Sunday, November 24, 2013

Drumlin Ramble, Ride # 94

A drumlin, according to one online dictionary, is "a long, narrow or oval, smoothly rounded hill of unstratified glacial drift." Fair enough.

There's one in nearby Lancaster at the base of George Hill Rd and across from the campus of what was once the Atlantic Union College. Called the Dexter Drumlin, the huge graceful mound swells upward like an earthen great blue whale.

The Drumlin
I like to ride by there from time to time. Any ride that takes in the Dexter Drumlin I call a Drumlin Ramble. Ride #94 on a sunny, not exactly warm, but bright Saturday afternoon was one such ramble.

Earlier in the year, maybe late April, I'd ridden the Crust over there and ridden right up to the top and, though it's a very gradual slope and doesn't appear, from the base, to be that high, from the top the view is sweeping and far. This time, though, on my road bike, I contented myself with a view from the base.

As I type this entry a day after the ride, I'm looking out on a covering of snow that came overnight. And, it's 21 degrees F outside and blustery. It may warm up some this week and rain but seeing the snow cover this morning suggests to me that I may not manage another six rides before Christmas. Nevertheless, on yesterday's Drumlin Ramble I was dressed perfectly so wasn't cold at all and didn't mind, for example, slogging into a head wind across the wind open expanse of farmland that takes you over the hill and into the town of Sterling.

The shaggy Scottish Highland cattle didn't seemed perturbed by the gusts or chill either and grazed without looking up to acknowledge my shouted "bonjour!"s.

Farm of the Scottish Highlanders

Heading Toward Sterling
The gusty wind combined with a lot of climbing (a Drumlin Ramble, like a Sholan Loop, takes me west of Lemonstar and into hill country), made for a slow average speed (just about 14 mph). About three quarters of the way through the ride, I started to get chilled; not badly, but my fingers got pretty numb. No surprise why; I checked the temperature after returning and it had fallen to 36 F.

 Ride Stats: Ride # 94, 28 miles (45 km), 14 mph, 2 hours in the saddle. 44 degrees to start and 36 degrees at ride's end.

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Chick-a-dees and Letting Go, Ride # 93

I ride alone. Probably 95% of my rides are solo. That's partly due to circumstance and partly due to choice. Riding alone affords time for reflection, introspection; it's a turning inward powered by repetitive pedal strokes. The meditation is to stay present & mindful in the Riding Moment while at the same time allowing the mind to free flow. One can achieve a sort of physical humming presence of Moment while also meandering through ideas, reflections, and mental landscapes past and present.

Today I rode to the nearby town of Shirley, to the house in which I grew up and where my father was living alone in May 2012 when he passed away. No one has lived in the house since. Yet I pay a neighbor to keep the yard properly mowed, to park a car in the driveway to suggest occupation, to keep an eye on things. My father's estate is still not officially closed after all this time so no decision has been made nor action taken on disposal of the house and accompanying 15 acres of land.

Shad Head & the House, 11/21/13
One thing is certain - I won't ever live in the house again. And yet, despite the logic of letting go and moving on, of transforming the structure and land into money (a tool that can be used to get along in this culture), I ponder schemes that would allow me to hold onto some if not all of the property. There are 15 acres at stake, mostly woods with hemlocks and white pines and some hardwood (old maple trees, younger oaks), also a beaver pond and a swampy area. Most of it isn't suited to development. I think of donating it to conservation but retaining the deed; I think of carving out a couple acres with the old stone wall as a border and keeping it, maybe building a meditation hut on it.

In the long I should just sell it and be done with it. But not yet.

Instead, I ride over there in the late afternoon, it's about ten miles one way, and what do I do? I fill the bird feeders with sunflower seeds. Yes, nearly 18 months after my father died, I'm still feeding the birds. And they are plentiful. Chick-a-dees mostly but also titmice and nuthatches and blue jays and cardinals. I stand still next to the feeders in the gnarled old French lilac bush and the birds' wings hum and whir around me. I delight in their enthusiastic and frenetic darting and feeding.

