Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Ride # 40: Spring is a Dog From Hell

Looks can be deceiving
Tuesday afternoon, 3:15, gray, dour
45 degrees

Sure, the snow is gone. Hasn't hailed or sleeted in a while. But it does not feel like spring. I paraphrase the classic Bukowski book for the title of this post. And it's true. This year. Snarl and spit, fume and pout. Where's the love? Where's the lamb? It's almost May and on only one ride so far have I been able to wear short sleeves.

The good news is that I did 22.5 miles today and now these several hours later my back and hip don't feel bad. In fact, everything feels better than yesterday. I stretched before and after riding today. I also moved my seat forward a quarter of an inch or so before setting out. And twice in the first few miles I stopped and adjusted the seat height, raising it each time. I'd lowered it too much after Sunday's ride and I felt squat and bunched as soon as I got going today, like a teenager too big for his bike. On the second adjustment though I nailed it. Or so it felt for the rest of the ride.

The thing is, I want the pedal stroke distributed mostly through my quads and calves; but at the height I'd had my seat at, the burden fell on the narrow band that stretches from the glutes around back, over the hip arrow, down across the groin valley and onto the plain of quad. Now it felt better, I could feel the thighs working, could feel the calves doing their share; I did not feel an excess strain at the bridge over the river thigh.

When I felt good after the first few miles I thought "With the Niceness!" and hoped for the best. Turned out to be a reassuring ride. No need to turn back.

Gray, overcast, very much a  forbidding day. Poe-like. Cold. 45 degrees (7 C). Nothing soft or happy. Just a craven, crow-spackled, elocution of spat.

A year or so ago I might not have gone out on a grim day like today. But that was before riding through the winter and riding through all the various extreme weather situations those months presented. A moderately T.S. Eliotian cruel April day did not displease me.


Wondering about the four horsemen of the Apocalypse

Yet there are unmistakable signs of spring. Wan green buds. The first probing shoots of growth in the debris-ridden roadside; fern thickles, vine tendrils, poison ivy nipples. Nubbins of green on sumac stalks lining stonewalled fields. Occasional blooming shrubs and ornamentals.


Shadsythia

Ride Summary: 22.5 miles (36 K), 13.4 mph (slow, cautious in the sand and in the rough conditions of the western hills; oh, and yeah, the HILLS). I wore full winter garb today: under armor, zippered fleece, thick outer Pearl Izumi limonade winter thick top. 43 degrees when I got back. Not a beam of sun all day.

Have started to track my rides at strava.com. More on that later.

Parting Shot

The road to Hobbiton
East Farthing






Sunday, April 27, 2014

Ride # 39: Quilted Hubris

Sunday morning, 11:00
45 degrees
it rained earlier this morning

Awesome! Back to booties and tights, under wear, over wear, layered gloves, skullcap, talismanic scarab broach (perhaps), it's cold and vaguely raw, like early March. Except it's the end of April. It should be warmer. The capricious wiles of New England. Allez!

Some more bad news. I'm experiencing A LOT of lower back & hip pain, right side. The same old irritated places, except magnified. Really uncomfortable. As soon as I got on the road bike two rides ago I found myself having to stretch forward to grip the handlebars. Over distance, this proved to be exacerbating. Or so I now conclude after road ride # 3. My fucking parts hurt! First time in a long time.

So today, thinking that I should RAISE the seat (as I had with the Crux), I upped it a half inch and set out. Felt great. For a while. Eventually I noticed that my quads and calves didn't seem to be exerting too much energy or having much impact in the pedaling. The pull and push centered in the hip and pelvis, the lower back. And while one side (the left) could handle it, the other side, the ever cranky right, rebelled. I rode on.

Eventually, in the center of Harvard some twenty miles into the ride, I stopped and lowered the seat. D'oh. That seemed better. But was it? By now the whole muscle band was irritated. I improvised riding positions that offered temporary relief. I relished the chance to stand up and power up hills. Stamina-wise, I felt great, ready to do some mileage. Ah well.

I was going for the high note. The extrapolated breath of Oneness that your body offers up into the void of our imaginary selves. Praise to the enthusiastic embrace of What Come Next!


What Comes Next

Then, riding out of Bolton toward Harvard, I passed the giant sycamore tree that's grown there by the roadside for ... 150 years? 200 years? A massive testimony to gentle perseverance.


