip.

Why do base at all?

Because I was effectively starting from zero.

Sure, I had decades of consistent riding, running, etc.  But, I couldn't just jump right back into it.

I needed to give my body a break...

... and a chance to recalibrate.

It's been fun.

I've been able to do some group rides...

... hanging on, then getting dropped.

Base training is good for that, for building the aerobic engine.

It's not good for putting a sting into our efforts...

... or responding in kind.

That only comes from...

  • Intervals
  • Racing

... there's no other way.

The racing could be the kind where we pin a number on, spicy group rides, or getting after PRs.

The intervals, well there's a million ways to flog ourselves doing those.

In short,
we gotta do the explosive efforts.

There's no way around it.

It's not for everyone.

Only those who want to find out what they're really capable of.

Me, I'm targeting two days a week for the carnage.

Tuesdays.
Saturdays.

The key to success will be...

... showing up fresh, in a mood for violence.

--- 

165.1
9 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
83


>

JUST BELIEVE THIS ONE FACT

THERE ARE ALL KINDS OF THEORIES:  The Big Bang, Evolution, Creationism, even The Simulation.  No matter which one, if any, you subscribe to...

... one fact remains.

This body is the only one we got.

I dunno why people treat 'em so badly.

Heck I've done plenty of bad myself.

But, there's nothing like racing to keep me on track.

Even just racing myself,
my times.

No matter what your beliefs...

... these bodies do their best when we eat clean.

Of course, there are a million beliefs on what that entails.

I keep it simple.

  • No processed foods
  • As much fresh veggies and berries as possible
  • Plenty of protein
  • Plenty of water

That's my belief of what actually works...

... and I think it's a fact.

Because every day we are building our bodies, it's important to remember...

... Every Day Is RaceDay.

---

167.1
8 hrs Sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery 
90 minutes reading + Journaling 
83


>

WITH ALL THY FITNESS, GET...

IS THERE MORE TO RACING, than racing?  Well, yeah.  Of course.  A lot more, the only question is are we taking advantage of the opportunities.  As the wise one said...

... With all thy fitness, get adventurous.

By that, I don't mean in a racy way.

The point is to go somewhere,
do something new,
unattempted.

We've got the fitness,
which too few people actually have,
so we can accomplish what most cannot fathom to attempt.

So, what's it gonna be... 

  • Ride across the country
  • Travel to a remote destination
  • Run the Grand Canyon rim to rim
  • Go from hut to hut in Colorado

... pick something.

What's holding us back... 

  • A tour guide
  • Language barriers
  • Support in case things go wrong

... nothing that can't be solved.

Do it.

---

166.7
7 hrs Sleep
Pullups and Pushups
20 minutes recovery 
90 minutes reading + Journaling 
82

Tell us about it.


>

H0W ARE THEY SO EXPLOSIVE?

OK, WE GET IT THAT PROS ARE FASTER.  Right?  But, how they heck are they so explosive without racing?  Asking for a friend, myself, and...

... anybody forced to train alone.

We gotta know.

  • Personally, I enjoy the solitude.
  • Others don't near other riders or group rides
  • And, then there's those who's with uncooperative schedules

How are the outstanding pros doing it?

Not racing, 
showing up and slaughtering their competition.

Intervals?

Well, personally I can't stand intervals for more than a few weeks without...

... wanting to take a hammer to my bike computer.

Riding and racing with the teammates?

That makes a little more sense, but only a little.  Who wants to drill or get drilled by their trusted allies?

Way more rested?

Mmmmmaybe the non-racing leads to a more rested and ready body?

Healthier?

Because they aren't traveling so much:

  • They aren't picking up colds and flues.  
  • They aren't eating whatever they can find.
  • They aren't taking such large risks as when racing

E-racing?

Are they just getting on a trainer and duking it out with the online competition?   If they are, don't they need to have fake profiles for privacy as well as less fitness?

Virtual racing?

Setting up race course segments on Strava and trying to beat the PRs?

 

I dunno, for me...

... ain't nothing like the real thing.

---

166.2
8 hrs Sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
80


>

GETTING PUSHED AROUND IN THE GROUP

THE RIDE WAS GETTING SPICEY.  The pace increasing considerably, and the terrain going from flat to sawtooth.  The legs were screaming, and...

... and I was moving backwards.

Then, it happened.

Just before the apex of quick power climb, 
just when I needed it most...

... my pal, The Gambler, gave me some pedal assist.

Yep, he had the gaul to put his paws on my lycra and pushed me some.

And I loved it.

It was just the right amount
to keep me on.

Sly enough I quietly thought and hoped...

... Maybe nobody noticed.

That's thing about needing help.

When we could really use some,
we don't ask.

Good givers, like The Gambler, don't ask...

... the just give.

Without making a big deal about it.

---

165.8
9 hrs Sleep
No Strengthwork today
10 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
80


>

SHOULD WE LEARN TO TUMBLE?

LIKE MOST OF US, we have a group of regular riders.  So far, 3 of the 10 of us have broken bones this year.  One hit a tree skiing, one crossed wheels today...

... and, well, you know my saga.

I was off the back over the top,
and rolled up on the mishap.

If you're a real rider, 
you've broken your collar bone.

Ok, I don't know if that's 100% true.

But, I have broken one,
while riding.

So, it's common.

And I gotta ask...

... Should we take tumbling lessons?

Would it help?

Would it keep us from doing the natural thing vs...

... rolling out of danger?

Maybe, sometimes.

Not a guarantee,
perhaps a skill worth...

  • learning
  • practicing
  • investigating

... got a thought on this?

---

166.7
7.5ish hrs Sleep
No Strengthwork today
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
82


>

IS THIS THE BEST RIDE IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA?

IMAGINE A RIDE THAT FEATURES all the beauty and wonder of Southern California.  The beaches, the shaded prairies, the tall forests with ski runs...

... covering all of it in a single day.

Oh, and almost no traffic.

Impossible you say.

Not.

100% possible.

It took us years to scout it.

Here are some pics from 2023... route below.

Here's the route: https://www.strava.com/routes/3216181932420212282

It's 120 miles, 15000' of climbing.

We start at Doheny State Beach and wind up in Big Bear, refueling at convenience stores and restaurants along the way.

It's almost all dirt most to Corona, then a 35-mile bike trail across the Inland Empire.  At the bottom of the mountains, we jump on an abandoned logging road, and it's nearly all dirt to the top, and down into Big Bear.

Epic.

Insanely epic.

Are you game for the ride of the year?

Click here: https://pedalindustries.com/products/free-registration-for-the-surf-n-summit-california-5-18-24

---

Some of the FAQ's from a Zoom call yesterday.

Logistics:

      1.    Where to stay Friday Night?  Dinner plans?  Stay as close as you can to Dana Point, where we start… it’s only a few minutes drive to my house.  We’ll have dinner at my place and go over last minute specifics.

      2.    Ride start time?  Official Start is 6am, I highly recommend slower riders leave earlier to make sure we all get to Colton at the same time for the flat 35 miles across the Inland Empire – much easier in a group.

      3.    Where can we store bags? My van… Susie will drive it to Big Bear.

      4.    Confirm - unsupported?  Any plan B options for repairs, crashes, etc.? It’s self-supported, be prepared.

            a. Anyone we can hire to assist?  Is there a way to transport overnight bag? Susie will drive it to Big Bear.

      5.    Big Bear

            a. Anyone staying the night?  TBD on this.

            b. Transporation back to Orange County?  TBD on this.  Some ride back, some Uber back.  We need a final head count.

      5.    Snow blocking trails? Currently yes, but it’s getting warmer and it’s a south facing climb, we should be fine.

People

      1.    How many people are coming and their capabilities?  Unknown, people always commit and don’t show, others never commit and just show up.

            a. We are locomotives not goats:).  Likelihood of creating riding groups of different speeds (any forecasted pacing / finish times)? For sure start early, and KNOW HOW TO UPLOAD A ROUTE to your device.  Any regrouping points?  One for sure, in Colton at a convenience store… depending on pace, we might all meet up at Seven Oaks restaurant about 1/3 up the climb… some of us will do some extra climbing and single track at end of 35 mile bike trail, others will go straight to the climb, which is why we might end up there at roughly same time.

Nutrition

      1.    Where are the nutrition and water stops? ONeil Park is about 2 hours in, a campground with water and bathrooms.  Do NOT dillydally at any stops.  Next stop is Colton, about 4 hours away.  These are my estimates for your speed.

      2.    Water stops on the final climb or is two bottles sufficient? At Seven Oaks restaurant, we can get water, soda, hamburgers, fries… depending on heat, 2-3 bottles.  My bike holds 3.

      3.    Nutrition recommendations? 300-400 calories per hour.  Whatever you like and sits well in your stomach. I like CarboRocket, 333 calories/bottle.

Equipment

      1.    Tire recommendation? I am running Continental Terra Speed 45s, with 32lbs in the rear, 28 in the front.  Lots and lots of sealant before we roll. 

  What are the gravel sections like? Pretty nice, a little more rutted from rain run-off, but totally 100% ridable and fun.  There’s a little single track where trail is currently flooded close to the start.

      2.    Other gear that would be helpful (e.g. hydration pack, lights). Lights for sure, early start, and maybe a late finish.  Be able to carry 3 large bottles worth of water. Get a BLACK  mosquito net, bugs can be nasty… we learned the hard way that the white nets reflect light which was blinding as the sun was setting.

                3.            Clothing recommendations?  (Temp change to expect)?  May is a tricky month, I’ll carry my KOM Jacket which is great for wind and water and small enough to go in my Barrito Bag … my bike will have a Barrito for the KOM jacket, and food and drink mix supplies in my Day Ripper bag.  Only other item I’d carry would be arm warmers… but highly unlikely we’ll need them.  My Wahoo died 30 minutes from the top… bring a battery booster.

---

166
7.5ish hrs Sleep
Pushups and Pullups
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
78

 


>

ARE YOU STRONG ENOUGH TO BE...

I POLLED THE RIPPERS and 100% of them lift weights or do resistance exercise year round.  Well, I was shocked by that.  I had no idea if we rubbing off on each other...

... just hope.

In the beginning, after our first day with real weight, we often echo the great Cheryl Crow song...

... God, I feel like hell tonight.

Why do it?

  • Strong bones
  • Good posture
  • Improved ability to handle challenges

Why not?

  • Takes time
  • Potential to get hurt

Here's my current program,
takes about 15 minutes.

  • 6 pullups
  • 18 pushups
  • 10 shoulder press
  • 5 pullups
  • 15 pushups
  • 6 squats
  • 4 pullups
  • 12 pushups
  • 20 toe raises, 10 heel raises
  • 3 pullups
  • 9 pushups
  • 10 curls (vanity muscles)
  • 2 pullups
  • 6 pushups

In other words, mainly pullups and pushups with something extra to break up the sets.

The focus is on large muscle groups.

In Natural Born Heroes: Mastering the Lost Secrets of Strength and Endurance, there's a strong emphasis on tendon strength being key to true athlete prowess.  We develop that moving heavy weight with large muscle groups...

... the stuff we need to be fast.

For the bar...

  • Jump up to the bar, and let yourself down slowly.
  • Use a pullup assist machine
  • Giant rubberbands

For pushups...

  • Figure out hand positions that are comfy on the shoulders
  • It's cool to start on your knees

Squats...

  • Do air squats and put that arse in the grarsse
  • Go half way down

Start somewhere,
just start.

---

166
7.5ish hrs Sleep
20 pullups 60 pushups 15 shoulder presses + other stuff
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
79


>

HOW TO OVERCOME INJURY

I'VE BEEN ASKED TWICE TODAY if I had any feelings of Why me? after my brain injury.  And, how did I overcome that?  Well, good questions because...

... we all gotta battle through the shiz.

During the darkest days, I only had one thought.

How can I fix this?

We've all been dealt multiple bad hands over the years, and if we think about it...

... we often come through them stronger, better.

It never seems like it at the time.

Our challenges, I believe, are our challenges, for a reason.

As rotten as they appear...

... they are personalized gifts.

If they weren't for our benefit and didn't totally suck,
they'd be easy to overcome,
requiring little effort,
personal growth,
or change.

With that in mind, I set about studying and researching how best to recover from this unplanned set back.  

There's plenty of improvement still to be made...

... and that's exciting as hell!

---

166.7
8ish hrs Sleep
20 pullups 60 pushups 15 shoulder presses + other stuff
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
79


>

GIMME SHELTER

THERE AIN'T NOTHING LIKE A TAILWIND to blow the group to pieces.  The palms were bending, for sure...

... this one was gonna hurt.

It's counter intuitive.

But, it goes like this.

Alone, a tailwind feels nice.

A chance to tap lightly on the pedals and fly along.

In a group, it's whole different game.

The strong go to the front and drill it.

'problem is, there's no draft,
no place to hide,
no rest.

Which is exactly how it went down today.

Three of us were rotating.

Hard pulls.

It felt terrible,
and great.

Nobody else was pulling through.

I didn't blame 'em,
it was hard as heck.

I glanced back...

... gap was 30 feet.

Then 300 feet.

Then, a slight bend in the road,
an every so tiny gap opened, and...

... I was ejected.

Just couldn't close it.

No draft.

How was the ride back up the coast into the wind? 

Well, alone it woulda been a bear.

In the group, much easier.

Sure the brief moment pulling through stung a bit, then...

... it was right back to the shelter.

So, there you have it.

Tailwind, get on the front and get a gap.

Headwind, take it easy, nothings getting away.