I realize that I'm sentimental and attached to the damn songbirds!

This I contemplate on the ride back to Lemonstar. I wonder where this quality in me came from, this deep well of sentiment and empathy (some might say pathological sentiment and empathy). It's as if I cannot distinguish between one type of sentient being and another. I grieve for them all, I celebrate them all, I feel responsible for them all. I meditate on this riding back and try to get out of the trap. What would the Zen Master in Zen Mountain Monastery say?

Shad Blur in Ventoux Yellow, Backyard

I also think about what my good friend Mawgz emailed me a couple days ago when we were discussing this very thing, the process of letting go (or not being able to), the reality of Loss and aging and transformation and how it all can weigh on you. He shared a proverb which I paraphrase:

It is a foolish man that trips over something behind him.

It occurred to me with a flash of recognition that I am a foolish man, one who quite easily stumbles.

The house, the birds, the fantasy of small and large mammals living in bucolic harmony in the woods I once roamed, these are my trip wires.

The ride is beautiful but I'm a little later than I want to be getting back to Lemonstar, it's starting to be darker than is safe (despite my rear blinking light and my bright yellow jersey, a gift from Scrod and his triumph at Mont Ventoux). Nevertheless, I pause at the top of the hill by Gove Farm and look down the slope of the last apple orchard in the birthplace of Johnny Appleseed and take in the sunset.

I was strong in the saddle today. The bike rode like velvet; soft and silent.

Sunset over Lemonstar

Ride Stats: Ride # 93. 23.26 miles (37 km), 15.2 mph, 1 hour 31 minutes approx. Temperature in the low 50s; sunny at the start but the sky clouded over as evening approached.

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Lemonstar to Lunenburg to Shirley, Ride # 92

Blustery. Wind rush, leaf swirl. Why is wind so much louder when it's cold out? A clear day, sun bright, sharp. A full layer day, booties to boot.
Shad Rides

It's that great time of year in New England when the afternoon light is frequently dramatic - huge pure skies with puffy pink clouds, or milky blue canopy dome of deep infinity; and the countryside awash in creamy buttery yellow sun-sink. And purple, there is always purple in there at some point.

Time after work to ride through Lunenburg and to nearby Shirley, loop through that old town with its classic New England town commons, then back to Lemonstar. At mid-afternoon there is little traffic on the roads and so the ride is pleasant. I feel good and pedal like a gazelle running (I imagine), I fly over newly paved roads with a muted whir.

Shirley Center Town Commons, Nov. 19, 2013
Lemonstar
Late Afternoon, Nov. 19, 2013
Ride Stats: Ride # 92, 21.82 miles (33 km), 15.2 mph, 83+ minutes, sunny bright day but really windy!

Sunday, November 17, 2013

Ride # 91 in the Gloaming

Gray day, barely warm. Not warm really. But I spent two hours before riding in the backyard raking leaves, cutting back plants & shrubs, bagging yard waste. With a bonfire to boot. So by the time I set off on ride number 91 I was plenty warm (though I still layered my front with a brown paper bag). A completely gray & rain-threatening afternoon. Dubious. Beautiful. Somber. Like a World War I battlefield. The jaundiced gray gloaming of Ypres, the Somme.

Once on the other side of West St and climbing into the hills, I'm all alone. The gloaming countryside. Crow caw. Stone walls piled centuries ago disappearing into hardwood forest. A reservoir for the town of Lemonstar. The bike is silent, riding smooth and fast today. I imagine myself as light as possible. Descending one of the hills coming home, I make myself horizontal and imagine an arrow, a feathered flyer. I see myself soaring. It's like flight. I am an arrow let fly by Jah.

Shad Rides, Number 91

Ride stats: 58 minutes, 14.6 miles. 47 degrees. Sholan Loop. November 17, 2013.