Sycamore Looming

Trunk of the venerable giant

I Shad and the limbs of history

Rainy mist at one point, some westerly wind, billowy gray & white ghost skies. A quilt of muted hubris.


Flirting with the void of reason

Ride Summary: 35 miles (56 K), 14.9 mph, two hours twenty minutes. Felt great except for the nagging right-side freak out.

Road Kill: Bad day for small mammals. A red squirrel, a chipmunk, and a gray squirrel (not photographed).


Red Squirrel


Chipmunk




Saturday, April 26, 2014

Ride # 38: Utility

3:00 Thursday afternoon, April 24 

I always feel good when I can combine biking with something I have to do which, in today's case, was to meet a conservation committee member at the property I inherited in Shirley, about 10 miles from Lemonstar. Instead of driving over there, I got the road bike out.

I also donned tights, a long sleeve fleece jersey, and a high vis windbreaker vest. Yes, tights. Yes, fleece. So much for summer-like weather! A strong NW west combined with temps in the mid-40s made it seem like early March all over again. But well-dressed as always for the conditions, I didn't mind the cool. The wind sort of sucked and at times buffeted me around a bit more than was comfortable but no harm resulted.

Because today's outing was a mission with a set meeting time, I had no chance to stop and photograph the two separate snacks that had quite recently been squashed by cars. Garter snakes. Dead before they could even enjoy the warming weather and the long days.

The thing is, I felt great today and wished I had more time to extend the ride after my meeting. The legs were strong, I had power on the climbs, the wind didn't exhaust me. Road biking season bodes well!

Except the transition from the Crux Elite to the Allez Comp might be impacting my hips and butt. The slight change of position, the minor elongated extension I have to adopt on the road bike, perhaps resulted in the increased soreness I felt the night of the ride and the day after. I'm not sure if it's just a matter of adjustment, of getting used to the change, or if I have to tweak the position of the handlebars and/or seat on the Allez Comp. Hard to say yet.

Ride Stats: 20 miles (32 K), 15.7 mph (at least half of the ride into a 20+ mph NW headwind), 75 minutes. Two dead snakes.

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Rasputitsa Coverage Around the Internet

In the wake of last Saturday's inaugural running of the Rasputitsa bike race in the Northeast Kingdom of Vermont, some online articles & videos about the race have appeared.


Text

The Newport Dispatch

The Chronicle (Vermont's Northeast Kingdom Past and Present)

Recovery Poutine (from www.Iamtedking.com) - Ted King, a professional cyclist fresh off a little spring ride called Paris-Roubaix joined the legions of riders at the Rasputitsa.

Like It's Your Last (CouchingTiger Blog) - The author finished 6th overall.

Video

Some good video posted here - Cyberia, the Lanterne Rouge, the start, Tim Johnson

2014 Rasputitsa Newport, VT - a collage of photographs by Patrick McCaffrey

Dirty 40 and Rasputitsa Gravel Road Race in Coventry, VT - 11 minute posting of the racers ascending a long dirt climb in Coventry. Posted by Donald P. Hunt.

Brian Nolan's - Rasputitsa Gravel Road Race:






Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Ride # 37: Just Like That


78 Degrees at 3:30 in the afternoon
road bike time

Just like that, it's 78 degrees, the sun pouring down through a vaguely gauzy veil of high encroaching clouds. Saturday I was battling the elements in northern Vermont and today (Tuesday) it's beyond spring-like, it's early-summer-like.

It's amazing how the transition to short sleeves and shorts occurs. One day you're in tights and layers, a few days later and you're wearing hardly anything, just a thin bike jersey and a pair of skin tight shorts. For the first few minutes today, dressed so, I felt incredibly exposed, even silly. But then the arrow-like line and the speed of the road bike took over my awareness and all I cared about was zooming forward with grace and assurance.

Unfortunately, the warm weather brings out the animals and that ups the road kill total. We are entering the Season of Slaughter. Today offered a preview of the sanguinary scenes to come.


Calamity on the tarmac


1st turtle casualty of the year

On a positive note, I passed a branch of the Nashua River and there, lined up along several logs, were 20 or 30 very much alive painted turtles soaking up the sun's energy. A sure marker of spring.

Ride Stats: Road Bike! 1st time this year. 34.38 miles (54 K), 15.7 mph, two hours and eleven minutes. Felt great being on the more slender, lighter bike, the thinner tires, the less road resistance. The beginning of what I hope to be a long season of road cycling.

