Memorial Day Photos

My plan for the perfect weekend:

Pour wine at Dobra Zemlja Saturday morning and bring home a delicious Sangiovese. Save for Sunday evening.

Ride to Volcano with friends. Lament not stopping for a beer at The Union , but hurry home with promises of “the river”. It truly is sad to skip this stop, as The Union in Volcano is the best restaurant in Amador. The food is delicious and local, and the atmosphere is friendly and relaxing.

Before heading to the river the river to relax, stop by Amador Vintage Market in Plymouth for sandwiches and old-fashioned sodas.  Taste wine again.  Another local winery, Legendre Cellars was pouring, and the wines were delicious.

Take the 1985 Ford F350 four door diesel down to the river. Riding in this truck is an experience not to be missed.

Relax, swim and enjoy the company of family and friends.

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Old dam at the Consumnes River

While hanging out enjoying life, open the Dobra and enjoy. Very nice evening wine, not too heavy or sweet and still refreshing when served at room temperature.

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This is from the drive back. It was a little too dark to shoot without a tripod, but the watercolor effect on these flowers was nice.

Follow this relaxing evening with a lake loop and dirt option.  Top off with a perfect dinner on the patio in Town Center.

And on Tuesday evening, the light hit the Willie’s jeep just right. Sadie, who usually will not stand still in front of a camera,  agreed to be a subject.

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All in all lovely. The four day work week never hurts either.

Now off to race the Auburn Omnium!

 

Sea Otter 2014

These kids know cycling is all about friends. And vuvuzelas.

These kids know cycling is all about friends. And vuvuzelas.

I had a whole entry ready to go here.

All about my racing, my planning to race, my thoughts while racing and my placings. Nearly finished, just needed to be edited and submitted.

But then I realized that I was missing the point. I thought that I had gone to Sea Otter to race my bike. I was wrong.

I went to cheer for my teammates as they raced around the track in the circuit. I went to enjoy a beer and a waffle during the cyclecross race. I went to cheer for Cody as he threw down against the pros in the MTB short track. I realized that I went to Sea Otter for the community.

One of the reasons I treasure riding my bike is because of the cycling community. Even in Monterey, I had friends to hang out with. They cheered for me and I cheered for them. We drank beers together and watched dual slalom. Most importantly, I got to ride my bike with my best friends. I got to watch as my teammate Cara formed a break and won the road race. I knew my teammates pain struggling to hang on in the circuit, up that brutal hill again and again and again.

I’d gone to Monterey to race my bike and that means spending time with the best people in the world.

Win.

joanne and ben

Joanne and Ben watched Dual Slalom with me, met Marianne Vos with me and went to the SRAM ladies lounge with me. Good people.

ryan

Even after the organizers screwed his start, Ryan is upbeat and happy. He always has the best attitude. Even when I messed up his name.

justin

How Justin can look clean after racing MTB I have no idea.

thirsty bear ladies

After punishing me up the hills, the Thirsty Bear ladies were all smiles.

But if you still want to read about my racing, check the next post down.

Racing Sea Otter 2014

'Cross flyover. Maybe next year...

‘Cross flyover. Maybe next year…

Last year, I took the opportunity to attend the Sea Otter Classic in Monterrey. For the uninitiated, this is the biggest bike event of the year. I had a good time last year, racing in the circuit and the road race. My results weren’t terrible, and I had such a great time at the expo, that I decided I would go again. I even held onto my numbers, to remind myself that there was to be NO FLAKING. The calender rolled around and I was reg’d and ready to go. I’d had a solid couple of weeks of riding beforehand to get ready. Several of these rides included a lot of rain. Like, the entire trip from Placerville to Town Center in the pouring, drenching rain. I’ve never been so cold in my entire life. I stripped that kit off as fast as possible and was still shivering 20 minutes later, even while sipping hot chai and wearing sweats.

Even when sopping wet, my Pactimo kit was comfortable.

Even when sopping wet, my Pactimo kit was comfortable.

Then the next Thursday, I set out from my sunny house for a nice cruise through Fiddletown. As I gained elevation, the sky started to darken. Soon, it was raining. Then it was hailing. Hail hurts. I was out in the middle of nowhere, no shelter and no cell phone and just trying to get through the hail. Not thinking about anything but putting my head down and pedaling. Finally I got to Fiddletown. I ducked under some eaves to try to pull myself together to get home. Luckily, I had my Smartwool arm warmers, and there is something about wool that just hits the spot. Oh yeah, it’s that it keeps you warm even when even completely soaked from riding in my back pocket. I was able to limp home. In the shower I could see all the red spots on my arms and legs from being pounded by the hail.