---

168.4
9ish hrs Sleep
20 pullups 60 pushups 15 shoulder presses
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
78


>

DO LESS, AND OBSESS

CAN'T GET THIS CONCEPT OUTTA MY MIND, not because I've never considered it, because it's so darn rhymey. I coudn't say it better...

... Do less, and obsess.

Maybe I just needed to hear the message?

The idea of having 1 (one) 'A' race a year has always turned me on...

  • It's more fun to have one focus
  • dive into the nittygritty
  • get granular
  • geek out

... that's the shift I love.

Yeah, I might end up with a bike that's not good for much but a particular course,
training that is so specialized as to be worthless for everything else.

But, that's the point.

To be so singular,
to be uniquely prepared.

Then, and only then, I might have a chance...

... and that's all the hope I need.

When I'm that locked in, it's easy to treat...

... all other races as distractions at best.

Places to test...

  • equipment
  • strategy
  • training

... nothing more.

When I'm that locked in, it's easy to commit... 

... to training blocks and weight lifting.

When I'm that locked in, it's easy to see...

... the big picture.

To do less,
and obsess.

---

168.7
8ish hrs Sleep
20 pullups 60 pushups 15 shoulder presses
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
76


>

HE'S TRYING TO KILL ME

THE POOR WOMAN WAS RED IN THE FACE, if looks could kill her guide/date would be dead.  They'd just cleared a very overgrown jungle and were now pushing their bikes up a rocky stretch...

... who could blame her?

Who could blame him?

Sometimes our sense of adventure...

... is total nonsense.

I could only laugh.

Don't kill him here, you need to get home first!

They had a ways to go.

We have about 5 weeks to prep for the SurfNSummit.

Yeah, it's far.

Lots of climbing.

But, still I'm surprised at how many people misjudge what it takes.

Some, think it's just impossible to complete...

... usually my most fit friends.

Others, show up with what appears to be no business attempting it...

... but, hope and the desire to do something epic.

It's one of those Henry Ford moments.

Whether you think can, or think you can't...

... you're right.

So, if you think you can ride 100+ miles with 15,000+ feet of climbing...

... click here to check it out: 

https://pedalindustries.com/products/free-registration-for-the-surf-n-summit-california-5-18-24

---

168.2
9ish hrs Sleep
No Strength Work
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
76er 


>

AN OBSERVATION ON UNEVEN POWER BETWEEN LEGS

ONE OF THE SETTINGS ON MY POWER METER shows the power put out by each leg.  It can def ovewhelm for an entire ride, because we can...

... freak out about data we don't like.

It's on one of my Wahoo screens.

I see it from time to time on a ride.

Consciously trying to even out the power was annoying the heck out of me.

One leg was always stronger, unless I reallyreallyreallyreally focused.

Then, I had an idea.

Something to try, 
that I used to do.

This came to me when I noticed standing and climbing,
power was always 50/50.

Hmmmm.

What's the difference?

Then I noticed, 
same thing when it got steep and I really had to put out some power.

Well, that was nice to see...

... somewhat calming.

Hmmmm...

... how to do that all the time?

Welp, this is just an observation.

It might not work for you.

Meter could be mismonitoring, but this makes all the difference in the world...

... when I consciously focus on pedaling with the heels down.

What?

Really?

Yes.

What I think is happening is I'm eliminating a dead spot along the top of my pedal stroke...

... gonna verify with my genius bike fitter, Ashley.

---

167.3
8ish hrs Sleep
No Strength Work
20 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
78

 


>

THE WHAT AND WHY OF A PROPER EZ SPIN

I'VE BEEN TRYING TO GET THE LEGS TO COME AROUND, which means I had to actually dedicate myself to do some easy spins.  Because, like most of us it's just...

... darn hard to go easy.

Or, is it just me?

First off, what constitutes an easy spin?

Two things:

  • Low effort
  • High rpm's

How low?

Very bottom of Zone 2, or anything in Zone 1.

How high?

90-100+ rpm's.

Why?

Well, one of my early coaches called it a Rinse Ride for a reason.  

If we are really doing it correctly, 
our legs feel all clean and springy because...

... we rinsed out the crud.

Why else?

  • It's good on the brain
  • Takes the pressure off, simply relaxing
  • Great time to catch up with friends and chat while spinning

How long?

45-90 min seems about right.

The things we think about when we're just spinnin' ez.

---

166.9
8ish hrs Sleep
Just PullUps and PushUps today
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
73


>

EVER HAD THE CRUD BEAT OUT OF YOU, FOR REAL?

GROWING UP, we fought a lot.  We were too weak to do much physical damage, but there was plenty of pride and shame on the line.  It's not much different now...

... when we race.

If we truly get the crud beat out us by...

  • the course
  • the competition
  • our worse, ourselves

... there is only one question.

Did we really get it beat out of us?

Or, are we destined to get pummeled over and over again because...

... the crud is still there?

Is our diet a joke?

Do our handling skills still stink?

Does our bike squeak and wobble?

'Cause if that crud is still there, then...

... it's not beat out of us.

We've just learned to live with mediocrity...

... and that's just plain cruddy.

---

167.8
8ish hrs Sleep
2 Rip On RaceDay Circuits
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
74


>

IS IT TIME TO CONSIDER ROAD PEDALS FOR OFFROAD?

WHEN I WAS PRE-RIDING LEADVILLE a while back, the phenom who would shatter the course record floated by me as I labored.  He made it look so easy...

... was it the pedals?

99% of MTB racers,
dismount on that course. 

There is no way they'd sport road shoes and pedals,
even though they are...

  • Lighter
  • More aero
  • Offer better contact and efficiency

... because once fouled they're VERY difficult to get engaged.

Gravel,
is another deal.

Unless we are pushing the boundaries,
ripping single track,
slaloming sand...

... we're not going to dismount.

The only time would be if crashed,
or unclipped to rutter a turn.

In most gravel races,
that's not likely.

So, should we run the road set up offroad?

I have multiple friends who roll the dice in local XC races...

... and even the long, epic stuff.

It almost always works out great.

Worth the risk?

Up to you.

Worth testing?

100%.

---

167.6
7.5ish hrs Sleep
2 Rip On RaceDay Circuits
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
74


>

HAVE YOU EVER TRIED TRAINING BIG BLOCKS?

 A QUESTION CAME UP LAST NIGHT ON OUR ZOOM CALL.  Have you ever trained big training blocks like Keegan Swenson just posted.  Good question...

... does it work?

Maybe.

Here's what I can tell you from personal experience.

18 months ago, I was prepping for my insane time goal at Leadville.

I was really committed.

Holed up in Breckinridge all by myself,
for the month prior.

It's easy to be selfish with the time,
when you're by yourself.

The race is in August.

In July, I did..

  • 20 hours
  • 22 hours
  • 25 hours

... a lot more than my normal 10-12 hours a week.

It was very race specific training.

Lots of Zone 2.

Recovery
was key.

I came out of that in awesome shape,
and had the best race
of
my
life.

Does it work for everybody?

I have no idea.

But, I'll definitely do it again when prepping for a once in a life quest. 

----

168.9
7.5ish hrs Sleep
2 Rip On RaceDay Circuits
10 minutes recovery 
90 minutes reading + Journaling 
73

 

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

THINGS TO CHECK FIRST...

 THERE ARE A FEW THINGS THAT CAN MAKE OR BREAK a race, the chief being the bike.  Bikes don't win races, but they sure can make things a lot harder...

... or a lot easier.

As I went through my checklist, I found a few issues:

  • Rear brake pad smoked
  • Sealant dried out
  • Battery low

It's kinda nice to have brakes that work, especially with a ripping downhill like Saturday's.  

The course should be in pretty good shape, but that doesn't mean a small wire or piece of glass couldn't be a day-ender without sealant.

And c'mon...

... ya can't ride these modern bikes without good batteries.

And, I'm not just talking about the derailleur batteries.  Many of the shifters have their own small batteries.

I have made the mistake of not checking the shifter batteries.

Heck, I didn't even know about them until the start of the Filthy 50 a couple of years ago.  I didn't warm up, just saddled up and headed to the start.

Typically MTB XC start... everybody pinned to get to the single track first...

... I got there last.

Shifter was dead, I was spun out and then spit out.

15 minutes later, with some help from the mechanic on site, I was back at it.

Which is exactly why I came up with the RaceDay Bike Checklist, and made it into a sticker.

https://pedalindustries.com/products/raceday-ready™-checklist-stickers

For about a year now we've been shipping the stickers out with each RaceDay Bag purchase.  They're great for tool boxes and benches.

Here's a link to check 'em out: 

https://pedalindustries.com/products/raceday-ready™-checklist-stickers

----

168.7
8.5ish hrs Sleep
2 Rip On RaceDay Circuits
20 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
71

 

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 

 


>

THE HEROIC MOVE

THERE'S A LOT OF GREAT RACING GOING ON.  Locally, regionally, internationally.  Sometimes we witness the unfathomable attack from impossibly far out, other times...

... a second or third wind, for the win.

By inches.

We shouldn't be impressed.

I'm mean,
it's cool.

We all cheer.

But the truth is the victory was secured long ago.

When nobody was cheering.

It was dark,
lonely,
cold.

The alarm was more drill sergeant, than fan.

In those moments...

... the heroes make their moves.

If we're lucky,
we witness the results.

---

169.1
9ish hrs sleep
No strength work today
20 minutes recovery 
180 minutes reading + Journaling 
72


>

IT'S LIKE THE SUN GOING UP ON ME

40 DEGREES, 80% HUMIDITY ain't nothing.  Combine that with a dawn start, the sun hidden behind the hills, and, well, when you're going 20+ mph in your underpants...

... it's bonechilly.

I left the knee warmers behind.

No vest.
No jacket.

Just arm warmers,
a base layer,
skull cap.

It's risky,
we might freeze,
this is how we do it...

... when we know sunny times are ahead.

So are they?

Whether we are enjoying the longer days,
recovering from an injury,
just getting back at it...

... we hope and plan for...

  • better fitness
  • decreased fatness
  • all things to improve

... it's a process.

And, we know it.

Just like the sun coming up, 

we imperceptibly rise to the occasion.

That's how today was for me.

Still got dropped,
but made it a little further.

I'll take it. 

Here's a snapshot of where things stand.

There's nothing like a good fitness journey.

How's yours going?

---

168.7
8ish hrs sleep
10 Pullups 30 Pushups
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
73 (per training peaks)


>

MY DUMBEST PREDICTION YET

PARIS-ROUBAIX IS SUNDAY.  I can't wait.  It's always so fun to watch, and such a battle of machine, mind, and bike handling.  Lots of drama, and this year...

... is starts before the famed Arenberg Forest.

The forest is always crazy.

Mud.

Cobbles.

A massive battle for the front ensues for those who want the best chance of getting through with the lead group...

... unscathed.

This year, the organizers decide a chicane right before entering the forest would be a good idea.

Less dangerous.

I looked at the layout.

Here's my prediction.

Rather than racing for the forest entrance to avoid carnage...

... they will race to the chicane.

And...

  • have plenty of lycra on the pavement.
  • or in the barriers
  • or both.

... I hope I'm wrong.

Then, we have to wonder, at least I do, what is the point of racing?

Call me crazy, but I think part of it is to show bike handling prowess.

We're still gonna see it with the chicane.

Just seems like a little chicanery...

... to appease, who?

---

169.1
8 hrs sleep
15 Pullups 50 Pushups 40 Shoulder Press... no legs today.
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
69

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

BLOOD. WORK.

DON'T BE LIKE ME.  Because I never get sick, I never go to the doctor.  Which meant I never had my blood work done.  You're too smart for that...

... here's why.

By regularly getting the blood work done, we have a baseline for "our" normal.

I don't have that.

When I had the brain injury a few months ago,
things changed.

The brain is our command center, telling the body what to produce and control and do, etc.

A brain injury often causes issues with how the body is regulated.

Today, we reviewed my blood work which was drawn a few weeks ago.

Some markers are out of range - too high on some, too low on others.

Bad news is...

... I have no reference point of "my" normal.

Could be genetic, could be from the injury.

Good news is...

... we know where I'm at, and have some corrective measures to take.

Bonus, most indicators are positive for my body, and with my overall health.

Dr. Cory King, my functional health doctor from Encinitas, went over it all with me.

Nothing too scary...

... but definitely areas to not ignore.

Things like cholesterol levels, vitamin levels, etc. that can have negative effects if left untreated.

So, we'll chock this up as another blessing from my brain injury.

Regardless of your awesome health.

Find out where you are at,
things can probably be improved.

Consider this a gentle and loving nudge from me to you...

... get the blood work done.

---

169.4
9 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
70

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 

 


>

CHEAT CODE

HERE'S A DIRTY LITTLE SECRET.  Okay, maybe it's not all that dirty but it is secret and fact is it's...

... a cheat code for life.

There's a reason we get out and do our thing.

Sure, it's great to be in shape.

Have that come what may attitude.

Fact is, even though the fitness is great...

... there's something better.

  • The problems we solve
  • Ideas we come up with 
  • Freedom to think

We often, nearly always, return...

... renewed.

Ready

To

Kicka$$

Even when,
especially when...

... we've rung out our body's energy supply.

---

169.1
8.5 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and pushups
10 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
70

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

STRUGGLING WITH WEIGHT... TRY NOT

SINCE MY AWESOME START TO THE YEAR, knocking myself out and spending a 5 days in ICU, my metabolism has changed.  This is not uncommon, given the standard protocols...

... and now I'm pissed.

I didn't ask for this, and that is not the problem.

I haven't asked for a solution.

I have forgotten my own wisdom.

Well, on the eve of my bday, yesterday, I was asked...

... What do you want?

