Thursday, June 25, 2009

Wyss Wins RAAM, Robic Drops Out!

Wyss has won the 2009 solo RAAM. He raced 3021 miles in a time of 8 days 5 hours 45 minutes. His average speed of 15.28 mph wasn't much slower than the record of 15.4 mph. Pete Penseyres set the speed record in 1986 and no one has been able to break it.

In a very disappointing end to the extremely close battle between Wyss and Robic the last couple days, Robic dropped out of RAAM with 54 miles to go. Here's what's posted on Robic's blog
Jure was the fastest cyclist on this years RAAM. On the last time check TS51, he came few minutes before Dani Wyss. Because of the penalties, issued controversially, because of the rules not aplied always in the same manner and because of not issuing penalties to others, Jure and his crew decided not to finish the race as 2nd, but step out of it on TS51.

Today it was written the history of RAAM. Jure and Dani staged the toughest fight ever and on the end the fastest didn't won.

Robic's 2 penalties on the road seemed legitimate. My RAAM update yesterday has more details on the penalty Robic received yesterday. The only thing I've found about the one at the start was that someone saw him urinate at the side of the stage and thought he might have gotten a penalty for it. I don't know for sure.

His crew claimed that Wyss ran a stop sign and didn't get a penalty. Of course when Mike Trevino was close to Robic in 2004, they accused him of cheating. Trevino actually stopped but finally was convinced to continue but never was close to Robic again.

Whether or not the penalties were fair, I think it's poor sportsmanship to just quit. Still no official word from RAAM so there may be more to the story.

Update
Robic didn't change his mind and received a DNF. Jure Robics crew has posted a few videos that they claim show reasons Wyss should have been penalized and wasn't. Because of the way he feels he was treated this year, he says he won't be back to RAAM.

In the video I've embedded below, it does seem that Wyss made a right turn at a red light, did a u-turn and then turned right to avoid the red light. This is against the rules. I had to watch it a couple times but then it seemed clear what he had done. RAAM officials thought it may have been accidental and gave a warning instead of a penalty.

They have a video showing Wyss over the double yellow line. From what I can see, he's staying in the center out of the way of traffic when he pulls out until his follow van comes in behind. It seems like a safe thing to do and no penalty should have been given.

In another video he grabs the butt of a girl cheering him on. You can argue about tastefulness of it but I don't know of any RAAM rule against it.



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posted by UltraRob @ 10:27:00 PM   8 comments links to this post

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Close 2009 Solo RAAM Race

Jure Robic and Dani Wyss
Photo from Dani Wyss' blog

Update: Wyss Wins, Robic Quits!

The last couple years, Jure Robic has dominated the Race Across America. Robic has won 4 out of the last 5 years.

Robic didn't win in 2006. That year Dani Wyss won. Robic was taken off the course by ambulance in Pagosa, CO with respiratory problems.

2006 was the year I raced and I remember RAAM legend, Danny Chew, telling me all I had to do to be one of the few to beat Robic was to finish. I ended up dropping out at the Mississippi due to a leg injury though.

This year Robic and Wyss are locked in battle. It was long been said that the race doesn't really start until the Mississippi. In the race from the Mississippi to the finish, Robic started with about an hour lead over Wyss.

Now 2500 miles into the race, Wyss has closed the gap and Robic and Wyss are trading the lead on the road. In reality Wyss has the lead. Robic has 1 hour of time penalties and Wyss has none.

Robic's latest time penalty was from taking the wrong route to time station 40. There was difference between the GPS file and the route book. RAAM rules state that the route book is the official route and GPS is only provided to assist crews.

If a racer goes off course, they must go back to where they went off course and continue riding the course. They can be shuttled back to that point by vehicle. Apparently it was quite a ways back to where Robic went off course and his crew chose to take a 30 minute penalty instead.

Robic wasn't the only one to have route issues yesterday. Earlier in the day, Wyss rode 9 miles off course before being taken back to the course. His crew estimated he lost 45 minutes from the route mistake.

With 500 miles left to race, both riders and their crews will have to manage their sleep breaks very carefully. Sleep too much and they could lose the race. Not sleep enough and they could crack and lose the race.

It seems that Wyss has been riding faster the last couple days but also taking longer sleep breaks. Maybe he's more rested. Robic though is known for not needint much sleep.

Dani Wyss' blog (Google translation) has interesting graphs comparing the average speeds between time stations 24 and 40.

Robic Avg Speed
Jure Robic Average RAAM Speed

Wyss Avg Speed
Dani Wyss Average RAAM Speed

The solo women's race is also close. Janet Christiansen and Daniela Figueiredo Genovesi are about 30 minutes apart a few miles past the Mississippi. The have a little over 900 miles left to race.

In the women's race, Christiansen has no penalties and Genovesi has 30 minutes so that extends Christiansen's lead. It does seem though that Genovesi has been riding better the last day so it'll be interesting to see how the race plays out.

Update: Wyss Wins, Robic Quits!

Related Links: RAAM FAQ | Robic's blog | Wyss' blog | Janet Christiansen's twitter

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posted by UltraRob @ 12:37:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

2009 Race Across America

Race Across America
Solo Men start the Race Across America (RAAM) at noon PDT today. Solo women and men over 60 started yesterday. Relay teams will start on Saturday.

RAAM has been called the world's toughest sporting event. More people have summitted Mount Everest than have finished RAAM. In the movie Bicycle Dreams, Perry Stone says, "It's not a sporting event in a classic sense. It's more of sending a gladiator into a pit with a lion."

So what's so tough about this event? The competitors ride their bikes from Oceanside, CA to Annapolis. MD which is just over 3,000 miles. The time cut-off is 12 days. Some years the winner finishes in under 9 days. This is equivalent to riding the Tour de France 1.5 times in less than half the time.

For more about RAAM, read my Race Across America FAQ. Also go read my guest posts on Bike Crave and MissingSaddle.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:32:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Monday, May 25, 2009

Bicycle Dreams Movie Review



Bicycle Dreams is a new documentary about the 2005 Race Across America (RAAM). Bicycle Dreams won the Best Documentary Feature at the Fallbrook Film Festival.

RAAM Starting Line in OceansideRAAM has been called the world's toughest sporting event. The top racers ride their bike 3,000 miles from coast to coast in only 9 days. More people have stood on the summit of Mt. Everest than have finished RAAM. It's more than just an event. It's an extreme journey.

I first became fascinated with RAAM over 20 years ago. I found a book about it at the library when I was in high school. I continued to follow the race but for many years I didn't think I'd actually compete in it. In 2006 I did race in RAAM although I dropped out at the Mississippi River, 2,000 miles and 8 days into the race.

Riding into the Night During RAAMBecause the racers are riding more than 20 hours a day and end up spread across several states, it is a difficult event to cover. Filmmaker Stephen Auerbach and his crew traveled inside the riders’ crew vehicles to get an inside look at the race. They used 18 cameras to capture the scenery and the highs and lows of the racers.

Auerbach doesn't cover the race much from how the racers are doing in the race standings but focuses on their own personal battles. Battles with things like sleep deprivation, hallucinations and physical ailments that come from pushing the body to the extreme.

Pain of RAAMOne of the things that the film tries to answer is why someone would attempt to do an event like RAAM. In trying to find the answer, it looks at the history of some of the racers and how it motivates them.

The 2005 RAAM was the year that tragedy stuck and Bob Breedlove was hit head on and killed instantly. Bob was a 5 time RAAM finisher. Bicycle Dreams follows Patrick Autissier as he tries to deal with Bob's death on top of his race battle.

I have seen several RAAM videos over the years and Bicycle Dreams shows the emotions of the race the best. RAAM fans will love the film. Even non-cyclists will enjoy watching it and seeing how riders deal with pushing their limits.

Bicycle Dreams is now available on DVD from Bicycle Dreams website. I suggest you order your copy today.

For more about RAAM, check out my Race Across America FAQ. The 2009 race starts on June 17th.

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posted by UltraRob @ 1:24:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Ride of Your Life eTour Interviews

David Rowe
A couple weeks ago I had a great interview with long distance cyclist and author David Rowe. It was part of the eTour for his new book, The Ride of Your Life.

All of the eTour interviews are now online. They have different perspectives depending on the focus of the bloggers they were with. I've enjoyed all of them. The links below will take you directly to each interview.
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posted by UltraRob @ 11:27:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, February 06, 2009

Interview with Long Distance Cyclist and Author David Rowe


Today I have a great interview with author, David Rowe. I recently reviewed his new long distance cycling book, The Ride of Your Life.

I asked readers for long distance cycling questions for David. There was a great response so there were a lot of questions for David. I gave him the option of skipping some of them but he took the time to answer all of them.

5 readers that asked questions get a free copy of David's eBook, The Ride of Your Life. With so many good questions, it was tough to pick the eBook winners. Congratulations to the following
David is a road bike rider who lives, works and rides in the Pacific Northwest.

His goal-centered approach helped him break the 100-mile-barrier and attempt routes in the remote Cascade Range and Columbia Plateau with cyclists called randonneurs. What he learned while riding with these highly skilled cyclists helped him complete some of the most challenging road biking events in the Northwest, including the Cascade 1200, the Portland-to-Glacier 1000, and the Rocky Mountain 1200.

With his son Evan, David created Ready to Ride® in 2005 with the goal of helping cyclists who, like himself, do not have a background in road racing, but want to excel at long distance riding. Ready To Ride® is a Web site for sport-recreational cyclists who want to balance the demands of career and family with the physical, mental, and equipment demands of long distance cycling.

UltraRob: How did you get into cycling initially?

David Rowe: I was going to school at UC San Diego in La Jolla, and living about 10 miles north in Cardiff by the Sea. I was looking for cheap transportation to school. One of my buddies sold me his rusted-out Peugeot. I had it sand blasted, and my Dad and I repainted it in the garage. I joined the bicycle co-op at school and built it up one part at a time. It was a great bike, very light, and very fast. I rode it to school every day, and I was blown away by my fitness. I was into competitive surfing at that time, and I noticed that my improved leg-strength was allowing me to carve much more aggressive turns in the wave. So I began to use cycling as cross-training for surfing. Cycling really got to be a part of my life from that point on. I guess it's been more than 30 years now since I built that first bike. I'm still wrenching and riding!

UltraRob: Did you one day decide you wanted to ride a 1200k brevet or was it a slow progression of doing longer and longer events?

David: Riding the Cascade 1200 was a huge leap for me. I didn't even know it was a randonneur event! I did what randonneurs recommend you don't do, which is to ride your first Super Randonneur series (200K, 300K, 400K, 600K) and ride a 1200K during your first season in the sport.

But my confidence was way up, having just completed the Torture 10,000 (in the Oregon Cascade Range), but I really did not understand the difficulty of that ride when I sent in my deposit. I was 49 years old and wanted to plant a significant marker in my life during my 50th year. I was scouring the Internet for big rides and found it, right in my own back yard.

UltraRob: What has been your most enjoyable event and why?

David: Last year, I rode a 600K brevet in Washington called Four Passes. It was an epic ride. We rode out of Seattle in pouring rain, climbed through snow-covered roads on Stevens Pass. Mt. Rainier is one of the most dramatic rain shadows in the world, and the set-up was working perfectly. As we descended into Leavenworth, the sun broke out, we tore off our rain gear and enjoyed a warm, sunny day in dry, central Washington before heading back into the Cascade Range. By the time we were back in the Cascades, the rain-storm had moved out and we had clear skies and stars. We rode on two more passes on the way to the overnight control, which was just below White Pass. We got up to the lodge about 11:30pm, ate a big dinner, got a few hours of sleep, and were back on the road at 4:30am. We had to climb the rest of White and then Cayuse Pass to get to them, but wow - the descents were incredible. The final one into the Greenwater control was 30-plus miles!

UltraRob: Do you do long events because you enjoy riding, the sense of accomplishment when you complete a goal or do you enjoy suffering?

David: Looking back on what I've done are the proof-points, but not the rewards. I stopped buying the medals for all but the big events. I don't keep my numbers, or the brevet cards.

Cycling is one of the few areas of my life where I can really live in the moment. When I am riding a brevet, I can truly shut-out the rest of the world. It's the closest thing I can think of to the feeling you had as a child, when you were totally absorbed in play. There was nothing else - only that which you were experiencing - real or imagined.

I'm not big into suffering, though there's plenty of it out there on the road. I've done what I can to marginalize it with my training regimen. But my weak points - Achilles tendons, knees, low back - eventually start talking to me. I gauge how much pain I'm in based on when I have to start taking 800mg Advil tabs. I don't like to take them, because once you do, you can't feel the pain so much, and that's when you are likely to do the most damage.

There is a benefit to the suffering, though. When things get tough for me at work, or in my personal life, I compare it to the level of stress or anxiety or pain that I might have felt on a ride like the Rocky Mountain and Cascade 1200s, and nothing can hold a candle to it. Thinking about a problem in that light gives me the confidence that I can handle it.

UltraRob: In your book, you focus on the mental part of long distance cycling. Do you feel the mental part is harder than the physical?

David: They are closely related, maybe inversely related. The greater level of fitness you attain, the less likely you are to encounter repetitive motion injuries, so you may not have to call on your mental powers to stay in the ride.

The problem most riders encounter, though, is mustering the motivation in a long training period, to adequately prepare for an event. You can take 10 weeks and be fit enough to handle a century. Getting ready for an ultra cycling event like a 1200K requires 26-weeks. If you're training for an event in June or July, that means you are going to be getting to know your trainer, and most riders hate that. Or they hate the gym and won't get in to do the core training.

In my book, I try to help riders load their goals with deep emotional pay-offs, so they literally pull them out of bed in the morning to train, when they'd rather be sleeping in. The process I share will also help you work through the opportunity cost in advance of the training, so riders can opt-out of a ride that sounds cool on the surface, but really isn't a good fit with their life at the time.

UltraRob: There are the weekend warriors that do most of their riding on the weekends. Do you think this is a smart way to train for a long distance event?

David: Distance riders have to get one long ride in on the weekend, sometimes, two, as the event draws near. But doing long rides without riding during the week is a recipe for failure. You'll either injure yourself on the weekend, or at the event. I talked about a real-life weekend warrior in the book. He let me look at his training program. It was hard to see the problem, at first, because he sent me his monthly mileage and hours, and they looked great. I asked him to send me the daily detail, and there it was: the shock and awe approach to training. 95 percent of this rider's miles were on Saturday and Sunday. He started to get sick on rides, and eventually, he quit the sport.

UltraRob: I have friends that say they're hurting at the end of a century. They think if they're hurting a 100 miles into a ride it'll just hurt more at 200k or a double century. If you're hurting half way through a ride, do you find worse at the end or have you not found that to be the case?

David:I think most long distance riders will tell you that the bliss (the cyclists' high) begins at 100 miles. But most riders also find they have a pain-point they have to ride through. I experience the greatest discomfort at about 50 miles. Rarely does it come after 100 miles. By then, I've got it all dialed - food, pace, clothing. Repetitive motion injuries are a wildcard; and most Achilles issues show up on the second day. But if your training includes stretching and strengthening ankles, knees, and your core, I think you can avoid most of that. Those kinds of exercise are the ones that riders struggle with; they can be boring. But they are the key to success in "the back nine," if you know what I mean.

UltraRob: If you've dropped out of a long ride, which ride was it and what caused the DNF? If you haven't dropped out, What is the closest you came to quitting but continued on?

David: I've never quit or DNF'd - knock wood. I suppose it's out there for me, but I want to avoid it if I can. But I have to be honest, there is a point on every ride where I question my motives. I wonder why I'm doing it. Sometimes that still small voice isn't so small.

It was screaming at me on the Cascade 1200. I've written about that at length on my site, Ready To Ride, so I won't recap that saga here. But I think you might find it good reading.