After all this weather BS my bike was in sorry shape, but my LBS fixed me right up.
So I was feeling pretty prepared for whatever Sea Otter had to offer. At least it likely wouldn’t hail.
Circuit:
45 brutal minutes on the Laguna Seca track. Up the hill on the back and ripping down the corkscrew on the other side. An absolutely punishing race. Last year I got dropped, had to fight back on, and then ended up completely spun out in the sprint. This year would be different. I talked to Larry before the race and he said the most important thing was not getting stuck behind someone else on the climb and getting dropped that way. My personal performance goal was to pedal on the descent and rip. I’ve been practicing descending this year and have really improved. And that’s basically how the race went down. There were a couple times on the climb where I was in bad position and had to work harder to get around some people, and a two person break got away somehow, but overall a great race. I ended up sprinting for the finish and came in fifth in the field, second in Cat 3 women. Unfortunately, I was tired and sweaty and distracted and so I missed my podium. But now I can keep the number for next year and strive and strive to get on the podium again.
Road Race:
Finish hill. There is an almighty long and brutal finish hill in this race. Last year I blew up, lost contact and got passed. So this year, I was going to save something for the finish hill no matter what. The race started out tame, with some attacks going, but nothing sticking. Then in the 3rd lap, my teammate and a Davis girl started pressuring the climb. I tried to respond, but my legs just didn’t have it. They got away and stayed away for the rest of the race. The rest of us formed a pack and some girls tried to get organized to chase, but I focused on having something left for the finish hill. That was my mantra for the entire race. At the feed zone on the last lap, I saw a woman pouring out her leftover water and followed suit, thinking at least there would be a mental advantage of being lighter. Then we got to the finish hill. After a little jockeying, I planted myself second wheel, behind a tiny little climber, and held on for dear life. The weekend before, at the CR ride, I had an epiphany. I was staring at the wheel in front of me and imagined a little string attaching me to it. No matter what, I could not let that string break. No matter how I felt, I could not let that string break. I bent my mind to the task and it worked. I practiced the same technique. No matter what, I was not losing this wheel. I held on, and with a little less than 200m to go, a woman attacked from the left. I latched on to her and continued on. All of a sudden, we rounded a corner and there was the finish chute. I started to come around her. We were standing and sprinting for all we were worth. I could hear her yelling, NO NO NO and I was yelling the same thing. We got to the line and she was an inch in front of me. We both collapsed on the ground and I tried to make the world come back into focus. It was an amazing finish. I haven’t tried that hard for something in a very long time. After, we got to congratulate each other on a job well done. So I ended up 4th, and proud to be so. My teammate won.

In addition to all the great racing, the expo was awesome. The best part is seeing all my friends from the cycling community, and making new friends. Saturday night is the epic ‘cross race and the heckling and cheering is great. I tried not to drink too much beer, because of the 7am RR start, but it’s hard when most of it is free!
When I got home, I reflected on my performance. I had raced to the best of my current ability and done well. Happy.

Then I got to watch my teammate Natalie’s TED talk about losing. She expertly captured all I love about cycling in 6 short minutes. Everyone needs to watch this.  TI had finished well, but there is still room to improve and a whole season left of racing.

This Porsche was so awesome.

And this car was just straight awesome.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Farm Life

Thanks to Holly, here are some of the pics I’ve been taking lately.

Disappointment

I was disappointed in my performance at Chico Stage Race.
When asked how it went, I replied bitterly, not good, 4th in the rr, stuck behind a crash in the crit and had a mental breakdown in the TT.
I did not feel like I had given my best.
Take the rr for example. I was excited about the gravel. I’d been practicing in gravel all week. I felt confident in my handling skills. But the gravel hit and I blew up.
Then in the crit, I had poor positioning on the final lap. When a crash happened in front of me, I lost all positioning and lost time on the gc.
In the TT, I fought my mind all the way. I had to tell myself to pedal. My worst enemy, apathy, surfaced and I had to attempt to fight it back. Apathy always asks me why, why do you do this? You know you’re no good, why keep trying. By the end, I was mentally exhausted and in pain.
So when people asked me how the race went, I said, not good.
Then, driving home, I began to go over the weekend in my head.
Actually, in the rr, I had done pretty well. I held on over the gravel, even after telling my teammate, I’m blowing up. She immediately asked, what can I do to help? Then my other teammate takes 3rd in the rr, and I have position to out sprint the five if been working with and take 4th. Not to mention all the encouragement that every woman on the peloton offered.
When I thought about it, the crit wasn’t that bad either. Yes, there was a crash. But the two women involved walked away from it. They were scratched and bruised but okay. The course was interesting and challenging. My teammate did well again, taking the win after launching multiple strong attacks. Very cool to be a part of.
And when I looked back at the TT, it wasn’t that bad either. I got to ride an amazing bike, loaned to me without a second thought. The hug from my friend when I broke down crying when she asked about my TT. And I saw that improving my time was possible. That gave me hope for next time.
Then I remembered all the great people who made it happen.

