Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Weekend with the Leonator III, Woo Tour

Sunday morning after the ascent of the Vonchusett and after the Longsjo Classic evening on the streets of the Woo, the Leonator and I, Dubstoevsky, went on a relaxed exploratory derive around Woo proper.

The Leonator at Bancroft Tower
June 26, 2016

Starting with Bancroft Tower.

Followed by WPI and the now-gone grotesqueries on the old field house being torn down; the huge brick warehouses along Prescott St reclaimed for medical officing, schooling bureaucracies, classrooms, veterans services; north Main Street and the urban renewal underway where the wretched mall once stood; Union Station with its magnificent marbled interior; through the Canal District and Harding St, Gold St, Beacon St and parallel of Main; to University Park and Clark University; and back to the Elm Park neighborhood and the redoubt of shad.




Scenes from the Woo Ramble

From Beacon St

Along Beacon St


Tribute to the Orlando Murdered, Clark University 

Halal Market Style

Weekend with the Leonator II, the Longsjo

Saturday night, after the assault on Mt Wachusett and after gorging on a huge fish dinner, the Leonator and I walked downtown to where the 2nd night of the Longsjo Classic was taking place, a criterium around the old streets of center Woo.

Though it sucked that the crowd was small, it was great for us because we could be right on the barricades, right in the action. We missed the women's race but were there for the last 25 laps of the men's race. As promised, extraordinary speed, 80 or so guys whirring by in a mad whizzing humming bunch of dangerous force.

Longsjo, Woo-Style

The evening was a beauty as well, hot as a summer night should be but not humid. Incredible conditions to be hanging out on the barricades waiting for the mad peloton to come whirring past.

We gave honor to Major Taylor, Woo City's prodigal cycling son, the great champion born in the same year as Harry Crosby, 1898. Fittingly, the Longsjo crit ran by the great cyclist's statue.


Major Taylor Memorial
Worcester Public Library

Longsjo Crit!

Woo Style




Weekend with the Leonator I

A big Team Shad welcome to the Leonator, a Brooklyn-based cyclist possessed of a wolverine relentlessness and unflagging spirit.  Longtime friend of both Wing Nut and Dubstoevsky, the Leonator doesn't make it to the Bay State that often so having him along for a team ride this weekend was a special treat. And what a weekend - more booming sun and clear blue skies, no humidity, slight breeze, perfect weather for the long haul.
The Leonator in the final sprint for the summit of Mt. Wachusett

Setting out from Team Shad HQ in downtown Woo, the 55 mile round trip to the mountaintop promised everything - empty country roads, farmland, sinuous descents, vistas, several cat 4 climbs, a cat 3 climb, wretched connector stretches on busy main road, neighborhoods, kamikaze downhills, twists & turns, long slogging pedal-cranking ascents, flat straightaways under canopied green foliage along reservoirs.

The fact is, you can plot out a mega ride in central Massholia. Though getting to the the huge swathes of forest and farmland requires traversing various town 'centers,' these are often just intersections of roads at town commons, and they are quickly and easily navigated. Mostly, you can be 'out there' on small, sparsely-traveled roads for very long periods of time.

The fact is that this was Wing Nut's first training ride from Team Shad HQ. Centered as he is in western Mass with a surfeit of long empty roads and fabulous climbing, he was, until Saturday the 25th, uninitiated into the glories of Woo-centric cycling, especially the Vonchusett Summit loop. Now it's a done deal, and having the Leonator along rounded out the triumvirate shadosterone.

As team leader I was responsible for the route. Small worry there. On a dry sunny Saturday with temps in the mid 80s, conditions were utterly perfect; it was so nice, we could have done laps around Holden Reservoir and it would have been excellent. But we didn't do laps - we hammered into the hills, we paced ourselves on the long rollers, we pulled each other along like a team time trial.

Wing Nut on Mason Rd
We also chilled and soaked up the general awesomeness of Being.

A hawk jumps out of the canopy'ing oak trees and flaps silently into other-side-of-the-road wisdom. A great blue heron, surprised by our passing, leaps into unnecessary flight from the silent pond face over which it stared. Occasionally, massive trees rear into consciousness, giant old veterans that have been growing for centuries and that have escaped the farmer's ax. Whispers of generations passed. The cycle of growth and regression. It's all there, visible across the landscape. Etched with stone walls. Dissected by road and field.

Dinner for Hungry Shad


Pompano and Red Snapper


Wednesday, June 22, 2016

Scenes from the June Roads

The high time of summer, the long days, the bright sun bearing down from a relentlessly blue sky.

Muschopauge Rd, Rutland

The long country roads shaded by hardwood canopy. The farms with faded barns and expansive green fields. The livestock gazing in grass-fed splendor.