Suffice it to say that if some very experienced randos hadn't encouraged me to eat, and then asked me the questions they did, I might have quit the ride of my life. Finishing it - or not finishing it - either option was going to be a life-changing event. I decided to finish. I got into the final control just 60 seconds before the cut-off - 60 seconds to spare in a 90-hour ride. Thinking about how close that was gives me the shivers, even right now.

Mike B.: I'm curious how one trains for ultra-distance events. In particular how does one balance the training time with family time?

David: Answering that question was the primary reason I wrote The Ride of Your Life. All I can say is that it varies, from year to year. You really need to square-off with how important your family is to you. I think one of the reasons you see older riders in ultra distance events is that they have the time to devote to it - that and the fact they're not able to do the crits and the stage races any more!

There are lots of ways to creatively get the training hours in, though. Get up early and ride before the family is awake. Commute to work on your bike. On long weekend rides, have your wife drive out and meet you at some point in the course for a picnic. That works really well for events, too. You can integrate a family vacation into the weekend.

UltraRob: Along with balancing family time, most people have jobs that take up a big part of week days. You've said WebMD is supportive of your riding, but I'm sure as vice president of marketing you don't get a free ride. How do you manage it?

David: The big one for me is commuting to work on the bike. I am able to get 30 miles and 2000+ feet of climbing in each day. I can increase the miles or the altitude by leaving earlier. On some summer mornings, I'll increase the ride-in to 50 miles. The only morning you'll find me on the main arteries is when I need to make an early morning meeting. Otherwise, I treat my commute like training ride.

I also make a point to let my boss and my team know about my riding goals and my events. We are a health services company, and I'm responsible for consumer engagement. So the fact that I'm eating healthy foods and exercising is consistent with our vision and values. It also makes me sensitive to the difficulties of sustaining a healthy lifestyle, and I think that makes our engagement efforts more effective as a result.

Allen B.: Before we had kids, my wife and I did a fair bit of long riding and some together, some by myself. Since our first daughter arrived, I have had an increasing awareness of their physical, emotional, spiritual – not to mention, financial – dependence on me as their dad. It is one of the greatest privileges in my life, however this awareness has led me to scale back my cycling to “safe” trails and roads with well-marked bike lanes, especially in light of the death of a couple of road bikers in our community. And, my brother – a very safe biker - has been hit by cars twice in the last 18 months. How do you deal with the inherent risks involved with road/long-distance biking when a family with small children is depending on you?

David: I have looked at the statistics and more people are hit by cars walking on the streets of their neighborhoods than cyclists are hit riding.

With that said, I realize that riding a bike increases the risk of injury. I have taken some time to my financial house in order, just in case I cannot work, or worse. I have disability and life insurance, which I think all of us who provide for dependents should have, if we can afford it.

It's also important that you do everything you can to be seen on the bike. I know that reflective vests and ankle bands and blinky lights aren't cool on a Saturday morning club ride. Neither are fenders and 28mm tires. But these are things we can do to increase our personal safety and we've got a responsibility to ourselves and our loved ones to do use all of the geeky gear, even if it means we have to ride alone on Saturday morning!

Mike H. and Bob M.: What do you do to stay motivated during long-distance events (especially ones where you're out there by yourself)?

David: First and foremost, you have to know why you are out there riding. I love the outdoors, so it's a rare day that I'm not loving the feeling of riding. Even in the rain - with the proper gear - I'm loving it. Music helps me, a lot. I ride with an iPod; so do most of the guys I ride with. I think it's safe to do so as long as you aren't turning up the volume to the point you cannot hear cars approaching you from behind.

UltraRob: Ken H. has a somewhat similar question to the above but brings in how the physical affects the mental.

Ken H.: How do you battle both the mental exhaustion of kilometer after kilometer of repetition and stay focused, but also how to you stay mentally tough as the kilometers beat on your body. As fatigue increases I'm sure it only gets tougher to stay motivated and focused.

David: The key is to chunk it down. On a brevet, you have controls. On an ultra, you have checkpoints. That's where you focus - not on the entire ride. You just think about the next leg of the ride, and what's in front of you.

You need to get your head up and look at the terrain. If the route will take me over a mountain pass, I try to make it out as far in advance as I can. If you are in the desert, you can see your route 30 or 50 miles up ahead if you've studied your maps. Then, you see the progress you're making on the landscape and it's a terrific feeling. I'm always amazed at how much ground you can cover on a bicycle. On a long ride, you will be shocked to keep seeing the same cars throughout the day, as they stop to fuel or eat, over and over again, while you just keep pedaling.

Ken H.: What methods do you employ to stay healthy and injury free? I'm sure the amount of cycling that you're doing is doing a number on your body... Yoga? Regular massages? Just battle through the pain?

David: I have a physical therapist and during the season, I'm there two or three times a month. That's been huge and has helped me to insure that my injuries heal without scar tissue. Long distance cycling has actually helped me to flush-out old injuries that didn't heal right, and 'fix them' as a result of re-injury, then proper healing with physical therapy. But in the end, staying fit the year round is the key to riding with a minimum of injury. Nobody I know rides injury-free. This is an athletic pursuit and athletes manage injuries, they don't avoid them.

Steve H.: What are your recommendations for leg issues, i.e. cramps, inflamation, etc.

David: Strengthening exercises are very helpful. So are stretches. Do these during the week, either at home or at the gym. I also recommend learning to stretch on the bike while riding. There are a number of yoga moves you can do while descending to stretch your lower back and your hamstrings while you're descending. You can stretch your upper back while riding the flats. It's good to make these habit, so when you get into the right terrain, you get automatic triggers to stretch.

Mike P. and Robb S.: For single day rides greater than 100 miles without a support vehicle, how do you either plan where you will stop for food (and how often) or how do you carry enough with you to keep the energy up. I just finished reading Ultramarathon Man and Dean eats 10,000+ calories during some of his 100 mile 1 day runs. While I've only managed a 55 mile ride last season, I have several planned century rides this year and keeping the energy / food levels up are one of my main concerns.

David: I am convinced that Hammer Nutrition has developed the ideal model and foods for long distance riding. It was a leap of faith for me to 'put the Hammer down,' but it works. On event days, I do not eat anything but Hammer fuels. I wrote a piece about that on Ready to Ride. It's lightweight, and the proper mix of fuel, and electrolytes, keeps me from feeling hungry. The only time I bonk is if I fail to stay on my feeding schedule. It's quite remarkable.

Another benefit of carrying your own fuel is you can minimize your off-the-bike time, which can be a killer. I ride a lot of brevets with Eric Ahlvin and John Kramer. All three of us are "on the Hammer." It allows us to get into and out of a control in minutes. Other guys are getting in line at Subway or whatever and we're riding away, putting serious gap on them. It's a huge benefit if you can ride with others who use the same fuels.

UltraRob: Joel S. has a questions similar to the previous one but gets to how do you get the calories down.

Joel S.: I find that there's no way I can consume enough calories while riding. What's your strategy for eating and why?

David: According to the folks at Hammer, you can burn 600 to 800 calories an hour, but you can only ingest about 250 to 300. So that's what they recommend you take in, in liquid form. The reason riders begin to feel queasy on long rides is they get too hungry, then gorge on a sandwich or whatnot, and it just sits there in the stomach. Liquid fuels got into the bloodstream in minutes. You can feel it happening. It's borderline bizarre.

Steve H.: For long distances, do you prefer a true road ride or a MTB or touring or hyrid?

For unsupported brevets, I use a Titanium bike that's been designed and built for this sport. It's as light as it can be, but it's also using parts that I can service on the road at my skill level, and with minimal tools on hand. In randonnuering you cannot accept any support accept at controls, and you'd be lucky to find tools at a control. So durability is critical, that's why you will see Ultegra components and Mavic Open Pro rims on my rando machine.

In a supported race - like a UMCA event - I'll be riding a Litespeed Tuscany with all the modern, lightweight parts. Of course, there's a follow-van to help with repairs.

Lloyd L. and Steve H.: I've tried a lot of different types of saddles--spent a lot of money. What is your favorite saddle for long-distance events and why?

David: I have a few, but the most comfortable saddles I have are leather. The Brooks B-17, and the Selle Anatomica are fantastic. John Spurgeon (profiled in my book) rode RAAM on the later, and that convinced me to try it. It was as soft on my first ride as the B-17 was after a year.

Steve H.: Which is your favorite chamois cream?

David: I'm laughing ... the stuff that's really popular at the moment is something called Lantiseptic. It was developed for hospital patients, and others who must spend days on end in bed, and can develop rashes or worse. I began using it and I wouldn't think of using anything else. You won't find it at your LBS, or even at your drug store. You have to order onlne. It's gotten so popular with randos that the company is advertising in American Randonneur!

UltraRob: Since most of your long distance rides have been in the Pacific Northwest, I'm guessing you've done much more riding in the rain than I have here in Colorado. What are some wet weather riding tips?

David: I wrote a series about staying dry in the rain on Ready to Ride. The most important one is about the rain jacket that I use. The other posts in the series are on feet and legs.

UltraRob: David, thanks for taking so much time to answer all the questions in this long interview. You've provided a lot of information for cyclist wanting to take on longer rides.

David has many more details are preparing mentally for your long distance cycling adventures in his book, The Ride of Your Life. If you want to find out more about the book before buying it, you can read a 34 page preview or read my review of it.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:29:00 AM   6 comments links to this post

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

The Ride of Your Life Virtual Book Tour

2008 Race Across America, David Holt
Update 2/6/09: I've posted the interview with David Rowe. His answers provide great information on long distance cycling.

I reviewed The Ride of Your Life eBook on Monday. I'm happy to announce that UltraRob.com will host an interview with author David Rowe about his new book. The interview will be posted on Friday February 6th.

The Ride of Your Life is a book for sport-recreational cyclists who want to increase their mileage and their enjoyment of events of 100 miles or more.

Help Me and You Could Win


I need your help for the interview. I did my first ride longer than a century more than 20 years ago. Some things about long distance cycling that seem obvious to me, my friends tell me aren't obvious.

Here's how you can help me. Ask a question about long distance cycling or one of David Rowe's ride experiences. (Edit: Please submit the questions by Wednesday 2/4). Most of David's rides have been in the Pacific Northwest, particularly in the Oregon and Washington Cascade Range

If your question is one of the 5 that David likes best, you'll win a Ride of Your Life eBook. Either leave your question in the comments below or email me at rob@ultrarob.com. I'll need a way to email you if you win the eBook or David needs clarification on the question.

If you don't already have a burning question about long distance cycling, you can read my review of the book or read a 34 page preview of the book. If you want the book now, head over to RoadBikeRider.com to buy it.

If you haven't read my review, you'll find another way in it to win a free copy of the eBook.

Here are the dates for the rest of the virtual book tour
Date 
January 30Quickrelease.tv. A podcast with Carlton Reid.
February 1Fredcast. A podcast with David Bernstein.
February 4PAC Tour. An interview with Lon Haldeman. (Click on the link to Lon’s Blog.)
February 10Cyclelicious. Interview with Richard Masoner.
February 12BikingBis. Interview with Gene Bisbee.
February 17The AdventureCORPS Blog. Interview with Chris Kostman.
February 20The Everyday Athlete. Interview with Heidi Swift.
February 24BikePortland.org. Interview with Jonathan Maus.
February 26BikeLoveJones. Interview with Beth Hamon.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:33:00 AM   9 comments links to this post

Monday, January 26, 2009

Guide to Long Distance Cycling eBook Review

The Ride of Your Life Cover

Update 1/28/09: I'm going to be part of The Ride of Your Life virtual book tour. You could win a copy of the book for submitting a question for the interview.

Many recreational cyclists make doing a century ride their big goal. If you're one of those cyclists and now you've become comfortable with century rides, what do you do next?

There are plenty of cycling options longer than 100 miles. There are organized double centuries and self supported brevets. Since brevets come from France they come in metric distances of 200, 300, 400, 600, 1,000 and 1,200 km.

Ok, there's plenty of options for long bike rides but how do you prepare for one. If you're a seat of the pants person like me, you just do some riding and then set off on your adventure. I first did a 160 mile unsupported solo ride when I was 15 and really didn't do much planning.

That method isn't the best way which is why I've used a coach for my racing. Now there's a new book, The Ride of Your Life, by David Rowe of Ready to Ride to help long distance cyclists achieve their dreams.

David Rowe CyclingDavid has experience in what he's talking about. Like many other long distance cyclists he's never raced. Instead he started out doing centuries and then going for long distances. He has completed some of the most challenging road cycling events in the Northwest, including the Cascade 1200, the Portland-to-Glacier 1000, and the Rocky Mountain 1200.

You might expect the book to be mostly about how to train. Instead it focuses on how to set your goals and fit long distance cycling into the rest of your life. David talks about coming up with an overall plan for your rides for the year but points to other resources to come up with a day to day training play.

UltraRob at the Furnace Creek 508David talks about your goals need to be inspirational. Being inspired to do something is what has given me many of my adventures over the years. It doesn't do any good to set a goal of doing a double century if doesn't inspire you to get out of bed at 5 AM on Saturday to do a training ride.

On the subject of fitting long distance cycling into your life, David writes
Most of us love riding, and we are exhilarated by the thought of riding farther. We also connect the thought of physical activity with its many benefits, including weight loss, muscular strength, aerobic capacity, stress reduction, and overall physical and mental well-being.

But few of us stop to think about the impact that increasing the hours devoted to cycling and other exercise will have on our relationships with our friends, and family and loved ones. More hours on the bike means fewer hours at home. And that can create stress in our relationships. Will the people in our lives be willing to sacrifice time they would normally spend with us, so that we might achieve our goal? Will they wish us well as we ride out of the driveway? Or will our rides be under a constant shadow of guilt, because our spouse or partner does not share our goal, measuring our time on the bike as hours lost from the precious time we would spend together?

And what about the impact increased riding can have on your job? If you are a career professional, you are very likely working 45 to 60 hours a week. If you are one who is known to arrive at the office at 7:30 a.m. every day, how will your boss and co-workers react when you start showing up at 8:30? Some work cultures would be supportive of any effort one makes to improve personal health. Others simply do not care, and will measure that lost hour as lost productivity, lack of commitment, or both.
David steps you through prioritizing your goals so it's easier to make decisions to keep your life in balance. One thing is to be flexible and know mentally up front that adjustments will be needed to keep balance with the rest of life.

In addition to the planning for long distance cycling, David included interviews with 6 recreational cyclists that have achieved inspiring long distance feats. The interviews with Greg Paley, Jill Homer, Del Sharffenberg, Kitty Goursolle, Kent Peterson, and John Spurgeon will make you want to head out for a ride now.

I highly recommend The Ride of Your Life if you want to make the move from century rides to longer rides. Even if you're doing shorter events, you'll find valuable planning information. You can read a 34 page preview of the book or you can head over to RoadBikeRider.com to buy it.

How you can win a free copy of The Ride of Your Life


David is collecting stories from readers who overcame physical, mental, or equipment challenges to finish a challenging ride. You can win a free copy of the Ride of Your Life, simply by telling you story in 200 words or less.

David is going to publish a compilation of the best stories in an eBook, which he will make available free in the Spring of this year. If your story is selected for publication, you’ll win a free eBook. It’s that easy.

You can download an entry form here: http://www.rideofyourlife.biz/my_ride.zip. Be sure to mention that you learned about the eBook giveaway on UltraRob.com

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:21:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Saturday, October 04, 2008

Pedaling Through the Desolate Desert

2002 Furnace Creek 508
This weekend 84 solo racers and 48 relay teams are racing 508 miles through the desert of California. The Furnace Creek 508 has been the oldest RAAM qualifier. This year it's not a qualifier due to the ongoing feud over the UMCA buying RAAM a couple years ago. Not being a qualifier doesn't seem to have hurt the race much.

The Furnace Creek 508 is where I first qualified for RAAM in 2002. It's a great race and has a lot of history but the desolation of the desert started getting to me mentally. There's beauty in some deserts but not much where the 508 goes. It does go through Death Valley which has beauty but nearly all the riders go through it in the dark.

