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triple double

Sunday,  04/06/08  11:19 AM

Well, I did it, or actually I must say we did it; my friend and riding partner Mark Burson and I successfully completed the Hemet Double Century yesterday, making our third double this year and hence we have become - ta da - California Triple Crown winners.  We are [very] sore and [very] tired today, and [very] happy.  And more than a bit proud of ourselves :)


A couple of happy guys - we did it!


This story begins over a year ago, when Mark rode the Solvang Century in March 2007.  At about the thirty mile mark he had a bad fall and thrashed his hip.  He struggled to finish the century but did so, complaining of severe pain in his knee.  Making a long story short after some false diagnosis he discovered he had cracked his hip.  In fact, he had the Bo Jackson problem where the blood supply to his hip was interrupted, and he ended up getting his hip replaced on April 7, 2007.  Mark that date.

Being an avid cyclist and tough guy, Mark hatched a plan to rehabilitate via long rides, and set a goal of achieving the triple crown; three double centuries in one year.  And he got me, somewhat reluctantly, to agree to join him.  That was late last summer.  We began by doing the Lighthouse Century together last September; Mark's first long ride after getting a new hip.  That was a great victory for him and we discovered we enjoyed doing centuries together.  (I can't link a blog post, because, well, I wasn't blogging last year.  Boo.)  You can't do these rides with just anyone; you need someone of compatible speed and climbing ability, and also compatible temperament :)  I mean, we're talking 6-15 hours together.  Flushed with success we rode the People Powered Ride the following weekend, two centuries in a week, and that "worked".  Then we rode a 200K together in January (125mi) - which at the time was the longest ride I had ever done - and then a 300K together in February (185mi) - again a personal longest.  And then we completed the Butterfield Double in mid-February, the first leg of the triangle.  It was tough, but we did it.

Which was all nothing compared to recent events.

Last weekend we rode the Solvang Double together in fine style, with no problems.  The second leg was done.  Victory was at hand.  All that was left was one more double century, yesterday - the Hemet Double - billed as the easiest of the three.  (Although it must be said, two doubles on consecutive weekends is not for the faint of heart or the out of shape :)


The Hemet Double is organized as two loops, each 100mi; many people ride just the first loop as a Century, and others ride both as a Double.  The first loop is easier, but we were warned at registration that the second loop had been changed from previous years and was now "a bit tougher".  Riight.

We begin the first loop at 6:30, cruising through Hemet and Morongo Valley with no problems.  Until, at about thirty miles (!), Mark has a bad fall and comes down heavily on his [new] hip.  His hand and arm are bleeding, and he is sore everywhere.  Oh no!  What will this mean?  Can he ride another 170 miles?  Being an avid cyclist and tough guy, Mark gets back on his bike.  A little first aid, some ducktape, and we're off. 

We finish the first loop in a bit of a funk.  The weather is crummy; cold and overcast, with a stiff wind.  The loop isn't that hard but with the wind it isn't that easy, and anyway 100 miles is 100 miles.  Our riding time is 5:30 for the first loop, 6:30 elapsed, not bad but not our best.  We eat lunch, our spirits revive, and we take off on the second loop.  Mark's hand is sore and his arm is thrashed, but fortunately his hip seems okay.  It looks like he/we might make it...

The second loop is a killer.  The first 25 miles features serious climbing up Sage Canyon, and we reach the first checkpoint at Vail Lake exhausted, with 75 miles left.  Next comes a thrilling eight-mile decent down Pala-Temecula Road into the Pala Indian reservation; the whole way down I'm thinking "crap, we're going to have to get all this vertical back".  And so we do; after a terrifying encounter with fast traffic on 76 (no bike lane and no shoulder) we have to come back up Rice Canyon, mile after mile of climbing.  By the time we reach the second checkpoint at Rainbow, with 50 miles left, we are toast.  Normally in a double when you have "only" 50 miles left, you feel like you're basically done, but this is different.  The concern has shifted from whether Mark will make it due to his injuries to whether we will make it, period. 

The next section takes us mile after mile through the Lake Skinner recreation area - in the dark - up and down through rollers which are progressively steeper.  Well probably they aren't, but they feel that way.  We are on autopilot, legs moving, brains numb.  Failure is not an option.  Finally we make it to the last checkpoint - yay! - with only 25 miles to go.  And this time it really does feel like the home stretch; we could have carried our bikes 25 miles if we had to, the finish felt that close.  And can I just thank the organizers for providing hot chili at the last checkpoint; that was a key feature.