The kits coming through in time. Chris washing and tuning our bikes late into the night. The generous host housing provided by local cyclists. Getting to know my teammates around a delicious dinner. Seeing all my friends and hearing their stories and having them listen to mine. The success of my teammates and friends.
Now I have the correct answer when asked, how did Chico go? The answer: awesome.

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Yay! Got to ride this awesome bike!

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Playing with the Boys

This weekend I was reminded why I am so passionate about riding and racing bikes. It had been a rough week at work and I had not been prioritizing riding. Coming off the rain and trainer last week, I had lost my motivation to wake up at 5:15 and ride before work. Nothing better for mood improvement than a change of scenery, so I loaded up my bike and headed to Santa Cruz.
UCSC was hosting Slugapalooza, a collegiate RR  with USAC categories, later in the afternoon and my friends and I decided we would ride over there. After a delicious sandwich, we headed over. The views when we got to campus were amazing. There was a cluster of old lime processing building, including stone kilns. Last time I was down, I got interested in lime kilns when my riding partner and I explored some on Ice Cream Grade. Super cute name for a road. No ice cream though.

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Insta of some of the old buildings on campus

The rr course was a sweeping loop with a steady climb and a breathtaking descent. The descent alone was reason enough to race. After a steep final pitch, the road flattened out into a sweeping right turn and then ocean views all the way to the bottom. It was difficult not to get distracted and stare of into the distance while cruising to the bottom.
I couldn’t resist the course, so I got regd and ready. The collegiate atmosphere was so chill and cross like. Great music and a awesome crowd.  I had originally signed up for the USAC Women’s field, but didn’t see any other women warming up.  No other women. I started to worry that I would be the only person in my field, which was not what I had bargained for. As I hung around the start line, the 4/5 men started showing up. Lots of 4/5 men and still no women. I asked the promoter and learned that a Cat 4 woman had reg’d, but she was no where to be found. Oh well. Faced with no competition, I cajoled the officials into  letting me race with the men. “You want to race with the 4/5 men?” one asked, with disbelief on his face. Why not I figured.

I got into the pack and we started up the hill. I had difficulty clipping in and soon was near the back. Luckily, I was on Mason’s wheel, a friend who had come down to ride and hang out, and I started yelling at him to move up. Mostly so that he would take me with him. He complied and by the time we finished the hill, we were near the front of the pack. On the descent, I moved up even more, so Scott, Mason and I were at the front. It was such a thrill. Like Coffee Rupublic, but sanctioned. We drilled the descent and I stayed with the pack until the pace picked up too much up the hill on the second lap. With 8 laps to go, I settled down and found a good wheel to hold on to for the rest of the race. I tried to work with the guy, but I was barely hanging on.

Ocean View from the finish line

The cheering section was awesome. I still wear my cross team shorts and the Sac State Cycling guys would cheer for me and call out “Bike Biz!” every time I went by. Then the teammates of the guy pulling me around the course got in on the cheering and told him to, “Drop your girlfriend already.” So funny. If I hadn’t been focusing every ounce of energy on not getting off that wheel I would have waved and blown a kiss, but even that gesture would have had me dropped.  I stuck to his wheel and we continued to count down the laps. Toward the final few I noticed that I was dropping my companion on the final steep section of the climb. I would let him catch on for the descent and we would work together until I dropped him on the climb again the next lap. We caught up to a junior who was climbing his heart out and he joined our group. I decided I would beat them. On our second to last lap we were lapped by the two man break, but since it was 10 feet from the finish, they let us continue. Wish I wouldn’t have been lapped, as always I have many shoulda, woulda, couldas.

On the last lap, the three of us were together at the top of the climb, through the descent and into the rollers at the bottom. I attacked once, but the junior got on my wheel and I didn’t want to pull him. So I backed off and we cruised further up the hill. About 50 meters from the finish I attacked again and stayed away from them. So fun. And all the officials and promoters were so helpful and nice the entire time. We cruised back to the hotel and went to the brewery with my teammate for dinner. Yum. Great Day.