The lead riders are already through the Trona check point, 153 miles into the race. The top 5 are
  • Kevin McNulty
  • Michael Emde
  • Chris Ragsdale
  • Gerry Cody
  • Vinnie Tortorich
That means that Kevin McNulty has averaged 23.8 miles an hour. As with all RAAM qualifiers, that's without any drafting!

Vinnie in 5th place was on David Holt's RAAM crew with me this summer. He's a great guy. Last year he DNF'd so I hope he continues to do well.

In the women's race, Catharina Berge is the only one through Trona. In California City, Isabelle Drake was 2nd and Shanna Armstrong was third.

You can keep track of the standings as the race continues today and tomorrow. Pictures are also being uploaded to the webcast.
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posted by UltraRob @ 4:27:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, September 12, 2008

Hoodoo 500 RAAM Qualifier this Weekend

Hoodoo 500 near Bryce
Photo from Planet Ultra


The Hoodoo 500 is taking place this weekend in a beautiful part of Utah. It is 519 miles with about 30,000 feet of climbing. I had hoped to race it this year but have stayed too busy with projects around the house to be able to train much.

This year it is a RAAM qualifier since the Furnace Creek 508 isn't. RAAM doesn't allow qualifiers to be less than a month apart if there closer than 1,000 miles.

One of the cool things at the Hoodoo is the solo riders are split between those doing it with RAAM style support and racers doing it self supported. 18 riders are doing it supported and 12 are doing it unsupported.

Unsupported riders can still qualify for RAAM but the qualifying time is based on the fastest solo rider not already qualified for RAAM. The solo riders will be lumped together for purposes of RAAM qualifying. Unsupported riders will be at a big disadvantage if they're trying to qualify for RAAM.

Planet Ultra will be updating their web cast during the race as they can find internet access. Alex Isaly is racing solo and his wife is going to try to post updates on Twitter during the race. David McColgan is racing on a 4 man team. He also is a Twitter user but doesn't say whether he'll be updating during the race.

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:38:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Sunday, July 13, 2008

2008 Fireweed 400 Results

According to a 2008 Fireweed 400 report in the Anchorage Daily News, Ben Popp of St. Paul, Minnesota won. His time was 22:28:42. My time in 2003 was 22:09:42 but weather and course conditions make it difficult to compare times.

Long time endurance althlete Rocky Reifenstuhl was 2nd with a time of 24:46:27. He was last year's winner. Reifenstuhl led for most this race before being passed by Popp after Glenallen.

The amazing thing is Reifenstuhl was hit by a lumber truck a week ago. He was struggling just to walk. He considered not doing the race but he said he doesn't like to pull out of races.

400 Mile Solo Results
  1. Ben Popp 22:28:42
  2. Rocky Reifenstuhl 24:46:27
  3. Brandon McNerlin 24:56:22
  4. Chet Fehrmann 26:01:24
  5. Lew Meyer 29:12:28


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posted by UltraRob @ 3:23:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, July 11, 2008

Fireweed 400

The Fireweed 400 started today at noon. The 50, 100, and 200 mile races are tomorrow. There are 733 on the start list between all the different distances. 15 are doing the solo 400 mile RAAM qualifier. The Anchorage Daily News had an article today.

I've qualified for RAAM at the Furnace Creek 508, Fireweed 400, Race Across Oregon and the Adironack 540. The Fireweed 400 is still my favorite RAAM qualifier. The scenery is so amazing and it's really only dark for a couple hours.

Fireweed 400 Elevation ProfileThe ADN article mentions that the Fireweed 400 is tough because there's a lot more climbing in the 2nd half of the race. The race uses an out and back course. The race starts around 2800 feet and then drops to sea level at the turn around in Valdez. Racers then have to climb back up in the 2nd half. The course profile has never look right to me on the website. I have a big version from my computer download on my Fireweed 400 page that I've never finished up.

Having the 2nd half harder ended up working well for me since I didn't feel the best during the first half and felt good the 2nd half. I rode the 2nd half faster than the winner. I think I was in 5th at the turn around and finished 2nd.

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posted by UltraRob @ 12:29:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Jure Robic Wins Record 4th RAAM

Jure Robic Wins 2008 Race Across America
Picture from www.raceacrossamerica.org

Today Jure Robic became the first person to win RAAM 4 times. He finished just under 9 days with a time of 8 days 23 hours and 33 minutes. When I raced in 2006 he was trying to become the first person to win 3 consecutive times but dropped out in Pagosa, CO with pneumonia.

In the team division another record was broken. The 8-person Byggkjøp/BMC Cycling Team set a new relay team record. Their time was 5 days 9 hours and 56 minutes. This gives them an average speed of 23.2 mph.

The rest of the solo field is stretched all the way from Maryland to Ohio which is about 550 miles of the course. David Haase is the only American in the top 5. He's currently in 2nd on the road by less than an although it seems he's really in 3rd place.

I have always thought there were no time credits in RAAM, just time penalties. I'm sure I've also read that in the rules. In any case, Mark Pattinson has been given a 4 hour and 35 minute time credit. It's for an incident near Taos, NM involving drunk cowboys not allowing him and his crew to pass through. I haven't really been able to find information on what happened but it seems that race officials may have told Pattinson to stop riding.

The 50+ age group is very close for 1st and 2nd. Currently in Chillicothe, OH, Arvid Loewen is less than 20 minutes ahead of Doug Levy. They have just over 500 miles left to the finish line.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:35:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Race Across America FAQ


The Race Across America website has a RAAM FAQ. Although it has some great answers to questions, there are questions that I get asked that aren't on the web site.

Of course with as few people that know about the Race Across America, maybe the first question should be What is the Race Across America? It's a bike race that is 50% longer than the Tour de France and is done in about half the time.

I've written answers to some of the questions that I often get. I didn't answer all the ones that are on the RAAM site or gave different answers so you may want to read that FAQ too. If you have any other questions, ask it in the comments below.

Where is the start and finish?
How many years has the race existed?
Who can do the race?
How far is it?
How long do racers have to finish?
What is the typical winning time for the solo racers?
How much do RAAM racers eat?
What do RAAM racers eat?
How much sleep do the racers get?
How much sleep does the support crew get?
What happens if the weather is bad?
Why are the solo average speeds so slow?
Why do the riders always ride alone?
How do the solo racers keep from getting sore butts?
What are time penalties?
Why would someone volunteer to crew?
Why are all times reported in Eastern Daylight Time?

Where is the start and finish?

In 2008 the start is in Oceanside, CA and the finish is in Annapolis, MD. Normally there are small changes to the route from one year to the next. Sometimes the route is totally changed.

How many years has the race existed?

2008 is the 27th year for the solo race. The first year it was called the Great American Bike Race and 4 guys competed.

Who can do the race?

Anybody can race on a relay team. Racers have to qualify to race solo. Most of the qualifiers are over 500 miles or are 24 hour events.

How far is it?

RAAM is always right around 3,000 miles. Compare that to the Tour de France which is 2,000 miles and takes 3 weeks.

How long do racers have to finish?

Generally the racers have the time below to finish. Racers riding a fixed gear bike, hand cycle, etc. are often given extra time to finish. There are also time cut-offs along the route to keep the race from getting too spread out.
  • Solo Men – 288 hours (12 days)
  • Solo Men 60+ – 309 hours (12 days, 21 hours)
  • Solo Women – 309 hours (12 days, 21 hours)
  • Teams – 216 hours (9 days)

What is the typical winning time for the solo racers?

The last several years the winning time for the solo racers has been a little under or just over 9 days.

How much do RAAM racers eat?

Most racers try to get about a little less than 300 calories an hour. Some are able to eat even more. That adds up to about 6,000 calories a day. That's 3 times the typical calories for a man.

What do RAAM racers eat?

Many racers eat mainly liquids since they're easier to digest. Others claim to be able to stomach pizza and cheeseburgers. I wrote fairly detailed about my RAAM nutrition when I raced in 2006.

How much sleep do the racers get?

The top solo racers typically take short naps or sleep for 90 minutes at a time. More than 3 hours of sleep a day is considered a lot. It's said that one year Jure Robic slept 8 hours in the 9 days it took him to finish.

The racers on the relay teams can get more sleep since they can sleep while another racers is riding. For them the amount of sleep will depend on whether they are on a 2, 4 or 8 person team.

How much sleep does the support crew get?

The people on the support crew should be able to get more sleep than the racer since they take turns in the follow vehicle. Even so the crew also has to get the other vehicles down the road, find food and water, fix bikes, etc. The crew also end up being at least a bit sleep deprived.

What happens if the weather is bad?

The clock is always ticking in RAAM in spite of what happens. One rider getting caught in a storm and another one not is just part of RAAM. Riders will sometimes decide to sleep during a storm. In 2006 an official stopped me just after dark one night, he said there was a tornado in a town not far down the road. He wanted us to stay safe but I wouldn't get any time adjustment if I stopped.

Why are the solo average speeds so slow?

The average speed is calculated on total elapsed time. It includes all the time that the racer is off the bike. Unlike races like the Tour de France, riders aren't allowed to ride in packs so the speeds are slower. Also as most racers become fatigued and sleep deprived they struggle to go very fast. When the average speed for a time station is shown under 10 mph, it's usually because the rider took a sleep break.

Why do the riders always ride alone?

It's one of the rules of RAAM. It is an individual competition and no drafting is allowed. Racers are actually allowed to ride side by side for up to 15 minutes. After 15 minutes they have to separate until 24 hours has gone by. Riders get spread out and don't pass very often. Even when they do they generally aren't in the mood for more than a couple minutes of chatting.

How do the solo racers keep from getting sore butts?

There are lots of things like using chamois creams, good padded shorts, and keeping the shorts dry to help prevent saddles sores. Unfortunately nearly every rider ends up with a hurting behind.

What are time penalties?

Time penalties are generally given for the support crew breaking a rule. There are a lot of rules to keep the racer and crew safe. Penalties can be given for things like not calling race HQ within 30 minutes of going through a time station, not pulling the support vehicle far enough off the road when stopped, following a racer without flashers turned on, etc.

Time for penalties is as follows
  • 1st Penalty 15 minutes
  • 2nd Penalty 15 minutes (Total – 30 minutes)
  • 3rd Penalty 30 minutes (Total – 60 minutes)
  • 4th Penalty 45 minutes (Total – 105 minutes)
  • 5th Penalty 60 minutes (Total – 165 minutes)
  • 6th Penalty Disqualification

Who pays for the crews?

Each racer finds their own crew. The racer normally pay all the crew's expenses. Most crew members are volunteers but in some cases they get paid a small amount.

Why would someone volunteer to crew?

It's a way for people that don't think they can do the race to be involved. There are some that have crewed many years. It's also a good way for someone thinking about racing to learn more about the race. Some that crew are friends and family that are talked into it.

Why are all times reported in Eastern Daylight Time?

The race crosses 3 time zones. Rather than keep track of time zones, all times are reported in race time which is EDT. Watches and clocks in support vehicles are set to EDT before the start.

Crew still have to remember which time zone they are in to know when they must be directly following a rider. Riders must always have a follow vehicle between 7:30 PM and 6 AM. Crews also have to know local time to know when stores open and close.

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posted by UltraRob @ 6:03:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, June 13, 2008

Raw Butt Stops David Holt's Pedals

David Holt During the 2008 RAAM
As I know all too well from my 2006 RAAM attempt, a RAAM racer can quickly go from riding well to struggling to move down the road. David Holt was riding well most of the way to Durango.

David took a sleep break in Durango. When he got up he mentioned that his butt was getting sore. My butt was hurting by that point when I raced so I wasn't that concerned. We just knew we needed to do something to try keeping it from getting worse.

Before we got to the next time station in Pagosa Springs he was having trouble putting power into his pedal stroke because of the pain. We got a hold of multi-time RAAM finisher George Thomas to try figuring out more to do. We got more supplies in Pagosa Springs but David continued to suffer.

During what was to be crew chief Lisa and my sleep break, we spent time trying to figure out how to get some Assos Chamois Cream, different saddle, different shorts, and a saddle cover. A big thanks to Gearing Up Bicycle Shop in Taos, NM for agreeing to take a couple pairs of shorts to a hotel so we could pick them up after hours. I called my sister and had her overnight the other things from Colorado Springs, CO to a hotel in Clayton, NM so we could pick them the next afternoon.

I jumped back into the follow vehicle in Antonito, CO. It was cold and David is from southern California. Before the night was over the temperature would drop into the 30s. David was not doing well. It was tough to see him struggling so much.

As we were talking in the follow vehicle, I found out that we did have another saddle for him. We had David stop for a quick saddle change. It seemed to help him but not enough.

I noticed that David wasn't eating as much as he should have been. Vinnie and Ken who had already been in the vehicle for a while said they'd been having trouble with it for a while. I talked to David and he said he no longer could take the taste of the Ensure and Perpetuem that had been the majority of his calories.

We got him to eat some but I think it was too late. His energy levels were dropping which caused him to get really cold. We kept putting more layers on him but it wasn't helping. It seemed that he was getting hypothermia.

We were already planning on having his saddle sores checked at the ER in Taos. We weren't optimistic they'd be able to do anything but figured it was worth a try. In Allen Larsen's rookie RAAM, he had stopped because his butt was in pretty bad shape. The ER doctor told him, "Son, you just have to stop riding the bike." Allen got back on the bike and finished 3rd.

We were still about 35 miles from Taos when it was obvious David wasn't riding there without getting warmed up and some relief from his saddle sores. We got him in the follow van and started driving him into Taos. There was a bridge part way to Taos where we'd been warned we might have to stop for 30 minutes because of a movie being filmed.

There was a sheriff sitting there and we told her we had an emergency and needed to be able to get through. It turned out that traffic wasn't stopped but she said she'd give us an escort into Taos. At the edge of Taos, an ambulance meet us and took David on into the ER.

By the time we went to a hotel and ate some food, David was there from the ER. Not surprisingly the ER doctor told him he should stop. David said the race was over.

Some of us on the crew wanted him to try continuing on. We decided we'd let him sleep as long as possible and still be able to get him back on the bike and make the time cut-off in Taos. We doubted he'd change his mind. Still we wanted to leave the possibility open.

David actually was back up by the time we got up. We read him an e-mail that a winner of the Race Across Oregon had sent encouraging him to go on. We also got George Thomas to talk to him. The answer was still that the race was over for him.

David Holt and RAAM crew in Taos, NMLisa made the official call to race headquarters. We then made plans to get everyone back home and get the vehicles back to where they needed to go. It was disappointing to not see him able to go all the way but RAAM is a brutal race. Only a few racers start and only about half make it all the way to the finish line.

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posted by UltraRob @ 2:55:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Thursday, June 12, 2008

This Really Sucks

At the racer meeting before the start of RAAM, the race director, Terry Zmrhal, said there were 2 key phrases that we could use during the race. The first one was Sweet! The 2nd one was this sucks.

The first part of the race when David Holt was riding well we had lots of Sweet! moments. Now we're really having a this sucks moment.

Tonight we were trying to get David to Taos before having him stop to rest. He was really struggling as he had been all day. Taos is the first time cut-off of the race. Getting him to Taos would allow him to take a long break and not have to worry about the time cut-off.

We were having trouble getting him to eat since he was hurting so bad. The temperature was in the low 40's. Since he wasn't eating enough, he wasn't staying warm. Unfortunately about 35 miles before Taos, we had to drive him into Taos for medical attention.

He's still talking and knows what's going on. We don't believe it's anything serious but we need to get him recovered. In theory we have plenty of time to let him get enough rest and then make the time cut-off. After that we could let him rest some more. We'll just have to see how the next few hours go.

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posted by UltraRob @ 2:35:00 AM   2 comments links to this post

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Day Before 2008 Race Across America

It was another busy day getting ready for the RAAM. Unless you've been involved with the race it's tough to imagine the planning it takes to do this race. Even after all the planning over the last few months, we've kept very busy the last 2 days making final preparations.