The Bedouin have come to watch Team Shad train
Rutland, June 14, 2016

Two Wachusett summits recently.

One, on June 12, the 40th anniversary of my first Dead show, a wildly cloudy day that, while warm enough at the lower elevations, was actually chilly on the gray summit.


Dub on the Mountain

Grateful Dead, live at the Boston Music Hall, June 12, 1976

And the second, a week later on what would have been my brother's 59th birthday, June 19, 2016, a classic summer Sunday, but very hot.


Captain Swelter and Franklin's Tower

Unusually, I didn't do a loop on the 19th. Instead, I started from Fruitlands Museum in Harvard, Massachusetts where I'd attended a Father's Day Brunch.*

En route back to Woo City, I succumbed to the pull of the Mountain and detoured north despite it being a sweltering day of remorseless sun heat, the kind of day where you drink so much water that you feel sick and don't want to drink anymore but you HAVE to drink more because you're sweating so much you're losing water at a rapid pace and need to replace it.


Departure from Fruitlands, June 19, 2016
the peak of Mt. Wachusett visible in the distance

Sterling

Looking south toward Woo City


* Father's Day brunch honoring Team Shad's founding father, Vladimir Andersshadokov, visiting from Sverdlove, a small village two hours or so northeast of the Black Sea port of Odessa. The brunch was more or less a success, marred only by the well-intention'd caviar that the old patriarch declared to be of Iranian origin and so obviously inferior to the Russian.* 




* Yes, he said "Russian," not "Ukrainian"

The Work Ethic of Team Shad

Work Ethic of Team Shad

Work ethic, up close
Maple Spring Pond, Holden
June 12, 2016

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Another Summit; Muschopauge Rd; Ali is Gone

Capping a three ride week  with a Sunday morning 45 mile mountain top summit loop that pushed me over the 100 mile mark for the fifth week in a row. These are the prime weeks of the cycling year. The light is long and the weather generally excellent.

Dubstoevsky in the cottony maw
Today, for example, was a beauty, though windy like a fucknatty. Serious northwest wind gust hurtling down from a revolving storm in eastern Canada. But warm. And mostly sunny. And luckily, on the climb to Wachusett's summit, the wind was wholly absent for half of the ascent, the mountain's bulk providing the windscreen.

Atop was a tumult of gust and blow, however, and I did not linger.

It's been a remarkable week, going back nine days to Friday June 3 when Muhammad Ali died on Allen Ginsberg's birthday (AG would have been 90). What other human being could unite so many disparate people by the common bond of the love of a single man? Or, how could one man mean so much to so many different people? Surely none other that Muhammad Ali.

And 40 years ago today I saw my first Grateful Dead show, at the Boston Music Hall, June 12, 1976 (listen here).

The raw persistence of time, and the unexpected gifts that appear along the way.

The Apex of Tuesday's Ride

Earlier in the week, on Tuesday, I rode north to Rutland and apex'd at Muschopauge Rd where I turned right and had the pleasure of (mostly) descending for three or four miles on hyper-rural, well-conditioned, traffic-free, roadways. Dreamscapes of curve and foliage tunnel, huge trees standing stout sentry in the thicket whirring past. Alive in the hurtling wind rush.

Sunday, June 5, 2016

57 on Saturday

Hunkered down with a pint of strong latte at six AM. The gray Sunday morning resounds with bird song and the first hesitant raindrops patter the crab apple tree.

I should be speeding swiftly north in the team car, headed to the starting line of the Tour de Haunch in the hills west of Brattleboro. But I am not.

Dubstoevsky earlier in the week

I, Dubstoevsky, marauding Amur tiger of the Russian taiga, have been reduced to tabby stature by the ignominy of a few showers. Or downpours. Even by the threat thereof. Appalling.


Dubstoevsky reacting to the news of showers

Shad fans are rightfully disappointed by team management's decision to withdraw from the grand Heifer ramble. But these things happen in the shadowy world of Big Time amateur cycling, and sometimes the sensible decision comes across as folly or weakness or calculated evasion. There's nothing to be done about it. The races and the challenges go on. The cowering tiger cub tastes fresh meat and learns how to snarl, learns how to hunt.

Once the decision came down to abandon the quest for a Triple Crown this season, the logical response was to seize the moment and ride. Saturday, after all, was a jewel of a day, the kind of clear, bright, not-too-hot day that cyclists dream of.

A mountain summit seemed the logical goal, with a punishing but rewarding route to the base a prerequisite. So, flogged by the lash of guilt over abandoning the Heifer, I checked to make sure my claws were still attached to my paws, climbed aboard the aluminum shad, and set out for Mt Wachusett.