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Ride # 90

The ninetieth ride of 2013. Saturday. Another warm November day, again almost 60 degrees. Fantastic. But it's another wedge-it-in ride because riding is only one facet of Saturday. Though ultimately our plans to go into Boston and eat lunch at Neptune's Oysters, and for ND to go to the movies, and for me to go to the Boston Antiquarian Book Fair in search of Harry Crosby volumes, all get changed, I ride with that whole scenario still in the offing. Which means I have a time frame and a time constraint and so ride with focus and an eye on the computer for time elapsed.

Tuttle Rd., November 16, 2013
Ultimately, we end up not going to Boston, not going to the Book Fair, not doing any of the things that, pre-ride, had been the determinants of this ride's limits. In other words, I coulda' done a giant ride on this gorgeous sunny Saturday!

Philosophically-speaking, the "I coulda' done ..." phrase is loaded with angst. Its meaning hangs on regret. What a burden! As an exercise in self-awareness and self-determination, notice how often you say (or think) "I coulda' ..."

So actually, what I mean to convey is that I had a terrific 19 mile ride on a beautiful November morning/afternoon and the rest of the day unfolded, not as planned, but as occurred, and it was all giant.

Ride stats: 19.34 miles (31 km), 15.2 mph, 1 hour 17 minutes in the saddle.

Stolen Moments, Ride # 89

A ride that wasn't foreseen, happened. It hadn't been in the cards. Other plans were made. But then suddenly on a Thursday afternoon I was looking at a free hour and the weather was warm and sunny and I had no choice really but to seize the opportunity and rush off for a mini Sholan Loop and ride number 89.

Shad Rides, #89
Ride Stats: #89, 14.3 miles (23 km), 14.6 mph, 59.25 minutes in the saddle. Close to 60 degrees. What a difference from Tuesday's snow-dusted hills.

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

A Dusting in the Hills

Shad with a Dusting, November 12, 2013
And suddenly it is COLD. 34 degrees when I set out. It was probably silly to ride today, certainly unnecessary, this is the fifth consecutive day riding. I haven't managed to do that in years. But the cycling cosmos seemed to line up this weekend and today, well, I had a choice but I didn't have a choice. What I had was the afternoon off from work in advance of a late-day dentist appointment and, while it had spit rain and sleet overnight, by noon the roads were dry and there was no precipitation to be seen.

So I had to ride.

But it was cold. And gray. No real sun.

Again the paper bag in the jersey. Today, multiple layers. Long underwear leggings & tights. Booties. Full hoodie. Winter gloves with liners. Five upper body garments (+ bag). And I was warm. Truly. Completely comfortable the entire ride.

I'd questioned my decision-making upon setting out but after only a couple miles out I realized that I nailed the clothing test and I'd be fine for the duration. For a brief mad moment I considered trying to rush up Wachusett again, but thought better of it.

Turns out the rain and sleet in Lemonstar proved to be more substantial in the western hills. Not exactly an accumulation but a white shroud over everything evoked the colder, harsher days to come. Reminded me that, while the streets may be clear in the lower elevations, as soon as you start climbing into the hills west of town, even a little elevation makes a difference.

November 12, 2013 in the Western Hills
Once you develop serious momentum, once you cobble together a string of rides, once you start to achieve a level of fitness that allows for longer rides, then you can no longer control yourself. Riding becomes the paramount concern on a daily basis. Will I have time to ride? Will the weather be good for riding? Will the light last long enough for an after work ride? It becomes all about putting miles under the wheels.

Not to mention the single-mindedness born of successful weight loss. Every bite becomes considered, every meal evaluated for calories. Snacking is anathema. Losing weight becomes a competition with yourself. Beer acceptable only on riding days. Ice cream a seldom treat. Embrace of fresh greens, crispy apples, raw nuts, yogurt and berries. Being the correct weight for one's height is incredibly empowering. How did I allow myself to grow so heavy for so many years? Easy, actually. I've never had a problem eating more than I need. Gluttony was once a badge of honor.

