Saturday, August 19, 2006
Trip Summary
"According to our strength of character and our clarity of vision, we will endure, we will succeed, we will have contributed to make life where we were and as we lived it better, brighter and more beautiful"
Frank Lloyd Wright.
After 50 days and a few days rest, the thrill of completing such a challenge is exhilrating. With the sight of the ocean, my emotions overcame me with tears of joy and happiness. Had I really made it all 3780 miles, climbing over 110,000 feet? CHECK OUT THE MAP http://maps.google.com/maps/ms?ie=UTF8&hl=en&msa=0&msid=105016220074415919612.000442fe95f82cf857b57&ll=56.944974,-77.519531&spn=40.216836,163.476563&z=3&om=1 It was a most remarkable journey with physical, mental and emotional challenges conquered by all on this trip, and to my surprise, even myself. Trip of a lifetime!
On the eve of the trip, like many, I was wondering if I was really prepared for the adventure that lay ahead. As we rounded the room with introductions, it became apparent these people were clearly skilled cyclists who had prepared months and possibly years for this trip and included some Olympic and World Class Athletes, some trip Alumni and some who cycled 4000 plus miles. Most were doing it for the love of cycling.
Then there was me. I dare not say it, I was not doing this for the love of cycling (after all I was a novice, not even ever having changed a flat tire). I was in it for the love of the outdoors and backwoods of America. I wanted to embrace, savour, smell, feel, taste, touch, enjoy and experience America at the grass roots – to see it every inch of the way! In April, I stumbled upon the opportunity of a free summer which coincided with my life long dream that has been itching me for years. And as the saying goes ‘if you have an itch, scratch it!’ Arriving in the US and buying my bike May 20th, 2006 I was off. On the eve of the trip, I was contemplating ‘was it the time to fess up to the following?;
- That my Odometer was inadvertently set to measure Kilometers (although labeled as MPH) and with distractions of family and travel, I had only ridden 329 miles?
- That in the little riding I did, that I loathed hills and with just 3 days before departure, I made my brother pick me up each day (to avoid the 2 mile 10% climb back to his house)?
- That a physical chronic pain has haunted me daily for the past 18 months (and that I was feeling it at that very moment)?
Nope! Revealing such secrets would only weaken my own confidence. I am a firm believer of ‘what does not break you, makes you’. This was going to test that theory. I realised early on that I might be (or rather was) physically weaker than all of those here but I was head strong and planned to remain that way.
Everyone rode this trip for different reasons, many to pursue a life long dream and enjoy America. In addition to my intentions of saturating myself with the States, I set out with one objective and that was to ride ‘EFI – Every Fabulous Inch’. This is a very tough objective considering that there are so many variables, many risks beyond one’s own control (weather, pre-determined destinations and schedule regardless of how you feel and unpredicatable construction). And perhaps now is the time to say remember on Day 23 (of my blog), we (Lois and I were forced into a SAG – not just through a construction zone but against our will to the hotel). It was 8 miles. For me, it was a gnawing bit of defeat that I was trying to release and let go that day but simply could not shake it. I was not happy, although beyond my control, I felt failure. All things then changed as Lois approached me just before dinner and said ‘Annie – I came to ride EFI and I am going back to re-ride what we missed. Want to go?’ Oh yeah- game on! Like sneaking out of camp, we re-traced our route at 7:00 pm for an additional 14 miles. Oh what a sweet feeling that was! But we realised it also upped the stakes on going the distance, so we decided it was best kept secret. The following day, with 105 temperatures and nearly 75% of the group sagging in the frustration of nasty headwinds and heat exhaustion, I was more determined to go EFI (at least for the day), not wanting the previous days’ effort to be wasted. Fourteen bloody hours! It was undeniably grueling but going the distance was exhilrating. ‘Tough Cookie’ one fellow rider said to me. Oh yes I am! From then on, I never questioned if I could make it (as I had for weeks at the beginning).
Every aspect of this trip has been phenomonal. All in all, I was very pleased with this route and trip - it had great scenery and history with mostly backroads and fairly safe shoulders. We had great weather for the most part and even with the few dark days of rain, thunder, lightning and hail, it made for finding adventure and entertainment in barns. It seemed the sole unpredictable risk were the various bits of construction but this could be eliminated with the simple use of technology. As a group, we were all very lucky with just a few close calls with careless drivers. In all, we had a few incidents of ‘road rashes’ and just one broken collar bone. Not bad for a group of 50 plus cyclist traveling some 175,000 miles.
As I turned the corner into Rye, NH, the church bells were ringing out with Amazing Grace ‘ I once was lost but now I’m found’. How amusing, inspiring and reassuring! At this writing, I am enthusiastically energised on life and look forward to stepping back onto the career ladder taking my trip experiences with me.
I also might fess up that I am now a cyclist for life. Just days after finishing in Portsmouth, I had the urge to cycle. And with that, I attempted the summit of Mount Ascutney, a 3.8 mile, 12-18% grade in 50 minutes. In true Final Four style, I did not make the time but I made the hill. After just 50 days, a cyclist? Maybe. Another cross country trip? I hope so. So to all those armchair athletes, I say, get out there! You will surprise yourself with what you can do!