Get my lycracovered buns back in fighting shape.

I went to bed with a question...

... How do I get back to my normal, leanish self?

I woke up with an answer.

A book recommendation appeared on my Kindle.

Feast., Fast. Fit. by Fred Duncan.

It wasn't new information for me.  

Heck, I preach it.

It's worked in the past.

I believe it will work again.

The lesson?

It isn't get on the diet train...

... it's ask the right questions,
and expect answers.

  • How can I get lean?
  • How can I climb faster?
  • How can I stay cool in the blistering heat?
  • How can I complete a century without bonking?
  • How can I reduce the drag created by my bike and body?

Try not.

Ask or ask not.

---

170.3
8.5 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and pushups
10 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
70

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

THOU SHALT CARE FOR THY HANDS

TAKING CARE OF THE HANDS is importante.  Road, is pretty straight forward.  So is MTB.  Gravel, well, it's got it's own challenges...

... what can we do?

I've seen plenty of ruined hands...

  • brutal gripshift blisters
  • palms filled with asphalt gravelly stuff
  • a thumb's skin pealed from under the nail past the first knuckle

... all of it could have been spared with gloves.

Personally, I prefer very lightweight fullfinger gloves.

But, that ain't gonna help on the gravel bike.

No suspension.

What can we do?

I double wrap my bars with a good soft tape.

  • helps with vibration
  • displaces pressure points across a wider area

I was reminded of how great this is just last week.

It'd been a while since I'd ridden the roadie, been riding the gravel bike on and off road a ton.

As soon as I got going the bars felt weird.

Sharp.

Oh yeah, the single wrap bar.

It's lighter.

More aero.

But, I'd never go back to a single wrap on the gravel bike.

---

170.5
8.5 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and pushups
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
67

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

WHICH NUMBERS ARE WE CHASING?

THERE'S A BIG DIFFERENCE between the kinds of numbers some of us focus on putting up.  Some chase big power numbers, while others chase small numbers...

... what's the corresponding motivation?

You know.

Are we more interested in the low numbers: 1st, 2nd, 3rd...

... or, increasing our own personal power numbers?

Do we need everybody to see us on the podium...

... or, are we thrilled when we privately snag a new PR?

We can go out to the race,
or we can design our own incredible adventure.

We can train to beat everybody,
or our training can help us live our best lives.

They're not necessarily mutually exclusive,
there are four seasons for a reason.

---

169
8.5 hrs sleep
No strength work
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
67

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

IS IT TIME TO STOP BINGING?

SATURDAYS ARE MY DAYS.  All week long, I look forward to getting up early and rolling out with no particular plan but wasting time via hours in the saddle...

... I call it binge riding.

Not today.

It was raining

When that happens on the 6th day of the week,
my day,
I'm typically grumpy.

This time,
I was looking forward to it.

Why?

Honestly, I'd been binge riding too much.

Too many days in a row spent
slipping out after work
staying out too long...

... the time change being my enabler.

I was unconsciously due for a break.

Some call it overtrained...

... overbinged is more accurate,
for me.

---

168.2
7.5 hrs sleep
Lots of pull ups, pushups and squats.
10 minutes recovery 
180 minutes reading + Journaling 
68

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 

 


>

THE OL' WHAT IF YOU KNEW...

THESE TWO PUNKS SHOWED UP TO MY HOUSE, and dragged their dear ol' dad out for his favorite thing.  Riding MTBs with them...

... that wasn't the best part.

Sure, it was fun to keep up with 'em.

Mostly.

Then, completely overdoing it at Cheesecake factory.

The best part was dropping by the Audi store...

... and hotrodding around in a $70k RS3.

So.

Dang.

Fast!

It's good to get in the dream car, and throw it around some corners...

... to keep the dreams alive.

But, what if it wasn't a dream.

What if... 

... you knew you could PR any segment, win any race?

What would it be?

If we don't know,
can't quickly answer the question..

... likely not going to happen.

But, 
what
if 
we
knew...

... then,
what would we do with today's training?

---

1680
7.5 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
69

Do you want to Rip On Raceday? 


>

JUST BECAUSE IT'S FREE MEANS...

SO MUCH INFORMATION, and so much of it free.  Free is a weird price, because we know it's gonna cost time and there's probably...

... an ask down the road.

Don't be fooled.

Sometimes the really expensive stuff is great,
sometimes it's terrible.

Same for free.

Price is a signal.

Should we be swayed?

I recently got an offer to save 30% on a $6000 frame.

6K!!!...

... must be awesome.

Maybe.

But, how do we know?

Really?

The glossy magazine ad?

The pro riding it to a win?

It can be frustrating.

When it comes right down to it, most of us...

... are swayed by our friends' reviews.

Like these -> https://pedalindustries.com/pages/reviews...

... which I'm extremely grateful for.

---

168.3
8.5 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
69

Do you want to Rip On Raceday?

 


>

DOES YOUR DOG BITE?

THE GREAT INSPECTOR CLOUSEAU encounter with a dog is classic.  The dog is off leash, he asks Does your dog bite? The answer is, No.  He bends to pet the dog...

... only to have the dog viciously latch on to his hand!

I thought you said your dog does not bite?

That is not my dog.

I thought about that since Surfergirl has...

  • demanded
  • pleaded
  • asked

... that I let her track me on my rides.

I feel like a dog on a leash.

The Jason Bourne in me wants none of that.

There's nothing to hide,
when I ride.

But, really?

She does have a point.

I often venture into the wild.

Signs with warnings of mountain lions and snakes about.

Trails are often treacherous to the bike, 
and potentially me.

Humans few and far between.

If, if, if I should need a rescue,
which I never have...

... I'll just need two things.

A cell signal...

... and a friend who cares.

It's kinda romantic when ya think about it,
guess we're doing all right. 

---

168.2
8ish hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
69

Do you want to Rip On Raceday?


>

HOW MY LITTLE PRACTICE LOOP TOOK ME DOWN

I SET OFF TO POUND MY PRACTICE LOOP.  The profile is jagged, lots of single track, and...

... I'm trying to crack 90 minutes.

Today's failure is why it's so important to practice racing.

Here's the dill.

This course is very hard to stay fueled on...

... almost impossible to drink, forget about eating.

Which meant I was tuckered out, with 4 miles to go.  The last 30ish minutes are pretty dern steep.

With about 20 minute warm up,
winging it on 1/2 bottle and 100 calories was a weak effort.

Just not enough.

Strava called a Massive Relative Effort, 
giving the workout a score of 192.

I'll try it again in a couple of weeks.

This time with 400 calories, 
and 30 ounces of water,
in a Camelbak.

There just isn't time to suck on a bottle,
the bladder hose is easy to grab,
and once in my mouth,
handsfree.

Ya can't figure that out without simulating what ya might be racing...

... in real world conditions.

---

169.1 lbs (dropping some of these will speed things up, too)
8ish hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
67

Do you want to Rip On Raceday?

 


>

SPEED AND BRAKES, NOT ALWAYS OBVIOUS

THERE'S A TECHNICAL, ROCKY SECTION on part of a local trail.  First-timers walk it, new riders use a slow approach, locals...

... let it rip.

They know something.

Speed makes it much easier to glide over the the treachery.

It's counterintuitive.

Disc brakes are the same way.

They rub.

We pry 'em apart and reinsert the wheel.

Soon into the ride they are rubbing again.

Why?

The pads are worn out.

You'd think they would stop touch the disc or barely work when running thin.

That's the way rim brakes work when the pads are worn down.

Not discs.

Counterintuitive.

Which why we alwaysalwaysalways check our brake pads before a race...

... so we hit the tricky stuff with speed.

---

167.9 lbs
8ish hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
66

Do you want to Rip On Raceday?


>

DO YOU D.H.T.?

 WE MAY NOT BE PRO.  Our equipment may be lacking, our preparation woeful, our  focus far from singular...

... which makes it all the more impressive.

When we, you and me...

... Do Hard Things.

Just like the pros,
but on a whole other level.

They level up,
get a pay check.

Our objective has nothing to do with money, and...

... everything to do with commitment.

Here's the cool part.

People see it.

Our family, friends, work associates, neighbors, etc.

They get inspired.

Maybe not to ride 100 miles or run a marathon or do an Ironman.

Doesn't matter.

The ability to D.H.T. can be applied to anything...

  • changing diapers in the middle of the night
  • studying instead of clubbing
  • making 100 cold calls/day
  • working 80 hrs a week for a season
  • pushing a car off to the side of the road
  • leading volunteers to repair after a disaster strikes

... once we learn we have it within us.

---

169.1 lbs
8.5 hrs sleep
No strength work today
10 minutes recovery 
180 minutes reading + Journaling 
66

Do you want to Rip On Raceday?

 


>

WE NEED A METRIC FOR THIS

THE FIRST TIME I SAW SHIMANO'S INTEGRATED SHIFTING, dubbed SIS, I knew there was no chance in a sprint without it.  Sure we'd perfected the lost of art of...

... sprinting, letting go of the handlebars with one hand to shift.

But, what was the point?

It was useless.

Shimano changed the game, all because...

... Gripshift had changed the game.

Gripshift morphed into SRAM.

Shimano gave us electric shifting.

SRAM did it better with wireless.

How is that my new Kindle got me thinking of this?

Simple.

Kindle changes the reading game.

Which got me thinking about another game changer, Training Peaks.

It's pretty cool.

All kinds of data.

But, one metric is missing and would...

... be so funny to have.

A measurement for how bad a ride sucks...

  • Freezing rain
  • Frying pan heat
  • Mile long hike-a-bike
  • Gail force headwinds
  • Countless mechanicals

... indicating our badassness for getting it done,
not quitting.

For example, we rolled the dice this morning on a 38% chance of rain.

No big deal, right?

3 hours in, we face another hour of driving headwind and relentless rain...

... the suckometer was needling past halfway.

  • Hands were edging towards inoperable.
  • Too wet and involved to eat carbs
  • Feet sloshing

Not terrible.

But, somewhere on the ride data it woulda been nice to see...

... the badassometer read out.

Just fer fun.

See where the day's suckiness ranked against other such rides over time.

Time to go back the Kindle...

... under the blankies.

Me still cold.

---

167.9 lbs
7.5 hrs sleep
Just pull ups and push ups
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
67 

Do you want to Rip On Raceday?

 


>

LEARNING TO RIP FROM MARCH MADNESS

BALL AND STICK SPORTS are typically concerned with, and built around, offense and defense.  How do we...

... apply that thinking to our endurance addictitions?

Do we have offense?

Defense?

Yep.

Offense

  • Riding, running swimming time
  • Weight lifting
  • Racing and competitive group rides
  • Upgrading equipment - new, shiny stuff
  • Hiring a coach
  • Fine tuning the bike fit
  • Developing our handling skills

Defense

  • Recovery work
  • Sleep
  • Proper nutrition
  • Accountability partner(s)
  • Equipment maintenance
  • Stretching
  • Allies to work with when falling behind

And before you say I've misplaced one of those, we all know...

... the best defense is offense and visa versa.

That's not the point.

The point is to figure out...

... how to incorporate a great offense and defense in our limited time.

---

167.8 lbs
8.25 hrs sleep
Just pull ups and push ups
20 minutes recovery 
180 minutes reading + Journaling 
62

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>

TWO OF LIFE'S MYSTERIES

THERE TWO MYSTERIES THAT SCIENCE can't explain.  AI doesn't have the answer, either. But's they are facts just the same.  For example...

... why do beginners get all the flats?

Riddle me that one LycraMan.

You know it's true.

You know if you invite a new, excitedtobethere, rider along, there's gonna be a flat.

Waywaywayway more often than the experienced riders will experience.

Makes no sense.

Just like why more bike shops don't have a comfy couch to wait for that...

.... just a few more minutes...

repair.

Maybe a coffee table showcasing

  • A colorful catalog of their favorite products
  • Samples of their go to sports drinks or things to chomp
  • Gotta have tools to check out

I was thinking of another mystery as I swapped out my worn disc brake pads...

... why more of us don't learn the basics of maintenance. 

---

168.7 lbs (the struggle is real)
8.25 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and push ups
20 minutes recovery 
180 minutes reading + Journaling 
63

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>

THE PRIDE CYCLE QUEST

WHAT HAVE YOU DONE THAT YOU'RE PROUD OF?  Could be anything, but let's stay on point with athletic endeavors because it's important...

... to harness this concept.

The Pride Cycle Quest.

It's also dangerous,
if we let it get the best of us.

For me, at least, it's all about the quest.

Can I do it?

And, it's a cycle...

  • Pick the outrageous result to chase
  • Train for it.
  • Do it.

... and pick another quest.

I don't really care if anybody else thinks it's cool,
so few understand us anyway.

It's internal.

Am I proud of that result?

It's only dangerous if we are chasing likes and kudos and cheers...

... from the world.

It's not about that.

It's about the quest.

It's personal.

I'm happiest when I have at least one per year.

That's my cycle of pride.

---

167.9 lbs 
7.25 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and push ups
10 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
62

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>

CHASING GHOSTS

PATHS BECOME TRAILS, trails become roads, roads become highways.  It's evolution, and underneath it all are the ghosts...

... who got it started.

We think we're blazing a trail,
when we are really just going along with the crowd.

I was thinking about the day my longgone granpappy came to watch me race a criterium.

It was all new to me.

We wizzed past him every lap.

But, the laps were long...

... and he could barely see at that stage.

Afterwards, he told me how it was years before, when he was young.

I thought it would be in a velodrome and I'd be able to see you entire race.

Clueless me had no idea velodrome racing was the only bicycle racing 100 years ago.