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The next day we headed out early for a ride up through the hills. After riding through the strange towns of Ben Lomond and Felton, we arrived at the base of Alba. I had ridden this climb once before and it is a steep MFer. My legs didn’t have it and I let the guys charge to the top and then cruise down to get me. The descent was another story. It was long and sweeping, just like the day before. I remembered the turns being gradual and easily negotiated so I just let go. I stayed on Scott’s wheel and pedaled to keep up. It was exhilarating. At the bottom there is a left sweeper over a bridge and as I looked up out of the turn I saw my speed hit 54 MPH. That’s fast. I’d never hit that number before! It was amazing. I’d stayed smooth on the entire descent and been rewarded. 

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The feeling was incomparable, I felt so brave and confident. Improving descending has been one of my goals for a long time and I finally felt rewarded.

Now if I can only get my internet to work so I can see the QOM, ’cause now I know I can go back and get it.

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Another stop at a different brewery on the way home and a quick trip to the beach made for the perfect weekend. So lucky to have such amazing friends and live in such a beautiful place.

Trainer

Somehow I have managed to embrace the trainer. As we speak this blog is being updated. That’s one reason to embrace the trainer. Productivity.
And on that happy note, I turn to my favorite subject: bike racing.
Specifically this quaint town. Which, though dying, is a great place to kick it for a bike race. Speaking of dying, there is a very interesting spot nearby.
The cobbled roundabout circling the town square made for interesting riding and spectating. Folks were bbqing, dogs were frolicking and there was plenty of Lycra. A local tavern kept people in beer and food, so the atmosphere was close to a cross race. Without all the antics.
We have interim kits from Fast Freddy, very comfy stuff. Looks great on the podium. (As my teammates modeled this weekend in nearly every ncnca race. Yep. Except Dinuba, there was a VSG woman on the podium for every 1/2/3 field. Amazing. And tons of hard work from other teammates put then there. Feeling very stoked about my team right now.
Anyway. So addicted to the trainer. Don’t have to wear a bunch of gear; don’t have to worry about light and cars. Relaxing. Except for intervals. Which are easy to hit because there are no giant rollers. Hmm speaking of giant rollers; I better ride outside soon to get some practice. I mean the trainer’s nice, but maybe a little too relaxing. Is it still recovery if you’re drinking wine?
Oh and I adopted a cat.

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We’re Not in Kansas Anymore

For the month of January I decided to attempt respectability and take a job. Yes. An everyday, wake up at 6:15, drive to work, get paid job. Granted, it isn’t permanent, but definitely a step in the right direction. This job has also allowed me to explore a new section of Northern California by bike. I’ve been working in San Andreas, and the riding here is unlike anywhere else. For starters, the area is mountainous, and the rollers are extreme. 20140201-121923.jpgThis also means that while sunset is officially at 5:15, the sun has dipped behind the mountains much sooner that that. Except for this interesting little road to nowhere caller Hawver. It starts out single lane and quickly becomes graded dirt. It winds through and around and down several large hills in the area. The best part of this road is after climbing to the top, I was higher than the hills to the west and the entire area was bathed in sunlight. It was breathtaking (cause of the climb and view 😉 and it was warm. 20140201-122353.jpgThis is in contrast to the other road I frequent in the area, called Pool Station. According to the map, that road will eventually connect with Highway 4, which leads to Stockton and beyond. I haven’t got that far yet, because of the light, though I did find the Copperopolis Fire Station. No, bike racer friends, the race was not in that area and the road was much better paved. I also saw what I believe to be a drug deal go down on this road. No I am not kidding. At the bottom of a descent near San Andreas, there is an abandoned mining site. Not Gold Rush era, though Calaveras was a prosperous mining town during this period, but a more recent mining operation that had been shut down. I was working on some threshold climbing and so passing by the same pull-out to the side of the road several times. The first time I passed there was a car parked and a woman sitting by herself. The second time I passed there was another car parked there, and a couple was looking at something on the original woman’s trunk. The third time I passed, all the cars were gone. What makes me so sure this was a drug deal? Mainly the isolated road. No one except crazy cyclists use that road and there is nothing nearby for miles. An innocuous meeting would take place in a public parking lot or somewhere where the attendees aren’t trying to avoid scrutiny. The bottom of a hill, on a deserted road, next to an old mining operation is shady. Hence:Drug Deal

 

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The gold mining industry of the area is evident in the very county lines. Amador ends at the mokolumne river and calaveras begins. To the west, Amador ends at the consumers river and El Dorado county begins.
Though beautiful county, Calaveras does have a history of criminal activity. Just the other day I read a historical marker about an attempted stage robbery! A wagon carrying the payroll for  a local ranching company was shot at the two of the people riding in it were killed. Very dramatic. Deserving of a historical marker though? I don’t know.