The race starts tomorrow at noon PDT. Race standings should be kept updated here but can be delayed. You can also visit the Race Across America home page to see more updates and pictures

If you want to send something to help encourage David across the country, send email to raam08@ultrarob.com. As we all become sleep deprived, we may need some good jokes to keep us all awake.

Part of Crew Having Breakfast
Some of David Holt's 2008 RAAM crew having breakfast by the harbor.

Quickly Made Flag Holder
In RAAM you need to be able to figure things out as you go. One of the things we've done the last couple days is make a trip to Home Depot to make a flag holder for the required safety flag

David's Wife & Vinnie's Girlfriend on RV
David's Wife & Vinnie's Girlfriend on RV

David Holt's RAAM 2008 Crew
David Holt and his RAAM crew

Lisa Talks to the Officials
Crew chief Lisa talks to the officials and vehicle and bike inspection.

RAAM Vehicle and Bike Inspections
Lisa is very happy when the vehicles and bikes easily pass inspection.

Pier Where RAAM Starts
The Oceanside pier where RAAM starts.

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posted by UltraRob @ 11:59:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, June 06, 2008

Race Across America Preparation

It's been a busy day getting everything prepared for RAAM.  We got signs on the 2 follow vehicles.  Tomorrow we'll get the RV.

Look at the Twitter updates in the right sidebar for the most frequent RAAM updates.

Scott Putting Signage on Vehicle

David Holt's Follow Van

David Hot with RAAM legend Danny Chew

UltraRob with Cindy and Mike Roark  2008 RAAM Registration



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posted by UltraRob @ 11:59:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

Test of Jott Updates

Instant Jott listen

Powered by Jott


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posted by UltraRob @ 10:43:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Thursday, May 29, 2008

Blogging from Coast to Coast

2008 Race Across America Route
In about a week I'll be in California to crew for David Holt in the Race Across America. Outside magazine once rated this as the world's toughest sporting event. I raced in 2006. Crewing will be much different than racing but I'm not sure it'll be easier.

2006 Race Across AmericaIn addition to crewing, I plan to blog the experience as much as possible as we go. With David being on the bike for 20+ hours a day, I expect it will be challenging.

My father-in-law loaned me his T-Mobile card for internet access while we're on the road. I'm not confident that it'll work well especially in the southwest where we won't be near cities for long periods. I've heard that Verizon is better for mobile internet access but I don't want a 2 year plan.

I plan on using Twitter to post some updates. Twitter allows messages of up to 140 characters to be posted. One of the ways this can be done is by sending a text message. Before I leave I plan to put a widget in the right sidebar that will show my Twitter updates.

In addition to text blogging, I'm also going to be doing audio blogging. Jott allows posts of up to 30 seconds. Not only do they provide the audio, but they also convert it to text. I wonder what they'll think I'm saying at 3 AM. I've also signed up with GabCast for longer audio updates. I haven't had a chance to do any testing with it.

Anybody have any suggestions on other services I should check out? I have a basic cell phone so there's not much I can do on it.

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:33:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Sunday, April 06, 2008

RAAM Finisher Randy Van Zee Killed

Former Race Across America Director, Jim Pitre, posted the sad news to the RAAM Yahoo Group that Randy Van Zee was killed yesterday while riding his bike. He was struck and killed instantly by a vehicle from behind as he was riding west into the setting sun near his home last evening.

Randy is survived by his wife, Denise and family in Sheldon, IA. A funeral is planned Tuesday afternoon April 8th at Vander Ploeg funeral home in Sheldon. My prayers are with his family.

In 2004 Randy finished RAAM even though he had crashed and couldn't get on or off is bike by himself. After finishing RAAM, he went to the hospital and found out that he had a broken pelvis. In 2006, the year I attempted RAAM, he was planning to race again but a training accident kept him from racing.

Quote from Danny Chews comments in 2004 from the UMCA website.
The last finisher in the solo race was 52-year-old Randy Van Zee of Sheldon, IA. He finished in eighth place (second night time solo finisher) on Friday morning at 2:40 a.m. with a time of 11:16:26 over eight hours behind Moonen.

Riders have to finish in less than 12 days and 2 hours to be official, i.e., by noon, Friday, July 2. Randy had over nine hours to spare. He had the classic solo RAAM finish - exhausted with failed neck muscles and terribly swollen feet and ankles; he had to be helped off his bicycle by crewmembers. Having an all rookie crew with just two minivans, he slept on cement at times. Waking up at 4 a.m. to ride before work every day in training finally paid off, though he said, "I never trained enough for RAAM." When his neck gave out on him in New Mexico, he had to start wearing an Allen Larsen-inspired neck brace. His friends made it after they watched Larsen's RAAM videotape. Two ladies he works with brought him this device and adjusted it on him. He crashed near Troy, OH, injured his groin and cracked his pelvis. Although he couldn't walk, he could still ride!

Randy's daughter Rachel lives in Germany and flew to Atlantic City to see her father finish. Her husband Chris (serving the USA in Iraq) learned by e-mail of Randy's finish. Standing very proudly on the Boardwalk, Randy said, "If you can do RAAM, you can do anything." So how can a 52-year old, full time worker and grandfather finish RAAM while other much younger men training full time have to drop out? The difference has to be in attitude. Van Zee had an iron-willed desire to make it to the finish line regardless of whatever obstacles were thrown into his way. When his neck muscles gave out in New Mexico, he could have thrown in the towel. When his feet and ankles became painfully swollen, he could have checked into some hospital and had a doctor tell him things will only get worse if he keeps riding, but he didn't. My vote for the Ian Sandbach inspiration award would have clearly gone to Randy Van Zee, but then the award couldn't have been handed out at the awards banquet on Wednesday evening. So I hereby create a new award called Chew's Most Tired Award given to the solo rider who finishes looking the most exhausted/beaten-up thus embodying the true spirit of RAAM. Few people got to see Randy finish in the wee hours of the morning that night (many officials, media people, riders, and crew had already left for home), but those who did will forever remember Van Zee's courageous/heroic finish. His neck muscles will heal and the swelling of his feet and ankles will go down, but his finish will never be forgotten. Randy became the 169th person (including unofficial fin ishers) to finish solo RAAM - a number far less than those people who have climbed to the top of Mt. Everest.

"Van Zee had an iron-willed desire to make it to the finish line."

Related Links: Randy Van Zee Out of RAAM | Outside Magazine Article on Bob Breedlove

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posted by UltraRob @ 4:22:00 PM   6 comments links to this post

Tuesday, March 18, 2008

Crew Needed for 2008 Solo Race Across America

UltraRob Riding in Utah, 2006 Race across America

As much as I'd like to say I've secretly been training for the Race Across America, I haven't been. I'm far from that kind of fitness but I still plan to be a part of the race this year.

Last year I had planned to crew for David Holt's rookie RAAM attempt. Unfortunately some physical problems during training caused him to cancel a couple months before. He's been training hard this winter and is ready to do it this year.

He still needs a couple more people to crew for him in order to do it. Of course he prefers someone he has been involved with RAAM or at least a qualifier but that's not necessary. Being able to function with a small amount of sleep, sit in a van for longs hours and deal with the unexpected is. If this sounds interesting, leave a comment or send an e-mail.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:12:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Monday, December 17, 2007

Correction and More on Spinning Record

The article I found on Saturday had that John "Blue Dog" Jurczynski and Mike "Mad Dog" Gallagher had ridden 112 hours. John replied to my post on the ultracycling list to let me know it was actually 113 hours.

I had said I could imagine doing the Race Across America but I couldn't imagine spending 4.5 days spinning in one spot. John replied spinning 113 hours was much easier than doing RAAM. He said, "It is like a slumber party on wheels."

Some more articles

Related Links: Spinning Again for a Guinness World Record | John Jurczynski's ride last year

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:29:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Saturday, December 15, 2007

New Spinning Record Set at 113 Hours!

John "Blue Dog" Jurczynski and Mike "Mad Dog" Gallagher have set a new spinning record of 113 hours! Jurczynski said Thursday was a hard night for him but as they got close to the record he felt good. Near the end Gallagher said he felt like he could go for another 10 hours.

The Guinness rules allow a 5 minute break every hour and the time can be saved up for a few hours to give enough time for a nap. That makes for a total of 2 hours a day off the bike which means some serious sleep deprevation over 4 days.

They both deserve big congratulations on breaking a tough record. Although it was physically tough, it had to be even tougher mentally.

I always feel like I'm working much harder on a trainer than I do when I'm riding outside. I once did 5 hours on a trainer and even that was tough mentally. I've thought of riding for 24 hours at the local 24 Hour Fitness as a fundraiser to raise money to attempt the Race Across America again. Even that seems pretty brutal. There's an easier way for you to help me raise money to do RAAM again.

Update: The first article I found incorrectly had that John and Mike had ridden for 112 hours instead of 113 hours.

Related Links: The Citizen of Laconia article | Spinning Again for a Guinness World Record

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:58:00 AM   3 comments links to this post

Friday, December 14, 2007

Spinning Record Update

I haven't been able to find much this week on John "Blue Dog" Jurczynski and Mike "Mad Dog" Gallagher attempt to break the Guinness spinning record. I did find an article written on Tuesday from the local Laconia paper. According to that article, they were still trying to get enough people to satisfy Guinness' witness requirements.

They need to ride until 8:17 PM EST tonight to break the record. They have said they want to break it by a good margin but won't reveal by how much until the match the record. The Laconia Athletic & Swim Club have posted some pictures of Cycle Mania 2007 that show John and Mike riding. Hopefully they're still riding and will keep going for a little longer. Although I can see riding that much out on the road, I really don't think I could do it on a spin bike.

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:08:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Flood Relief Donation Matching by STP Organizer

Cascade Bicycle Club, organizers of the Seattle to Portland double century,is pledging $2,500 in matching funds for flood relief through the Centralia United Way. Cities along the STP route sustained heavy flood damage from last week's rains. Biking Bis will donate $5 for each of the first 20 bloggers to link to his post with more details.

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posted by UltraRob @ 12:18:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Monday, December 10, 2007

Spinning Again for a Guinness World Record



Last January George Hood rode an indoor bike for 85 straight hours in an attempt to set a new Guinness World Record. It seems that his record keeping wasn't good enough for it to be recognized by Guinness. He raised some money for an Illinois police group so it wasn't totally wasted effort.

The week after George's ride, John Jurczynski was planning to ride for 50 hours to raise money for the American Diabetes Association while he was training for the Race Across America. He decided to try going longer than 85 hours. He ended up doing 87 hours. Since he decided to go for the record at the last minute, John wasn't even sure what the rules were and figured it would be unofficial and it was.

In April Pete Masie and Wendy Gardiner both rode for 96 hours, 4 minutes and 8 seconds during training for RAAM as a 2 person team. I'm not sure if their ride was ever recognized by Guinness.

George Hood didn't let his defeat in January get him down and in July he rode for 111 hours, 11 minutes and 11 seconds. His goal was to ride long enough that the record would be his for a long time.

John JurczynskiJohn "Blue Dog" Jurczynski finished RAAM solo last year and now he wants the Guinness World Record to be his officially. Along with Mike "Mad Dog" Gallagher, John started riding at 5 AM this morning at the Laconia Athletic & Swim Club as part of LASC's 5th annual Cycle Mania fund raiser for needy children in New Hampshire. There will be relay teams riding along with John and Mike. Check out John's website for more information and links to a couple promotional videos. Hopefully there will be some updates throughout the next few days.

Related Link: John Jurczynski's ride last year

Update: New record set at 113 hours!

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:04:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Sunday, October 07, 2007

2007 Furnace Creek 508

2002 Furnace Creek 508

The Furnace Creek 508 is happening this weekend. It was where I first qualified for the Race Across America. The leaders should be well into Death Valley and shouldn't be far from the check point. The race splits are being updated throughout the race. Race pictures are also being uploaded.

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posted by UltraRob @ 12:46:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, October 05, 2007

Flat and Windy

Riding South of Ellicott, CO

Last Saturday I headed out for my long September ride. I really wished I was in shape to ride up to Cripple Creek since the aspen are turned now. Up to Cripple Creek and back hurts even when I'm in shape.

Instead I did the Ellicott/Hanover loop. It's a ride I do in the winter since it stays low and is generally warmer. It's certainly not what I call scenic.

Normally I go down to Fountain, go out to Hanover and then ride up to Ellicott. This time I did it in the opposite direction since possible rain showers were forecast for the afternoon there's no place to get shelter between Hanover and Ellicott and from Ellicott back into town.

It turned out I only got a few rain drops so rain wasn't a factor. My choice of direction left me battling a fierce headwind up to 65 mph the whole way down the Peyton highway where there's absolutely nothing to block it. From that point it would have been better to go my normal direction. Although if I had gone my normal direction, I may have been breathing smoke from a grass fire that broke out around Squirrel Creek when a hay truck caught on fire. I saw the plume of smoke when I looked back at one point but I hadn't seen anything when I went through that area.

The last part of my ride was to pick my girls up. I rode 7 miles with an empty trailer and 7 miles with them in it. Even with it empty, it's noticeable that it's more work. With both of them in it, I think it's close to 90 lbs so I really feel it.

I felt much better than I did on my long August Ride but was slightly slower even before I picked the girls up. I think it was because of the wind. I was out in the open when I had a headwind and cross wind and was more protected by trees when I did have a tailwind. Once I picked up the trailer, my average speed dropped even more.

Bike Ride Profile of Ellicott/Hanover LoopOnce didn't get a full 100 miles in but I got in the required 90 miles to count toward the UMCA Year Rounder. I got in 92.2 miles with 27.17 feet of climbing. It took me 7:09 of ride time.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:30:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Saturday, September 15, 2007

Hoodoo 500 Race This Weekend

Hoodoo 500Picture from Planet Ultra


The first Hoodoo 500 is going on this weekend. It's 519 miles in Utah with about 30,000 feet of climbing. When it was first announced, I was thinking of doing it. It's closer for me than a lot of the ultra road races and there's some great scenery. Of course I never got in shape this year and it's all I can do to make it through easy 100 mile rides.

The solo racers without a crew started at 5 AM this morning and racers with a crew started at 7 AM. Teams started at 11 AM. The standings are being updated regularly. The standings page also has links to pictures that are being updated throughout the event.

The course is of the caliber for Race Across America qualifiers. Planet Ultra told me that they had wanted it to be a RAAM qualifier but isn't because it was scheduled too close to the Furnace Creek 508. The UMCA has a rule stating
The UMCA will sanction one qualifier per section of the country / continent in a given season. No new qualifier will be sanctioned that would take place within approximately 1000 miles and two months of an existing qualifier.

I can understand the rule for all the other RAAM qualifiers. Most of them have 10 or fewer racers but the 508 has reached it's field limit the few years. I can't see that the 508 would be affected much by the Hoodoo 500 being a RAAM qualifier.

One thing that the Hoodoo 500 has done different from the RAAM qualfiers is to have a separate category for solo riders without a crew. The only RAAM qualifier that doesn't DQ somebody for riding during the night without a follow vehicle is the Adirondack 540. It is also this weekend. They don't have a separate category for riders without crews. When I did it in 2005, I know some riders doing less than the 4 lap RAAM qualifier were doing it without a crew but I think everyone doing the RAAM qualifier had a crew.

Although I think a race like this is doable without a crew, you certainly can't be as fast without a crew. I also haven't studied this race well enough to know how much water you'd need to get between places to get water. I know on some courses such as the 508 you would need to carry a lot of water at times.

I know people have mentioned to me that they would like to do something like a RAAM qualifier but either thought they couldn't get a crew together or couldn't afford a crew. It is expected that the rider will pay all crew expenses. By the time you pay for a hotel the night before and after the race plus travel expenses, even for a 3 person crew the costs can add up. I think it's great that Planet Ultra decided to give racers the option of doing it without a crew.

