Chronicles of my insanity

Sunday, June 21, 2015

Ungoogleable Experience

100 miles around Lake Tahoe and beyond complete!  What an amazing experience.  It's always hard to describe the emotions that occur during long rides, and there are many emotions to be had over an 8 hour day on the bike.  But here's my attempt at sharing . . .

Waking Up
Our day begins with a 5am alarm.  My friend and roomie, Eileen, and I go about the morning business in that blurry silence which happens when you are trying to be functional at an hour best suited for sleeping.  I eat a banana and some bread and down a cup of awful hotel coffee in attempts to force my eyelids open.  By 5:45 we are amid a buzzing group of cyclists in the hotel lobby ready to roll.

The Start
Shortly after 6am, the 5 of us roll out the door and begin our ride merging into a mass of cyclists already on the road.  America's Most Beautiful Bike Ride (AMBBR) has about 3000 registered cyclists, 700+ of which are part of Team in Training across the county.  It's a fairly spectacular site to see hundreds of purple jerseys pedaling away.  Even more amazing is the fact that the 700 of us raise over $3 millions in support of the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.  Our chapter raised over $171,000 as of last week.   It's a great feeling when you know you contributed to this amazing effort of good in the world.  And when you see so many people dressed in TnT gear, it's like a real life data visualization of the impact.
 

Anyhow, back to the ride.  Here's what the day had in store for us.  100 miles and just under 5000' of climbing, 72 miles around the lake + a 28 mile out and back jaunt to Truckee.   This is a fairly flat route by Bay Area standards, and I knew we were ready for the adventure.  Our group included our trusty Coach Jim, Eileen, Morris and myself all seasoned riders, and Todd, who was embarking on his very first century.  


Emerald Bay (Mile 1-32)
After a nice flat warm up, we round the west side of the lake and begin climbing up by Emerald Bay.  I had been to this spot once before on my bike back in 2011 after an unfortunate incident of my car breaking down and stranding me in South Lake Tahoe for a few days.   What I remember about that ride was how scary it was with all the traffic and then the absolutely stunning views.  So upon my return, it was a delight to find they had closed traffic on our side of the road for this 5 mile climb.  It was not to my delight, though, that it was strangely foggy that morning. A heavy layer of fog, a la San Francisco, had settled over the lake, and all you could see as you climbed was the familiar white layer. Hrmph.  As we get to the top 45 minutes later, the sun starts to burn a hole into the fog and clouds, and miraculously, we are treated with this amazing view.  I retract my hrmph-ness, mother nature.  You win!
 


Out and Back to Truckee (Mile 32-60)
At about mile 32, we take a turn to do an out and back to Truckee.  On the way out this is an ever so slight downhill, which is great for pacelining and fast riding.  We all tuck in behind Jim, and start cruising along. As the last in the line, I was enjoying all the benefits of the pacelining and taking in the views a bit.  

Up ahead, I see two cyclist suddenly stop on the side of the the road, even though there is no shoulder.  The rest is in slow motion.   Jim swerves, Todd breaks quickly and falls,  Morris crashes into him, Eileen swerves trying to avoid Morris and the traffic next to us, and I slam on the breaks.   We all stand and lie there stunned for a few seconds as traffic and bikes race past us.  I turn towards the road and start signaling for cars to slow down.  We all help Morris and Todd stand up.  Thankfully no one is seriously injured. 

Morris's bike, unfortunately did not fare as well.  A broken derailleur and shifter and some pulled muscles put him out of commission.   So we move off the road, and begin the hilarious process of trying to call SAG.  After a serious set of miscommunications and an hour of sitting on the side of the road, we finally get some help and transit for Morris and his bike.    We are able to continue on to Truckee down one teammate.  :-(

[Side note:  the guys who essentially caused this giant tumble, didn't even bother to ask us if we were okay.  They simply looked at all of us lying on the ground and then rode away. Jerks.]