Rasputitsa Miscellany: After Thoughts

The official results are still in flux. The organizers are trying to find the times for some of the last unidentified riders. Right now, here's how Team Shad fared of the 271 known finishers:

Dubstoevsky 168 (1 hour 7 minutes 20 seconds behind the winner)
The Virginian 169
I-ward 247

In my narrative of the race, I referenced, in what I hoped would be understood as comic hubris, "animosity and dissension" on Team Shad. Of course, there wasn't any. That was a narrative trick, a handy comedic detail. My whole account of the day is, as I hope readers realize, imbued with jest and deliberate hyperbole.

Allez! Back to the race itself.

There were really all kinds of bikes and approaches to the race including fixed speed bikes, tandems, high end cyclocross bikes, road bikes. There were serious gear heads decked out in all sorts of sweet cycling clothes as well as some nuttier folks wearing shorts and one guy (at least) in sneakers and sweatpants (see below). There were solo mercenaries, gregarious strangers, smiling faces, grimly set jaws, the fit, the unfit, and the unshakable. Everyone lined up together on a side street in a massive bunch and we all huddled in the cold, impatient eager for the race to get underway.

The relaxed approach
(Note the dude on the right in sneakers)

Finally, announcements, thank-yous, and acknowledgements of all kinds done with, we got underway. As we waited in the rear for everyone to get underway, it became apparent that the neutral 1 mile start would still be a competitive stretch. As I rounded the corner onto Main St. and started heading out of town, already the front pack was hammering away into the distance. And though I needle The Virginian for his aggressive tactics, in hindsight it was the right thing to do and we should have all three of us made a surge to get as far up ahead as possible.


Neutral Mile
The Virginian making his first move of the day

Even as the race spread itself out in the first couple miles along the lake, I somehow got it in my mind that we weren't as far in the rear as we were. I imagined a hustling pack of 30 guys way out ahead and then a more reasonable contingent of slower riders not that far ahead and possibly within reach. Wrong! As this excellent video (shot I think on Back Coventry Road) shows, the front of the race was still a lot of guys, a hundred or more, and they were charging along! No way were we going to catch any of these guys unless they cracked and lagged behind, though I'm glad I didn't realize that at the time. Thinking I could bridge gaps gave me incentive to ride as hard as I could.

The video is about eleven minutes long and is shot from the top of a long dirt climb. Seeing the leaders come hammering up the slope is impressive! About 3 mins and 45 seconds after the main charge, The Virginian and I, Dubstoevsky, pedal into view moving at a considerably slower clip. What is interesting is that by this point we had given up hope of I-ward ever making contact with us but as you can see in the footage, I-ward powers up the hill on his own a little more than three minutes after us, right around the 6:30 mark. But we didn't know that at the time. So we kept on.

Miscellaneous Images and Comments


Fairly typical landscape

The onset of the section known as Cyberia
And this was the good section

Just before the long stretch of pavement into a strong headwind
The Virginian marks the Green Lantern (wearing an Ireland jersey)
and gradually grinds away from me

We know now how this race works so next year we'll approach it differently. First lesson? Get to the starting line with more than 10 minutes to spare! Whether you belong among the elite cyclists or not, get right in there at the front of the pack and have your go. Let the elite worry about riding away from you rather than you worrying about trying to catch up to them.

Don't bother trying to stick together unless you know you're evenly matched and agree to work together. And even then you need to be wary of your mates. The Rasputitsa can, apparently, confound a rider's moral compass so without even realizing it a previously mellow companion can morph into a fiend who'll leave friends in the breech, shamelessly draft others, and generally claw and scrape and snarl like a feral Maine Coon cat. It's best to understand this in advance so that when The Change comes over your heretofore loyal domestique and he or she launches an attack on you, you're ready to counter the move.

Joking aside, all three of us, The Virginian, I-ward, and Dubstoevsky loved the experience and are all eager for next year's edition. We'll be ready ... and that means these guys better start worrying now!


The Winners!
This is as close as I got to them all day
(L-R) Ted King, 2nd, Ansel Dickey, 1st, Tim Johnson, 3rd

Indeed, next year bodes well. The town of Newport has already erected a statue honoring the participation of Team Shad. A gracious touch.