Prior to that, it was racing bicycles long distance, on dusty...

... gravel roads.

In other words, we gone from...

  • gravel
  • to velodrome
  • to road
  • to bmx
  • to mtb
  • to gravel

... so why is gravel "new"?

It's not.

We're all just chasing ghosts who've gone before.

---

168 lbs 
8.25 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and push ups
10 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
62

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>

THIS AIN'T NO TIME FOR FOOLING AROUND

WHAT IS THE BASELINE?  The minimum effort to do and consider the week a win?  It's important to have the least acceptable effort in mind...

... and make it happen.

Riding in the rain will make you think things like that.

Like, why the heck am I doing this?

Which is exactly what I was thinking as the skies opened an hour away from home.

Because I made a plan.

A public commitment.

Accountability.

Yesterday, in the sunshine and 72 degrees I committed to do the following this week:

  • 15 pull ups, 50 push ups, 10 squats daily
  • Ride 14 hours this week
  • Drop 3 lbs 

Easy to do when the weather is good, 
and the day lazy.

The public commit was to the RaceDay Rippers,
who also hold me accountable each week when we check in.

I'm two months out from my next quest, the SurfNSummit.

The plan is on my RaceDay Calendar. 

Some say Show me your calendar and I'll know what important to you...

... and yes, Date Night better be on there each week.

We have a few of the Giant RaceDay Calendars left, and you can save 25% since a quarter of the year is nearly past by using promo code:

CAL25OFF

https://pedalindustries.com/products/pedal-black-2024-giant-raceday-calendar

Here is the code:

CAL25OFF

Nod to the great Talking Heads for the inspiration

This is ain't no party, this ain't no disco, this ain't no time for foolin' around

---

168.9 lbs 
9 hrs sleep
1 Rip On RaceDay Circuit + extra pull ups and push ups
20 minutes recovery 
120 minutes reading + Journaling 
59

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>

HOW TO STAY SLOW...

IT'S SUPER EASY TO STAY SLOW, and just as easy to stay fast.  To stay slow, do what your slow friends do and...

... expect to get fast.

The problem with actually getting fast,
nobody gives you credit.

For the most part, they can't see or appreciate, and will never know...

... how hard we work.

And, we've got to be okay with that.

To commence,
recognition be damned.

To be fast, do what you fast friends do...

... and expect to get fast.

Do.
Expect.

---

168.4 lbs 
7.5 hrs sleep
Push Ups and Pull Ups
10 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
58

Rip On Raceday

 


>

WWDGD?! - 25 WEEKS TO GO

I FELT GOOD ENOUGH THIS WEEK TO DREAM of getting my fitness back and setting unrealistic goals.  Is there anything better than that?  Getting to a place to...

... dare to go for it.

After pushing hard for nearly 3 hours, we had a choice.

Take it easy or do the hurtful climb?

500' in a mile doesn't sound like much...

... unless it's the last climb of a fast day.

We were gonna skip it, and then Love Watts yelled...

... WWDGD!

Huh?

What Would David Goggins Do?!

There was no choice at that point, because all of us have streeeeeeeeetch goals this summer.

It was fine.

Slower than I'd like...

... but, compared to last week waywayway better.

And so the journey begins.

The countdown to Gravel Nationals.

Here's where I'm at.

You can see my fitness score at the very bottom.
Down from over 50%, 18 months ago.

Weight, 168ish.
Up 10 lbs, 18 months ago.

Vision is still messed up.
Way off from what I considered one of my few advantages racing off road.

Can I be ready September 8th, 2024?

It's gonna be fun, 
and frustrating.

WWDGD?

Go for it.

Every
single
freakin'
opportunity.

---

168.2 lbs 
8 hrs sleep
Push Ups and Pull Ups
20 minutes recovery 
60 minutes reading + Journaling 
60

Rip On Raceday


>

WHEN THE RACE PLAN GOES TO HECK IN A HANDLEBAR

IT WAS A ROUGH START, things weren't going smoothly at all.  It was causing a lot of stress and internal turmoil.  Energy I'd hoped to reserve for...

... more important sections of the event.

Ayyyy, what to do?

What I always do... 

... but, forget to do.

Think of of the things going right...

  • I felt good
  • I'd started on time
  • My prep was perfect

... other words be grateful for the good.

My energy shifted.

I calmed down.

Focused on getting down to business.

Wound up having a spectacular day...

... at the office.

Tomorrow's race should go a lot better, and if it doesn't...

... I know what to do.

---

168.2 lbs 
8.5 hrs sleep
Push Ups and Pull Ups
20 minutes recovery 
600 minutes reading + Journaling 
56

Rip On Raceday


>

A Sunday In Hell

Apr 28, 2017 Todd Brown

So there’s no money in pro cycling?  Look back 40 years and re-think that.  Rider X is so stylish?  Look back 40 years and re-think that.  Todays racers are so much stronger?  Look back… …this movie is awesome.  It’s art.  It’s history.  And it makes me want to ride like a Belgian.  

So there’s no money in pro cycling?  Look back 40 years and re-think that.  Rider X is so stylish?  Look back 40 years and re-think that.  Todays racers are so much stronger?  Look back…

…this movie is awesome.  It’s art.  It’s history.  And it makes me want to ride like a Belgian.

sunda

 

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When Every Trail Reminds You

Apr 27, 2017 Todd Brown

Big, long road trip today.  Utah bound.  Kids are graduating from “the BYU”… 31 years after The Old Diesel – now that’s wild to me. It seems like yesterday, but… …I’ve packed a lifetime in my lifetime by taking lots of detours. Some detours are good enough to repeat, like today’s hike in Kolob Canyon...

Big, long road trip today.  Utah bound.  Kids are graduating from “the BYU”… 31 years after The Old Diesel – now that’s wild to me. It seems like yesterday, but…

…I’ve packed a lifetime in my lifetime by taking lots of detours.

Some detours are good enough to repeat, like today’s hike in Kolob Canyon.

Other detours become journeys.

And some are duds.

Keep barreling down the highway in a hurry, trying to be somewhere, and you’ll get there.

kolob cabin
Fife cabin, built in the 1930’s  Most likely a summer home, to get out of the heat.  Talk about a piece of heaven on Earth.
kolob trail
Which trails are you taking?
graduates
The graduates, Shane and Abbey. Abbey starts her Masters at Long Beach State in the Fall. Shane is off to Deloitte, the consulting side (Trevor is on the accounting side, the brothers are excited to be working together.)
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It’s never boring.

Apr 25, 2017 Todd Brown

14 years later and The TMWC is as fresh as ever.  Today “Young Kevin” knifed his way to his first V, by perfectly executing his simple plan. While I whipped up the pace on Antonio, he sat in. While Peter blasted up the A climb, he conserved. While Sean got us moving up the bike..

14 years later and The TMWC is as fresh as ever.  Today “Young Kevin” knifed his way to his first V, by perfectly executing his simple plan.

While I whipped up the pace on Antonio, he sat in.

While Peter blasted up the A climb, he conserved.

While Sean got us moving up the bike path, he surfed up through the shelled riders.

While Mike shot us to the wall, he slipped by me like a silent assassin.

While Chris launched vicious attacks along the valley bottom, he watched.

While it blew to pieces up the corkscrew, he left the best behind.

Nice job kid.

It’s anybody’s guess who will be the unOFFICIAL Tuesday Morning World Champ on 7/11/17… but I’m putting my money on one of the regulars this year… so much talent is showing up these days.

Check out Pete’s most excellent video

never old

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Sea Otter Takeaways

Apr 24, 2017 Todd Brown

Generalities:  Sea Otter is an awesome event.  There’s every kind of racing and riding imaginable from Gran Fondos to Downhill MTB.  All kinds of new products from vendors you know and never heard of. Camping at the venue is the way to go.  Whether you’re in a tent, a van, or a motorhome it’s much..

Generalities:

  1.  Sea Otter is an awesome event.  There’s every kind of racing and riding imaginable from Gran Fondos to Downhill MTB.  All kinds of new products from vendors you know and never heard of.
  2. Camping at the venue is the way to go.  Whether you’re in a tent, a van, or a motorhome it’s much nicer to stay at the venue vs packing up every day and making the long journey from Monterrey to the Laguna Seca Racecourse.
  3. The public showers are perfectly hot.  Use ’em.
  4. Sometimes the portable toilets are out of t.p.  Be prepared.

Race Specific:

  1. You won’t be racing with the usual suspects so try and get to know the players.  I should have/could have predicted the players better with a little research on RaceResults.  It was great to podium at the circuit race, but a little more research would have told me who’s wheel to be on.  Could have I have won?… doesn’t matter – couldawouldashoulda.  Same thing on the road race.  The results might have been the same, but we shouldn’t have let the winner get away with 15 miles to go.
  2. If you’re lucky enough to podium, the medals are super rad… and you get to kiss a girl – almost never a bad thing if you earned it.
  3. Camping at the venue made for a much more relaxing race day.
  4. The circuit race is PERFECT pavement, you will nevereverever find a better surface to race on.  Plus, it’s superduper wide.  Do it!
  5. The road race was nice pavement on a rolly and twisty road.  If someone/you get a minute up the road the pack can’t see you anymore.  Also, the entire road is closed to traffic.  It’s the most pro experience I’ve ever had.  The finish is a 2.5 mile climb that is a lot like the last 2.5 miles over The Wall on the TMWC.
  6. My friends that did the MTB XC gave it raving reviews.

Next Time:

  1. I’d like to arrive a day earlier to have time to walk the entire vendor village.
  2. I’d like to stay a couple of days longer and ride up there more.
  3. I’d like to get 3 spots and bring in more motorhomes and get the whole gang up there.
    Exhausted and Thrilled after the road race... pretty much sums up the weekend.
    Exhausted and Thrilled after the road race… pretty much sums up the weekend.
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The best time to train…

Apr 22, 2017 Todd Brown

… is before the race.

… is before the race.

the best

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Mancation Time

Apr 19, 2017 Todd Brown

We’re off to Sea Otter.  Three dudes.   Rolling in style in Matt’s gigantic motorhome – diesel pusher. Nothin’ bettah.  

We’re off to Sea Otter.  Three dudes.   Rolling in style in Matt’s gigantic motorhome – diesel pusher. Nothin’ bettah.

mancation

 

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If You’re Shiny And You Know It

Apr 18, 2017 Todd Brown

Warning:  the following information is not for bikes with matte finish.  If you’re bike is shiny then read on because I’m gonna share my little secret for keeping the shine shiny. Go to your mom’s cleaning supplies and grab the Lemon Pledge.  Now, I know it’s a stretch but in case you’ve never heard of..

Warning:  the following information is not for bikes with matte finish.  If you’re bike is shiny then read on because I’m gonna share my little secret for keeping the shine shiny.

Go to your mom’s cleaning supplies and grab the Lemon Pledge.  Now, I know it’s a stretch but in case you’ve never heard of this amazing product, it’s furniture polish that probably has a lemon citrus base.  If you don’t live with your mom (congratulations on that) you can pick this up at any grocery store.

Spray it liberally on an old t-shirt and wipe down your bike – don’t get it on your brake pads or rims.

It’s fast and easy.

It will tear through that unsightly grease and grime and leave behind a beautiful shine.  Plus, if you live near the beach it will also protect your parts from rust.

Spray it liberally on an old t-shirt and wipe down your bike – do not get it on your brake pads or rims.

It’s fast and easy.

You’ll probably forget you did this until the next time you grab your bike and it feels so “oulala!

lemon pledge

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Better Than Most, Not As Good As Some

Apr 17, 2017 Todd Brown

There used to be this guy on the air during my evening commute who I loved to listen to, he was really smart, really interesting and really polite to his callers.  We never learned his name because rumor had it that he’d “served time”.  HIs name was Mr. KFI, and his signature saying when asked..

There used to be this guy on the air during my evening commute who I loved to listen to, he was really smart, really interesting and really polite to his callers.  We never learned his name because rumor had it that he’d “served time”.  HIs name was Mr. KFI, and his signature saying when asked how he was doing was “Better than most, not as good as some”.

If you take the time to get good at something, like bike riding, you’ll get results.  You’ll improve.  You’ll be better than you were last month, last year, last…

Not only that, you’ll be a lot better than almost every single person you know and every single person in your city, state, country and planet.

The bigger the pool the better you will be compared to most people.

The reverse is also true, and I’m going to see that first hand this weekend at Sea Otter.

One of the races I’m planning on is the road race, where the best climbers in my age group will show up.  It has a 2 mile uphill finish.  I’m not a great climber compared to these cats.  Bitching an moaning about that won’t make me any faster…

… but it might ruin my weekend, unless I remember …

I’m better than most, not as good as some.

sea otter

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Got To Get You Into My Life

Apr 15, 2017 Todd Brown

I was alone, I took a ride I didn’t know what I would find there Another road where maybe I Could see another kind of mind there Then I suddenly see you Did I tell you I need you Every single day of my life You didn’t ride, you didn’t hide And had you gone,..

I was alone, I took a ride
I didn’t know what I would find there
Another road where maybe I
Could see another kind of mind there
Then I suddenly see you
Did I tell you I need you
Every single day of my life
You didn’t ride, you didn’t hide
And had you gone, you knew in time
We’d meet again for I had told you
You were meant to be near me
And I want you to hear me
Say we’ll be together every day
Got to get you into my life
What can I do, what can I be
When I’m with you I want to stay there
If I’m true I’ll never leave
And if I do I know the way there
Then I suddenly see you
… The Beatles (slight tweaks by me).
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We Gave Up A Long Time Ago

Apr 14, 2017 Todd Brown

We gave up a long time ago and things got a lot better.  It didn’t happen over night, it takes discipline to realize where you can win and stay focused there. Racing is always fun, racing events that suit our talents are more fun.  We perform better.  We connect better to the other competitors.  We enjoy..