North Shore (Mile 61-75)
Back from Truckee, we round the north shore of the Lake.  This was a fairly long stretch, where we are able to paceline a bit more (safely!) and go through a series of rollers.  Eileen, who had done the ride before, had said lunch was at mile 70 or so.  I vaguely remember looking at the map earlier in the morning and seeing the same information about lunch being at King's Beach at 70.  For me when doing 100 mile rides, mile 65 or so is when I start to get tired and very hungry.  But since I knew lunch was at mile 70, I didn't bother eating too much knowing that we had a lunch stop ahead.

Let's just call miles 70-75 the Hangry Miles of the ride.  At this point, you are riding fairly close to the shore and can see the lake and the beaches. At each turn you think you are going to pull into one of these beaches for lunch, but you don't.  You are also rolling through a fairly developed part of the lake where there are hamburger joints and pizza parlors and ice cream stands every few feet. And you are very, very hungry and getting very, very angry that the lunch stop was not at mile 70 as promised. This is also when you think you may have missed the lunch stop and get silently angry at everyone else around you.

Lunch (Mile 75)
So it turns out they moved lunch a few miles from the last time Eileen did the ride, and I was very tired at 5am.  We did not miss lunch and had a gorgeous picnic table view.  We even met some locals who had been doing this ride for 20 years, and had their sweet teenage daughter join them for the last 5.  My whole outlook on life was changed by a ham sandwich, a bag of chips, and a cookie!




Hills, More Hills, and a Big Hill (Miles 75-94)
Fully refreshed with calories, cold water, and a lot of chamois butter, we return to our bikes. Immediately after lunch, you face a two mile climb that takes you back into Nevada.  Normally, this hill would not be a problem, but after gorging yourself of lunch and various snacks, everything feels a little sluggish and your stomach is not thrilled with you. Frankly, it's very mean.  But then you are treated to bopping along through Incline Village, a very wealthy neighborhood on Tahoe. The houses are enormous and the views just grand.

Then we begin the climb to Spooner summit.  This is a doozy of a 9 mile climb, fairly steep at parts, and hits you around mile 82, which, again, is just mean.  This goes on for a good long time.  At this point, it's the warmest part of the day.  While it was just 78 degrees, it felt like a billion degrees with the asphalt and all the sweating and all the complaining that was coming out of my mouth.   However, just when I would get really tired, I would look to the right and see the amazing views. Here's a peak of Carnelian Bay and it's crystal blue waters.  If we had been closer to the lake, I would have jumped right in!


At these events they set up cameras on the hills because you are going slow enough that they can capture a non-blurry photo of you.  These are also, sadly, the moments when you are most likely suffering the most.  Here is one where I am trying to be happy for the official race photo as I climb up Spooner.


We finally all survive the climb and regroup for the last 12 miles.  The descent is 6 miles down Hwy 50, a 4 lane highway.  The roads aren't closed, but because there are so many cyclists on the road, the traffic generally was giving us a full lane.  The road is smooth and clear and fairly straight.  I hit close to 50 mph on my trusty bike.  What a thrill!

What?! (Mile 94-100)
The last 6 miles are a series of rollers. As I am cruising down a hill, I hear a sudden pop and ssssssss....  flat tire! Luckily there is a wide shoulder and I pull over.  My rear tire is completely flat.  

Slightly defeated, I hop off my bike and get to work changing the tire.  I take it off and start examining the tire to see what caused the flat.  On the first go around, I don't find anything but some white feathers in the tire that look like they blew in there when I was taking the tube out.  I go another round and find nothing but the feather.  One more time around and I stop at the feather.  Well what do you know!  It was the feather!  The quill was stuck through the tire and had a pointy bit which punctured the tube.  I pull it out and try to get the feathers out as well with no avail.   Who in the world gets a flat tire from a feather?!

Meanwhile Jim pulls up having come back to help me.  Dozens of riders zip by me yelling out, "Bummer!"  Jim gives me a patch and I cover up the feather holes, and put it all back together.  The official ride SAG shows up right then.  They pump my tire back up and help me get it back on the bike.   We rejoin our teammates and see that not 200 feet from where I got my flat, the finish line is in sight.  We were less than a mile from the finish!