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posted by UltraRob @ 2:28:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Monday, July 23, 2007

2007 Race Across Oregon Results


Here are the results for the Race Across Oregon. Tom Letsinger, who crewed for me in the Race Across America last year, didn't finish but I haven't found out why.

Al Smudz35:30
Glenn Johnson39:05
Robert Buntrock40:12
Ryan Correy41:31
Bruce Carroll42:19
Adam Garmon44:22
Hugh GapayDNF
Tom LetsingerDNF
Ross MueckeDNF
Brian CushingDNF


When I did the Race Across Oregon in 2004 my time was 41:42. That was on a slightly shortened race because we finished at Government Camp instead of doing the last 6 miles up to Timberline Lodge. Actually a few miles have been taken out in other places but they were mostly flat. When the leaders we close to finishing, it was snowing so hard that George and Terri, the race organizers, felt it was unsafe to ride in. It would have been still rideable but it was a white-out and they were afraid someone would get hit by a car. I don't know what it was like up higher when I finished but it was barely above freezing and pouring down rain down lower.

Although I finished fast enough to qualify for RAAM for my 3rd time, I certainly didn't feel the race went well for me. We started in drizzle that turned into cold rain as we climbed near Mount Hood. I got a little chilled and apparently burned extra calories and started bonking a little over 100 miles into the race. I did recover from that fairly quickly as I got to where it was warm and dry. Then during the night I had sleep issues from some nasal spray. Trying to stay awake I created GI issues and several quick trips to the bushes. It then became too painful to sit on my saddle and I spent some crying by the road side of the road. My crew got me going again but I felt I was out of the race and I wasn't going very fast.

Near dark of the 2nd day I felt better and kicked it up a notch after Kelly Hegar passed me late in the race. I was able to pass him back and finished 11 minutes ahead of him. Coming off the last pass it was very dark and pouring down rain. It was in the mid 30s and I had on neoprene booties, winter tights and jacket, Gore-Tex helmet cover and winter gloves and I was still cold. Water was running everywhere but I didn't let it keep me from still going close to 50 mph.

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:29:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Saturday, July 21, 2007

Race Across Oregon is Underway

Race Across Oregon Neutral Start


The Race Across Oregon started this morning in Portland. It is a brutal 535 mile Race Across America qualifier. It's more a loop around Oregon than it is just across Oregon. After Chris Grealish did it in 2004, he said it should be called the Race up Every Climb in Oregon. It climbs over 40,000 feet in those 535 miles. I also raced it in 2004 and quite honestly it felt like more than 40,000 feet. A month before the race, I had ridden the course in 4 days and even then it felt like more than 40,000 feet of climbing. Not only does it have that much climbing but it finishes with a brutal climb to Timberline Lodge.

Standings at the time stations and some information about how the racers are doing is being posted on the website. A few pictures have also been posted.

Tom Letsinger from GVH Bikes is racing this year. He crewed for me in RAAM last year. Tom finished 3rd in the Ring of Fire last year with 342.2 miles in 24 hours. I believe that's the longest he's ridden before. Right now he's toward the back of the pack but it's still early in the race. In any case, just finishing the Race Across Oregon is a very tough task.

In 2004 I motioned my follow vehicle beside me around mile 340. I stopped and leaned against the vehicle and told my crew I couldn't continue. I then sat down and cried from the emotion of dropping out and the pain I was in.

I had some GI issues brought on by too much caffeine and sugar in an attempt to stay awake after some nasal spray made me sleepy. Several trips to the bushes had made it unbearable to sit on my saddle. After my crew let me cry beside the road for a few minutes, they coaxed me the 60 miles to Prineville which is the only town of any size on the course. There they were able to get some medicine that helped but I was still in pain. I did make it to the finish and qualified for RAAM for the 3rd consecutive year. I have now qualified 4 times and the Race Across Oregon was by far the toughest qualifier for me.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:21:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Tuesday, June 26, 2007

Help Me Do the Race Across America Again


There's a lot that goes into doing the Race Across America. The long hours of training, making a nutrition plan, convincing at least 6 people to take 12 days to cross the country and the list goes on. One of the hardest things if you're not a top rider is coming up with enough money. I think even the top riders struggle with getting sponsors.

When I did RAAM last year, I didn't do very well getting enough sponsors. A big thanks goes out to the sponsors I did have. I ended up spending a lot of my own money to make RAAM happen for me. Money is the biggest factor as to when I attempt RAAM again. Time to train is another factor but that can be helped with enough money.

There's an easy way you can help me get the money to do RAAM again. It won't cost you any extra and it might even save you some money. At the top of this page there is a cycling and outdoor gear search box. I have over 150,000 product entries from over 40 cycling and outdoor gear stores. They include companies like Price Point, Performance Bike, Bike Nashbar, Jenson USA and I'm working on adding more. Each time you make a purchase, I get a commission and I'll use it to do RAAM or maybe I'll make a detour along the way and do the Great Divide Race.

You can also help by linking to my cycling and outdoor gear search page if you have a blog or website. Even if you don't have a lot of traffic, it still helps for you to link because search engines rank sites with more links higher. Thanks for helping me continue to pursue my dreams.

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posted by UltraRob @ 12:39:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Sunday, June 24, 2007

2007 Race Across America is Finished

The Race Across America was officially over Friday afternoon. There were 5 guys that I thought were going to have a tough time making the time cut-off. They all made it except 2 hours and 45 minutes of time penalties pushed Patrick Autissier 34 minutes over the limit. He was still counted as an official finisher and I think he deserved it.

This year the time cut-off was 3 hours longer than it's been the last several years. 4 racers were over the old time limit. In the early years of RAAM, the time cut-off was 48 hours after the winner. 13 racers this year were over that. Some old timers think that RAAM has become too easy. It may be easier to get an official finish but it's still far from being easy.

David Jones dropped out of RAAM last year after he was blown off his bike in the wind storm in Eastern Colorado and Kansas. This year he came back and finished a few hours before the time cut-off to set a new record in the 60+ category. He's not quite as old as Fred Boethling was last year so Fred still is the oldest RAAM finisher although he was a couple hours over the time limit.

Another rider to finish with just a couple hours to spare was John Spurgeon. The impressive thing about him was he did the race on a single speed. He had one bike set up with a gear for climbing and another one with a gear for everything else. RAAM is hard enough with gears. I can't imagine doing with only 2 gears and shifting gears required switching bikes.

Kerry White was the last of 5 women to official DNF this year. The diabetic from Vail, Colorado continued on and finished around 1:30 PM on Saturday. She had the most cheering of any finisher when she made it to the boardwalk. Some pictures of her on the boardwalk have been posted on the RAAM website.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:39:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Race Across America 2006 Day 9 Memories

Meeting with Mike and Cindy Roark, Race Across America 2006
Last year at my sleep break in Jefferson City, I didn't sleep very well. It seemed like light was flickering in my hotel room. My wife did say there was something strange about the hall lights so maybe I wasn't totally losing it. However, I did think my crew had snuck in and were laying on the floor on the other side of the 2nd bed. I went so far as turning on the light and checking only to find there was no one in the room.

After a way too short 90 minutes, my crew came and got me up. I had really wanted a 3 hour sleep break but had been too tired to argue about it. When I was ready to leave the time station, Fred Boethling's son said his dad had just left. He encouraged me on and said they were going to try to figure out how they could meet up to have their massage therapist see what she could do for me. Once again this mandatory time off the bike time station didn't fall at a very good time. I had stopped at dusk and was leaving around 11:30 PM meaning I'd be riding during the time it's always the hardest for me to stay awake.

On the straight sections, I could see the flashing lights from Fred's follow vehicle. It should have motivated me. I was tired and in a bad mood and I just couldn't chase. I just wanted to go back to bed.

A short nap improved things slightly but not enough. My IT band was really bothering me and in general I was feeling really off. Although it was mostly flat to the next time station there where a couple sections of short, steep climbs. I ended up walking a couple times.

I got to the point I just couldn't stay awake. I kept falling asleep. I'm not talking about just zoned out but eyes shut and completely out. I've fallen asleep on the bike before and it's much more likely to happen on downhill sections. Although it was obvious to my crew that I was asleep because I was weaving all over the road, I continued to pedal and go about the same speed. They'd wake me with the two way radio. I'd stay awake long enough to get back in the middle of the lane and then I'd go right back to sleep. After about an hour of that, they stopped me for a 30 minute nap.

Marthasville Time Station, Race Across America 2006After the nap I stayed awake and it soon got light. I still was having trouble getting my legs to work and my IT band was really bothering me. At the time station in Marthasville, MO, Tom worked on my legs for a while. He didn't have any massage therapist training but he did the best on working my legs out after Pog left was planned at Trinidad, CO.

Even after Tom worked on my legs, I just couldn't seem to get them to work. The day before I had taken quite a bit of caffeine to keep moving to make it to Jefferson City in time. Normally I try to take only a little caffeine but I had needed to keep moving and was struggling with staying awake. My legs were feeling like they'd felt in the past after getting really dehydrated.

Even if I was riding fairly well, it was going to be tough making it to the time cut-off in Indianapolis the next morning. I had ridden almost 800 miles over 4 days since I had started having trouble with my leg. Before that I had averaged about 280 miles a day. Not only was a riding slower, but I was spending a lot more time off the bike even though I was sleeping less.

I finally made up my mind. It was over. There was no way I would be an official finisher and I didn't think I could make it unofficially to Atlantic City. I was about 40 miles from the Mississippi and wanted to end my race there.

Discussing Dropping Out, Race Across America 2006Emotionally I had gone through dropping out 2 days earlier while I was still in Kansas. Now actually making the decision was more of a relief. Now I neededt to break the news to my crew. They were committed to getting me all the way. My wife was in the follow van so I told the crew we needed to find a spot to stop and let me go for a walk with my wife. When I told her, she supported my decision although it was hard for her. She really did want me to make it all the way but she knew what I was going through.

We told the rest of the crew that I was dropping out once I made it to the Mississippi. They really wanted me to continue on and thought maybe the officials would be lenient with me at Indianapolis. At RAAM headquarters they had noted the day before that I was making better progress. Unfortunately that better progress had taken it's toll on me.

As I rode on toward the Mississippi, the crew called RAAM HQ to discuss what our options were. They said that officials Mike and Cindy Roark were in the area and they'd try getting them to meet us at the Mississippi. They ended up catching up to us about 20 miles before we got there.

It's Over, Race Across America 2006We stopped and I told them how I was feeling. They said that in theory I could make it to Indianapolis before the time cut-off if I didn't sleep much. With the way I'd been having trouble staying awake and my leg injury, they felt I was making a smart decision to drop out. Once we got the decision out of the way, we talked for nearly an hour before I continued on to the Mississippi.

Mississippi RiverAfter 20 years of dreaming of doing the Race Across America, I had given it my best shot. My crew had done everything they knew to do for me. Unfortunately I didn't make it all the way. The first 4 days had been better than I had ever imagined. The next 4 days where extremely tough but I had kept going. Even many riders that have gone on to finish well at RAAM, didn't finish or make it as far as I did on their first attempt. I hope to be able to try again sometime and make it all the way.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:33:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Race Across America Day 12

There's about 17 hours before the finish line cut-off for the 2007 Race Across America. There are still 10 men trying to make it to the finish line in time. Some have willing minds but unwilling bodies. I know that feeling all too well.

Yesterday when I wrote that it would be hard for Richard Vollebregt to catch Attila Kaldy, I hadn't checked the time penalties. It turned out Kaldy had 4 penalties for 2 hours and 30 minutes. Vollebregt only had 1 for 15 minutes. The amount of time given for a penalty isn't determined by what rule was broken but by how many previous penalties the rider had. The first penalty is 15 minutes and they keep being 15 minutes longer. Six penalties results in a DNF.

Rookie Jeff Oatley from Alaska crossed the finish line this morning in 7th place to be the first American finisher this year.

It looks like David Jones will be close to the cut-off but he currently is on pace to break the 60+ record by about 3 1/2 hours.

Although Kerry White didn't make the Indianapolis time cut-off, she has continued to ride. There were so many e-mails about here that she's being tracked unofficially. The last update showed her in Grafton, West Virginia.

This is Alessandro Colo 3rd attempt at the Race Across America. In 2004 he dropped out 1,191 miles into the race from saddle sores. That year I had ridden with him on a 4 day pre-ride of the Race Across Oregon course. He then did the Race Across Oregon only 2 weeks before RAAM. It didn't seem like a good idea. I heard his butt was in pretty bad shape by the end of RAO so it didn't suprise me when he dropped out of RAAM. In 2005 he made it to Pratt, Kansas. I never heard the whole story but it seemed to have to do with the hot weather, crew, and money problems.

Alessandro is now less than 110 miles from the finish and has been riding really well for the last day. It looks like he'll ride the 2nd half faster than the first half. This is very tough to do as they body gets tired and sleep deprevation kick in.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:52:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Race Across America 2006 Video



This is a video that Tom Stormcrowe but together last year of images he took while crewing for me in the Race Across America. The pictures and video are from the start to about the Colorado and Kansas border.

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:46:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Monday, June 18, 2007

Race Across America Day 9

Most years just over half of the solo Race Across America racers make it to the finish line. Amazingly nobody has dropped out in the last 24 hours. In the men's race, only 5 out of 25 races have dropped out. A few are very close to the time cut-off and are in danger of being cut from the race in Indianapolis. It still seems like a high finish rate is possible this year.

Jure Robic only has 110 miles left to Atlantic City. His closest competitor is over 100 miles behind. Unless something goes wrong, he'll probably be celebrating his 3rd Race Across America victory by the time I get out of bed in the morning. Wolfgang Fasching is still in 2nd place but Daniel Wyss and Gerhard Gulewicz are less than 2 hour behind so sleep breaks could determine who pulls off 2nd place. Fasching is said to be suffering but so are the other 2. Fasching has won three times so I believe he'll use his experience to hold onto 2nd place.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:46:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Latest Patty Riddle Updates

Patty Riddle is indeed continuing to ride across America even though she is officially out of the Race Across America. Updates are being posted on the Race Against Diabetes website. She's almost to Kansas. Here are the 2 latest updates.

Mon. 6/18, 6:00 am PDT: Patty called as she was about to leave Springfield, CO. She sounded good, and even answered questions coherently (—he: “Where are our passports so I can shortcut through Canada in Stage Two?” —she: “Same place they’ve always been, dummy.”). She also remembered that we both forgot to call her father on Happy Daddy’s Day—Happy Late Daddy’s Day, Chuck! Patty says her goal isn’t to break 50+/60+ records, it’s just to get to Atlantic City. Go Patty!

Sun. 6/17, 7:00 am PDT: Patty rode out of La Veta toward Trinidad, CO around 4:00 am RAAM time (1:00 am PDT). She was officially listed as DNF for the race last night so that RAAM could take its Time Stations down and keep its officials up the road with the other racers, but Patty immediately decided to keep riding on. (There’s been a lot of time on the bike for every option to be weighed—over and over . . . .) If she picks up time on the never-ending flats of the Midwest, she could still finish under the record time for 50+ and 60+ women—but that’s premature to think about, given the elements of weather, sleep deprivation, weather, stomach, weather, neck, weather, feet, weather, crotch, weather . . . and the fact that she has over 1,900 miles to go. Time for some tailwind, please! Go Patty!

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:23:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Sunday, June 17, 2007

Race Across America 2006 Day 8 Memories

Leaving El Dorado, KS, Race Across America 2006
After letting me sleep for 2 hours in El Dorado, KS, my crew got me up. Although it was late on Saturday afternoon, they had found a massage therapist that would give me a massage. They took me over to her and discussed how we only had 30 minutes for the massage. She insisted that she needed a full hour.

I dozed in and out but I could tell she was really good at finding tight spots and getting the muscle to release. After about 45 minutes, I could hear my crew getting anxious outside the massage room. I don't remember exactly but I think they knocked on the door and told her she needed to finish up. They started getting all my stuff ready to get me dressed and back on the bike.