We gave up a long time ago and things got a lot better.  It didn’t happen over night, it takes discipline to realize where you can win and stay focused there.

Racing is always fun, racing events that suit our talents are more fun.  We perform better.  We connect better to the other competitors.  We enjoy the process a lot more.  Whether or not we actually beat everybody is not as important because we perform to our best level and that’s what it’s really all about.

The same thing has happens in business.  The more we focus on cycling specific products, the more we develop our own products, the more fun we have, the better we connect to our customers, the better we get with our processes, and whether or not we win all the business we try and get we are getting better every day.

It’s much better to focus on delighting ourselves racing and delighting our customers with incredible products.

(Some people take their customers golfing, we go riding.)FullSizeRender

 

 

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How To Get Even

Apr 13, 2017 Todd Brown

It’s so easy to get mad.  The more you do it, the easier it is.  More things that tick you off flow your way.  Getting even takes much more effort, but it stops there. Squirrely rider up ahead?  Get even.  Pull up along side and lovingly share some pointers. Getting beat in the sprint by..

It’s so easy to get mad.  The more you do it, the easier it is.  More things that tick you off flow your way.  Getting even takes much more effort, but it stops there.

Squirrely rider up ahead?  Get even.  Pull up along side and lovingly share some pointers.

Getting beat in the sprint by a wheelsucker?  Get even.  Next ride just suck wheel too… there’s no need to waste any energy getting mad, plus it’s a valuable skill.

Tired of getting dropped?  Get even.  Ask the faster riders what their doing?  If you can add or delete something do it, if you can’t accept your fate.

Feeling proud of annihilating everybody else?  Get even.  Throw thirty pounds in a back pack next ride.

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Gravity…

Apr 12, 2017 Todd Brown

Hate gravity all you want, it’s still there… reminding you to eat better, climb more. Hate gravity all you want, it’s still there… making you stronger. Hate gravity all you want, it’s still there… pulling you down that favorite road/trail, making your eyes tear and your mouth grin. Still hate gravity?

Hate gravity all you want, it’s still there… reminding you to eat better, climb more.

Hate gravity all you want, it’s still there… making you stronger.

Hate gravity all you want, it’s still there… pulling you down that favorite road/trail, making your eyes tear and your mouth grin.

Still hate gravity?

gravity

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Why It’s Like ‘Riding A Bike’?

Apr 11, 2017 Todd Brown

“It’s like riding a bike”.  Really?  It’s gonna be super awkward at first?  There’s a good chance I’ll get hurt? No, not like that.  Like, once you do it you’ll never forget how to do it. Why would anyone want to learn to ride a bike knowing the 100% certainty of pain? Because we see..

“It’s like riding a bike”.  Really?  It’s gonna be super awkward at first?  There’s a good chance I’ll get hurt?

No, not like that.  Like, once you do it you’ll never forget how to do it.

Why would anyone want to learn to ride a bike knowing the 100% certainty of pain?

Because we see our friends and family zipping around with huge smiles, and they believe we can do it.

It’s the ratio of small pain to huge pleasure that makes other skills unforgettable, “like riding a bike.”

little on a bike
10 year old Shelby, ripping Deer Valley… sure miss this little kid.
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New Choos

Apr 10, 2017 Todd Brown

Wow… what a difference a new pair of shoes can make.  Why do we wait so darn long to replace such an integral part of the ride?  This is where the muscle meets the metal.  It’s been 4 years since I’ve had new road shoes, and more than that for MTB.  What a dork!?… nah,..

Wow… what a difference a new pair of shoes can make.  Why do we wait so darn long to replace such an integral part of the ride?  This is where the muscle meets the metal.  It’s been 4 years since I’ve had new road shoes, and more than that for MTB.  What a dork!?… nah, I had just forgotten how awesome new shoes are.

I’ve owned lots of different brands of shoes over the years.  My feet are weird, which is why I’m in flip flops most of the time.  So, when I find something comfortable I’m reticent to change… a forgivable offense, no?

Anyway, the new shoes felt amazing this morning as I stomped up the 1 minute climbs on one of my new loops.  PR’d a few.

Why is that?

Well, these shoes aren’t the lightest at all.

The soles feel so supportive.  The dials are in a weird place, on the top of my foot… but, I don’t feel any pressure from them being there and the adjustments are very comfortable and even across my foot.

At first glance you wouldn’t guess they’d be airy, but wow! my feet were very cold on the ride this morning.  So the vents really work.

And let’s be honest, a sexy looking shoe is always good for a few watts of mental edge.

There’s supposed to get more comfortable over time… can’t wait for tomorrow’s ride.  Nigh-t-nite.

new choos

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All Work And No Play

Apr 06, 2017 Todd Brown

We were crammed into Terry’s basement, couches covered with kids.  Jack was running, ax in 1 hand, Shelley with a cleaver chasing, the little boy hustling towards the camera.  Snow, cold wind. The Shining climaxed and the volume maxed couldn’t hide my uncontrolled scream! REDRUM. “All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.” Training day after..

We were crammed into Terry’s basement, couches covered with kids.  Jack was running, ax in 1 hand, Shelley with a cleaver chasing, the little boy hustling towards the camera.  Snow, cold wind. The Shining climaxed and the volume maxed couldn’t hide my uncontrolled scream!

REDRUM.

“All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.”

Training day after day, without a purpose can make me crazy.

Too one-dimensional, ultimately making me neglect the basics and wind up hurt.

Finally surfed this week, coaches orders, to rehab my shoulder.

The super stiff shoulder (from last fall’s dork crash) slowly loosened up after about 10 minutes in the water.  I turned to catch a wave and that final power paddle shot lightening up my arm… it was delayed and hit me as I popped up, and I hid an uncontrolled scream.

$^&*!

$^&*!

$^&*!

I couldn’t enjoy the ride, I just cruised then turned out and lamely paddled back.  Determined to ease into the next wave, I failed.  Too many years of that final power paddle to pop up.

$^&*!

$^&*!

$^&*!

This time I just rode in.  It hurt too bad.  I could barely move my right arm.

But after the trauma… my shoulder was freer, moved better.  With some therapy today my mobility improved more.  Coaches orders:  surf twice a week, mainly paddle.

It’s good to cross pollinate the training with other sports.  Surfers have strong backs and cores, critical to sprinting and climbing for cyclists.  It doesn’t take much time to make a big difference to your overall fitness… just be careful, and go slow.

shining

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Even Perfect Trails Have An End

Apr 05, 2017 Todd Brown

On my mind today was the sudden death of one of my favorite bloggers, Steve Tilford.  Steve’s writing was pure, honest, simple.  He wrote about racing, his passionate opinions, and life stuff.  I never met him, but feel like I knew him. Maybe it’s a little more timely, since I stopped in to see my..

On my mind today was the sudden death of one of my favorite bloggers, Steve Tilford.  Steve’s writing was pure, honest, simple.  He wrote about racing, his passionate opinions, and life stuff.  I never met him, but feel like I knew him.

Maybe it’s a little more timely, since I stopped in to see my dad yesterday.  His battle with Parkinson’s is brutal.  It’s just hard to experience for me… rather than complain, mixes jokes with genuine interest into our lives.

And so I rode and smelled the wild flowers and felt the wind knowing all perfect days and trails have an end.

IMG_2397

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No, Does Not Mean “NO!”

Apr 04, 2017 Todd Brown

A thousand years ago, I started racing while attending college in Utah.  It started at a local crit held in the huge football stadium parking lot.  I won a few, and winter came.  I purchased a trainer and rode it 3 days a week when it was too cold and snowy.  I skied on the..

A thousand years ago, I started racing while attending college in Utah.  It started at a local crit held in the huge football stadium parking lot.  I won a few, and winter came.  I purchased a trainer and rode it 3 days a week when it was too cold and snowy.  I skied on the weekends.  Every effort was planned around becoming a 3 before I moved back home in the Spring.

The work paid off, I got the points and I applied with the local  USCF rep.  He asked what was my hurry, and I said I was heading home.  They’re a lot faster down there, I’m not going to upgrade you.

It ticked me off, and chip on shoulder I quickly attained my goal of becoming a 3.  Back then, we’d have 80+ guys on the line.  I’m not saying it was harder than now (yes, I am), but it was very hard to navigate all that humanity and grab points.

Was the guy in Utah right?  Maybe, probably.  Either way, it reinforced a valuable lesson I apply to this day.

For example, today I stopped by the county offices to get a new course permitted.  “No.”  I’ve learned that’s a pretty standard answer from public officials, and I’ve learned what it means to me.  It means, other race promoters are going to have a hard time and most likely get discouraged and quit.  I’ve learned it means this public servant sees some flaws in my plan and that by improving my plan the event will be that much better not only for the next race, but for all future races.

For me, hearing “no” now makes me smile… No => less competition + better product.  It also means we’ll soon have a new venue.

We learned this as children, about the same time we learned to ride bikes.  Some of us haven’t  forgotten the lesson.

adult on bike

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The Things We Tell Ourselves

Apr 03, 2017 Todd Brown

We had a shirt that said “Ride Hard”.  Not a big seller… and not the first design I badly misjudged.  I changed the text to Ride Fast, for me… because while I like to ride hard, and be able to handle the hard ride… …I’d rather ride fast, any day. You’ll see that logo in..

We had a shirt that said “Ride Hard”.  Not a big seller… and not the first design I badly misjudged.  I changed the text to Ride Fast, for me… because while I like to ride hard, and be able to handle the hard ride…

…I’d rather ride fast, any day.

You’ll see that logo in little places on some of our products, because it matters… to me.

I leave notes to myself.

I name my bikes.

I blog.

I leave myself clues to tomorrow.ride fast

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Fruit & Loops

Mar 29, 2017 Todd Brown

Riding the same loops over and over gets old. Today I set out to find something new and totally scored.  Not that new roads magically appeared, it was me connecting them in a new way.  Kinda like when your bike’s tired filthiness sneaks up on you and you bust out the Simple Green and throw..

Riding the same loops over and over gets old. Today I set out to find something new and totally scored.  Not that new roads magically appeared, it was me connecting them in a new way.  Kinda like when your bike’s tired filthiness sneaks up on you and you bust out the Simple Green and throw on some new GP 4000 S II’s or some new bar tape.

Here’s the loop: https://www.strava.com/activities/919557893 that made me smile.

As for the fruit, I’m trying something new for post recovery:  macadamia nuts and an apple.  Protein, fat and low-glycemic sugar.  Yum.

To make a new loop or route,  I roll out with a general idea and let it unfold… if I hit a light, I might turn right to keep moving and see what happens.  Basically, I just go “where the wind blows”.  It not always be good, but at least it’s a change.

(It’s always good to see the sea.)

new loop

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One Man’s Fast Is Another’s Slow

Mar 28, 2017 Todd Brown

Sean says we need to go faster at TMWC, Marek says OUCH! to today’s edition, Mike rode the course a second time solo and went quicker, I limped home.  That’s a group ride for ya… keeping us all honest with our effort. Were it not for the weekly men’s support group/social ride we call TMWC,..

Sean says we need to go faster at TMWC, Marek says OUCH! to today’s edition, Mike rode the course a second time solo and went quicker, I limped home.  That’s a group ride for ya… keeping us all honest with our effort.

Were it not for the weekly men’s support group/social ride we call TMWC, most of us who attend would have no idea where our fitness is, definitely we’d skip the extra mile or two and say yes to the cake and ice cream.

It’s not a cycling monk’s life that motivates us to keep at it, it’s the feedback on how well we’re taking care of our health during our weekly check in that keeps us on track.

If I can’t pedal fast, what else can’t I do to my best ability?

one ;man

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It’s About Time

Mar 27, 2017 Todd Brown

My maternal grandfather retired in Newport Beach, East Bluffs.  There was nothing better than getting on the bikes he kept in the garage and riding over to the elementary school to play hide and seek.  Certainly that old codger couldn’t find the slippery 7-year old speedster. Grampa was a genius at getting us to play..

My maternal grandfather retired in Newport Beach, East Bluffs.  There was nothing better than getting on the bikes he kept in the garage and riding over to the elementary school to play hide and seek.  Certainly that old codger couldn’t find the slippery 7-year old speedster.

Grampa was a genius at getting us to play with him.

No matter where we were, when Grampa pulled up it was time to play.  Up popped the trunk and out came footballs, basketballs, softballs and bats and mitts, frisbees.  It was time to have some fun.

The kids always won, no matter what the game.  And if things got too lop-sided Grampa would make up a new rule and say “southern rules”… meaning that’s how they played in the South.  He wasn’t even from the South, but he’d raised his family for a good stretch of time.

Time passed, and grampa got older.  But he kept moving.  Lifting his 15 lb weights, jumping on his miniature trampoline, jogging down the block.  He was taller than everybody, and stood as straight as giant pine.

I’d go visit him on the weekends when I was in college.  They’d moved to Utah, and that’s where I was studying.  What at treat to visit those two characters.

Diabetes slowly brought him down.  He couldn’t feel his feet, and his vision failed him.  For a while I’d just read the prescriptions and medicine he was taking.   Then, I’d read him the newspaper.  Eventually, we’d watch a game together and he’d listen and I’d add my color to the commentary.

He never lost his sense of humor, never took life too seriously.  He had very high standards for himself, and for others.  I’m sure it was humbling for him to ask for help, but it was healing for me.

