Tuesday, November 25, 2008

Bike goodies #4 - somebody stop me!

I've been sorta obsessed with sunglasses lately. Not the really good kind, like Oakleys; I can't afford them. The closest I ever came to Oakleys was the $8 counterfeits that I purchased near Times Square once, which lasted for maybe a dozen rides before the temples snapped in two.

Last week I saw where the Toyota-United team is selling off all their inventory, and I submitted a pretty low-ball bid on a helmet and some quality sunglasses — like the Specialized Miura and Tifosi Gavia and Slip — but my bid was rejected.

Then I ran across the PBK Motion sunglasses on ProBikeKit.com. Five interchangeable lenses, 100% UV protection, $17. Tax-free, and shipping to the US is still free. I've had good luck with PBK in the past, so I'm gonna give these a shot. Oh – also ordered an Elite Ciussi bottle cage while I was there.

Tonight I went to Excel Cycle in Excelsior for their winter clothing sale. Got an awesome Castelli wool cap and a pair of Craft windproof gloves for half price. Score! Now I really gotta stop spending money for a while…

Sunday, November 23, 2008

Is that a glove in your shorts?

… or … are you happy to be biking?
I guess it's a little of both. I hadn't ridden in almost three weeks, so I had kinda forgotten how to dress for the weather.

It was 37 degrees when I headed out the door. I wore three layers on top — polypro, an insulated long-sleeve jersey, and a vest; two layers down below — cycling shorts and heavy tights; smartwool socks with thin shoecovers; lobster mitts and a balaclava. My hands actually ended up a little too warm, as I sweated thru the mitts. And everything else was fine except for my privates. Luckily I had brought an extra pair of gloves, so I stuffed one of them down my shorts. Priceless.

Note to self — windproof front panel!

Sunday, November 16, 2008

State Championships CX

Last cyclocross race of the season in Minnesota.

Bought new Swix gloves earlier this week. (A brand recommended by BruceA.) Found them on clearance at Gear West. Trying to go cheap, and might have gone too cheap; they may not keep out the wind like I need. Anyway, I could only find one of them when heading out the door this morning! So I brought my polypro liners to wear with my cycling gloves instead.

Walked all the way around the course, looking for the best photo spots. The course was way long! Maybe I should've just run back and forth all day between the stair climb and the sand pit / barriers. Nah, then I would've missed the photos along the lake. On top of that, I wouldn't have run into All the Way Ray. I stopped and chatted a while with him just before Race 3. He's still enjoying his cortisone shot.

Mmmm, that dark beer at the BMC tent was sure good. I met meow while I was enjoying my frosty beverage, but I didn't get a cookie from her. :-( I hope there's a next time....

I hate to sound like a whiner, but my back was killing me today. A simple little sneeze yesterday morning really aggravated my pulled muscle (geez I sound fragile). Made it hard to concentrate on photos.

Still, I'm pleased with some of the photos I got on hooligan hill, with the whiskey and beer hand-ups and the dollar primes. (The new superwide lens was handy for getting crowd shots up there.) On the other hand I wish I had spent more time at the sand pit.

Rawbee is talking about doing an online gallery of "best of the 2008 season" from various photographers. I think we'd want to get photos from T.C.Worley, Andy Frye, Bruce A, etc. We'd probably also solicit photos at the mcf.net/mboard. Lots of people are always out there taking photos; surely they've captured a few gems they'd be willing to share.

Who knows, maybe we can get One on One Bike Studio to hang them. That would be cool! Starting to look into that...

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Lake Rebecca CX

Temps in the low 30s like yesterday, but with much lighter wind. Started overcast, but then the sun started to come out after a while. Kept getting alternating clouds and sun, giving me trouble with the changing light conditions. Exposure is trickier with the super-wide lens since it captures a lot of the sky (and my camera ain't so smart).

This sure was a spectator-unfriendly course, due to all the contruction in the park. I figure I walked about a mile from parking/registration to the start/finish, and about four miles total.

Tried a different pair of gloves — a pair that I thought were windproof. But my fingertips still got painfully cold — had to stop several times to remove the gloves and warm my hands up inside my jacket. Need to ask Bruce at skinnyski for some advice.

Misc. observations:
  • Not too happy with my pictures in the woods. I kept trying to get a good one — should've just moved on and spent more time at the barriers or something.
  • Worried that I might have encroached on PatL during the race; he was cutting some of the corners really tight. Nobody has ever yelled at me though...
  • Hollywood shouted "last lap, Frank!" to me as he went flying by at the end of the race. Thanks, Hollywood!
Missed:
  • Curved section of paved road in the park that had an orange plastic barrier on both sides. Might've looked interesting in a photo.
  • Spectators — few, but clustered around the finish line with the race officials. Hmmm, I should get pictures of the officials and volunteers too. They're an important part of the race atmosphere.