 

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Step back in history

Went with my parents today to see what had been revealed by dropping water levels at Folsom lake. While we may have had aspirations of seeing something resembling this:
https://www.google.com/url?sa=i&source=images&cd=&docid=gUctfG7Zco-xbM&tbnid=VB5Y43HUNiJKCM:&ved=0CAUQjRw&url=http%3A%2F%2Fen.wikipedia.org%2Fwiki%2FMormon_Island%2C_California&ei=98nFUryKHMeGogT66oD4CA&psig=AFQjCNFurka1bzvxI5nxd0wwgG8lhaDHoQ&ust=1388780402627887
We ended up more with this:

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The history of the flooded town of Mormon Island is quite interesting. Especially the fact that there were 7 saloons for 2500 residents. Miners, regardless of religion, frequented local “watering holes” after a hard day dredging for gold.
The entire atmosphere of the dry lake bed was eerie. Many families were taking their kids and dogs out, which lent a picnic feel to the day. That and the 70+ degree temperature made for a pleasant outing. However, the presence of metal detectors and sea monsters made it known that people were also there to learn about local history.

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Yes. I said sea monsters. Photo as proof.
There was a bit of a hushed awe when faced with the water level. I couldn’t help but feel the ominous presence of the severe drought we are experiencing. The water level has not been this low since the dam was built and the valley flooded.
The area we visited, after parking on Sophia, is actually the outskirts of the original town. We were able to identify what was once an orchard, though couldn’t figure out what type of trees were there.

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The last cool thing we saw was a bald eagle pair roosting in a tree. Zooming in on this photo should show them.

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A very interesting visit.

Epic Thursdays #2

Wow. Last week it was dirt. This week it was snow. What about next week? I mean, where do you go from snow? I guess to observed trials on a road bike. Or not. Ever. But I have come to believe in the madness that is #epicthursdays. Follow @keithhillier on twitter to get the low down on the originator of epic thrusdays. Somehow the stars have aligned and I have found a solid set of people that will throw down in a big way on thursdays. The madness started when we bypassed a road closed sign to traverse a snow covered bridge into placerville. I was feeling pretty good about that. And then we got to a little road called Bayne. Of course this was after a lot of painful climbing. I decided it was better to ride slow and take pictures than actually try and found these guys chillin at the top.

waiting

waiting

And then we got to Bayne. This road drops down into Coloma and is a common climb for the more adventurous. At the top we had a warning.

Abandon all hope ye who enter

Abandon all hope ye who enter

Then there was snow. And ice. And awesomeness. At one point I ended up in the ditch because I got scared and couldn’t hold my line and started panicking. Panic is always a recipe for disaster. It was a flat section with some car tracks and bigger lumps that had frozen on the side of the lines. I was going a bit to fast, but couldn’t brake because of the ice underneath. I was really panicked. That ground would have hurt going down. I ended up in some deep stuff and kinda went into the ditch to slow down so that I could unclip safely. No harm done. After this, we regrouped and Todd said, raise your hand if you’re not having fun. Just sayin’ my hand didn’t go up and my grin got huge. Awesome.

I eventually got the hang of the conditions and had a great time.

not that hard after all

not that hard after all

I have to admit, I was thinking about all the hard core ‘cross racers up in Bend last weekend. While the temperature difference would have been terrible, I almost envied that chance to test my skills on the snow and ice. It was certainly fun on my road bike.

Then we dropped into beautiful Coloma and a neat historical place, the place that started the Gold Rush in California. Funny story about that park…I actually got locked inside the gates one night several years ago. I was visiting with a friend from Sweden and we were exploring until well after dark. We got back to the car and the gate had been padlocked. Yes, I panicked in that situation also. We started to dismantle the slat fence in the hope that my car could fit though. General mess. Luckily the park steward nearby saw the car lights and released us. I was not looking forward to spending the night in there.

Back to the ride…

Then I bonked. Grenaded. Generally exploded. But with the help of the guys, managed  Salmon Falls to make it back. Whew. What is going to happen next week?

hmmmmm

hmmmmm