Town monument to Team Shad

Parting Shot

Captain Dubstoevsky slipping past
the steely Virginian
at the finish line



Sunday, April 20, 2014

Rasputitsa At Last: The Narrative

At last! Race day in the Northeast Kingdom. And lest we be disappointed that race conditions would be - gasp! - dry, packed, and fast (as they were Friday when we reconnoitered some of the course), Mother Naturavichskya swooped in overnight with a barrage of snow showers, slush, and icy rain that, as we would all discover, delivered the proper Rasputitsian flavor.

Race Day!
6:15 AM
View from my hotel room window

Newport, Vermont is a small city on the southern shores of Lake Memphremagog. Most of Lake Memphremagog is in Canada. The Rasputitsa starts on Main St. in Newport. The pack of riders gets led out of town and along the eastern shore of the lake for a neutral mile or so before the racing actually starts. Except that's not quite accurate, as Team Shad learned.


Team Headquarters
Four Seasons Inn, Derby, VT

The thing is, despite staying overnight at team headquarters just a few miles north of the starting line, we left the team hotel later than anticipated and by the time we got downtown, parked, geared up and mounted our bikes, hundreds of riders had already queued up ahead of us so that we were forced to start near the rear of the pack.

The rear of the starting line
The Virginian in neon high vis lime on the left

Despite being pretty far back in the throng of riders waiting to get underway our spirits were high and we felt ready for the competition. We had a plan; we'd stick together for as long as possible and then, if it was clear that one of us was holding the other two back, we'd split up and allow for individual attacks and the quest for solo glory.

Team Shad, Loose and Confident

The thing is, when you assemble a small squad of riders as I did, you never quite know what you're going to get. On the surface, all seems jovial, convivial, unified. In the training rides leading up to race day and in team meetings and dinners everything seems as One. But when the rolling throng of competitors spins off the starting line and you suddenly find yourself in a large group of riders, most of whom immediately begin jockeying for advantage and position, dynamics change quickly. It requires discipline and communication to stay together.

Little did I anticipate Team Shad exploding within the first two miles. Turns out that The Virginian, despite what I believe to have been a sincere willingness to be a team player, is, at heart, a solo assassin. He is preternaturally unable to subsume the wild need for the attack. So as the peloton began unwinding itself along the long, narrow, still-paved lake shore road, The Virginian immediately began accelerating, working his way forward. Teammate I-ward, on the other hand, not quite as fit as myself or The Virginian and knowing he'd need to pace himself in order not to bonk over the long haul, fell into a sensible, if slower, pace behind me.

I found myself in a conundrum; to keep the team together, I had to keep both lads in sight. I attempted to stay visible to I-ward and give him the comfort of knowing I wasn't beyond reach. At the same time I knew that if I allowed The Virginian to drop me at this very early juncture I'd be on my own for most of the race so I had to pedal a little harder and make a bigger effort earlier on than I'd hoped to do. All the while, other riders whir forward or fall away behind me as I pass them.

By the time we hit the first stretch of unpaved road, maybe two and a half miles into the race, Team Shad has imploded. I-ward is hunkered down in a small gaggle of cyclists somewhere behind me; when I glance back hopefully over my shoulder, I can no longer see his scrambled-egg-colored jersey. He's gone. The Virginian on the other hand is 100 yards ahead or so and moving along at speed but within sight and within reach.


First stretch of unpaved road
about 3 miles into the race

Then the first significant climb arrives, the road is soft, riders begin faltering and bogging down, some already climbing off their bikes, another poor soul already with a flat tire. Over the course of the race we end up seeing many people pulled over changing tires, an inordinate number of them, it seems. Perhaps they're riding on road tires? Plenty of riders are though there are also plenty of mountain bikes and cyclocross bikes.

I use the climb to my advantage and ride up to The Virginian. I excoriate him for blowing up the team in the first four miles, deliberate with him over whether to wait for I-ward or not, then both of us lessen our pace thinking that I-ward may catch up with us if we slow it down. Other riders take advantage of our meandering and pass us. It's difficult to let them go knowing that we're dropping in the standings even as the race is just getting underway. Eventually, we agree to leave I-ward to his own devices and press on with our own quixotic pursuits. The reality is that even had I-ward caught up to us at that point we would likely have lost him again on the next major climb. At that moment I realized that the team strategy was out the window and it was every shad for himself.