Tonight as I fumbled trying to adjust my seat post height I could only laugh at my resistance to wear glasses.  I’d adjusted my seat post height only to realize after I’d loosened and raised the post that I couldn’t read the markings on the seat post collar indicating the torque required to tighten the bolts.

Solution?… take a picture, and zoom in to read it.  Maybe it’s time for some glasses.

Where’s Grampa was, I now am… where he went, I am sure to go.

newt

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A Whale of a Time

Mar 25, 2017 Todd Brown

The forecast was for rain, but it was just cloudy.  I’ve slept a ton all week, but I’m still pretty worn out.  My eyes opened at 5:30am.  Ran down to see if all the pics had downloaded, and started uploading to the HUNKR website.  They are awesome, but they take forever to upload at home...

The forecast was for rain, but it was just cloudy.  I’ve slept a ton all week, but I’m still pretty worn out.  My eyes opened at 5:30am.  Ran down to see if all the pics had downloaded, and started uploading to the HUNKR website.  They are awesome, but they take forever to upload at home.  I kept working on site content until she woke up.

She wanted to go whale watching.

We loaded up the paddle boards and drove to Shaw’s Cove.  Passed Patrick Coffey on his TT bike, in his new TMWC kit.  Got to Shaw’s and slid into her secret Mini spot.

Unloaded the boards and paddled out. And Out.  And further Out.  We were probably 1.5 miles off the coast and she stopped paddling.  What do we do now?  We wait for about an hour and pretty soon we’ll see whales and dolphins.

I don’t believe her.  I do, but I don’t.  She always has these crazy dolphin and whale stories.

I think about how geeked up I get about riding, take a friend along and the magic just doesn’t happen.

We wait.

I have to paddle slowly because my balance is not to keen.  The clouds persist.  A whale watching boat comes to us thinking we’ve got something.  Nope.

Bored, I paddle North towards Emerald Bay.

Then I see them.  Dorsal fins slice through the water in pairs.  Up, dooooown, up doooown.  Over there.  Next to me.  Over there.  They are racing south, too fast for us to follow.

The sun bursts through.

Hot, we shed the neoprene tops.  Mission accomplished.  I start heading in.  It’s been fun, but I’m ready to quit.

Come on… wait a little longer.  She’s so faithful.

We wait.  Float.  Soft paddle. Float.  The sun feels great on my great paleness.

Then we hear it… a wind so distinct even I know what it is.

About 100 feet away we see the spray from the whale’s exhale.  The long body moves gracefully and she paddles furiously.  Me not so much.  Come on! she yells.

It’s gone.  Silence as we crane here and there.

More water shoots in the air, no more than 10 feet away from her.  It glides on it’s side and even I can see it’s eyeing her.

Hello Whale!

Down it goes.  Off she races for another glimpse. Not today.

But, today I got a glimpse of what makes her so happy.  I know this, and she knows I love to ride.  Most Saturdays, all?, I’m off on two wheels and she’s off to see whales and more.

It’s good to change gear.

IMG_2343

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Team. Work.

Mar 25, 2017 Todd Brown

Someone will step up and lead your team.  It might be you, because of your experience or willingness or vision or frustration or opportunity.  Whoever it is has the responsibility to teach the rest of the riders their roles AND how to execute their roles. Those roles can range from driving directions and hotel selection, to cook,..

Someone will step up and lead your team.  It might be you, because of your experience or willingness or vision or frustration or opportunity.  Whoever it is has the responsibility to teach the rest of the riders their roles AND how to execute their roles.

Those roles can range from driving directions and hotel selection, to cook, to bottle handerupper, to canopy set up, to equipment selection, to equipment maintenance, to riding the front of the paceline, to leading the final miles, to sprinting for victory.

Regardless of how you assign the roles, you’ve got to define them in such a way that supports the main goal of the team.  Winning, friendship, fun.. all worthy goals.

A team united behind a goal, understanding individual roles can adjust as conditions change.  Someone might get sick, have a mechanical breakdown, etc.  That’s when the leader’s vision and the team’s goal will allow for the rest of the team to pick up the slack.

More important than filling each position is being in position to find the right teammates… then getting out of the way.

IMG_0646

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The Friends We Make Par Duex

Mar 23, 2017 Todd Brown

Tonight, I had dinner with David whom I hadn’t seen in 37 years.  We met on a cruise ship in Greece, summer of ’80.  He’s British, and was traveling with his father… we were a rowdy bunch of Americans spending the summer in Europe.  We all hit it off and absorbed him into our mania. This..

Tonight, I had dinner with David whom I hadn’t seen in 37 years.  We met on a cruise ship in Greece, summer of ’80.  He’s British, and was traveling with his father… we were a rowdy bunch of Americans spending the summer in Europe.  We all hit it off and absorbed him into our mania.

This morning, Gould and I were out rolling around town.  Zone 3 was his assignment, my assignment was self-assigned:  get out on that new bike!  While we blasted along the coast we picked up a caboose.  We turned right, he turned with us.

I turned and said, I’m Todd.  He said, I’m Justin.  Where are ya headed, I quizzed.  Home.  Where’s that?  Up ahead.

You on Strava?  Yep, Justin Aida.  Cool, I’m there too.  We meet at La Pata and Saluda every Tuesday at 5:50am.  Join us.  Will do.

We parted ways.

Gould and I rode on.  My bike, so new and pretty, still wasn’t “fit” to me by Eileen.  That would happen at lunch.  So I rode with a little discomfort, comforted knowing that would soon change.

Eileen’s, my kindred sister.  She’s been fitting me for 18 years.  She keeps all my fits on paper.  She’s old school and new school all in one.  When I told her what bike I was getting, she paused… I could hear her shuffling through my file.  In less than a minute, she blurted frame size and stem length and bar width and saddle width and crank length.  I try and explain the magic she works, most people can’t see the value.  A few do, and their riding is changed forever.

You’re changed forever, because it’s more than a bike fit.  Sometimes I’ll see her for an adjustment and she’ll touch my leg.  Work is stressful, isn’t it?  That’s weird I think, but then I absorb what it takes to pick up on someone’s state like that and realize why she’s such a treasured friend and mentor.

Dinner time came.  What  a reunion.  It was awesome.  So fun to hear what people have done with their lives.  What brought us together again is another story.

But what does bring us together?

As I wrapped up the day, I checked in on Strava.  Justin had left a comment on the morning ride.  Then Mike C had commented on Justin’s comment.  Turns out, Mike had rented a house with Justin’s brother and my brother in Huntington a few years back.

Maybe it’s not what brings us together that’s important but why we are brought together and what we learn and share with each other that matters?

Ride On.

david

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It’s The Friends We Make

Mar 23, 2017 Todd Brown

There are a lot of reasons to ride your bike.  Your doctor might say, “hey, chubby get out there and drop some pounds”.  Your spouse might say, “hey, grumpy get out there and come back with a smile.”  Your friends might say, “hey, it’s like being a kid again.  Try it.”  Off you go. One..

There are a lot of reasons to ride your bike.  Your doctor might say, “hey, chubby get out there and drop some pounds”.  Your spouse might say, “hey, grumpy get out there and come back with a smile.”  Your friends might say, “hey, it’s like being a kid again.  Try it.”  Off you go.

One day, nobody says anything.  You suit up to suit yourself.  The sky is blue, shining on your shoulders.  The wind sings away any blues in your soul.

Cyclists eventually come across other kindred souls and bond, and that’s what keeps us healthy, happy and young.

olson

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Flashy Jack Moves In

Mar 21, 2017 Todd Brown

It was hard to let Black Lightening go.  Three years ago I brought him home, his twin was already there and being ridden by Trevor.  Such happy days, a dad getting throttled by his son on matching bikes.  That passed, BL and I rode on – over 20,000 miles. Winning was rare and hard, but..

It was hard to let Black Lightening go.  Three years ago I brought him home, his twin was already there and being ridden by Trevor.  Such happy days, a dad getting throttled by his son on matching bikes.  That passed, BL and I rode on – over 20,000 miles.

Winning was rare and hard, but we had a few wins: on the group ride seen, a thimble full of TMWC’s, a couple of Market Rides, 1 Food Park and 1 CV… on the USA Cycling side, a few top placings and wins at small crits and one very sweet road race win in Santa Barbara.

We’d commuted to and from work many days, through sunlit mornings and dark nights. We’d moved from Coto to Las Flores to San Clemente.  Each stable a little different.  Each location offering new starting points for rides.

I re-shoed him with Roval CLX 40’s.  These magical wheels were a game changer for us, the speed gains amazing.  Recently, I’d upgraded all his electronics.  His paint was still quite nice.

How could we part?

It wasn’t easy.

When I saw the chrome forks on Flashy Jack I knew I had to have him.  Black Lightening could have stayed on as a back up ride.  That would be the smart thing, especially this rainy year.  But it would be cruel.  He is still so fast, he needed to find a good home.

His new jockey, Chris Hill, has already confirmed that Black Lightening is a game changer for him too.  They rode to a top 3 placing in HUNKR – OC in a star-packed group.

Flashy Jack waited patiently for me to find the time to put him together.  I was impatient, and couldn’t wait to see Eileen for a bike fit tomorrow.  We rode together for the first time today.

It was early, very dark.

I fumbled with the new e-tap shifting.  My position was wrong enough to make my back tense and my knee twinge.  The deeper dish wheels created uncertainty. We hit the TMWC, still no daylight.

A break went off the front.  The gap was expanding.  It was time to see how Flashy Jack would perform.  Ziiiiinnng!… we flew across the gap with minimal effort.

Flashy Jack, welcome home.

flashy

 

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Back To Work

Mar 20, 2017 Todd Brown

I need a break, but there’s still so much to do. That’s what happens when you sign up to make a difference.  I’m tired and on fire… thank you for stoking me .


I need a break, but there’s still so much to do. That’s what happens when you sign up to make a difference.  I’m tired and on fire… thank you for stoking me

IMG_2324.

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These Are A Few Of My Favorite Blogs

Mar 14, 2017 Todd Brown

These are my top 3 cycling blogs.  One I almost always disagree with, and come away a better person.  Another, is very personal and real and raw dealing with racing and life.  The last, inspires me to grow the cycling tribe. I wouldn’t rate one above the other, and I tend to binge on one for..

These are my top 3 cycling blogs.  One I almost always disagree with, and come away a better person.  Another, is very personal and real and raw dealing with racing and life.  The last, inspires me to grow the cycling tribe.

I wouldn’t rate one above the other, and I tend to binge on one for a while and sample the others then switch it up.  Over time, these three stay in the rotation while others come and go.

They all have their own unique style and authenticity honed over many years.  None of them are newbs.  One of them has become truly rich and famous, one makes a few bucks which I think mostly go to sponsor local races (I could be wrong, again), and the other plugs long-time, loyal sponsors.

One thing I’ve come to appreciate is I think they would each blog for free.  It’s more of a calling, fulfilling a need for them and ultimately feeding the rest of us with entertainment and knowledge.

Big thanks to:

Wanky

Steve

and Seth

You make my life richer.

3 blogs

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Race IQ = MinutesToGo/IQ

Mar 13, 2017 Todd Brown

I have noticed over the years, the closer I get to the finish line the dumber I get.  One year at Leadville I was putting down a fast time.  I raced into the transition and couldn’t find my team.  Granted, there were about a million spectators… still my friends were right in front of me yelling..

I have noticed over the years, the closer I get to the finish line the dumber I get.  One year at Leadville I was putting down a fast time.  I raced into the transition and couldn’t find my team.  Granted, there were about a million spectators… still my friends were right in front of me yelling to grab the bottles and go.  Here’s the formula for Race IQ and how to raise it.

Let’s say your IQ is 120.

Your Race IQ = MinutesToGo Divided By Your IQ

If your race is a week out, that would mean your Race IQ is 84. Why is that?  Because you’re running out of time.

Two weeks before a race, you’re a genius with a Race IQ of 168.  You’ve got lot of time to break and fix stuff, travel, make upgrades etc.

3 days out = a Race IQ of 36.  A good chance of forgetting something is looming.

Race day = RIQ of 13

3 minutes from the finish you have an RIQ of 1.5… and so does everybody around you.

So pay attention, this is when bad things can happen.

The antidote is getting into a state of flow.

FLOW = Confidence X Prepration X Visualization X Heart Rate X Panic X Pleasure X Smiling

If you’re confident in your skills and you’ve practiced something similar to these last 3 minutes and you’ve visualized a good outcome and your heart rate isn’t a million and you’re calm and actually having fun and smiling your RIQ can be 120 or more.  When you’re in flow everything slows down.

Most of us, myself included, spend too little time on the formula for FLOW.  If things aren’t flowing, you might consider slowing down.

signs

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Write The Finish, Then Get Started.

Mar 11, 2017 Todd Brown

Trevor asked me to drive to the high school together and time him running 1 mile.  He’s only done that once before and has probably run less than 50 miles in his life.  5 minutes was his goal. 5 minutes? Yep, I think I can do it.  I ran 5:20 last year after running 1 day...

Trevor asked me to drive to the high school together and time him running 1 mile.  He’s only done that once before and has probably run less than 50 miles in his life.  5 minutes was his goal.

5 minutes?

Yep, I think I can do it.  I ran 5:20 last year after running 1 day.   I’ve run 11 days this year, so I should make it right?

Right. (?)

Just like that he’d written his finish.  Set the goal, reviewed his prep, checked his shoes and bathing suit, picked the music, chosen the location and time.  Now it was time to perform.

I get it.