These are different days now. These are days of physical and mental challenges. Moderation in consumption, excess in exercise. Compulsive movement. Winter threatens. I'll be off the bike for weeks at a stretch. I dread the thought of re-gaining even 5 lbs. I haven't even whispered at 150 lbs since early in September. Incredibly enough, back when overeating was routine, I thought of my "riding weight" as 160 lbs. As in, I thought I was "in shape" if I managed to get down to 160. Now? If I "balloon up" to 150, I'll be mortified.

I'll always remember reading a piece about Lance Armstrong. Someone asked him how you can be a better climber. His answer was simple: lose weight. Either body weight or bike weight or both but you'll climb better when you're lighter. I've learned that that is absolutely true. Lance didn't lie about that, at least.

The View from Ride # 88
Ride Stats: #88, 17.9 miles (28 km), 12.5 mph, 1 hour 24 minutes in the saddle. Temp approximately 33 degrees. Sholan Loop. A dusting of snow in the hills.

Last Climb up Mt. Wachusett for this Year

Summit of Mt. Wachusett, Nov. 11, 2013
Sharp, clear, cold. Veteran's Day morning, on the bike by 9:30. The weather report had indicated a sunny morning and a cloudy afternoon so it behooved me to get out early. Surprisingly mild at that early hour, low 50s. Still, I didn't take chances and stuffed a paper grocery bag between my layers. Seems a simple thing but it works remarkably well.

Destination? The summit of Mt. Wachusett. Very likely the last time this year. It used to be that I'd make the climb once, maybe twice a season. This year has been different. Once I pared away 10 lbs, then 15 lbs, then 20 lbs, climbing Wachusett became less of an epic struggle and more of a routine ride, albeit still a solid work out. In fact, the climbing required just to get to the base of the mountain is, arguably, more difficult than the actual road up from the park headquarters. At least the road to the summit is varied; there are even a few sections that level off or slope downward briefly. Getting to the mountain, though, is nearly all climbing ... and it starts even in the first neighborhood getting out of town.

It's been a great few days with plenty of riding and a surfeit of fine food at journey's end. The only dark cloud has been the news of the Scrod's crash in Frankfurt. The first-you're-alright-and-then-you're-crashing reality of cycling weighs a bit more heavily today; I try to be Zen-like mindful, though it's difficult. Like meditating, I always have to bring myself back to a place of focus; I have to consciously bring myself back to the moment in order to be IN the moment. Daydreaming while riding is desperately dangerous.

Shad Rides Near the Summit
But I made it to the top without incident, then whizzed back down (grateful for the paper bag in my jersey). The sky remained blue and the sun remained shining ... but I didn't see another cyclist.

Summit, with Berries and My Ride
Ride Stats: Ride #87. 27 miles (43 km), 13 mph, 2 hours 4 minutes in the saddle, approximately 9:30 am to 11:30 am. Mid 50s temperature.




Monday, November 11, 2013

Two Beeches and a Crash in Germany

I probably could have taken the day off in good conscience given the epic ride yesterday on the dirt roads and rutted byways of Orange and New Salem, but I didn't. It's November, it was Sunday on Veteran's Day weekend and the weather was reasonably mild and the sun was visible. The Opportunity to ride was there, so I seized it.

But not a big ride, just a normal, I-have-limited-time ride, a Sholan Loop of a ride, what turned out to be 17.11 miles (27 km) of spinning under fair conditions.

Leaving from my doorstep, I have basically two options. If I ride east, out the near side of town, the roads are mostly rolling without many significant climbs. However, they are also busy roads with a lot of town-to-town traffic. If I roll west, out the far side of town, the roads are emptier but steeper. Everything to the west is hilly and to ride that direction means a good deal of climbing. The Sholan Loop, for example, is essentially a series of climbs (though the return trip home is mostly downhill).