Finally we have just ninety minutes left: a little blundering about near Menifee Lakes, another brush with fast traffic and no bike lane - this time in the dark - and all right whew yes YES! we have made it.

{For posterity I will note our riding time for the second loop was 6:30, elapsed time 7:15, for a total of 13:45 elapsed overall.  Incredible considering the vertical, over 10,000', with the bulk of that climbing concentrated in the last 100.}

So you marked the date, right?  Yes, as I mentioned, tomorrow will be the anniversary's of Mark's hip replacement.  So he was able to achieve the triple crown within a year.  A pretty remarkable achievement; there are plenty of people with artificial hips walking around, but not so many who have ridden three double centuries within a year of getting them.  Amazing.


As for me, now I have to ask what's next?  The Furnace Creek 508?  Just kidding!  Or am I...

 

Sunday,  04/06/08  09:16 PM

A day of coding, and of recovery...  feeling pretty good actually.  Physically anyway.  There is a mental recovery which make take longer...

Tomorrow I'm going to Vista for day one in Aperio's new building!  Very exciting.  The team pulled together and the move went amazingly smoothly.  We had our critical servers back up within hours of taking them down, last Thursday night, and had pretty much everything running by Friday afternoon.  The logistics of moving all the furniture etc. then took over, and our IT team was in over the weekend testing phones and hooking up everyone's computers.  I have no doubt there will be some problems tomorrow but given the potential for disaster it couldn't have gone better.  Whew.

So UCLA lost!  Badly!  I was otherwise occupied Saturday so I Tivo'ed the game, and began watching it this morning.  Within five minutes I could tell Memphis was going to win, and they did.  So be it, my bracket is a shambles, and I have no rooting interest tomorrow night.  I'll take Memphis just because they beat UCLA, I guess.  Go {had to look it up} Tigers! 

The Daily Mail features some stunning 3D photos of Mars.  Hard to even imagine a five-mile deep chasm, isn't it? 

Pink Slip Nation?  Well...  "Actually, the unemployment rate in November 1996, when Clinton rode a soaring economy to victory, was 5.4%, three tenths of a percent higher than the 'grim picture' of a 'pink slip nation' painted by this month's unemployment report."  [ via Instapundit, who notes "that was different, because back then a man from Hope promised Change" :) ] 

Powerline on the Mark Penn fiasco: A Good Deed Punished.  The more you read about how Clinton runs her campaign, the more you realize she is not qualified to be President. 

A fantastic opera review: Tristan and Two Isoldes, from Alex Ross in the New Yorker.  I don't even really like opera, but I like opera reviews.  Go figure.  This one is notable for recounting one of the best lines ever in an opera, ad libbed; Leo Slezak missed the swan boat in Lohengrin, turned to the audience, and asked "when does the next swan leave?" 

There's a great new cancer resource: cancer.net, from the American Society of Clinical Oncology.  It is amazing how great the Internet resources for medicine have become.  [ via Learn to Live

Forbes: Dial D for Disruption.  "Mark Spencer, who is all of 29 years old, is poised to disrupt the $7 billion market for office telecom switches much the way the Linux open-source computer operating system crushed the price of business computing and brought woe to established leaders such as Microsoft and Sun Microsystems.  Since Spencer released Asterisk to the world in 1999 as a phone operating system, it has been downloaded 500,000 times, and it continues to be downloaded 1,000 times per day. Some 350 contributors have taken it from a rocky voice system to one with clear calling and more than 100 features."  I love it. 

I'm trying an experiment.  I have a 15-year-old email address, ole@pacbell.net, which is now run by Yahoo.  (Pacbell was bought by Airtouch, who were bought by Southwest Bell, who became SBC, who sold their internet business to Yahoo.)  It is a total spam magnet; I get about 2,000 spams a day.  Fortunately SpamBayes deals with them, but it takes time and bandwidth to retrieve all that crap, and it makes the account unusable from my Treo.  So I've configured GMail to retrieve mail from Yahoo via POP, and then I retrieve my mail from there, using GMail as a server-side spam filter.  So far it is working quite nicely, although I'm spending time manually checking the Spam folder on GMail to make sure I'm not getting false positives... 

Microsoft has posted a detailed overview of Windows XP SP3.  This is far more interesting and relevant to me than anything Vista-related, I'm afraid... 

Engadget reports XP will remain available through 2010 for Eee-class ultraportables.  That's excellent, because that means it will be around for all sorts of other computers as well.  I wouldn't be surprised if this back-door is deliberate.

Slashdot reports 40% of us may be paranoid.  I'm worried that I could be one of them. 

 
 

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