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| Modified 11 Hills of Kirkland |
Rather than driving there, I started from home. I picked up the route at "Old Redmond Road" on the way to Rose Hill, normally the last of the "big seven." The trek to the starting line was longer than it looked on the map, and I could see I was running out of time until the start closed. Instead of heading south and picking up the Lake Washington trail per the map, I cut over straight to Kirkland's Marina Park. With five minutes to spare before the start closed, I picked up my bib number and loaded my jersey with mini-bagels.
| Hill | Avg Grade | Max Grade | Height |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rose | 4 | 10 | 490 |
| Market | 4 | 9 | 205 |
| Juanita | 3 | 10 | 285 |
| Seminary | 6 | 18 | 405 |
| Norway | 5 | 19 | 470 |
| Kingsgate | 2 | 11 | 412 |
| Winery | 8 | 14 | 390 |
| Education | 3 | 9 | 330 |
| Union | 3 | 12 | 630 |
| Ames Lake | 6* | n/a | 425 |
| Dulthie | 9* | n/a | 360* |
| Issaquah-Fall City | 8* | n/a | n/a |
I reloaded at the food stop. There was a table with pump bottles of "Hammer Gel." I think the idea was you were supposed to put it on a spoon and taste it, then wash it down with water from the coolers. Both coolers were empty. I picked up cup and filled it halfway with random flavors. They've done a good job with the flavors, but the gel is so viscous, it's physically unappealing as a foodstuff. You just want to wash it down with something. The other table had coolers with water, and a canister of dry-mix Gatorade. I topped off my Camelback, washed the ooze out of my mouth, and started up Kingsgate.
At what initially appeared to be another wacky 5-way intersection, there were still some teenagers cheering on the bikers. Once I get over the initial embarrassment at how pathetically slow I am, I really enjoy the cheering. This must be one of the cooler parts to racing.
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| Neil Hubbard, neilbagpiper.com |
The route took us to the east. Education Hill was relatively easy going up, but scary as shit going down. As I hit 40, I saw the "slow down" markings, looked up, and saw a car stopped at the light. I braked hard.
I briefly -- very briefly -- toyed with the idea of making this a full century. Sanity crept in as tiredness set in climbing Union Hill. I bypassed the rest stop and took the south part of the loop, exiting at Ames Lake Rd. This was a convenient segue back towards home.
I followed the flat and wide-shouldered SR202 (aka "Redmond-Fall City") for a few miles, then hoofed it up Dulthie Hill. Man, was I glad I was wrapping this up. The road was not only busy, but it also had a relatively narrow, sloped shoulder littered with debris. A lot of people have moved in since I last took this.
I was almost home and had accumulated about 5,000' of ascent. Even though I was tired, I wanted to say I qualified for The Mile High Club (no, not that one). I did loops around my neighborhood until the altimeter clicked over. This is the black splotch in the map above.
Totals for today: 71.6 miles, 5,289' ascent, 4,440 calories, and an average heart rate of 124 bpm. As I'm looking at my chart, I notice my speed was on the low side; however, I was able to do all of this without going anaerobic once.
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