I never plan on winning or PRing a race I don’t care about.  Once or twice a year, I’ll target something.  Write that finish in my mind, and go for it.  Get the equipment ready, try and shed some lbs, monitor my sleep, huddle with my coach (I can only handle about 6 weeks of structure which drives her nuts – there’s a lesson on loyalty), you know the drill…

but, are you writing your finish?

Can you see it?  Is it coming to life as the timeline shortens?

All kinds of things will pop up on the way:  work will get busy, your family will need more of you, your bike will need fixing, your nutrition will fail on training rides, and so on.  Write how you make it all work into your finish now.

We had worked out a signal for each lap:  thumb down, faster than required; thumb up, too slow.

3, 2, 1, GO!

Thumb down, 1:05.  Thumb down, 2:28.  Thumb up, 3:55.

5:06.

He collapsed on the synthetic field, his back covered with tiny crushed rubber dots.  Phone laid still.  Air pods popped out.  Panting.  I sat on the bench and waited.  Man I love this kid, even if he’s 25 he’s my kid… who takes after his mother athletically.

Let’s walk, he says.

My flip flops clop.  I listen as he writes a new finish.

Dad, once I’m through busy season and have passed my CPA exams and can rest and run, you pace me on your bike.  I’m going to crush 5 minutes.

100' to go
100′ to go
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What The FUNKR?

Mar 08, 2017 Todd Brown

Making a game of sport is all the rage.  And look, racing a bicycle is hard… making a game of it can take some sting out of the efforts.  Isn’t that what Strava has done?  Well, check out what we’re doing over at HUNKR. We created FUNKR, because… Going for your personal record at HUNKR..

Making a game of sport is all the rage.  And look, racing a bicycle is hard… making a game of it can take some sting out of the efforts.  Isn’t that what Strava has done?  Well, check out what we’re doing over at HUNKR.

We created FUNKR, because…

Going for your personal record at HUNKR is fun, going for it with 5 or more friends is FUNKR!

Our top-secret software and supercomputer will take the five fastest times of your team and rank y’all against all the other FUNKR teams..  Then we’ll call up the fastest and shower you with gifts and trophies.  How FUNKR is that?

There are 3 categories:

All ladies?  You’ll be competing with other ladies.

All dudes?  Same.

Mixed?… ah, mixed.  Everybody’s thinking, “we could win mixed, all we need is a fast girl”.  Maybe, who knows?  Could be 4 fast ladies and some fast dude.  Ya see our technology is so savvy, it will scan for the fastest mixed group.  Just remember, you have to have at least 1 member of the opposite sex be in your top 5 fastest times.

Let the FUNKR begin.

Those cats crack me up… thinking so hard… “well, what about… you know that crazy fast kid that came on the ride that one time?”… HUNKR down boys and girls it’s FUNKR time.

funker

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Kids Under 23 Ride FREE!

Mar 07, 2017 Todd Brown

Kids, if you’re under 23, you ride FREE at HUNKR… as long as you register before 3/15/17, all of ya from 12 to 22. Pre-reging helps us to have enough food, t-shirts and awards for y’alls.  No need to hit the parents up for some dough. If the dog eats your internet, and you just can’t get it done..

Kids, if you’re under 23, you ride FREE at HUNKR… as long as you register before 3/15/17, all of ya from 12 to 22. Pre-reging helps us to have enough food, t-shirts and awards for y’alls.  No need to hit the parents up for some dough.

If the dog eats your internet, and you just can’t get it done in time…  Come anyway!

If you register at the event,  we ask $22 for a top-notch day on the bike… and, please get to the on site registration EARLY.

Bring your friends, especially the ones that just ride for fun… ’cause this is gonna be fun.

PS… This is a pic Trevor Brown took when he was 22 and still racing.  He was out on a training ride and bombing down the Alpine Loop in Utah and he sees Peter Sagan out cruising… slams on the brakes… whips around… sprints up to Peter and they ride for a good long time just chatting.  We’re sharing this story because we know all about the financial struggles you face… that’s our motivation to have HUNKR free to the kids under 23.

Y’all are awesome!

trev and peter

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Sunny Days Are Here Again

Mar 05, 2017 Todd Brown

As a cycling event promoter I haven’t had to worry about the weather too much.  The TMWC is in July and the SoCal Cycling Summit was in doors at Oakley’s HQ.  As a cyclist in Southern California, rainy days equal rest days.  It’s been wet and cold for months, and that has been on my mind..

As a cycling event promoter I haven’t had to worry about the weather too much.  The TMWC is in July and the SoCal Cycling Summit was in doors at Oakley’s HQ.  As a cyclist in Southern California, rainy days equal rest days.  It’s been wet and cold for months, and that has been on my mind more than ever as we prepare for our very first HUNKR.

I’ve monitored the registration rates at other cycling events this year and 90% of the participants are signing up the week of the event.  It’s an element we like to keep hush-hush, but it’s stressful nonetheless.  Imagine planning a wedding and not getting any RSVP’s until a few days before – yikes!

While it’s impossible to predict… I can firmly say whether your coming from Silverado (Amber Neben) or San Francisco (Ted King) or Los Angeles (Rahsaan Bahati) or San Diego (Thurlo Rogers) it’s looking like a perrrrrfect riding weather for HUNKR – OC on 3/18/17.

All those days of mist and chill and rain, when you threw your leg over the saddle and went for a pedal, are going to pay off.  You were passionate enough to brave the elements or mount the trainer.  Bring that fire when you go for your personal best over a 100 kilometer course on the only “country” roads in Orange County.

Meanwhile, we’ll keep getting things ready for ya!

weather

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Premium Experience

Mar 04, 2017 Todd Brown

Part of the HUNKR ethos is delivering a premium experience, that’s why we have hired Chef Joe Youkhan.  Because when you roll in after a 100k your body is craving goodness.  He’s personally preparing platefuls of  Paella, Pulled-Pork, Vegan burritos and sweet potato fries… and it’s included in your race entry. … envisioning this is making..

Part of the HUNKR ethos is delivering a premium experience, that’s why we have hired Chef Joe Youkhan.  Because when you roll in after a 100k your body is craving goodness.  He’s personally preparing platefuls of  Paella, Pulled-Pork, Vegan burritos and sweet potato fries… and it’s included in your race entry.

… envisioning this is making my mouth water…

Joe is a Five Star Award Recipient at the Ritz Carlton. He has been featured in Best Chefs of Orange County and Flavors of Los Angeles and the Culinary Masters Event, and much more…

It’s gonna be good.  It’s gonna be hot.  It’s gonna be fresh.

Spread the word, Chef Joe is coming to HUNKR too!

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Peaky, Pitchy, Bowly

Mar 03, 2017 Todd Brown

In the 80’s we would call 976-SURF for the surf report.  Some dude imitating Jeff Spicoli would give us the low-down for well-known spots.  My all time favorite report was for Oceanside Harbor one hot summer afternoon:  peaky, pitch, bowly.  We checked the common cash and gas and hit the road. The rest of that..

In the 80’s we would call 976-SURF for the surf report.  Some dude imitating Jeff Spicoli would give us the low-down for well-known spots.  My all time favorite report was for Oceanside Harbor one hot summer afternoon:  peaky, pitch, bowly.  We checked the common cash and gas and hit the road.

The rest of that summer, Stephen and I just looked at each every time it was good and laughed “peaky, pitchy, bowly”.  It was such a goofy, succinct way to describe special surf: super fun, with lots of opportunities for everybody.

Today’s late lunch ride was like that:  sunny, warm and dry.

It was only an hour.  It was just what I needed to power through the end of a busy week.

The new bridge I found nearby is a perfect set up to a sweet little 5 minute hustle.  I ripped the loop off 5 times, then spun around town smelling the sunshine and feeling the spring grass grow.

Peaky.  Pitchy. Bowly.

jeff

 

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I Thought About It

Mar 02, 2017 Todd Brown

Steven thinks I’m nuts.  He’s the only one that sees the hours I’m putting in right now.  From 6ish when my feet hit the floor ’till 9ish when I’m a little coocoo it’s all work.  And those are the times I think about not taking a spin.  Like today. Up at 6.  Emails.  8, meet..

Steven thinks I’m nuts.  He’s the only one that sees the hours I’m putting in right now.  From 6ish when my feet hit the floor ’till 9ish when I’m a little coocoo it’s all work.  And those are the times I think about not taking a spin.  Like today.

Up at 6.  Emails.  8, meet with Tyler on all the volunteer positions to fill as well as the “big rocks” that we are finalizing – guessing how many delicious meals we need on the 18th aint easy. 12, get to office makin’ calls ‘n emails ‘n such.

… funny aside:  speaking with the Sheriff’s dept and the CHP I feel like a teenager getting pulled over.  They’re all on board with HUNKR, just keeping them up to date…

Leave office around 7.  Costco for my veggies, nuts and fruits… ’cause ya are what ya eat.  Crank out more “day” job work.

Viola it’s heading towards 10.

At 5:30 with the sun setting it was tempting to keep at it.  Young Todd, who ballooned up to 195 lbs woulda done that, The Old Diesel knows a break in the action is the winning pace to make it ALL happen.

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Volunteers

Mar 01, 2017 Todd Brown

Volunteers make things great things happen because they want something important to them to succeed. They don’t ask if anything needs to be done they ask how can I help? and then they get busy.  Tonight I was truly inspired at ou first HUNKR volunteer meeting Eight of us met and poured over the details..

Volunteers make things great things happen because they want something important to them to succeed. They don’t ask if anything needs to be done they ask how can I help? and then they get busy.  Tonight I was truly inspired at ou first HUNKR volunteer meeting

Eight of us met and poured over the details of our plans. Many refinements were made. The major operations were assigned. Training begun. What a talented team we have assembled.

Feeling very blessed tonight.

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What’s The Big Idea?

Feb 28, 2017 Todd Brown

As much as I love group rides and racin’… I do love to ride alone.  Doesn’t matter if it’s road or mountain, flat or up, fast or not.  Ridin’ alone is magical in it’s own way because that’s when nothing else matters. When nothing else matters, my head is clear.  Eventually.  Not at first.  It..

As much as I love group rides and racin’… I do love to ride alone.  Doesn’t matter if it’s road or mountain, flat or up, fast or not.  Ridin’ alone is magical in it’s own way because that’s when nothing else matters.

When nothing else matters, my head is clear.  Eventually.  Not at first.  It takes a bit for the voices to dwindle.  Faux conversations dim.  Cares don’t need tending.  Wheels spinning it all away.

It’s just me.

And my bike.

And my voice.

My real voice, surfaces.

Hey man, how you been?

Life okay?

What can I do for ya?

Well, ya see, it’s like this…

…and I spin…

It’s not deliberate or intentional.

It’s flow.

Ideas flow.

I stop, write them down.

Expand on them.  Think on them.  Prey on them.

The winners return, ride after ride.

Until one day they are real.

question

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Strawberry Fields

Feb 27, 2017 Todd Brown

Today, I lost my front wheel on a very slick sidewalk.  Maybe it was subliminal?… I was, after all, humming Strawberry Fields Forever… Let me take you down… and now I have a great big strawberry on my left hip. At some point you’re gonna take a tumble, whether it’s riding bikes or falling in..

Today, I lost my front wheel on a very slick sidewalk.  Maybe it was subliminal?… I was, after all, humming Strawberry Fields Forever… Let me take you down… and now I have a great big strawberry on my left hip.

At some point you’re gonna take a tumble, whether it’s riding bikes or falling in love.  How you handle the wound makes all the difference in recovery speed.  Don’t let it scab, keep it moist and heal from the inside out.

Here’s what I do:

  1.  If at all possible, keep riding… mainly because that is what tough guys do and I like to practice my tough guy skills in case I need them.
  2. Get home, strip down, get in the shower, soap up the loofa and scrub all the dirt away.
  3. Air dry the road rash.
  4. Put on too much Neosporin – you can’t put on enough, trust me.
  5. Cover with giant band aid.
  6. Go to work and hope it doesn’t leak.
  7. If you can, add more ointment during the day so it doesn’t scab – I blew this today.

If a scab forms you will lose movement because the scab isn’t flexible.

This will hurt like a son-of-a-biscuit sooner than you think.  You will ride anyway, because of step #1 and the scab will crack and bleed and that’s just a drag.  But, if it happens just pour on more ointment than you think you need and let it soften up the scab.

As the wound starts to heal you can de-breed it carefully.  All the while, you should be able to ride and enjoy life.

Keep the rubber side down!

scab
Trust me it’s nasty under there.
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Like I’m Young Again

Feb 25, 2017 Todd Brown

Rolled up to the start line behind all the dinosaurs, watched ’em roll off without me… bye-bye turds… Brownie is racing with the Category 3 kids today.  The whistle went off (no guns here) The Old Diesel led through the first turn – wanted the little ones to know who not to worry about. Dang, was..

Rolled up to the start line behind all the dinosaurs, watched ’em roll off without me… bye-bye turds… Brownie is racing with the Category 3 kids today.  The whistle went off (no guns here) The Old Diesel led through the first turn – wanted the little ones to know who not to worry about.

Dang, was I ever this young and frisky?  Suicidal attacks consistently whipping things up only to be slowly shut down by idunnowho… sorry punks.

We, Pete and I, were sporting the 2017 kits with our new sponsor’s colors:  HUNKR … I thought we looked awesome – serious bias on that.

Since getting back to road racing, I’ve been racing the age group stuff.  No teammates, just freelancing when I can.  Pete upgraded to Cat 3 last year, and this was our first race together.  He’d been freelancing his way from 5 to 4 to 3.