Mile 10 or so and the race has split apart

What unfolded was an arduous and intensive pursuit of every rider up the road that we could see; and for me personally, a continuously rolling gut-check. There was very little resting or coasting, not if you had any intention of riding for placement. This, I realized, is what separates a good hard weekend 40 mile ride from an actual organized race. On the weekend ride, you let yourself rest periodically, recover a little bit, maybe amble along some to enjoy the scenery and catch your breath. In the race, you are pedaling hard all the time, and when you're struggling instead of easing up you force yourself to push through and keep pedaling as hard as possible.

After the initial big unpaved climb and then a long rolling stretch across a ridge, after 10 miles or so, I was warmed up and feeling fairly strong. I felt bad that we'd dropped I-ward and now I was keeping a weather eye on The Virginian in the event he tried a sudden attack. I was determined to stick to his wheel as much as possible.

Keeping The Virginian in Check

The Attack!

Climbing into the hills heading for Cyberia

Counter-attack!
I rode off the front, leaving The Virginian to chase

Eventually, after a period of steady climbing, we came to the section of the race known as Cyberia. Pre-race talk had suggested that riders would need to "shoulder" for this section. That is, we'd have to heft our bikes and hike. Not knowing any better I had doubted these reports, dismissing them as hyperbolic or as race organizer scare tactics. Alas, my skepticism proved naive in the extreme.

The beginning of Cyberia
and the rider I would eventually power past

The first bit of Cyberia edged a sloping field and ridge line; the 'road' was little more than a dray path and was half mud and half frozen snow-ice. With the bravado that comes from just having powered up one of the major climbs of the day and having dropped a number of riders, I stormed into Cyberia full of confidence. At one point, impatient with following the rider I'd caught up with, I churned past him in the slush and left him to his mincing caution. I was in Cyberia! I was flying!

And then I wasn't. Rather than continuing flat on the ridge line for miles in a state of ride-able mud & slush/ice/snow, the rough path turned upward and into the forest. Actually, it became something of a mountain side rivulet for the melting snows, a rocky stream bed at places crusted over with thick snow-covered ice, at other places a running stream of slick round rocks. There was nothing to do but dismount and begin the long schlep up up up toward the top, a mile or so away.

Cyberia turns gnarly

And gets worse as it ascends

Even The Virginian has to hoof it

Then, at the top of the Long March of Cyberia, a surreal sight awaits. A Sasquatch-guarded maple syrup dispensary complete with frozen shot glasses from which to slurp the golden nectar. The Cyberian Reward.

Cyberian Sasquatch Syrup Stand

Iced shot glasses of Vermont's Natural Tree Fuel

The Virginian High-Fiving Sasquatch

Unfortunately, the descent down a power line on the other side of the maple syrup stand was deeply mudded, pitted, snowy, and impossible to ride. Plus, my cleats were encased in ice from walking up the ice slope so when I did try to mount my bike I couldn't clip into the pedals. I spent an ungainly few minutes trying to stay upright and pedal and keep my tire line straight. Finally, the power line (and Cyberia) ended, dumped us unceremoniously onto a gravel road that pointed very steeply upward. We all stood around with rocks and sticks picking at the undersides of our shoes trying to clear the ice.

My feet got wet slogging through Cyberia and then they got cold. And the race was only halfway done (more or less). Surprisingly, even though we immediately began a very steep climb, it felt good to be pedaling again. Pushing and carrying your bike for a mile on rutted, slippery terrain while wearing non-traction bike shoes & booties is TIRING. Pedaling, in comparison, felt easy relatively-speaking. Shortly after the initial steep climb, we evened out and cruised along for awhile on a pretty steady flat. Then we descended and made it to the valley floor.

At this point, I sort of lost my bearings and was unsure exactly where we were and what sections we still had left. At one point, we hit pavement and began a long, flat (with some minor rolling hills) stretch directly into a headwind. Once again, The Virginian proved pitiless. Instead of hanging with me and working together, he put space between us, latched onto the wheels of a group of four or five up ahead and tucked in behind them. Me? Hung out to dry alone in no man's land. I mounted a desperate attempt to catch them but couldn't. Instead, I toiled and slogged in a very low gear, I hunched forward to be as streamlined as possible but that didn't help much. Caught out in the wind like that forced me to use huge amounts of energy.