We all roll in together with big smiles on our faces. Hooray! Todd completes his first century, which was strangely emotional for me.  His wife was there to greet him, and I had a wave of emotions remembering what it was like for me to complete my first century, too.  It's a great sense of accomplishment mixed with exhaustion, the fuzziness of dehydration, and then the wave of knowing you just rode 100 miles.  This time, I was just pleased as punch to be part of Todd's accomplishment and know that we did all of this in support of an important cause near and dear to me.  Also I was very very very hungry. We end the night with lots of food, beer, and smiles all around!

Epilogue 
When sitting down to write this, I was trying to remember all the emotions that go with training and completing an event like this.  I've done it several times now, but each time there are always a handful of special moments that warm my heart, ones that are hard to describe although I always try. There's not a word or a phrase that captures it well enough, so I am always looking for  a good German word or some photos that can help in the description.  To that end, I tried to google "bike flat tire from feather" to see if I could find a photo to support my story.  Not to flatter myself too much, but I am an *excellent* googler. If it's on the Internet and indexed by Google, I will find it.  But after 10 maybe 20 different boolean search variations, I came up with not one entry about someone else getting a flat tire from a feather.  Not a photo, not a story, nada!  So there you have it -- the perfect metaphor.  Doing century rides with Team in Training is an Ungoogleable Experience.*

Many many thanks to all that supported me in my fundraising and training.  You guys are the best!

As always,  much love and gratitude!
m.



** Strangely, spellcheck recognizes ungoogleable as a word

Sunday, March 8, 2015

Shifting Landscapes

Things have been on the move lately!

Chris and I are preparing for a remodel of our house, with construction starting in a few months, we hope.   This has been a project in the planning stages for oh, say, the last 6 years.  For anyone who has spent any amount of time on a long bike ride with us, you surely have heard updates of this plan. And you will have to hear about it likely for another 6-8 months.  But then it will be done, and you will all be invited over to a big party!    But until then, let's continue on with this beating-a-dead-horse topic.

So, we are going to have to move out of our house for the duration of the construction. We have very luckily a place to stay in Rockridge, so will be up and moving parts of our life to Oakland in a few months time.  It's been quite the rubics cube of puzzles planning this all.  Some things are getting sold, somethings donated, others moving to Rockridge with us, others into storage.  While I don't mind the planning the logistics of it all, I am little uneasy about the upcoming upheavals in my life.  I'm actually pretty good about traveling and going with the flow in the short term, but my home has always been the place where I find stability and sanity.  So picking up and dispersing my life all over the Bay Area feels daunting.

Recently, we had a conversation with our next door neighbor, who has owned his house here since the 70's.  He told us that the reason our house and others on our street have such steep staircases and high garages is because our house used to be located several streets down the hill.  During the construction of the 280 freeway nearby, our house was relocated up to it's current location.  I immediately began to do some internet sleuthing to see if I could verify his story.  While I have not found any actual proof that this applies to our house,  I did find references to many houses between the 1930's to the 1950's getting moved in our neighborhood.  Given our house was built in 1940 per historical records, most likely it would have been moved due to the expansion of San Jose Ave, rather than 280. But the moving part  could be true. In any case, the fact that you can up and move an entire house is fascinating to me.  Here's a historical photos of a house that was moved in the 50's I believe.


and here's one from the horse and buggy days.



And here's a Facebook page of an upcoming book about the very topic, San Francisco Relocated.

[Side note:  Dive bar Clooney's in the Mission may also have been moved to it's current location.]

Ok, sorry to take you down my internet searching rabbit hole, but it is really fascinating, isn't it?  I mean, the idea of just taking your entire house with you and putting it in a new landscape is pretty amazing.  Same house, different views and different neighborhood.  

