FOUR Mountain View From West Hills Challenge #5

Last year on Aug 1st I was just riding back into Oregon.  Today I finished the first climbs of the West Hills Challenge Series of Five Hill Climbs where I currently reside at 32 of 35 and the last male on this hill.  Of the Strava riders doing the hill I am 52 of 60.  I have no idea if I will do any of the climbs again, although I will get a PR from Strava if I do.

On a day with no legs, I finally remembered how to climb properly and while my time wasn’t anywhere for the leaders, it was a smooth ascent and the first I have had this summer.

On the way up the view was spectacular.  Where Logie Trail is a pretty ride, this ride had views of the rivers, Mt. Hood, Mt Rainier, Mt. St. Helens, Mt Adams.  FOUR moutains viewed at once from one spot.  What a great way to spend a tiring day in the saddle.

I am not the rider I was a year ago.  At that point I had 3200 miles into my summer and over 140,000 feet of climbing.  This year I have 4% of the miles and .3% of the climbing and it shows on paper.  But for all of that, I did get out and have a good time learning new things and things I used to know as well.

West Hills Challenge 2011: The Beautiful Climb

Wow, still not the Red Lantern, 53rd out of 59.  I eased by Sarah so that was fun.  No, she has no idea who I am or that I am climbing the hills around about her time.

The really fun part of today was that this was an absolutely beautiful hill to climb.  Vistas, houses, trees, fun switchbacks, it had it all.

Technical details, well, I ate a little at the top, a bit late.  My legs came back half way home, these jaunts are getting me out there and I will have a day off this weekend to recuperate and then it is off to Climb #5 the last one.

West Hills Challenge #3, Almost the Red Lantern, Still Faster Than a Chicken

I am 60 out of 62, according to the Strava logs, riders who have recorded this climb this year.  In the competition I am 38th of 39 and Sarah has recorded a time faster than I did.  Sure Sarah is faster than I am, and undoubtedly sweeter and nicer, and I have no idea who Sarah is, but I was just faster than her in an earlier climb and as she is with Green Submarine Racing  I held out hope I wasn’t hopeless.

And then there was the chicken.  I am not the Red Lantern, escaping that distinction by one place, although I am not embarrassed if I end up there.  I am competing and that is enough, and who knows what might happen.  I believe the chicken was befriended by Sarah earlier and chased me as a result of my closing on Sarah’s time OR it chased me because I was turning the cranks over so slowly it thought it could catch me.  I flat outran the chicken and so leave this ride with my dignity intact.

 

Today I learned to use my Strava Android App correctly.  I recorded my whole ride for this first time and allowed Strava to cut out the competition part automatically.  I am really liking how this app works although I think for the love I am giving it I should get a 10 second time bonus.

Ride #2 West Hills Challenge 2011

I finally figured out how to add myself to the Strava West Hills Challenge 2011.

From the Peloton: today’s excuse is that I haven’t ridden a bike in a week and haven’t trained all summer.  And the Rivendell Atlantis failed me, it refused to shift into the low range of the triple.  I am sure that it remains spiritually one with me as I believe it is out of adjustment from when I caught the chain in between the gears and the frame.  No “Check Engine” light here.

Reality: I was lucky to get home on the 35 Mile Loop as I had a slow leak and even slower legs.

How am I doing?  I am 41st of 44 on this Category 3 climb, yes, it was shorter yet steeper than the last climb.  And for those who simply are recording it and not in the competition, I am 94th out of 110.  And the hills are getting farther from Portland.  Pedal On!

Hosting Touring Cyclist David Munusamy Reddie

This week we were fortunate enough to host David Munusamy Reddie, the organizer of bicycle touring in Nibong Tebal, Penang.   I have included David’s business card, although the best place to find him is at www.bicycletouringmalaysia.com.

David was a wonderful guest who provided us with many insights into his culture, his country, as well as the stories of his trip across the country.  At the end of his stay, which was very short, I realized how much better of a guest I need to be to include people easily into my world on such short notice.

I am pondering cycling in Malaysia, simply to see another culture from the saddle.  Very glad to have met you David.

David also left us with some amount of Malasian currency which I will have to look up.  We have it saved so we may spend it when we arrive in his country some day.