Best T-shirt slogan seen all day: Does "anal retentive" have a hyphen?This year's Ride Around Washington was a loop around the peninsula:
| Day | Start | Miles | Time | Calories | Ascent* | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | To Bellingham | - | - | - | ||
| 1 | Bellingham to Port Townsend | 80.1 | 6:50 | 5,126 | 3,860 | Three flats just past Chuckanut. Whidbey Island has some hills |
| 2 | Port Townsend to Port Angeles | 69.2 | 6:37 | 4,211 | 3,340 | Olympic Discovery Trail into town had everything: harrowing descents, punishing climbs, switchbacks, headwinds, gravel, chip seal, deer... and The Fog |
| 3 | Layover in Port Angeles | 2.4 | - | - | - | I biked into town to do a kayak tour |
| 4 | Port Angeles to Forks | 70.8 | 5:58 | n/a | 3,660 | This wasn't as hard as it was billed; route was very enjoyable |
| 5 | Forks to Aberdeen | 107.8 | 8:28 | 5,539 | 3,260 | 48°F when I left, 93°F by late afternoon; long stretches of nothing. |
| 6 | Aberdeen to Ilwaco | 100.0 | 7:50 | 4,530 | 1,860 | Another very enjoyable stretch |
| 7 | Trip home | |||||
| Flickr photos: here | ||||||
| GPS log of the last three days: here -- in many formats | ||||||
Day 0: Saturday, 8/20. RAW was to start in Bellingham's Fairhaven district. Bike and rider transportation was available from the Cascade Bicycle Club intergalactic headquarters in the Magnuson Park area of Seattle. Buses were scheduled to leave at noon, though loading of bikes was available as early as 10:00 a.m. As I am compulsively prompt, I brought a puzzle book to keep busy.
We arrived at Fairhaven Middle School around 2pm. It's a pretty campus on top of a hill, only four blocks from a cluster of boutique stores and restaurants. Registration wasn't supposed to start until 4pm, and neither our bags nor our bikes had arrived yet. Thankfully, someone opened registration early. Tchotchkes included a 3-LED headlamp that strapped to our head, helmet, leg (or whatever); an event T-shirt; and a reflective triangle.
While I was checking out the limited toilet facilities, the baggage truck rolled up. One reason I hate being compulsively prompt is my bag (and bike) often gets loaded first but unloaded last. Today was no exception. (As I shake my fist at myself.) But, I was soon encamped in a cozy spot on the hill behind the main building. I wandered into town for a bite to eat, finding the Colophon Cafe. Delightful.
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| Let my people go! Late arriving sani-cans would occur twice more. |
The first mandatory rider meeting ran that evening to break the ice. They gave a quick overview of road hazards and lunch stops and whatnot, emphasizing the presence of ARES and keeping track that everyone was safe. Typically, we'd check out when we left, check in at lunch, and again when we got to the final destination.
Day 1 came all-too-early. Most of us were up around 6:00 a.m. peeing, queueing for the catered breakfast, packing up our stuff and putting the bags on the truck... not necessarily in that order. The ride officially started at 7:00 a.m. or when we checked in with KD7MYC (Dave Flood), whichever came last.
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Somewhere on Bayview-Edison road, I had the first of three flats. A small sliver of something had lodged itself well into my front tire. I dug out the chip, patched the tube, and zoomed off again. A mile later, it went flat again because I hadn't let the patch fully cure before putting it back into circulation. The rest of the riders had started and each time a group passed, people inquired if I was okay, did I need anything, etc. Since it would be a bit embarrassing to admit I was a dumbass by not letting the patch vulcanize, I just politely waved and said "doing great, thanks," while balancing my bike and doing tire-replacement things.
In all the excitement, I had put my front wheel on backwards. Until last week, this wouldn't have mattered but my new wheel set had disc-accepting hubs, meaning the wheel was not totally centered. The brake rubbed something awful and the little wheel magnets weren't aligned. I loosened the brake and planned to attend to the data collection issue at the next official stop when bam another flat. Once again, the front tire had let some piece of shrapnel pierce the tube. I pulled over to a corner store and sat on a concrete highway barrier to patiently fix everything.
When I put the front wheel on correctly, the sensor to my cycle computer broke off. Here I am, less than 15 miles into the ride with three flats, a brake problem and a broken cycle computer. I just started laughing. I was one of the last ones to the lunch stop at Pass Lake, but food was still plentiful.
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Once past the bridge, I was back on the bike. The route zig-zagged around Whidbey Island in an effort to keep us off of the high-traffic SR 20 as much as possible. This added several hills to the mix, including two long grades that left a lot of people out of gears, so to speak. The clacking of metal cleats on roadway had a near-rhythmic sound as riders walked up the hill.
Shortly after this, I ran into Steve Hastings, Denise Chan's husband (both of whom were on the Chelan Century Challenge in June). Miles fly by when he's around because he's very fun to talk with and has a diverse set of knowledge. Conversation somehow drifted to a comparison of the efficiencies of capitalism versus communism. Although I am mostly a capitalist -- it's part of the
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I should note that as the ride went on, I became less fussy about eating.






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