The summit in the distance

Ah, the sweetness. The sharp, pleasant morning air, the landscape pulsing with green. You could almost hear the photosynthesis, the expiration of oxygen by every tree, shrub, roadside weed. And where just a month ago you could look deep into the forest and clearly make out the landscape's folds and ridges and rocky quirks, today all is a tangled thicket of Green. The long dun views through the naked trees are gone until autumn.

Which is fine. We are now fully in the season of verdant extravagance.


View from the last climb before the summit

But while the landscape disappears into the Big Green Embrace, the close observer is often rewarded with glimpses of wild critters going about their springtime business. So it proved to be Saturday morning. In a wide, still dew-dampened expanse of shaggy field, beyond the red-winged blackbird perched & signing on a conservation land sign, a large white tail deer grazed at the meadow's edge. She looked up and briefly gazed at me across the hundred yards that separated us.

Not too further along, a gray shadow loped swiftly and silently across the road, from one fern-strewn berm to the other, and disappeared into the tangle. A gray fox! I breathed a silent OM, grateful for having glanced up at the key moment to see this elusive hunter.

Along rt. 62 in Princeton, on the long climb towards the turn onto Merriam Rd, a large red-tailed hawk leapt from its perch above the road as I passed underneath. For a few brief moments we rode together and I snapped this picture; look closely and nearly in the center you'll see its inverted v-shaped winged majesty.

Red-tailed hawk on the wing

But the day was more than a wildlife lark; there was the business of the summit and the need to punish myself for my abdication. I hit Gregory (Corso) Rd and powered up the steep slope to Mountain Rd, the last stretch before the mountain's base headquarters. A couple of struggling rabbits lurched slowly up the long straight climb ahead and I overtook them with ease, adding them to my soup pot of dominance.

The summit road is now open to vehicle traffic but being still relatively early in the morning there were no cars yet and not many hikers either. As I cranked upwards on the initial long ascent, I glanced behind me to make sure that I hadn't unknowingly become a rabbit to some stealthy predator. No one behind. And no one in front either. So I set my ferocious forelegs to work and, badger-style, clawed my way to the summit.


Dubstoevsky and the Leaning Tower of Shad

But reaching the summit is only half the ride; there's always the small matter of the return trip and despite the plethora of descending, more than a few inclines remain to offer their own challenges. From Princeton to Holden is mostly all descending, but from Holden back to Woo City one encounters a series of small climbs of varying lengths and steepness. The challenge is being able to assault the climbs with stoic conviction and not succumb to the lethargic plod.

Many of the climbs and stretches of the day's ride have been charted out as intervals on Strava. One in particular, the 'Climb out of Tatnuck,' is a short, steep climb of 50 yards or so out of the little enclave of Tatnuck. For some reason, I've managed to hit this climb just right a couple times in the past and ended up among the top twenty riders overall for this interval. To put that in perspective, for almost any other interval that I normally do, I am firmly nestled in the middle of the pack. If 500 cyclists are on record for an interval, it's safe to assume I'm somewhere around rider 295.

Today however, despite arriving at this climb after 55 miles & a grueling three and a half hours, I hit it in stride, got out of the saddle, and hammered up it. I felt good, but I had no idea how good. Only later, after uploading my ride data to Strava, did I find out that I'd ridden myself into the top five overall (small caveat; I share the fifth spot with five others, all of us with the same time).

Parting Shot

One of Dubstoevsky's many fans

Friday, June 3, 2016

The Winds (And Rains) of Fate Threaten

100% chance of rain. Up to an inch possible. This is the forecast for the Tour de Heifer, Sunday, June 5th.

As this post goes up, it's less than 48 hours before the starting time.

The Great Triad on Grafton Hill
The Shad brain trust has been closely monitoring the direction of the storm and it seems certain that the forecast will prove true. Given this dire reality, and given the risks posed to the safety and comfort of the riders, Team Shad will almost certainly withdraw from the event.

This is a crippling blow to the
pursuit of the Triple Crown, a goal the team set at the outset of the season. The Rasputitsa, the Tour de Heifer, and the D2R2. To start and finish all three.

Ah, but the best laid plans ....

The beneficence of Mother Nature gave us an extraordinarily mild and delightful Rasputitsa, yet now her capricious will promises to wash out the Tour de Ribeye.

This is how the winds of Fate blow. They power the Great Triad of Life: Uncertainty, Possibility, & Hope.

We're a-swirl in the haboob (هَبوب‎‎ habūb).

We live in the moil of the Three.

We climb on our bikes and with hope and possibility pedal off on an uncertain road.

The blur of hope