When I started riding, the sun was about to go down. It was a nice evening with a tailwind. It still hurt to pedal but my leg felt much better. Maybe I still had a chance to finish.

Night Riding in Kansas, Race Across America 2006About an hour after leaving El Dorado, a RAAM vehicle passed and pulled off a short distance up the road. The official got out and I thought he was just watching me go by. My crew wasn't sure what he was doing. Soon he came flying by again and stopped just up the road. This time we could see he was frantically waving his arms so we pulled over. He said a tornado had been spotted in the town where the next time station was and they had closed the time station down. He said it was also raining hard. RAAM doesn't stop for any kind of weather but he wanted us to be aware of the tornado in case we got into any weird winds. Fortunately we just got another spectacular lightning display and a few sprinkles and wet roads.

Since I had to stop in El Dorado because of the mandatory Enduro category 2 hour stop, the plan was for me to ride through the night instead of taking an early morning sleep break. One of my criticisms of the mandatory stops was I might have to stop when I didn't need to and it would then throw my sleep pattern off. Durango had worked out OK although I would have slept in Cortez if Durango hadn't been a mandatory stop. It turned out I couldn't stay awake in the wee hours of the morning. We first tried a 10 minute nap but that didn't make a difference. Then I took a 15 minute nap which helped for about an hour. Then I couldn't stay awake again and ended up taking a 30 minute nap.

The morning brought the good news in I was finally out of Kansas and into Missouri. Mentally that was a boost. The only problem was that the Enduro category had another time cut-off at Jefferson City, MO. It was going to be tough for me to make it.

Trying to Get my SI Joint to Pop, Race Across America 2006Before too long, being in Missouri meant more hills. They were just rollers but they kept getting bigger. The worst thing was it hurt too much for me to stand up to get over the tops. It felt like something was binding in my left leg. I kept wanting to stop to stretch but my crew was trying to make sure I made the time cut-off. They did let me stop a few times. I considered riding slow enough to miss the cut-off so the pain would be over but I still had enough desire to finish that I kept doing my best. Nearly every time my crew had me pretzeled up on the side of the road, some local would stop and ask if everything was OK. Finally we got a big pop out of my hip. It made enough of a difference that I was able to stand up on the hills.

Through this section, a couple kept passing us and stopping to cheer me on. They were using my first name and the van only had my last name on it so they clearly had been keeping track of the race. Finally my crew stopped and talked to them. They had driven all the way from Texas to see RAAM. They were Fat Cyclist readers and had found my blog from one of his posts. It certainly was a boost to have someone cheering for me.

It was a hot day. Crawling up the hills in the Ozarks made it seem even hotter. In the desert we had used a sock filled with ice wrapped around my neck to cool me. In Missouri with the higher humidity, that just left me soaked without cooling a whole lot. Because my butt was raw and painful, I was wearing double shorts. That helped with the butt pain but it was making me too hot. I ended up going back to one pair of shorts. Going through the Ozarks, I did have one local cyclist ride beside me for a short ways which was nice.

The last 60 miles or so into Jefferson city was on a busy highway. I was hot and tired and the traffic noise was driving me crazy. I felt I was going to snap at any moment. I so badly wanted to get somewhere where it was quiet. In spite of the noise, I still managed to fall asleep a couple times.

My crew had told me that I had about 20 miles less to the time station than what the signs were saying to Jefferson City. I kept hoping that the time station was really just before Jefferson City. Finally my crew gave me the bad news. They had given me the wrong mileage and I had farther to go. Fortunately I had suspected that or I probably would have come unglued with them.

I kept looking at the time and knew I was barely going to make the time cut-off if I even did. I was getting pretty concerned and kept pushing myself. Strangely my crew didn't seem concerned even though it had been a big deal earlier in the day. I finally made it to the time station with 4 minutes left to the time cut-off. Only then did the crew tell me that they had found out that RAAM had decided not to make Jefferson City a time cut-off but they hadn't told me because they wanted me to keep pushing.

Jefferson City was the 3rd mandatory 2 hour stop for the Enduro category. It was early evening so again it wasn't an ideal time for me to stop but I was having trouble staying awake. One of the time station volunteers was a massage therapist and she agreed to give me a bit of a massage. Then it was time for 90 minutes of sleep.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:37:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Race Across America Day 8

On the 8th day of racing in the Race Across America, Jure Robic is continuing to build his lead. The three riders behind him are suffering. Wolfgang Fasching is holding on to 2nd place but Gerhard Gulewicz is close behind. Fasching is reported to be suffering from Shermer's neck and electrolyte problems. Maybe he doesn't know about Endurolytes. Shermer's neck is named after the original RAAM racer that had his neck muscles give out so he couldn't hold his head up. Last years winner, Daniel Wyss, has dropped to 4th place.

At the other end of the race, Lou Lamoureux and Patty Riddle were dropped from the race because of missing time cut-offs. Word is that Patty is continuing to ride unofficially.
Lou made it much farther this year than last year and gave all he had. He's riding with a donated kidney. There's a great post by someone on his crew about the experience.

Tom Seabourne missed the time cut-off in El Dorado by 4 hours and Kerry White missed it by 6 1/2 hours. They both were allowed to continue riding but Tom has since dropped out. He seemed to be moving really slow today. Kerry is the only woman left officially and has been able to pick her speed up slightly. She is a diabetic so another impressive effort by someone with an extra challenge.

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posted by UltraRob @ 7:07:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Saturday, June 16, 2007

Race Across America 2006 Day 7 Memories

Chatting with a Couple Local Riders, Race Across America 2006
Time for a Roadside Nap, Race Across America 2006After leaving Pratt, KS with only 30 minutes of sleep plus dozing a little while at the chiropractor, I struggled to stay awake. I feel asleep on the bike more than once. I always struggle to stay awake between 2 and 4 AM. I ended up taking a couple 10-15 minute naps to get me through to daylight.

Once it got daylight, staying awake wasn't as much of an issue. A bigger issue was I couldn't get any power out of my left leg. Mentally I was wanting to go but I just couldn't get my body to cooperate. I knew the race was over for me unless my condition improved drastically. It was very hard for me emotionally.

Talking to European Rider's Crew, Race Across America 2006A couple local cyclist that were out riding, made a U-turn and rode with me for a few minutes which was a big help. We stopped where the crew from an European rider was stopped. They didn't speak much English but where more than happy to see if they could help. They took me into their RV and do some massage. Unfortunately I couldn't tell a difference when I got back on the bike.

My wife wasn't in the follow car but I decided that when I got to the 2 hour mandatory stop in El Dorado, I'd discuss dropping out. When we got to El Dorado, things were a bit crazy. There was friction on the crew and my wife was upset.

We had started with 6 crew members which I think is the minimum that works well. One guy needed to leave the crew in Colorado and my wife would replace him. After Stormy left in Ulysses, the crew was down to 5. This made getting sleep tougher since we needed 3 crew in the follow vehicle. We had been on the road for most of a week and everybody was getting very tired.

I got all the crew together and told them they needed to not take things too personally. Everybody was doing their best but they were all sleep deprived. I then went to sleep without discussing my thoughts about dropping out.

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posted by UltraRob @ 11:09:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Michael Secrest Breaks 24 Hour Cycling Record

Michael Secrest broke his previous 24 hour cycling record by 1.11 miles with a total of 535.86 miles. Setting the 24 hour record is impressive enough by itself but he's 54 years old. He had trouble with asthma during the ride and there was some doubt he would be able to break the record but he still did. I know all too well what it feels like to ride with asthma.

Here's the press release from O2 Sports Media
MICHAEL SECREST BREAKS 24-HOUR WORLD RECORD

CARSON, Calif. -- 17 years to the day after commencing his unbroken transcontinental record ride, Michael Secrest proved himself once again as one of the toughest, most enduring, cyclists on the planet by overcoming a bout of exercise induced asthma to break his own 24-hour indoor unpaced world record with a mark of 535.86 miles, at the ADT Event Center Velodrome in Carson, California, June 16.

The existing record stood at 534.75 miles, which Secrest set at this venue in October 2006, but which he felt he could significantly surpass this time around.

Yet the breathing difficulties that arose for Secrest made the outcome a greater challenge, and at times uncertain. Even though he was riding more than fast enough, for several hours bystanders were far from convinced that he would finish the ride, because his breathing was so labored.

"If my physiologist wouldn't have had an asthma aspirator with him, the r ide would've been over," said Secrest at the finish. He added, "It was a stroke of divine intervention! Last time I had excercise induced asthma was in 1987, when I won the (Race Across America)."

After that race, Secrest starred in a television commercial for Primatene, whose asthma products he'd used to enable him to finish.

Exercise physiologist Frank J. Fedel, of East Michigan University, was amazed to see Secrest push through his difficulties at the ADT Velodrome. "The labored breathing continued for several hours, starting at about 10:30 last night. It didn't let up until about 6:30 in the morning. I couldn't believe he kept going. His breathing sounded like a freight train, you could hear him from all the way across the track. It's lucky I happened to have an asthma kit with me - which I was carrying for my own use."

For Secrest, this was a ride of which he was particularly glad to see the end. "World records don't come easy, but I think t h at must be one of the toughest world records that anyone has witnessed," he said.

The determination showed by Secrest in successfully completing his task underlines the principles of the 54 years-old Scottsdale resident, who says his role is to inspire others to set goals, to not give up, and be true to themselves.

Secrest has established a program called Ride Your Bike to School, which combats childhood obesity, and one of the purposes of this world record ride is to draw attention to this program. More information about it is available at www.theguyonthebike.com.

Fittingly, a group of school-age children showed up at the arena in the final hour of the ride. Entertained and inspired by the vision of a world record being created there in front of them, the children started cheering wildly as he went past the existing mark, some four minutes from the end.

Secrest is arguably the strongest US cyclist never to have ridden in the Tour de France. After an epic batt le with America's first Tour de France rider, Jock Boyer, in the 1985 Race Across America, Jim Ochowicz, head of the 7-Eleven team, did consider Secrest for a place on the Le Tour team, but time constraints prevented it.

Since then, with a prodigious talent for ultra-endurance cycling, Secrest has focused on covering distances in a single day that would make most pro cyclists curl up their toes.

He has now set four 24-hour world records in three decades. In 1985 he rode 516.2 miles. In 1996 he went 532.74 miles, then last year raised it to 534.75 miles. Today's mark of 535.86 miles was run at an average speed of 22.32 mph.

Experts cannot find another athlete that has achieved the feat of setting bona fide world records in three consecutive decades at the same distance.

Other notable achievements by Secrest include riding 1,216 miles in 24 hours in 1990, on a motor speedway pacing behind a truck. Also, he holds the North American transcontinental record of 2,916 mil e s in 7 days, 23 hours, 16 minutes. That was on the open road with towns, stop signs and stop lights to slow his effort.

Who: Michael Secrest
What: Cycling - successful attempt on the 24-hour indoor unpaced world record. Covered 535.86 miles, average speed 22.32 mph.
Where: ADT Velodrome, Carson, California
When: Started 8:35 a.m. PDT, June 15, 2007, finished 8:35 a.m. PDT, June 16, 2007
Why: To raise awareness for the Ride Your Bike to School program, which is intended to combat childhood obesity. Also, Secrest believes he was under-geared in his October 2006 effort and can go considerably faster
Website: www.theguyonthebike.com

ANALYSIS (Courtesy, Chris Kostman www.adventurecorps.com)

Hour 1 avg: 24.7mph (vs 23.456)
Hour 2 avg: 24:544 (vs 23.612)
Hour 3 avg: 24.544 (yes, the same!) (vs 23.353)
Hour 4 avg: 24.47 (vs 23.340)
100 Miles: 4:05:18 elapsed time
Hour 5 avg: 24.40 (vs 23.075)
Hour 6 avg: 24.35 (vs 23.353)
Hour 7 avg: 24.3 (vs 23.367)
Hour 8 avg: 24.21 (vs 23.320)
200 Miles: 8: 8:16:14 elapsed time
Hour 9 avg: 24.13 (vs 23.180)
Hour 10 avg: 24.047 (vs 23.161)
Hour 11 avg: 23.78 (vs 23.117)
Hour 12 avg: 23.62 (vs 23.107)
300 Miles: 12:43:41 elapsed time
Hour 13 avg: 23.55 (vs 23.074)
Hour 14 avg: 23.42 (vs 23.035)
Hour 15 avg: 23.32 (vs 22.990)
Hour 16 avg: 23.23 (vs 22.94)
Hour 17 avg: 23.12 (vs 22.39)
400 Miles: 17:20 elapsed time (2575 laps)
Hour 18 avg: 23.01 (vs 22.85)
Hour 19 avg: 22.88 (vs 22.794)
Hour 20 avg: 22.75 (vs 22.742)
Hour 21 avg: 22.61 (vs 22.687)
Hour 22 avg: 22.50 (vs 22.525)
500 Miles: 22:14:34 (3219 laps)
Hour 23 avg: 22:409 (vs 22:403 - he got back ahead of last year's average with this hour)

Hour 24 avg: 22.327 (vs 22.28)
Total Miles for 24 hours: 535.868 miles


For point of comparison, at hour 8 last October, Michael's average was 23.32 and he's been 1mph or more faster than last year in each of the first seven hours this time around, so he has some miles in the bank. At hour 12 last October, Michael's average was 23.107, so he was still "comfortably" ahead of his record pace. At hour 16 last October, Michael's average was 22.94, so he's still ahead of last year at hour 16.. As of hour 20 this year, Michael hit the same average as last year at hour 20. Then, with hour 21 and hour 22, he has fallen below last year's average for those hours. He has extra miles "in the bank" due to his faster start this year, but it is all coming down to his finishing push. In hour 23 he accelerated back above last year's pace.



Gearing this time: 55x15 (fixed gear) - Changed to 55x16 at 10:47 elapsed time.


Gearing last October: 54x15 (fixed gear)


Cadence range: 78-80 rpm (later it was 77 to 85, after he changed his gear)
--CK

Media contact: Paul Skilbeck, O2 Sports Media, tel. 415-516-1444 em. pskilbeck@o2sm.com

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posted by UltraRob @ 6:20:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Race Across America Day 7

With the Race Across America in it's 7th day, Jure Robic has extended his lead over Wolfgang Fasching to 100 miles. Daniel Wyss is in 3rd place, a 150 miles behind Robic. Although there still is a lot of racing left, it will be hard for anyone to catch Robic unless he has a total melt down. He's won twice before so the chance of that seems slim. Robic has now ridden over 2237 miles which is more than the Tour de France riders do in 3 weeks.

Of the 5 women that started, only Kerry White is officially left. Lauren Fithian and Caroline van den Bulk have dropped out since they won't be able to make the time cut-off in El Dorado, KS. Patty Riddle seems to still be riding in central Colorado.

Lou Lamoureux is still riding near the Colorado and Kansas border although he won't make the time cut-off in El Dorado. Tom Seabourne also doesn't seem to chance at making the time cut-off and a couple others will be close.

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posted by UltraRob @ 1:19:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, June 15, 2007

Race Across America 2006 Day 6 Memories

Stretching, Race Across America 2006
When my crew woke me up in Ulysses, KS, they hadn't found anyone that thought the could help with my SI joint and IT band problem. It was still dark and we decided the best thing was to keep trying to make progress. We thought maybe we could find a chiropractor in another town once it was business hours.

I began riding and I certainly wasn't any better than before my sleep break. I think I made it about 15 miles down the road before I couldn't get through a pedal stroke. RAAM rules allow a rider to be shuttled somewhere as long as they start riding where they stopped. I was shuttled back to Ulysses and went back to sleep while my crew figured out what to do.

They again got a hold of my doctor. He checked into what doctors were in Ulysses and contacted another D.O. He was able to get the doctor to see me before his scheduled patients so we showed up as the staff was getting there. Unfortunately, even though he was a D.O., he didn't to manipulative treatment. He really had no clue what to do for me other than giving me a shot so I wouldn't feel the pain. We decided against that option. He did know a chiropractor in town that my crew hadn't been able to find in the phone book. He called the chiropractor and arranged an urgent visit.