Saturday, November 8, 2008

Velodrome CX

Wanted to catch all five races (counting the kids' race) at the Velodrome today, but — owww — my back was hurting when I woke up this morning. Must be a pulled muscle from my Tuesday crash. Took four ibuprofen and eventually felt well enough to drive up for the final two races.

A cold and blustery November day. I warmed up between races — or at least got out of the wind — in the trailer that holds all the track bikes. None of these pictures convey how cold my fingers got! Need to start using gloves with some sort of wind-stopper fabric.

T.C.Worley sought me out today. He said he'd been asking everyone with a camera, "Are you Frank?". Glad I finally got to meet him; he does some great photography.

My new super-wide lens had arrived on Wednesday, so I was itching to try it today. After a few minutes I decided to do the entire race with only that lens. Wanted to force myself into thinking super-wide. Plus I liked the way the track looked when distorted a little by the lens — those crazy swooping curves. I had thought that with such a tremendous depth of field, I wouldn't have any trouble focusing this lens, but with the sky so overcast, and with my aperture wide open at f/4.0 much of the time, and with my trembling frozen fingers, I sometimes had trouble. Had to throw away several series of photos.

Overall, though, I believe I'm going to enjoy this new tool. I'll use it tomorrow at Lake Rebecca, as well.

Friday, November 7, 2008

Backfilling my Blog

I went several months without making any updates to my blog, but now I feel motivated to go back and fill in some stuff. Here's some posts that I've either been adding lately or which I'll be publishing soon:

Wednesday, November 5, 2008

Election Day Carnage

Seven or eight riders in yesterday's 23-mile lunchtime ride. Pretty fast, hard enough to make me drop to the back, barely hanging on.

Approaching Hwy 96 on Hodgson, somewhere between 20 and 25 mph I think, the traffic light at DQ suddenly turned yellow. Rawbee decided to hit the brakes instead of blowing thru. Sudden ripple effect, each rider almost locking 'em up, swerving to the right. My front wheel overlapped Don's a little. Not sure I could've stayed upright if nothing worse than that had happened. But his cassette sliced my sidewall and my tire exploded — and I mean loud — and before I could make any conscious reaction, I landed hard on my left side. Felt the back of my helmet slam against the pavement. Initially felt pain more than anywhere else in the middle finger of my left hand. Weird.

Was lying on the street, bike on top of me, afraid to move, afraid to open my eyes, shallow quick breaths, starting to feel pain on my left side above my hip. Somebody (Nelson?) pulled my bike off the top of me.

Slowly started to take stock of the situation and realized I was still in one piece and able to move everything. Answered people's questions coherently. Still afraid to try to stand. Learned that no one else had crashed. Surprisingly there was a police car just a couple blocks behind us and they called for an ambulance. Sat up in the street (right lane) and decided to just wait there, watching the cars slowly going by.

wtf? three police cars, two fire trucks, and finally the ambulance. Fellow cyclists still hanging around, watching and waiting, checking out my bike. (Go on, guys, you don't need to keep waiting for me.) Rawbee went on, to get his truck, expecting to help transport my bike and maybe me too.

Climbed in the back of the ambulance, got checked out a little more thoroughly, got cleaned off and gauzed up. Signed the form refusing a trip to the hospital. Scored some extra gauze pads, a little tape, and a little bottle of surgical scrub (which I've been advised to throw out and not use on an open wound). Rawbee drove me back to work.

Outcome: relatively little damage, coulda been much much worse. Broken helmet, sliced tire, blown tube, scraped handlebar tape, torn jersey. Two gauze-covered abrasions/contusions, above and below left hip. Minor stiffness in upper back. No cuts, nothing broken. Ten ibuprofen and a reasonable night's sleep. Just several days of soreness ahead. Keep wondering if I could've done anything differently. Too fatigued to be riding that close? Fingers not on the brake levers? Dunno...

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Rum River CX 2008

It's nice to get recognized and appreciated out there. Pattycakes said hi to me during his warmup ride around the course. We've never met each other before. (I did meet his dad, though, at Corcoran.)

Decided to spend more time this year on the back side of the course — on the long straight dirt-road section. I liked the way the pack would throw up a cloud of dust as they came thru. Planned to spend a lap or two at the rocky downhill in the woods, but got there too late. Only caught the last half dozen riders in the A race.

Shoulda:
  • taken more photos on the bridge. maybe I'll do that more next year, when I have my Super Wide Angle lens.
  • view from the cemetery
  • what else am I missing? hand-ups? pit area? spectators?