Two Beech Trees on the Way of of Town
I opt for a western venture today. That means I work my way through a couple neighborhoods and pass by a number of old resident trees, majestic beings like these two huge old beech trees. Certainly one of the joys of long range cycling is encountering trees. Beech trees in particular delight me and a few gray-trunked behemoths tower over some of the older, more established neighborhoods in Lemonstar.

West Rd is the last hurtle before free-sailing. It's a major thoroughfare, usually busy, and often requires patience to cross it. I'm not a skilled stand-upright-on-the-bike-and-wait kind of cyclist but I have learned not to react hastily at these types of crossings. The key, I've found, is to approach slowly, try to gauge both directions, and maintain balance as long as possible. Often enough I find that a break will open at just the right time before I have to unclip from the pedals and bring foot to ground. So it goes today. The approach, the caution, the deliberation, the steadiness, then a quick burst of pedal power and I'm across and zooming across the little bridge over the reservoir drainage creek, clear sailing.

West of Lemonstar
Balmier today. Sunday morning. Few cars. I feel surprisingly fresh given yesterday's undertaking. But there's no point in making it more than it is - an hour or so spinning to keep loose and burn some calories, to stay connected to the revolving wheels and empty the mind of its preoccupations and concerns. A ride like today's is therapeutic, like a rolling meditation, like a sauna, a cleansing. The body hums, the mind calms down, the senses receive.

The day is marred, however, by a text message I receive an hour or so after returning from an uneventful ride. It's from Scrod in Germany and reads:

Cher lescaret, dear bro, greetings from a hospital bed, bad fall today crossing tram tracks in cold light rain, bike just flew off to the right and I landed hard on my left hip, breaking the femur below the ball. Op is over and I am feeling much better. Prospects good.

A terrible development! Subsequent texts reveal the whole tragic accident, the hard crash, the ambulance, the bystander who dragged Scrod's bike off the tracks before an incoming trolley drove over it. Surgery. Five days in hospital. And the long recovery.

I try to imagine his state of mind by imagining my own in such circumstances. Bleak, surely, discouraged, pitiable. How even conceive of recovery? Doubly discouraging simply because Scrod has worked incredibly hard to get in the best physical condition of his adult life. Now, the temptation will be to consume Garibaldi's like pain pills, consoling himself with a victim's right-to-binge. It's a good thing the Scrod has been sober for decades else the bottle might prove a strong allure. I, surely, would seek respite in strong drink, in the irie meditation, in all the pharmaceutical candies the medical team would dare prescribe. I am not good with setbacks.

We must generate positive vibes and send them to the Mighty Scrod whose fin may be broken but whose spine, I know, is intact. The Scrod will ride again. And if even one tiny iota of good luck can be scraped out of this dark moment it is that winter is nigh and riding season all but over.

Dear Scrod, you will not have to peer nervously out your office window wondering whether the rain will hold off, whether the snow will abate, whether the temperatures will rise enough to allow a late afternoon ride. Your sole task now is to HEAL. To lay prone and read. To scribe Ventoux Calls with quiet ruminations and mental meanderings. To vow to yourself that you will rise again. Remember what you've proven in this transitional year - that you can train hard, hone your body, and scale the Giant of Provence. Next year you will resume your Quixotic odyssey à vélo.


Ride Stats: #86; 17.11 miles, 14.1 mph, 1 hour 11 minutes. Mid 50s, damp pavement, some mild sun.

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Lake Mattawa and the Hills of Orange, Wendell, and New Salem

The Virginian and I have been eyeing this weekend for a month or so, I figured it might be one of the last opportunities to get out for a massive ride. I'd hoped for an end-of-the-year century but that proved to be beyond our scope, mostly for time reasons (no matter how finely conditioned we are, 100 miles would still take a good eight hours of cycling to accomplish and with the weather now cold and the length of daylight abbreviated, a century at this point in the year is out of our reach).