I managed to bridge the gap only because the route lead us through a feed zone where everyone slowed down and then across a busy intersection where race monitors stopped traffic for the cyclists to pass. The Virginian's mini squad slowed through here and I bridged the gap.

"Thanks for leaving me out to dry, you bastard!" I shouted at The Virginian as I passed him. He shrugged and shouted back "You should have got onto my wheel!"

"I couldn't get your wheel, that's the fucking point! If you'd have hung back a bit and let me latch on, we could have worked together. I'll remember this!"

Etc. All in good fun, of course. But the effort I expended staying in sight and eventually catching up left me knackered. There were still about 20 miles to go. And then the sun came out. And all was good.


Once again, back together

That lasted about 10 minutes. Then more climbing, then more rolling mud roads across unprotected open field; the sky clouded over, the wind picked up, the roads were slick. Riders began to battle. The 20 or so riders that could all see each other up or down the road by now knew that the race was in the latter stages and that all the competition was now in sight. For the riders way back behind us, they were no longer worthy of our consideration. As for the leaders - how many there were we didn't know - they were beyond our reach. We didn't know if they were minutes up the road or an hour up the road. (And in fact, as we later determined, at this point the winners had already crossed the finish line, an hour ahead of us.) So it became a race between the twenty or so riders who were still in contact with one another. At least it was in my mind.

To borrow an extraordinary cliche from Paul Sherwen, the Brit cycling color commentator, I was forced to reach deep into my suitcase of courage in order to press on. I had little energy reserves left. I looked like this:

The face of a man who realizes that there are no more clothes
to be pulled from his suitcase of courage

Then we were hurtling through the sandy streets of Troy, down Main St., across town and out the other side, taking a left onto Bear Mountain Road. Though not unduly hilly at any part, Bear Mountain Road does gain some elevation and there are plenty of ups & downs ("rollers"), the ups being just tall enough and steep enough to summon despair and suffering. The riders were few and far between. I chased the Virginian and the Virginian traced a duo on a tandem alongside a single rider.

In pursuit of The Virginian
on Bear Mountain Rd
mile 35

We eventually all bunched together, then we dropped the single rider, then the tandem dropped us and it was finally me and The Virginian taking it home. Eventually, after some exceptional downhills, we merge onto Lake Road, a paved road that hugs the lake shore (though still presenting a couple of rolling climbs that really hurt; several times my quads protest in spasms and I'm afraid I'll cramp up in the stretch run and either be unable to finish or have to ignominiously push and coast my way to the finish line).

Then we see the 3K marker!


3 K to go!

At last! Main St., Newport, the red arc of the finish line. The Virginian and I are all alone, we've dropped everyone that was near at hand and no one had been in our sights ahead for the whole last Lake Rd section.


The finish line in sight!

Then it was over. The Virginian, in a move reminiscent of Lance Armstrong handing Marco Pantani the victory on the Mont Ventoux in the Tour de France, The Virginian slowed and watched me go past him and finish a second in front. Perhaps he was feeling guilty for having abandoned me to the headwinds earlier on. Or maybe he was, like Lance, secure in his ability to dispatch weaker rivals at will, as if he knew that finish line placement was more important to me than it was to him, and so letting me squeak by at the last was his gift of atonement.

It was a while before I-ward made it in but make it in he did, roaring down the stretch with surprising ferocity considering that he'd basically labored on his own all day.


The arrival of I-ward

Of course, when all was said and done, when we'd changed from our wet and cold cycling costumes and were warm again, any animosity and dissension that had riven Team Shad was forgotten and we were, once again, a Team.

Inity in the wake of the Rasputitsa

There was only one thing left to do. Hit the poutine station!

Poutine, the food of the gods

Ride Summary: This was ride #36 for me on the year. 46.98 miles (74 K), 13.3 mph, 3 hours 35 minutes.

Post script: See also Rasputitsa Miscellany, a follow-up post.

Friday, April 18, 2014

Northward Bound

The Time Has Come


The time has come to head north. The training and the planning are over with. Nothing left now but the tumult and the shouting.

The race day forecast hasn't changed - 50% chance of rain, more in the morning than the afternoon. High 40s. Overcast. It's going to be raw.

This morning I woke on planet Lemonstar and tonight, Jah willing, I will lay my head in Derby, just across the border from the land of the Big Poutine. Allez!

The next post will tell the story of how it all went down.


Chariot of Shad