The chiropractor evaluated me and said that my pelvis had rotated. Most likely it was from the cross-wind and leaning my bike over hour after hour to stay upright. He began adjusting me. He was a little strange and did some chanting but he was doing things that other chiropractors had done so I figured he knew what he was doing.

While this was all taking place, some of the crew were talking and Tom Stormcrowe, who we called Stormy, decided that it was best that he leave the crew and get home. He had diabetes and the crazy hours and bad food was causing blood sugar problems. He felt that was why we had a scary moment the day before. In eastern Colorado he had fallen asleep while driving the follow van. His foot went heavy on the gas and the van came at me at full speed. Fortunately my wife screamed and he swerved and came beside me in the ditch. In my sleep deprived state I don't think it totally sunk in what had just had just happened but it did enough to freak me out.

After the medical help and the loss of a few hours, I was shuttled back out to where I had stopped riding. My hip felt much better but I had a knot the size of a golf ball in my IT band and it still bothered me. I was however able to make progress although not as fast as I wanted. I had to stop fairly often to stretch.

About dark it started really raining with a lot of lightning. The lightning was to close for comfort but I was less than a mile from a time station where I could get credit for time off the bike so my crew pushed me on. At the time station, I got an unplanned 15 minute nap until the lightning stopped. I then started riding again and rode in the rain for a couple hours. There's a picture of me leaving the time station in the rain in the RAAM picture gallery.

I wasn't too happy riding in the rain since I was already dealing with the pain of my leg. I was also going into a head wind and I thought if I let the storm get ahead of me the wind might not be so bad. My crew kept pushing me on because the chiropractor we had seen in the morning and contacted a chiropractor in Pratt, KS. My crew had told the chiropractor in Pratt that it would be at least midnight when we got there. He gave them his cell number and said it didn't matter when we got there as he lived a couple blocks from his office.

We ended up getting to Pratt at 1:30 AM local time. Pratt is known in the RAAM world for the McDonalds that is always the time station and riders and their crew can order anything and get it free. My crew had gotten me a chicken sandwich minus the sauce at my request. I was doing a mostly liquid diet with some fruit, crackers and pretzels. I was going to off the bike going to the chiropractor so I felt having something more in my stomach would be fine.

The chiropractor spent a while adjusting me. He thought I was going to be alright and that the IT band would take care of itself with everything back in alignment. He refused payment and had brought his camera and just wanted a picture with somebody that would do something like RAAM.

After the chiropractor visit, it was time to get a 30 minute nap in the McDonalds parking lot before continuing to ride. I was only 2 time stations away from a mandatory 2 hour stop in El Dorado, KS.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:57:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Race Across America Day 6

Riding in Kansas, Race Across America 2006
The 2007 Race Across America is now into it's 6th day. Jure Robic has continued to build his lead at the front and now has nearly a 5 hour lead over Wolfgang Fasching. It's still over a 1,000 miles for them so anything could happen. According to a report on the RAAM website, Robic has had only 6 hours of sleep so far.

So far today, there haven't been any more DNFs. Even Patty Riddle continues to ride even though she's only made it to Pagosa Springs and can't have any hope of an official finish. Lou Lamoureux is staying positive even though it'll be tough for him to make the time cut off in El Dorado, KS. He's also in need of more crew so if you need something to do for the next several days, you should give him a hand.

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:54:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

24 Hour Cycling Record Attempt

Michael Secrest 24 Hour Cycling Record
Picture from ultracycling.com

Last October Michael Secrest rode 534.75 miles in 24 hours to set a new record. Two weeks earlier Samuel Nagel had ridden 7.64 miles farther but was given 45 minutes of penalties and had 16.95 miles subtracted. Right now Secrest is back at the ADT Event Center Velodrome attempting to break his October record.

John Hughes posted on the new Google ultra cycling list that Secrest had planned on going to track in Moscow.
"A 250 meter track beats the hell out of you. If anyone wants to have a shot a my 24-hour marks, it would be wise to go to a bigger track." On a 250 M track the rider spends more time in the steeper banking, more G-force on the body and more pressure on the perineum and soles of the feet.

Mike said his next event would be on the 333.33 M track in Moscow - 500 miles!

Due to the logistical problems of getting crew and officials to Moscow Mike decided to race again on the same track. I talked with him a few days ago and he feels ready - he's spent more time strengthening his neck and shoulder muscles to deal with 24-hours in the aero position.


I also received a press release on the attempt from O2 Sports Media.

BABY BOOMER MICHAEL SECREST AIMS TO PEDAL 550 MILES IN 24 HOURS

SCOTTSDALE, Ariz. (June 14, 2007) -- At the age of 54 years old, bicycle racer Michael Secrest, of Scottsdale, Ariz. shows no signs of slowing down. In fact, starting at 7.30 a.m. June 15, at the ADT Velodrome in Carson, California, he intends to go more than 15 miles farther than his existing 24-hour world record mark of 534.75 miles, set in October 2006.

"I'm here to inspire others to set goals, don't give up, and be true to themselves." Says Secrest, who has established a program called Ride Your Bike to School, and hopes to combat childhood obesity by traveling to schools around the country and inspiring children to be more active. Information about this program is available at www.theguyonthebike.com.

Secrest is arguably the strongest US cyclist never to have ridden in the Tour de France. After an epic battle with America's first Tour de France rider, Jock Boyer, in the 1985 Race Across America, Jim Ochowicz, head of the 7-Eleven team, did consider Secrest for a place on the Le Tour team, but time constraints prevented it.

Since then, with a prodigious talent for ultra-endurance cycling, Secrest has focused on covering distances in a single day that would make most pro cyclists curl up their toes.

He has now set three 24-hour world records in consecutive decades. In 1985 he rode 516.2 miles. In 1996 he went 532.74 miles, then last year raised it to 534.75 miles. That is an average speed of 22.28 mph!

Experts cannot find another athlete that has achieved the feat of setting bona fide world records in three consecutive decades at the same distance.

Other notable achievements by Secrest include riding 1,216 miles in 24 hours in 1990, on a motor speedway pacing behind a truck. Also, he holds the North American transcontinental record of 2,916 miles in 7 days, 23 hours, 16 minutes. That was on the open road with towns, stop signs and stop light s to slow his effort.

To Frank J. Fedel, an exercise physiologist at East Michigan University and Secrest's coach, Michael Secrest is a phenomenon. "People look at Michael's lab test results and say it shouldn't be possible for him to ride as fast as he does. It seems to me he has a powerful belief system, he's remarkably tough mentally. He has the ability to ride at a greater percentage of his threshold for an extended period than any other cyclist I have seen. It truly is inspiring to see what he can do, and it is a lesson to the common man that we can do a lot more than we realize we are capable of."

Who: Michael Secrest
What: Cycling: attempt on the 24-hour indoor unpaced world record
Where: ADT Velodrome, Carson, California
When: Starts 7:30 a.m. PDT, June 15, 2007
Why: To raise awareness for the Ride Your Bike to School program, which is intended to combat childhood obesity. Also, Secrest believes he was under-geared in his October 2006 effort and can go considerably faster

HI RESOLUTION IMAGES AVAILABLE ON REQUEST

Contact: Paul Skilbeck, O2 Sports Media, tel. 415-516-1444 em. pskilbeck@o2sm.com

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:39:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Race Across America 2006 Day 5 Memories

Storm in Kansas, Race Across America 2006
When I got up from my sleep break in Trinidad in the Race Across America last year, things seemed to be going great for me. The last 2 days I had felt good and especially the day before when I rode from Durango to Trinidad. I had felt great and had a lot of fun most of the day. I had moved up to 4th place in the Enduro category. The mountains were behind me and although I was worried about boredom on the plains, I'm a big power rider so flats are good for me.

Family in Trinidad, Race Across America 2006I was only 90 miles from my home. My parents and in-laws had brought my girls down to see me. It was good to see them and they hung out with me while I got ready to ride. All too soon it was time to continue on.

Fire Started By Lightning, Race Across America 2006When I left Trinidad, there was a really strong wind but it was a tailwind so nothing to complain about. Then it became a cross-wind and then a head-wind and then back to a cross-wind. It then stayed a cross-wind hour after hour. I got used to tumbleweeds blowing across the road. I did get concerned though when I saw a couple bushes fly across. The wind was about 40 mph with much stronger gusts. I heard some gusts hit 100 mph. I think those were late in the afternoon when thunderstorms started moving through. At first there were only a few sprinkles with the thunderstorms but a lot of lightning. It was freaky because we kept seeing plumes of smoke from fires started by the lightning and fire trucks headed out to the fields.

Some racers got blown off their bikes. One abandoned from I think an injured shoulder from being blown off his bike. I didn't get blown off but a couple times I went from a third of the way into my traffic lane to almost off the wrong side of the road.

During the wind, the IT band in my left leg started hurting. I've had problems before and it's when the SI joint in my hip locks up. Sometimes it will pop and start working right again by crossing my leg over my chest and having someone push down on my leg while I try to push up. We kept trying but couldn't get it to pop. Shanna Armstrong's crew came by when my wife had me crunched up on the side of the road. A guy from France on her crew had some physical therapy training or something. We couldn't quite understand what but he offered to try helping. He worked on me for a few minutes. It helped but didn't get me to where I needed to be.

Riding Through the Night in Kansas, Race Across America 2006I kept trying to make as much progress down the road as possible but had to keep stopping and stretching. 11 o'clock at night my crew was able to get a hold of my doctor. They had me as much out of the wind as possible beside a grain elevator as the wind howled and lightning flashed all around. He's a D.O. and so he tried to help them with the technique for popping my SI joint. They never were able to get it to pop.

Through this section of Kansas, there were several nasty railroad crossings. They crossed at long angles to the road and had rough wood around them. In the darkness it was tough to choose a good spot to cross. On one of them, I lined up so I could cross at 90 degrees. Just as I got to it I got enough light to see that I was ready to go straight into a big hole where the wood had rotted out. I knew I would endo when my front wheel dropped in. I decided to turn back straight with the road which made a bad angle with the tracks. It was worse since the road was wet. It wasn't raining right then but had been. My front wheel slid on the first track and I went down. I knew there was a good chance I'd crash so I was ready for it. I was quickly back up and not even scraped up. My crew was very concerned and had made it out of the follow van and to me by the time I got up.

I arrived at the Ulysses, KS time station about 2:30 AM local time for a planned 3 hour sleep break. A quick check didn't turn up anybody with massage or chiropractic experience but my crew was going to see what they could come up with while I slept. I went to sleep a bit concerned but hoped things would work out when I got back up.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:07:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Race Across America Day 5

Riding in Eastern Colorado, Race Across America 2006
It is now Day 5 of the 2007 Race Across America. Yesterday saw the leaders finish riding across Colorado and well into Kansas. Robic is still leading and increasing his lead. He should be into Missouri soon after dark tonight. Solo racers are now scattered all the way from western Colorado to eastern Kansas.

Yesterday saw the first DNFs of the race. Hana Ebertova dropped citing exhaustion and Fabio Biasiolo from a medical issue. Walter Blaettler didn't pass any time stations after yesterday afternoon and today he was listed as a DNF from a vehicle accident. Latest report from the live updates on the Race Across America website says he was taken to a hospital and released so nothing too serious but enough to put him out of the race.

Lauren Fithian and Alessandro Colo passed through Cortez over half an hour after the official time cut off. I think adjusted for the staggered start it was around 10 minutes. With the teams still behind them and not being over the limit by much, I'm not surprised that they appear to have been allowed to continue. Lou Lamoureux came in nearly 11 hours over the limit. According to a post from his crew, he had been exhausted and was out of the race but he got energized and is back in the race. It will be very hard though for these racers to ride fast enough since everybody normally gets slower. Patty Riddle appears to still be riding and going through time stations although the next one is Cortez where she should have been yesterday.

I first became interested in RAAM about 20 years ago when I was 15 or 16. I began dreaming about doing it although for a long time I didn't think I'd ever actually do it. Once there was a website, I would keep close track of the race as it happened. This year I thought it would be pretty much the same.

After my DNF last year, I didn't think I'd be able to afford to do it again any time soon. There were other things I was interested in. I mentioned in a post a few months ago there was something else probably even harder than RAAM that I wanted to do. I started writing a post about it but things got crazy at work and that post is still just a draft. I thought I had moved on from RAAM but keeping track of the race the last few days has brought back so many memories. I'm not sure how I'll pull it off but I now really hope to be back to RAAM sooner than later.

I won't keep you wondering what else I'm interested in that I think is tougher than RAAM. It's the Great Divide Race. This year's race starts tomorrow. Text updates and audio updates will be posted as riders check in when they get places civilized enough to have a phone.

My friend Larry is planning on doing it next year. It would be great to do it at the same time he does. We could train and plan together. There's a lot that would have to come together for me to be able to do it next year. It would also mean longer before I'd get back to RAAM.

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posted by UltraRob @ 6:18:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

Race Across America Day 4

Climbing Wolf Creek Pass, Race Across America 2006
The 2007 Race Across America is into it's 4th day. The team racers started yesterday. The solo leaders made it through most of the Colorado mountains yesterday and will be headed across the southeastern plains of Colorado into Kansas today. Most of the racers will be riding the Colorado mountains today including Wolf Creek Pass which is the high point of the race at 10,850. You can get the current standings and the latest race news on the Race Across America website.

Unfortunately it looks like Lou Lamoureux, Hana Ebertova and Patty Riddle will be cut in Cortez. They have to reach it today before 2 PM race time which is always Eastern Daylight Time. Lou crashed out last year between Flagstaff and Tuba City so he has made it a little farther this year.

Last year I got to Durango just after it got light and took a sleep break. I was doing the Enduro division and we were required to stop for a minimum of 2 hours in Durango. After suffering in the desert, I was happy to be in Colorado. I knew exactly where I was and where I was going and it was cooler.

Shanna Armstrong, Race Across America 2006From Durango to the start of Wolf Creek, it's gently rolling and a good bit of the course is on a quiet back road. I was back and forth with Shanna Armstrong until she stopped to take a nap in Pagosa Springs. It was nice to have someone else in sight since most of the time I rarely saw any other riders.

Climbing Wolf Creek Pass, Race Across America 2006I had never ridden Wolf Creek Pass before but I think I've been over it in a car at least once in each of the last 20 years. Although it is a long climb, it's never really steep and the grade is very consistent making it easy to get into a groove. I just rode a comfortable pace and took my time and enjoyed being in the mountains where I felt at home. I also thought about the great decent that was waiting for me.

Once off the east side of Wolf Creek Pass, the route crosses the San Luis Valley. This area has some of the flattest and straightest roads in the state. After that it's up and over La Veta Pass. From the west, La Veta Pass is very gentle and doesn't climb a huge amount. It was even easier since I had a good tailwind. Next it's a descent down to the town of La Veta. It was a little past midnight local time when I arrived and I stopped for a 15 minute nap.

From La Veta, the route heads over Cucharas Pass. It's a hard climb and probably felt harder because I was doing it in the dark. Unlike Wolf Creek Pass, it also doesn't have a consistent grade. I was very happy to get to the top and get to descend. I was hitting 50 mph in the dark which added to the excitement. Fortunately Tom did a great of driving and keeping me in the headlights. I arrived in Trinidad at 6:30 AM local time and stopped for a much needed sleep break.

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:32:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Race Across America Day 3

Riding Near Utah/Colorado Border, Race Across America 2006
The Race Across America is now into it's 3rd day. Jure Robic and Wolfgang Fasching have been within a few minutes of each other for most of the time but Robic went through Cortez, CO 69 minutes ahead of Fasching. They are now 771 miles into the race.