But then I started thinking if we could just move our house to Oakland with us, it wouldn't really be the same home.  For me, the part of the home being the center of your life is not just about the physical building, but about the people and community that you live in.  It's your friendly next door neighbors who share a beer from their cooler on a Friday evening. Or the owner of your neighborhood grocery store who knows what kind of cheese you like.  Or the hairdresser that knows the ins and outs of not just your hair but your personal life.  Or the series of mini parks and the Glen Canyon that I run through on my neighborhood runs.

So all of this really does take us back to cycling, I promise.   I've taken a few years off from Team in Training, and was recently wondering if I would enjoy it as much as I have in the past.  I had looked at the roster of people on the team,  most of them were new to me.  And I looked at the ride locations for the season, many of which were far away and new to me.  I also have a new-to-me bike that I have not ridden any long distances on, and I started to get concerned that I would need new gears or new adjustments on it.  Given all the changing landscapes of my upcoming life, I actually was a little concerned about adding in more newness to my life.

But this Saturday, I joined the team for my first ride of the season.  There were so many familiar and friendly faces -- previous coaches, teammates, honored teammates that I have spent many an hour with on my bike.  These are people who I may not see very often, but are ones that always welcome me with open arms. We rode a classic Bay Area ride (Paradise Loop) on what was apparently the perfect San Francisco day (75 and sunny!)

We dedicated the ride to an amazing man, AJ Jabanero, who lost his battle to liver cancer this past week.  He joined Team in Training several years ago when his two year old daughter, Izzy, was diagnosed with Leukemia.  He and his family spent endless time and energy supporting Team in Training.  Izzy is now in remission and a healthy litte girl.   Sadly, AJ is no longer with us.  But his spirit and energy lives on.



So all of this -- the joy and the sadness -- all of this was a little bit like coming home.  The community, the support, the cycling, and the fun. It was a reminder for me that this is why I keep doing this Team in Training thing.  It doesn't matter what else is going on in my life, where my home is moving to.  If I can hop on my bike and support some people along the way, then I will enjoy the shifting landscapes and enjoy the ride.

And by the way, if you want to join me on the ride and help change the landscape of blood cancers, please make a donation to the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.  Any amount is much appreciated!












Wednesday, January 21, 2015

The More the Butter!


Well, well, well.  We meet again.  Over 1.5 years later.  Good to know we can pick up where we left off so easily.

What have I been up to lately?  Allow me to summarize:
  • 3 long months in a miserable boot back in July 2013.
  • Then, out of the boot. Yay!
  • Then back in the boot a week later.  Boo!
  • 3 long months in a miserable boot.
  • Then back on the bike for the first time in January 2014.  17 miles. Woo hoo!
  • 6 months of intensive physical therapy + swim and bike training.
  • Speedster (my bike) develops 2 cracks in the frame. Bye bye bike.
  • Complete an aqua bike ( 2.4 mile swim + 112 mile bike) on a rented bike I had never ridden before. Ouch!
  • Buy a new-to-me bike, and name it Butter.  He's a smoooth ride!
That pretty much brings us up to speed.  What have you been up to?

Nice!  Sounds like you've been busy.   What do I have planned this year, you ask?

Well, in the spirit of New Years resolutions, I've signed up for another round of training and fundraising in support the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society.  I'll be training for and riding  America's Most Beautiful Bike Ride.  It's 100 miles around Lake Tahoe on June 7, 2015.

I know! It does sound fun.  Care to join me?

Oh. OK.  Well, think about it.  I'd love to ride with you.  We ride all over the Bay Area.  In the mean time, though, you could support me by donating to my fundraising efforts.  I'm trying to reach $3500 by June.  

Yeah, it's always a challenge to fundraise, but it's worth it.  LLS does such good work at supporting research and helping patients and families who have cancer.

Thank you!  That's so generous.   And thank you so much for spreading the word.

Okay, well, great chatting with you.  Let's catch up here soon, okay?

Bye!

PS.  Donate here!  http://pages.teamintraining.org/gba/ambbr15/melissacheung#home