Moosehorn Road, New Salem
Instead of a road century, we opted for dirt roads and forest paths in the hills of Orange, New Salem, Wendell, Shutesbury, Montague. Instead of the graphite arrow (my road bike), I turned to the Crust (first time since the D2R2 in August). These choices proved propitious and while we ended up covering 'only' 47.70 miles (76 km), they were rugged, exhilarating, challenging miles on roads largely bereft of traffic and through forests on what I imagined to be old colonial cart paths. I half expected to come across an old rickety dray loaded down with cider apples, a stubborn mule paused in the ruts.

The Virginian (aka Benzoid or the Benster from Ventoux Calls) is a decades-long riding partner. We started out on mountain bikes back in the early 1990s but then were swept up in the tsunami of Lance and switched to road riding around 1999. I've been a pavement devotee ever since. And yet now the Crust, with its more rugged frame and slightly beefier tires, opens up a new variety of riding. Not exactly mountain biking (i.e., no single track, no crazy technical rock/root/downhill/uphill madness) but not just road-riding, the Crust is the perfect bike for the kind of byways and opportunities one finds in the lesser populated regions of central and central-west Massachusetts. Plus, with autumn conditions making the roadways a little more perilous (blowing wet leaves, roadside debris), the Crust offers the comfort of rugged dependability.

The Virginian
So the Virginian and I met at Lake Mattawa in Orange. The temperature stood around 40 degrees (4 c) and the sky was steely gray and overcast when we set out. It's all hills and woods and small scruffy roads through this swath of the state, even the pavement roads are back country and rough and little traveled. And there's plenty of climbing. Back in our mountain biking days, I'd written "Ride to Climb" on my helmet, I was relatively light back then, not much more than 150 lbs, and I was, indeed, a fine climber and a decent bike handler; I could stay upright while climbing a single track path all rooty and bouldery. Being small was good.

Since those days, I aged and puffed up, taking an office job and gaining 10, 15, 20 pounds. I almost got old. Finally, earlier this year at a Zen meditation retreat it occurred to me that something had to change, that I had to shed the poundage that I'd accumulated in the previous two decades, that I had to re-orient the glutton within and become literally less than I was. So, from April 1st I've been consciously tracking my calorie consumption and actively trying to carve away the bloated excess that'd gradually formed on my once-sinewy frame. I was like a farm-raised salmon at the beginning of the year, an embarrassment to the sleek, silvery, aquatic arrow of a shad that might still exist beneath my suet rolls.

Shad Rides
Blessedly, I was right. The shad lives. Since that April 1st reckoning when I tipped the scale at 169 lbs (76 kg), I have melted it all away so that now, November, nine months later, pedaling aside the Virginian up the first steep hill of the day, I'm lighter than I was back in our mountain biking heyday, back in my early 30s. This morning I tipped the scale at 145.5 lbs (65 km), a quicksilver dart of a shad, a shad with a second life, an anadromous sliver of scale and fin returning to familiar spawning grounds.

Once again, I can climb. Perhaps not race speed climb, but climb doggedly, surely, inexorably. Without stiff log legs or the gasp-breath lung burn. Once again, climbing is a focused, Zen-informed practice of pedal-turning. In fact, the front wheel of my road bike is a Mavic and on the hub is a yellow Mavic sticker. When out of the saddle on a lengthy climb, I focus on the Mavic sticker turning turning turning (if it were a songbird it would be the "revolving yellow mavic") and forget all else but the turning of the pedals and the consistent revolution of the yellow hub. Trance-like.

Up Chestnut Hill Rd, passed the steep fields where the annual garlic and arts festival takes place, the pavement ends and we're on packed dirt, more climbing, more Chestnut Hill Rd. (there are "Chestnut Hill" roads in every town out here suggesting how extensive the chestnut trees were 100 or 200 years ago; there are few left today).