Friday, August 18, 2006
Final Four footnote
- A few bloody hills (Mount Hood, Ochocho Pass, Keyes Pass, Dixie Mountain, Tifton Mountain and Snall summit, Summit Pass, Togwotee Pass,Black Hills, Adirondacks, Apalachian Mountains, Green Mountains and Hogback Mountain) for a total of 110,000 feet of climbing.
- Spectacular scenery, in particular Mount Hood, Grand Tetons, Continental Divide, Cave of the Winds National Park, Missippippi River, Niagara Falls, Erie Canal (bike paths), NY churches (and many of them), VT covered bridges, Bennington monument and Hogback Mountain.
- Pursuit of business opportunities (Dayville, OR General Store ($325k with store, house and pool), desolate West Point Service (to entertain Mormon’s, Potato farmers and the occasional cyclist), Hell’s Half Acre (for potential Bison Burgers), DQ (to repair in Ripon), Michigan Land Auction (near power station!) and potential employees for a day at Niagara Falls TGI Friday’s (short lived!).
- Waterfights....
- Meeting fascinating people including Juniper Guy (http://www.juniperguy.com/), Marvin (of the Rasberries), DQ Curt, the Mandelas Lady and Grandpa. Most inspiring was self-supported Larry – we met him twice. Chatting with Amish on a few occassions who are sprinkled across the Northern States.
- A few wrong turns (most notable a painful but memorable 11 mile detour) which also included some road rash!
- All things related to DQ (off-roading DQs, helping hand in DQ and double dipping (two in one day DQs) .
- State signs! (The talents of setting a camera timer and balancing it for a group photo).
- Any technology to be tinkered with – including cameras falling into toilets, transforming to self-propelled rockets or performing 'houdini' acts. Capturing ‘must have photos’ of tunnels and the Michigan pothole. Perhaps one too many photos (total taken 3,646!).
- Animals of all shapes and sizes (elk, deer, moose, bear, bison, prairie dogs, racccoons, rabbits, frogs, fish (hatcheries), snakes, pigs, turkeys, cows and horses. Dead or alive. With added distractions of practicing the fine art of ‘cow whispering’. Only a few dogs occassionally quickened our pace.
Fruits (and vegetables) of labor (raspberries, blueberries, wildberries, pears, apples, cabbage, asparagus, alfalfa, ginseng, cucumbers, peas, beans, carrots, potato and just about any other fruit or vegetable). And of course, ‘corn stalking’ or was it stalking corn?
- Trains, planes and automobiles (and a boat as well) – All shapes and sizes – stopping or distracting us including many antique cars (including Corvairs), crop dusters and numerous freight trains. Timing was not always on our side as we even had to wait for a drawbridge (for a boat to pass)!
- Shopping at the Dollar Store for chalk, squirt guns and American flags - all necessities of the serious cyclist.
- Looking for luck (aka Pick a penny up and all the day you have good luck!).... Think we had a total of $3.13 collected of various coins and bills. At one point, I found 30 cents within 2 miles and had thoughts of funding my trip.
- Tacky tourists traps – The Dells, Outlet malls and Wall Drug (along with the 1500 miles of advertising sign to go with it). Getting my head around good ole American laziness (drive thru cigarette store, stand alone Espresso shops, all you can eat buffets).
- 'where is that bike helmut' revelations - 5 miles too late!
- Of course, 'valet'ing the bikes
- Napping in more than a few places including Magnolia, Port Byron, the golf course, under any shady tree and most notably picking up positive vibes on the Optimist Bench!
- Meddling with moody Mother Nature (and some nasty thunder and lightening storms – especially in Waseca, WI).
- Anything Red, White and Blue in the spirt of Patriotism and Lois’ scrapbook! It’s alive and well across the States (mailboxes, gas tanks, wood carvings, call boxes, you-name-it, its red, white and blue!)!
- Great bike paths (on or off the official route maps) – Casper, Elroy/Sparta (and visiting Bikin Ben of Sparta), Houston (and the one we could not find), Worthington with ‘wrong-way-Abe’, Windmill to Brantford (off-map), Erie Canal (off-map and not easy!) and Mohawk-Hudson trail.
- Hay Jumping (Evil Knevil style).
- Flower picking (and naming) - Stopping to view and smell the wildflowers as well as amazing manicured gardens.
- Lost in construction!
- Debating politics in Ripon without taking party lines and still remaining friends.
- Water towers (my all time favourite: The Big Smiley!)
- HOT FOOT - oooooooouuch!!! Must stop now!
- Train Spotting - a UK sport that I imported as an excuse to stop!
- Trip entertainers - Requested as the ‘cell phone’ singing Happy Birthday Quartet (yes me!) at SAG stops. Along with team sing alongs of ‘Rooster’, ‘This land is your land, this land is my land’.... etc, etc.
- Entertaining fellow riders with practical jokes and then only to realise there was no one left to fool and nothing left to do but ride on!
Sibling sitings (Lois sitings in Wisconsin and Ogrady sitings in VT, NH and MI)
Sleepless nights (with no energy to ride)– Blog, blog, blog.... A great trip diary....