Climbing the Yarnell Grade, Race Across America 2006Yesterday most of the racers had to deal with the heat of the desert although the leaders had made it to higher altitude before it got hot. Last year I hit the Yarnell grade early in the afternoon when it was really hot. The reward of all the climbing was cooler temperatures especially by the time I got close to Prescott, AZ.

Riding Through Monument Valley, Race Across America 2006This morning a lot of the riders were near Flagstaff, AZ. Although it can be warm during the day, the temperatures really drop at night. I think when I left there just before dawn after a sleep break last year, it was 39 degrees. It felt really cold after riding most of the day before with temperatures in the upper 90 through the desert. By afternoon it was back in the 90s as I rode through Monument Valley.

Climbing Wolf Creek Pass, Race Across America 2006The leaders will spend today riding through the mountains of Colorado while most of the other racers will be riding through the high altitude desert of the four corners region. By evening most of them should be headed into Colorado.

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:07:00 AM   2 comments links to this post

Sunday, June 10, 2007

2007 Solo Race Across America has Started

2006 Race Across America Solo Start
Danny Chew photo with Me at Race Across America Start Last Year


The solo Race Across America racers started this morning for Oceanside. It's hard to believe it's been a year since I lined up there. The temperatures shouldn't have been too bad for the first few house since the route climbs up into the hills. Then it drops down a great decent into the desert. Last year it was like dropping into an oven. Even though it was still in the 90s when I rode by the Salton Sea, there was a cooler breeze blowing off it that made it not seem so bad. Still I was happy when it got dark and the temperatures dropped.

It should be a great race this year with three former winners racing. There is last year's winner Daniel Wyss from Switzerland, 2 time winner Jure Robic from Slovenia who dropped out last year with pnuemonia and 3 time winner Wolfgang Fasching from Austria. Currently Robic is in the lead with Wyss in 2nd and Fasching in 4th. At this point it's all about pacing, staying hydrated and fueled for the long days ahead.

This year also has 5 women entered which is the most since 1993. Patty Riddle is attempting to become the oldest women finisher.

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posted by UltraRob @ 11:16:00 AM   5 comments links to this post

Thursday, June 07, 2007

UMCA Elections

Tomorrow is the last day for ballots to be postmarked for the UMCA elections. If you haven't voted yet, you really should. This could be a very important election.

There are 18 candidates for 6 director positions. There have been ugly discussions on the Topica list since January. To be honest, I don't know what the truth is. It does seem some rules where broken to buy Race Across America but I'm not a lawyer. That was the start of the controversy and then it spread to some people wanting John Hughes, the UMCA managing director, gone. People on both sides of the issue have been very ugly at times.

Transplant Athlete is one of the candidates. He's finished the Race Across America on a 2 person team and he attempted it solo last year. He's giving it another try this year. He has posted about the UMCA a couple times - here and here.

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:06:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Monday, May 14, 2007

Jure Robic Wins Race Around Slovenia

Two time Race Across America winner Jure Robic won the first Race Around Slovenia this past weekend. It was 1,100 kilometers. I haven't found a race report but it was posted to the UltraCycling Topica list that Robic won by a big margin.

Once again Robic is signed up for the Race Across America. Last year he dropped out in Pagosa Springs with pneumonia. Kenny Souza was also having breathing trouble and was stopped about 60 miles earlier in Durango for several hours. That's when I was feeling great in an area I know well. That's where I moved into 4th place in the Enduro division. Of course it didn't matter when I got injured in the fierce wind storm in eastern Colorado and western Kansas. I limped my way to the Mississippi River before dropping out.

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posted by UltraRob @ 10:40:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, March 16, 2007

Texas Hell Week 2007

Riding During Texas Hell Week
Hundreds of cyclists will be finishing up Texas Hell Week tomorrow. Bloggers Sascha, Steven and KWilkinson have been writing about it. I wish I could have been there but it didn't work this year.

It really started as a RAAM training camp. It used to be if you didn't put in at least a 100 miles a day you were frowned on. There still are rides every day that a in the 100+ mile range but there's also B and C rides that are around 60 and 40 miles respectively. Besides it being great training it's a lot of fun. There's very little traffic and interesting things to see. I hope to go again sometime and if you've never been you should plan to sometime.

Last year it was the best thing I did for training for the Race Across America. I got in 872 miles in 7 days. I had planned to ride another 100 miles on the 8th day but I was tired and it was raining when I got up. I decided the rain was a sign that I shouldn't push it too much. You can check out my pictures from last year's Texas Hell Week. On my page of pictures I also have links to my blog posts for each day that include the elevation profile for the ride.

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posted by UltraRob @ 5:45:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Tuesday, February 20, 2007

12/24 Hours of Sebring

While mountain bikers, skiers, and runners were conquering 100 miles of snow in Alaska, ultra road cyclists where competing in the first RAAM qualifier of the year at Sebring, FL. The reports are that it was cold for Florida but I'm sure it was nothing like it was in Alaska. There are actually several different divisions and only the 24 hour non-drafting event is a RAAM qualifier.

John Schlitter put in the most miles at the event with 479.5 miles on a recumbent. He'll be racing RAAM on a 2 man team. Brett Walker who is training for solo RAAM this year won the 24 hour race with 467.5 miles. John Jurczynski who is also training for RAAM won the 12 hour division with 245.5 miles. Nancy Guth won the women's drafting 24 hour race with 309.4 miles. Complete results for the 24 hours are posted here and the 12 hours results are here.

Bloggers JB and Transplant Athlete (Lou) were there. JB put in 353.8 miles. He was written a preliminary race report. Lou did RAAM last year. He's doing RAAM again this year. He didn't feel good and ended up bailing after 14:45 with 222.5 miles in. He was quite disappointed with that but it's a long time until RAAM.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:08:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Thursday, December 14, 2006

Race Across America Changes

As I posted a couple weeks ago, Fred Boethling and John Hughes have taken over RAAM. They haven't wasted any time changing the Enduro rules and appointing people to several positions. Jeff Stephens of Stephens Performance Marketing has been appointed to be the Sales and Marketing Director for RAAM. Jeff has 20 years of marketing with American Lung Association and American Heart Association. Hopefully he'll be able to bring more exposure to RAAM and increase sponsorship.

The Enduro rules have been changed to not have any mandatory control points. Racers will be required to take a minimum of 10 hours off the bike in the first 1,000 miles and another 10 hours in the last 1,000 miles. The total off bike time required remains 40 hours.

This year we were required to take a minimum of 2 hours off the bike at 5 control points. I only made it past the first 3 but 2 of them totally threw my sleep off. I was required to stop when I didn't feel I needed to since it was daylight. After stopping I tried to ride through the night since I'd already slept but kept falling asleep on the bike. I had posted a response on the Topica ultracycling list last week saying I thought the change was good. Paul Skilbeck that was the RAAM media director responded that he thought it was a bad idea because the media knew at least 5 spots along the race where riders would be stopped. I agree there has to be a balance between getting media exposure to help the race survive and not hindering the racers.

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posted by UltraRob @ 8:08:00 AM   0 comments links to this post

Sunday, December 10, 2006

McSweeny Scholarship Fund

I've been really slow getting this posted but the UMCA has set up a scholarship fund in honor of Anne Marie McSweeny. The Anne Marie McSweeney scholarship fund will provide scholarships to women cyclists to attend any one of three PAC Tour camps. The scholarship fund is administered by the UMCA and contributions to fund are tax-deductible. The deadline for applications is December 15, 2006.

The PAC Tour camps are
  • Arizona Coaching Camp March 3-10, 2007
  • Arizona Women's Camp April 8-15, 2007
  • Wisconsin Coaching Camp (not offered in 2007)

PAC Tour (Pacific-Atlantic-Cycling Tour) was started in 1985 by cross country record holders Susan Notorangelo and Lon Haldeman. Although I've heard about Lon for years, I first met him this year at RAAM. He and his daughter were manning the RAAM control point in Cortez, CO when I went through there during my RAAM attempt this year. He's in Peru now helping out poor people in various ways. One of the things he's done is deliver books to schools in remote villages. The books where bought from the sale of Anne Marie McSweeney bikes. In one of his recent posts, he talks about how he got back his stolen camera with pictures of children at an orphanage he had visited. It involved sitting in the doorway of a restaurant with a 12 inch metal file in his lap.

I've never been to any PAC Tour events but I've heard really good things about them. I'd like to do one of their long tours sometime. Doing week long of longer camps or tours is a great way to get really fit. The best thing I did training for RAAM was to go to Texas Hellweek.

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posted by UltraRob @ 9:42:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Friday, November 24, 2006

Race Across America to be Sold

Fred Boethling and John Hughes just signed a letter of intent to buy RAAM from Jim Pitre and Lon Haldeman. More details are on the Race Across America website.

The only time I've meet John Hughes is when I signed in at the timestation in Trinidad, CO for a sleep break this year in RAAM. I've had e-mail exchanges with him over the last couple years. I meet Fred Boethling at Texas Hellweek this year and rode the 300k brevet with him except the first couple miles. We were the first 2 finishers of that ride. Based on what I know, I think RAAM will continue to be in good hands.

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posted by UltraRob @ 6:41:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, November 15, 2006

Danny Chew's Post RAAM Interviews


Danny Chew has posted his post 2006 RAAM interviews with a few of the riders plus Chris Kostman. Until last year Chris Kostman was the youngest rider to finish RAAM and organizes the Furnace Creek 508, Badwater Ultramaration, and other events. I have a copy of of my interview on my website.

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posted by UltraRob @ 3:31:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Hoodoo 500 Ultra Cycling Race

Planet Ultra has announced a new ultra cycling race called the Hoodoo 500. It is scheduled for September 15-17, 2007 and will start and finish in St. George, UT. It sounds like a great route with great scenery. It will 512 miles with about 30,000 feet of climbing.

Unfortunately the UMCA has denied their request to be a RAAM qualifier. I don't know why but I'd guess it may have something to do with it being the same weekend as the Adirondack 540. The two races are on nearly opposite sides of the country so I don't think there would be that much of a conflict. It would only be a 10 hour drive for me and would be closer than any of the other RAAM qualifiers.

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posted by UltraRob @ 1:53:00 PM   2 comments links to this post

Thursday, November 09, 2006

Outside Magazine Article on Bob Breedlove

Last May at the local Ride of Silence, I talked to Bob Breedlove's daughter and she had said the family didn't believe the official Colorado State report of how he was killed during RAAM in 2005. I didn't write much about it out of respect for the family. She had told me they had hired a private investigator and that things didn't make sense. The November issue of Outside magazine has an article about the accident. I don't get Outside magazine and couldn't find the article on their website when I heard about it several weeks ago. I had thought of buying one just to read the article but one of the guys at work gave his copy to me without me saying anything about it. Outside has now posted the article online.

I doubt we'll ever find out the truth of what happened but there are certainly some things about the accident that are disturbing. The judge that sentenced the 15 year old that was driving without a license was never even told that the accident involved a fatality. This year in RAAM, I rode that section of highway just after daybreak. I was surprised at how much traffic there was so early in the morning. I certainly feel for the Breedlove family and my prayers are with them.

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posted by UltraRob @ 1:33:00 PM   1 comments links to this post

Wednesday, June 28, 2006

Emergency Room Visit

We're slowly making our way back to Colorado and visiting relatives along the way. At Julie's grandparent's cottage we didn't have internet access although I did go into town to an internet cafe. Now we're at my brother's place in Ohio and he has internet access but we also have a lot going on.

This is old news but something I haven't written about yet. The night after I dropped out of RAAM, I woke up totally drenched in sweat and the sheets were pretty soaked too. All I wanted to do was sleep but Julie was pretty freaked out about it. I felt fine other than muscle soreness. Julie insisted I go to the Emergency Room.

Once we got to the ER they were concerned about my electrolyte levels because of what I had just done. I was confident that amount of Endurolytes I was using would have been more than enough but figured getting tested would be a good way to find out for sure. They drew a bunch of blood and tested for several things.

The results showed my electrolytes were indeed fine. The only things the tests showed were I had significant muscle damage which didn't surprise them and that I'm low on my thyroid medication. I thought the one result they talked about was Muscle Damage Index and mine was 900 but I lost the sheet and can't find any information on it. They also said my free T4 was low. I'm on a high dose of thyroid medication which has seemed to be working well but the problem is I don't know what happens I do really long rides. Dr. Carter plans to do more tests when I get back home. A big thanks to Dr. Carter for his help during the race. He was on the phone with my crew at 11:30 at night the first night in Kansas trying to help walk them through popping my pelvis. He also was helping track down doctors for me along the way.

The conclusion on the sweats was that my body was just trying to flush out all the toxins from my effort. They continued for a couple nights and now I seem to be over them.

Hammer Endurolytes Capsules
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Hammer Endurolytes Drink Mix
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Hammer Endurolytes Capsules 120 Count
Hammer Endurolytes Capsules 120 Count
Price: $19.95
 

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posted by UltraRob @ 1:53:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Randy Van Zee Out of RAAM

Randy Van Zee has had to withdraw from racing RAAM in the Enduro category. He had a serious cycling accident last Saturday and sustained multiple facial fractures.

Related Links: RAAM Finisher Randy Van Zee Killed

Pearl Izumi Pearl Original Jersey Cap Sleeve Womens
Pearl Izumi Pearl Original Jersey Cap Sleeve Womens
Regular Price: $69.95
$30.08 on sale
 
Pearl Izumi Womens Pearl Original Cap Sleeve Jersey
Pearl Izumi Womens Pearl Original Cap Sleeve Jersey
Price: $49.95
 
Pearl Izumi Pro Jersey
Pearl Izumi Pro Jersey
Regular Price: $84.99
$55.23 on sale
 

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posted by UltraRob @ 6:03:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Monday, March 20, 2006

Hell Week Picture Page

The weather today is a bit of a shock after being in warm Texas at Hell Week. It's been snowing off and on with the windchill in the single digits.

I now have pictures of Hell Week posted on my website. There's an article in the Austin paper today about Hell Week.

Polar FS3 Heart Rate Monitor with Workout Summary Polar FS3 Heart Rate Monitor wWorkout Summary
Polar FS3 Heart Rate Monitor with Workout Summary Polar FS3 Heart Rate Monitor wWorkout Summary
Price: $79.95
 
Polar Heart Bra
Polar Heart Bra
Price: $34.95
 
Polar F6F heart rate monitor
Polar F6F heart rate monitor
Price: $109.95
 
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posted by UltraRob @ 1:10:00 PM   0 comments links to this post

Sunday, March 19, 2006

Hell Week Day 8 - Rain

After the 300k it was fairly late when I got to bed by the time I rode to the campground, showered, and went to town to get something to eat. I set my alarm for 7 Saturday morning so I could get up and ride in for the A ride. Soon after 6 I woke up to hear rain on the tent. It shouldn't have been any big deal but the tent is old. I know my brother and I used it on an expedition in Alaska in 1989 but don't remember how long we'd had it. Soon after the rain started, I felt water dripping on me. The fly needs to be recoated but it has a few patches. The zipper on the door keeps giving me problems and it was replaced several years ago. There's a rip in the door that is patched with duct tape and the floor is ripped from my pack getting thrown around in a violent wind storm in the Grand Canyon. It may be time to retire the poor thing.

I got up and really couldn't get motivated to ride in the rain. I checked the weather radar and it showed rain scattered around the area. I drove in to town and was at the hotel when the A ride should have started. By then it was just a light drizzle. A few riders trickled out in ones and twos. If I had ridden, I would probably been by myself. I already had in 872 miles for the week so I didn't feel any big need to ride. It takes a lot of training for RAAM but over doing it can can be a set back. I decided getting cold and wet could push me over the edge. It turned out that it dried out and drizzled off and on a bit like during the 300k so it wouldn't have been a bad day to ride.

I was able to change my flight home from Sunday to Saturday evening. After doing very little all day, I realized just how tied I really was. There were 2 very happy little girls to see me when I got in at the airport in Colorado Springs. Julie was also very happy for me to be home. This week is the longest we've been apart since we got married. This morning the girls spent most of th