Then it's off the packed dirt and onto Mt. Mineral Rd and right onto New Boston Rd, a road that, by its name, might suggest some importance but which is, actually, a nearly abandoned track through deep woods. It's kept clear by, perhaps, cross country skiers and snowmobilers, perhaps hunters or mountain bikers. The trees are close overhead, great numbers of hemlocks spread out up the slopes on either side, the road for a while follows a stream so it's fairly flat for a ways following along the water way, and interspersed with the hemlocks and white pines are great old hardwoods, maples and oaks, remnants, perhaps, from colonial days.

New Boston Rd Heading South

New Boston Rd Looking Back North
For long stretches at a time we ride single file, the Virginian usually leading the way. I pay close attention to my pedaling, to the road and its pitfalls and obstacles; but I also drift off in fantasy. November in New England conjures images of Bruegel the Elder and his fantastic Dutch landscapes and peasant imagery from the 1500s - somber, smokey fields, dun hillsides, gnarled tree trunks, huddled villages, burghers wrapped in woolen cloaks, pottery jugs, clay pipes, swaths of browns, ochres, russets, burnished oranges, carts and casks. I delight my imagination by disappearing into the past. I escape the wrath of Phillip II's soldiers, I'm a rebel peasant under the sway of William of Orange, we will rout the occupiers and regain the Low Countries and celebrate with overflowing milk pails, with jugged hare, with salted herring and potatoes roasted in fire embers.

A Forest Road
It goes on like this for hours. We stop to consult the map periodically. It's been years since we've ridden these roads. We emerge onto pavement and then launch off again onto dirt. Eventually we climb out of North Amherst and head up East Chestnut Hill Rd. in Montague and stop for a visit at Hotar's abode, Hotar like the character from a Norse Epic; bearded, burly, welcoming, once-upon-a-time a very committed cyclist but these days now more of a farmer philosopher and loyal companion. We warm up in his kitchen, even imbibe a tipple of cognac, eat an energy bar, and then re-mount the steads for the last hour.

We've breached the arcing pivot of the loop and we begin the return, much of which is downhill. I'm chilled now after sitting, my inner layers damp. To stave off the incipient cold of the return journey, I stuff a folded paper grocery bag inside my wool jersey (Hotar didn't happen to have any old copies of L'equipe or I would have used that). It works! The thick paper bag traps the warmth from my torso inside my layers and at the same time blocks the wind buffeting my chest. And I'm warm again.

The light grows wan. We zoom down long slopes from the center of Wendell, back toward the cars parked beside Lake Mattawa, back to the 21st century.



Ride Stats: Ride #85, 47.70 miles (76 km), 12.5 mph (20 kph), 3 hours 47 minutes in the saddle. Saturday, November 9th, 11:30 am to 4:00 pm all told.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Ride #84, the Sholan Loop

Friday of a long weekend and I took the day off from work. That was a good thing to do. It allowed me, after spending the morning doing necessary tasks, to take the afternoon for riding. Ride number 84 this year. A gusty, wind-blown day with giant ominous puff clouds and occasional sun.

The Other Side of Town Heading into the Hills
I did the usual loop. West of Lemonstar, out the other side of town actually, meaning that I have to cut through neighborhoods and cross a few busy streets to get to the place shown in the photo which is across the last busy street. You cross a small brook that's the outlet of the small reservoir on the right and keep going around to the right and you start climbing. And if you're destination is the summit of Mt. Wachusett then you are in for A LOT of climbing. West of town is mostly hills.

I wasn't headed to the mountain today, though there was still plenty of climbing. I thought to keep it reasonably mellow in advance of what I hope is a pretty big ride tomorrow with The Virginian. Planning on getting out the Crust for a cross bike ride around Lake Mattawa, Wendell, Erving. Today was more about just keeping the tone, the rhythm, getting loose, getting the heart rate up, burning some calories. It's the beginning of a long weekend, as I said, and that means there are some big meals ahead so I seized the opportunity to get myself moving.

