Good Times

This past weekend was the type of weekend that reminds me how lucky I am: friends, bikes, food, beer, great conversations and the cutest kiddo ever.

Two of the three day weekend days were ride days; Saturday was a group that I hadn’t ridden with but Gary and other friends had – a group that I later found out was known for speed and climbing – not necessarily qualities I was looking for on my loaded touring rig! It was already quite warm when we started out, and the pace was good for road bike riding – quick but not hammer down – but this was a bit fast for me on Ocho (my touring bike has a name, btw. Ocho is our eighth bike.) I kept with the group for the first 10 miles at my expense and had to take my time hauling myself over the first climb, enjoying the occasional glimpses of the Russian River winding its’ way below Fitch Mountain Road in Healdsburg. Read the rest of this entry »


Guidance or Nonsense

What does one do when one is told something by one’s psychic guide which one doesn’t want to believe ? I’m rattled and a bit annoyed, to be honest. After months of giving thought to my pending bike trip, I’m told that I’m not going. Or if I go, it will be shorter than planned. And if I go, it won’t be what I thought. And…I shouldn’t go – it’s dangerous. Read the rest of this entry »


Awaken Your Spirit to Adventure

This perfect poem was recently read to me.

A New Beginning

In out of the way places of the heart
Where your thoughts never think to wander
This beginning has been quietly forming
Waiting until you were ready to emerge.

For a long time it has watched your desire
Feeling the emptiness grow inside you
Noticing how you willed yourself on
Still unable to leave what you had outgrown.

It watched you play with the seduction of safety
And the grey promises that sameness whispered
Heard the waves of turmoil rise and relent
Wondered would you always live like this.

Then the delight, when your courage kindled,
And out you stepped onto new ground,
Your eyes young again with energy and dream
A path of plenitude opening before you.

Though your destination is not clear
You can trust the promise of this opening;
Unfurl yourself into the grace of beginning
That is one with your life’s desire.

Awaken your spirit to adventure
Hold nothing back, learn to find ease in risk
Soon you will be home in a new rhythm
For your soul senses the world that awaits you.

– John O’Donohue


Coincidence

20140518-134204.jpg

This past week I was privileged to be able to participate in an amazing women’s adventure retreat.   Colleen Cannon, founder of Women’s Quest, is an athlete with a spiritual side. Colleen shares her passions for activities which engage mind, body, and soul with everyone who comes her way, but her speciality is leading groups of women to explore possibility and see their strengths. I knew Colleen through my job and in previous years she had invited me to join her group for cycling, but I’d never been able to ride due to work. This year I contacted Colleen shortly before I left my job to let her know that I would be able to meet up with her group to ride, and to tell her about my trip plans. Colleen told me I was welcome to ride and hang out with the group, so I planned to ride with them a few days. I didn’t realize it before the week started, but the seeming coincidence of joining this group was no coincidence at all.  Read the rest of this entry »


Dread

photo-28Although I’ve known for months that I was taking this trip, taking action to make it real has been…well, dreaded, to be honest!  Each time I would think of booking the airfare, I would get the dreads. It was kind of a tier of dread; the first dread was the sticker shock I knew I would feel upon booking an in-season ticket – it can be nearly twice what I am accustomed to paying for the just outside peak season tickets I usually buy. Then I dreaded the cost going up even more during my indecision to buy a peak ticket.   This dread only grew worse with the passing weeks, and I marveled over my ability to sit back in a state of inaction as the days passed. Read the rest of this entry »


Doubt

It’s what fills my mind when I think about this trip. In fact, the whole feeling of the trip is as if it’s someone speaking through my body, someone saying words that I haven’t authorized. I heard myself responding to friends and co-workers inquiries as if from afar, “Yeah, the adventure of a lifetime, fer sure.” What the hell had I gotten myself into?

The idea of a trip started as a form of escapism, really, a little internet diversion daydreaming about a bike trip. I started reading about riding through Europe and envisioned myself on a point to point ride, traveling light with only a backpack and staying in a different town each night. Maybe I’d even plan to spend a few nights at a particular point of interest, pamper myself a little and enjoy the location to give my legs a hard earned rest once in a while. I started looking at hotels in different areas of Spain, and was quickly reminded that in Europe the cost of a hotel room is per person based on double (or more!) occupancy. The more research I did, the less it seemed I could afford to simply ride my bike across an EU country without spending a lot of money. At the same time, I was also coming across information about people who carried *all* their stuff on their bikes so that they were self sufficient on the road and not dependent upon hotels and restaurants. That seemed crazy to me! How was it possible to carry all that stuff on a bike, I marveled? It would totally affect the handling – I couldn’t imagine descending down Pyrrean switchbacks with any extra junk to throw off my already skittish descents. Just as I started to warm to the idea of adding a rack and panniers to my bike, I found out that you can’t just add a rack to any carbon bike, there are geometric considerations such as the length of the chain stays, and whether carbon can withstand the weight, and of course, brazeons and rack mount points were needed (whatever those were!).

As a casual road cyclist (with a Strava account, of course!), I had originally envisioned my trip as one where I would ride 75 miles a day at a fast pace for a good challenge (hopefully having bagged 3-4k feet of climbing – maybe more!). Upon completion of a satisfying ride, I’d hop off the bike for a shower and change of clothes and then go off into town in pursuit of a fab meal featuring local culinary and vinicultural delights. But the more research I did, the more it seemed I was going to end up looking like a bike hobo rather than a road cyclist if I wanted to avoid hotel costs. ‘Touring’ (I had made the mental shift and starting thinking in this term) was differentiated from road riding by some pretty non-negotiable points, such as a bike that can fit and carry the stuff you need to bring, and gearing to ensure you can turn the pedals to get yourself and all your essential crap from point A to point B – up and over those challenging double digit Pyrrean pitches. A trip like this involved gear.

So now I’ve spent a lot of time researching gear. I’ve bought a touring bike, which I purchased on sale and with all my REI coop dollars), a tent ( REI sale) and assorted other things (some of which have not yet arrived, such as my Ortlieb panniers). I love camping, so this part of the research has been pleasant, but I realize that I am avoiding other realities by losing myself in counting grams here. For instance, route planning and booking travel. Both of these represent reality – booking the trip means there is no turning back, which honestly, scares the shit out of me. And route planning emphasizes the difficulty that I will likely have when I am on the road trying to get someplace (I know how hard it can be to find my way in a foreign country when there are no signs, no corners and no people). But…that is what this trip is about. Being outside my comfort zone, relying on myself and doing things that scare me. The question I know I’ll ask a hundred times though, is why did I think that was necessary?