We had a grand master flash plan, and it worked pretty good until my Adult Onset O.L.D. flared up, withering my legs comically fast.  A mile to go and bye-bye punks… sorry Pete…

…but, I did feel young again… and I’m gonna find The Cure.

cat 3

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We Should Do This More

Feb 24, 2017 Todd Brown

At some point in your riding life you’ll settle into a great group.  Fact is, these groups become almost second families… at least brothers and sisters, and I for one am always thinking “we should have a party, or go out to dinner.” We never do. Life’s social routines rule. All these dear friends with..

At some point in your riding life you’ll settle into a great group.  Fact is, these groups become almost second families… at least brothers and sisters, and I for one am always thinking “we should have a party, or go out to dinner.”

We never do.

Life’s social routines rule.

All these dear friends with whom we wind up sharing so much of what’s happening in our lives as we pedal along and yet our wives/husbands/lovers rarely ever meet.

Tonight we met my friend and his lady at Jimmy’s.  Three hours later we parted… new, deeper friendships formed.

Such a great extended family.

We should do this more often.

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Brett

Feb 23, 2017 Todd Brown

Brett is one of those guys that you are pretty sure is completely full of that brown stuff that comes out of the back end of a bull.  We met in college, socially.  I got into riding, he said he knew a thing or two… that he was Specialized first sponsored racer.  “BS!” To this..

Brett is one of those guys that you are pretty sure is completely full of that brown stuff that comes out of the back end of a bull.  We met in college, socially.  I got into riding, he said he knew a thing or two… that he was Specialized first sponsored racer.  “BS!”

To this day, I sprint and practice sprinting the way he taught me.  He wasn’t even riding then, but would drive out to the old airport in Provo… and teach me.  Get my rpm’s up, then shift, get the rpm’s up in the bigger gear and do it again.  We talked positioning and timing the final sprint.  Not a taskmaster, just a friend sharing wisdom.

I started winning.

He laughed at my Cannondale touring bike and told me to buy a Gios.  A what?  A Gios with Campagnolo Super Record is the only bike to race on.  BS!

I saved all summer, ordered it from 10 Speed Drive.  Took the parts and frame to the local bike shop… they freaked out.  A Gios!

The Gios blue was amazing, and people that actually knew something drooled over it.

We connected about 10 years after leaving higher education.  He said he’d been hanging out with Eddy Merckx.  BS!

Yes, he had.  In fact he’d started collecting Eddy’s jerseys and they’d become friends.  Eddy introduced him to other old-time racers and Brett started buying their jerseys and old photos and memorabilia too.

The Horton Collection is recognized as one of the largest and best collections of cycling history in the world.  Before you say BS, check it out.

He has a few bikes too, one is his own Specialized with a #1 stamped in the frame and a one-page contract from M.S.

Merckx1973PR-keyline

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U23 is FREE?

Feb 21, 2017 Todd Brown

Why can racers under 23 years old can race my races for free?  When I started PEDALindustries the hippityhiphip cool tagline was Growing Cycling By Design.  I looked at that phrase every single day, many times a day.  The logic made sense:  more riders, more sales – more riders, more friends – more riders, more..

Why can racers under 23 years old can race my races for free?  When I started PEDALindustries the hippityhiphip cool tagline was Growing Cycling By Design.  I looked at that phrase every single day, many times a day.  The logic made sense:  more riders, more sales – more riders, more friends – more riders, more healthy people… which lead to what kind of event would grow the sport, which lead to HUNKR.

What does U23 mean?  Traditionally, U23 is an elite racing age group of 19-22 year olds.  The races for this age group serve as sort of a farm league for pro cycling, kind of like college sports in the US.  In fact, if you start too late in cycling as my son did you can’t realistically get a shot at racing in Europe – that’s a story for another day.

What do we mean by U23?  We mean every racer under 23 years old can race a HUNKR for free.  There may come a day when we limit that to a percentage of total racers, and won’t that be an amazing day!

How can you help?  Get your kids or friends’ kids to register and take part in an amazing event.  They don’t need to have ever raced before, the just need to know how to ride a bike and have some good fitness.  If they all ready race, all the better… they can have a real shot of making some real money – why prize money is also a story for another day.

Get Registered: HUNKR

u23

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Warm And Sunny

Feb 20, 2017 Todd Brown

It was warm and sunny.  80 degrees.  Sweat beading off my arms.  The energy! Wore the light gray jersey to stay cool, zipper cracked just past those two weird bones at the bottom of my neck. Used my cold bottles to keep my core cold. Cumulus patches waved hello with spotty shade. A red-tailed hawk eyed..

It was warm and sunny.  80 degrees.  Sweat beading off my arms.  The energy!

Wore the light gray jersey to stay cool, zipper cracked just past those two weird bones at the bottom of my neck.

Used my cold bottles to keep my core cold.

Cumulus patches waved hello with spotty shade.

A red-tailed hawk eyed me, one hunter to another?

Days like this day pull me towards summer.

I’m ready.

sunny

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What Is Makes A Standout Ride?

Feb 18, 2017 Todd Brown

STANDOUT RIDES: more memorable, more demanding, more re-living it over food, and someone – maybe you – shoots some stills, maybe video to prove it happened. If you and I were riding together – I wish we were right now – and I asked you to name a standout ride… well, there’s no telling the length of..

STANDOUT RIDES: more memorable, more demanding, more re-living it over food, and someone – maybe you – shoots some stills, maybe video to prove it happened.

If you and I were riding together – I wish we were right now – and I asked you to name a standout ride… well, there’s no telling the length of your tale

I’d listen, and we’d revel.

When, where, how far, who… shining from you, lighting up my mind.

HUNKRs are like that:

For OC, we’ll be on the best country road in the county.  It’ll be beautiful.  Some of the course is only accessible with special permission, and will be all new to (most of) you.

You’ll be prepped and out there with other riders.  The energy will thrill you, and push you to cover 100 kilometers… you’ll be getting after your personal record.

When you finish we’ll have a delightful meal for you.  Refueling and re-telling your day with your friends – nothing better.

As you relax we’ll be color correcting and editing your photo(s), and in a day or two you’ll have the digital proof to post up on the interwebs.

We can’t wait to serve you.

PS I’ve been asked lately if HUNKR is for first timers… of course it is, because there’s always time for a Standout Ride!  Just pick your starting group based on your pace, and have a blast.

memorable

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A Motivation, A Meal, A Momento… A Memory

Feb 17, 2017 Todd Brown

How do you know? If you’re fast(er) If you’re improving If you can do it How’d it go? Awesome Coulda been better As I thought, but different What’d ya do? I rode one hundred kilometers On a bike With these other fun, crazy athletes Really? Yep, check out this pic!

How do you know?

If you’re fast(er)

If you’re improving

If you can do it

How’d it go?

Awesome

Coulda been better

As I thought, but different

What’d ya do?

I rode one hundred kilometers

On a bike

With these other fun, crazy athletes

Really?

Yep, check out this pic!

2017-02-17_2033

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The Spoke N Word

Feb 16, 2017 Todd Brown

Went to dinner with my friend Mckay tonight.  He was in town on business.  Which is weird since he’s the biggest party planner I know, it’s hard to square with his business empire.  The last time we were together was Moab 2016. His plan: let’s ride the White Rim Trail in a day.  That’s 100 miles..

Went to dinner with my friend Mckay tonight.  He was in town on business.  Which is weird since he’s the biggest party planner I know, it’s hard to square with his business empire.  The last time we were together was Moab 2016.

His plan: let’s ride the White Rim Trail in a day.  That’s 100 miles of incredible views on 4×4 road.

Before that we did the entire Tour of California.

We did the 24 hours of Moab race on a 4 man team.

We took the families to Moab 20 years ago and walked along dinosaur prints.

We rode a bunch of sweet single track in NorCal where he lives and rented cabins in Tahoe with the families.

Ya need a guy like McKay to be part of your life.  Someone that’s always on the look out for an adventure… a “I wonder if we could ride from here to there in a day”.

He’s always inviting me, and I don’t go nearly enough.

Anytime I come up with an idea, his answer is nearly always the same… “let’s do it!”

On these adventures there’s always time to talk, hash out the ways to approach the current stage in life.

We ended tonight talking about The Life Of Pi.  He’s the only person I’ve met that understood the meaning of the book the same as me.

“If you stumble about believability, what are you living for? Love is hard to believe, ask any lover. Life is hard to believe, ask any scientist. God is hard to believe, ask any believer. What is your problem with hard to believe?”
Yann Martel, Life of Pi

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The Hills Round Here

Feb 15, 2017 Todd Brown

Finally got TB out on the MTB! It’s so green, and alive… and it was quite warm as the sun settled over coastal fog.  Matt and Robot joined me.  Robot forgot he had to pick up plans for an inspection in the morning, he bailed early at Cactus Trail.  Matt forgot his MTB shoes and..

Finally got TB out on the MTB!

It’s so green, and alive… and it was quite warm as the sun settled over coastal fog.  Matt and Robot joined me.  Robot forgot he had to pick up plans for an inspection in the morning, he bailed early at Cactus Trail.  Matt forgot his MTB shoes and painfully pedaled with tenni’s, so we got him a RaceDay Bag and he’ll never forget his shoes again.

This time of year I like to ride from the office on Wednesday evenings.  We are two blocks from Whiting Ranch.  It’s easy to get out and do 60-90 minutes of climbing, either on Harding Truck Trail or Santiago Truck Trail.  That makes for a nice 2-21/2 hour ride.

Those types of climbs are important to be doing for my next targeted event: Whisky 50.

We hit Whiting, then crossed over into Cleveland National Forest.  The plan was to roll to Old Camp, but Matt’s feet were on fire due to shoe selection and we shot down The Luge.

Wow!  The Luge is in phenomenal shape.  New berms.  Stutter bumps filled in.  I’d say it’s like the luge of old, but it’s actually better.

Daylight was thinning out, and I didn’t mind cutting the ride short.  Still got in a couple of thousand feet of vertical, not a bad start.  10 ten more weeks to get my body ready.

The gear is mostly all there, ‘cept my shoes.

My shoes are in desperate condition.  3 seasons is 2 seasons too many for race shoes.  They are beaten, torn, and have lost quite a bit of support under the tender, aging balls of my feet.

Shoes are always a tough purchase which is probably why I procrastinate it so much.

Top choices are expensive: $300-400.  Most shops don’t carry a good selection, and even when they do you’re trying on a shoe on a floor vs a shoe attached to a cleat and locked into a pedal.  Then, the color selections can be weird.

Generally, I just go with black:  it’s in stock most of the time and I love the look of black shoes and black socks… just looks like they mean business, the mean kind of business.

As much as I think I’ve mellowed over the years, when I target a race I’m just a different guy that day… it’s kinda a weird, this Hulk-like transformation.  It can be embarrassing if I get too wound up.

Maybe I should buy white shoes this time?  NO WAY!

Once the starter’s gun fires all those days of climbing for hours straight up will come to my mind and I’ll remember exactly why I showed up to race.

flag
The beautiful view from the top of The Luge
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For The Children

Feb 14, 2017 Todd Brown

A wise man once said: “The best thing you can do for your kids is love their parent.” … that’s all for today.

A wise man once said:

“The best thing you can do for your kids is love their parent.”

… that’s all for today.

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Do You Feel Lucky?

Feb 13, 2017 Todd Brown

Is it okay to race not too lose?  Saturday I raced not too lose, and had a good result.  Two weeks ago I raced to win and had a better result.  Granted, one course I felt fit my skills and build perfectly… which had a decidedly different mindset than this week.  Saturday, I tucked for..

Is it okay to race not too lose?  Saturday I raced not too lose, and had a good result.  Two weeks ago I raced to win and had a better result.  Granted, one course I felt fit my skills and build perfectly… which had a decidedly different mindset than this week.  Saturday, I tucked for eight minutes straight at nearly 50 m.p.h. and caught up to two elite climbers… then I tucked my tail between my legs.

I quit my grit.

These two had just freewheeled down the hill.  I was all risk and made up a minute with my extra ballast.

Who was I kidding?  I was lucky to be here.

The good news was the chasers were out of sight.

We hit the climb again.  Rather than go all in as I had two weeks prior, I let them go.  I dosed my effort and raced not to lose.

Why press my luck?

When I got home I compared my times to last year.  This year’s winner, was also last year’s winner.  But this year’s winning times equaled my times of last year.  In other words, my effort from last year would have had me on pace to ride with the leaders this year.

In fact, I made up time on those two as the race wore on.

The point isn’t that I would have won this year… the point is my mindset was different.  I wasn’t feeling it.

Last year we raced an age group down, and had a much bigger field.  I knew the people between me and the winners weren’t “that” much better, and I dug a lot deeper because I “knew” I was good enough to beat the guys close to me.  Some of these other guys were riding buddies and I was confident that I could hang with them.

There was nobody in between me and the leaders this year… lonely pavement and stoic cacti.

Two weeks ago, I’d told myself if I can make it up the hill I have a chance – it was a flat finish after a long descent.  The closer we got to the finishing line the luckier I felt.

Is there something wrong with racing not too lose?  I don’t know the answer to that.

Just sometimes ya feel luckier.

Can you make your luck?  Kinda, by preparing and caring and doing all you can to be ready… picking the right course.

There’s (sic) other things outside of cycling that make me feel lucky.

They seem to spill into all the empty spaces and buoy me.  A clean office, being in synch with the TW, scoring a big order and having some extra coin in the bank, a call from one of my kids just to say hi, a good night’s sleep, seeing the sun shine at day break, taking time to pray and appreciate life before the day starts, a good comedy movie, a Rocky movie…

…maybe it’s age?…

Young TB used to just crank the metal music and get pissed off to unleash the mighty fury…

…what a punk!

dirtyharry07 (1)

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