The Sholan Loop I call this ride because, whether early in the ride or near the end, I pass by Sholan Farm, a community-held apple orchard and community gardens. It's on a long stretch of open ridge that offers terrific views to the east but that is also consistently buffeted by west winds racing over across and around Mt. Wachusett and the surrounding hills. Today the wind has nearly stripped the last leaves from the maples. It's a day of pure autumn elements; wind, leaves, gray clouds, it even at one point spits tiny snowflakes.

The key to riding on days like this, with blustery wind and the temperature in the high 40s (8 or 9 C), is to dress correctly. I'm on a roll. I've cobbled together the perfect ensemble of cycling jerseys, zippered tops, tights, gloves, head gear, etc. for dozens of consecutive rides. Today was no exception. Polyprop under top, short sleeve full zippered summer jersey, long-sleeve woolen bike jersey atop, and all contained within a super thin orange windbreaker. Full finger gloves and, beneath my helmet, the pull-over near-mask-like head topper, the kind that ovals your face and that comes down covering your neck and gets zipped inside the top covering layer. Warmth on any ride in the elements is paramount. If you're warm, everything else is tolerable, even the annoying & relentless head wind. You push ahead. And marvel at the tumultuous swirl.

On the Sholan Loop
Ride Stats: 19.66 mph (31.6 k), 14.1 mph (22.69 km), approximately 1 hour 23 minutes of pedaling time. Friday, November 8, 2013, roughly from 1:40 pm to 3:00 or so.




Wednesday, November 6, 2013

Shad Rides, November

We're entering the dark period. The days are shorter, the light fades early on an overcast day and a rider, to keep riding, must increasingly settle for short forays stolen from wan afternoons and frigid weekend mornings.

But we're not quite there yet. In central Massachusetts, in early November, remnants of autumn remain. Classic New England landscapes, glaciated, a tumult of granite. Old worn down mountains covered in maple, oak, white pine. Orchards, dun fields, farms with leaning out buildings.

Princeton, Ma, Ride # 82, November, 2013

These are fantastic roads for cycling, they climb through forest, spill down hillsides, roll across farm land. They pass cows, rivers, ponds, village greens. Soon all the leaves will have fallen and a sense of Bruegelian peasant somberness will spill across the land.


Ascending Mt. Wachusett, November, 2013
A note about this blog. The American shad is a short tenacious fish that lives most of the year in unknown regions of the Atlantic Ocean but then rushes up freshwater rivers along the eastern seaboard to spawn. Shad do not ride bicycles.

But Shad is also a nickname, one I acquired from another piscatorially-moniker'd rider, Scrod. In New England, a scrod is another name for cod and while the rider Scrod spent plenty of time on Cape Cod, and though he and I came to know each other in western Massachusetts, he currently lives and pedals in Frankfurt, Germany. In fact, it was his blog, Ventoux Calls, about training to climb the fabled Provencal giant, that provided inspiration for this effort.

My intent is to chronicle my cycling practice for the year 2014, though I'm beginning almost two months early. Consider these first few entries a sort of wind-down of the present biking season. And a fine season it's been. Eighty-three rides to date. I managed to get out the first time on January 15 but then not again until March 16, the day I bought my first cyclocross bike, a Specialized Crux Elite.

The Crust Atop Mt. Wachusett, May, 2013

I rode the "Crust" (as a friend dubbed it) until late into May when I got out my road bike and that's taken me through to the very latest ride two days ago (Nov. 5th), a 24.95 mile late afternoon jaunt through local towns Lunenburg, Shirley, Groton, and Devens.

Final note. For variety's sake I'll define the term "cycling practice" quite broadly so that anything cycling-related that interests me, as well as personal fitness notes, health stuff, food & diet topics are all fair game for the entries ahead. Bon velo!