2.28.2006

The Start of the Season

Time 7AM Sunday Feb. 26, 2006

Aaargg! Time to get up. After a quick shower and breakfast of eggs, cereal, fruit and coffee I double checked my gear bag and loaded up the Subaru for another race day. It seemed like I had just done this, but it has been months. The drive down was fast with little traffic. I even kept my speed down on the dirt road after last year's very stern warning from the DNR sheriff----who goes 25MPH??? Arriving at the venue with plenty of time before my 11:30 start I got a nice close parking spot. A few minutes later the BRI boys parked along side me. The team van was like clown car with six or so racers pouring out along with plenty of gear, bikes and beer.

After registering I kitted-up and headed out with BRI and Dave from the team for a warm-up. The course looked really fun and was in great condition. After switching out clothes and adjusting shock and tire pressure I headed to the start. At the whistle we quickly headed out of the parking area and up the dirt road climb which helped string racers out just enough that getting into the singletrack was orderly and event free. This first section is really fun as we descended down cornering off of berm, followed by berm, followed by berm. Good times! After a short, steep climb we hit a new section of whoops. AT this point my legs were not coming around. I told myself just to maintain and was lucky to be able to. It hurt. As I climbed the fresh cut trail I got stuck behind a slower rider. Pretty soon a good train was formed and no place to pass. Finally I saw just enough room, got around and was now feeling really much better. By the time I hit the mid lap feed station I could see a group of five that had gapped me earlier in the race. Over the next couple miles I worked hard to bring them back. I had never been on any of these trails so in my heist to close the gap and had a few 'less than ideal' lines, but it was all good and nearing the end of the first of three laps I was back to this group and happy with my effort. However, my poor lines would soon come to bite me.

The last section of the loop is a very rooty section giving you little feel for your bike, but it did seem to me that rear end felt a bit soft. At the time I figured I just didn't have right air pressure in my rear shock for this terrain. I dropped down the start finish soon could tell that I was getting a flat. I quickly headed over to my car and grabbed the floor pump to add pressure for the next lap. But as I pumped I could hear air leaking and soon found a small hole in the sidewall. It seems that my Stans (a tire sealant) had dried up over the winter. I didn't have a tube so my day was over!

2.10.2006

Finally got the LED right


Just read this a Cyclingnews.

Dinotte Ultralight

Dinotte's aim with this compact, high-power single-LED light was to make the ultimate front light for road bike use. While mountain bikers like the huge light output of HID and multi-LED designs, what you need for road cycling is lots of light, in a compact, low-weight assembly. To that end Dinotte uses a five-Watt Luxeon LED powered by four rechargeable AA cells that sit in a pouch under your handlebar stem. The whole shebang weighs just 200g, leaves spots in your eyes for several minutes if you're foolish enough to look straight into it and has a claimed run time of 180 minutes in low power mode and 100 in high, with 2300 mAh cells./JS

More info: www.dinottelighting.com (in the UK: www.on-one.co.uk)
MSRP: US$249.99 (with 2300mAh AA cells & charger), UKP119.00 (without batteries or charger)

I think is the wat to go for road cycling, commuting and night cyclocross training. BTW. I'd go with the version without batteries. You can pick up NMih batteries and charger for less than the difference at many places.

Blue Bird Friday

Man what a day. Not a cloud in Seattle and morning temps in the mid thirties. Perfect day to ride the urban bike into work. It was a struggle getting out of bed. I was beat. Not sure why because I didn't even ride yesterday. I even changed up my route into downtown a saved a few minutes. Brilliant!

I heard a great idea on the radio this morning to quell the endless silly lawsuits plauge our courts. I'll call it the "defective" ruling. Basically if you such a lame ass person that you claim injury from something 99% of the population could handle without problem you are simply ruled defective and get nothing. Case in point is the daughter of a man who died after complications of surgery. She is suing Benyhanas claiming a flying shrimp caused this mans death.