schwim
Site Founder
- Joined
- Sep 17, 1998
- Messages
- 3,152
- Location
- NC, US
Well, here we are. For reasons known only to yourselves, some of you write me asking when you'll get to hear about the group ride. For reasons I can understand completely, others of you steer clear of it as if it were the plague. If you fit into the latter group, hit the back button on your browser quickly! What follows is a recollection of eight days of mindlessly mediocre riding, interesting to only a masochistic few. If you fall into the first group, at the end of my posts, I will share the number of my therapist. You seem to be in need of it.
Disclaimer: Understand that this is simply representative of my ride. There were all types of skill levels represented, and many rides. With enough trails to keep any rider occupied for the rest of their lives, Arizona could be the setting for some of the most amazing accounts of riding ever imagined. Unfortunately for you, I will be sharing the death defying moments I had on the bunny slopes. It truly sucks to be you, but you deserve what you get if you continue reading. You've been forwarned.
Pre-Ride
Arriving the evening before, and making it to Berger's house, Berger and I awake and load up the 650 and 300 to meet with Splat for a pre-ride at P&D, an area that could provide anything from parking lot smooth rides to challenging A level single track. I'm hoping for the parking lot, but expecting worse. We meet up with Splat and head out on some of the trails. The first thing I notice is that Arizona has a lot of dirt. Like, more than any state should lay claim to. I'm in the middle of the pack, due to the fact that I fear that if I'm at the end of the ride, I'll get nabbed by some desert gnomes, and nobody will notice until it's too late. Go ahead and laugh, but those gnomes can be pretty tough when you're fighting in full riding gear, and your eyes are clouded by girlie-tears. So Ken gets to take up the end of the pack, pushing me along when I attempt to ride in first. We take off on some wide road and I keep slowing down to stay out of the dust. After falling about a quarter mile behind splat, I realize that the dust never really completely settles, so I decide after much consternation that I'll only stay as far back that the dust is greatly minimised. It's easy to follow Splat's lead, because of said dust, so I meander along. Splat stops at all the intersections so I don't get lost and end up eating body parts to stay alive(He's ridden with me before, so he's well aware of not only my limitations, but also my phobias. He fraternises with me in spite of this, which although I don't understand, I am truly grateful for). We end up on trail 23 which seems to have been designed by a person immune to motion sickness who also has great knees. It's a trail that runs a mile or two with constant whoops, not always being rythmic. At the end of this trail, I can actually feel my lower leg bones fighting it out to share space with the upper bones, and am thrilled when Splat stops us for what he ever so kindly calls a "photo-op break". For those of you who ride with pansies, you can make them feel a lot better about their lot in life if you call all the times that they have to stop in order to stuff a lung back down into it's proper place a "photo-op". It's like calling the first loser a "runner-up". It's the kindler, gentler way, and all of us losers are very grateful to you for it.
After the photos, we travelled some more narrow track until we got to a couple granite steps and rises which unbeknownst to me, we were expected to traverse. After looking back at Ken, I decided that; 1) If I fall, I'm only going to hurt the bike, & 2) It's his bike, so I putted up the rock slope. It was painful to accomplish, bouncing around and trying to hold on. I can only imagine how painful it was to watch unfold. I'd like to take this moment to apologize to Ken for having to watch that. At the top, we continued on, going between two rocks in the shape of a "V" that was pretty cool, and eventually getting back to some wider wash type trails. Allow me this moment to say that I don't like going fast. I'm missing that gene that's in the rest of us to try to get to point B quicker than the other guy. For all I care, that guy can not only get there before me, but wash up, eat some beanie-weanies and have time to mock me at the finish line when I cross. Of premium importance to me is the fact that I make it across that line with a total of zero injuries, and if at all possible, no get-offs. I will do almost anything to make sure this happens. So in my mind, slow == safe. Well in a sand wash, slow doesn't equal safe. It equates to an incredibly painful and at times heart stopping slidefest. So, at these times, I compromise. If I can see well ahead of me, I'll lug it in 6th. No crazier than that. If I come to a hill or a corner, I slow down, front wheel diving be damned. It's just the way I'm programmed, which I'm totally ok with. The guy behind me however(Berger, if you'll remember) is probably not as OK with this as I am. I check behind me every once in a while to make sure that he's not drawing a bead on my helmet in the smooth sections. Having the patience of a saint, he settles for what I take to be the visual display of "You're number 1!!!".
We make it back to the truck, load up and bid Brian adieu until day after next, when most of the other guys will be there. We head back to Berger's house, stopping only for some pizza before doing some required maintenance on the bikes. Oil changes, new air filters, plug and valve adjustment along with some rewiring on the Berg, and we're ready to go. I end up in bed at the early hour of 1am(which is still 3am to my body) where I lie wondering what kind of killer cacti I will land on in the coming days.
I fall asleep with the thought that it will probably be more than one kind.
Disclaimer: Understand that this is simply representative of my ride. There were all types of skill levels represented, and many rides. With enough trails to keep any rider occupied for the rest of their lives, Arizona could be the setting for some of the most amazing accounts of riding ever imagined. Unfortunately for you, I will be sharing the death defying moments I had on the bunny slopes. It truly sucks to be you, but you deserve what you get if you continue reading. You've been forwarned.
Pre-Ride
Arriving the evening before, and making it to Berger's house, Berger and I awake and load up the 650 and 300 to meet with Splat for a pre-ride at P&D, an area that could provide anything from parking lot smooth rides to challenging A level single track. I'm hoping for the parking lot, but expecting worse. We meet up with Splat and head out on some of the trails. The first thing I notice is that Arizona has a lot of dirt. Like, more than any state should lay claim to. I'm in the middle of the pack, due to the fact that I fear that if I'm at the end of the ride, I'll get nabbed by some desert gnomes, and nobody will notice until it's too late. Go ahead and laugh, but those gnomes can be pretty tough when you're fighting in full riding gear, and your eyes are clouded by girlie-tears. So Ken gets to take up the end of the pack, pushing me along when I attempt to ride in first. We take off on some wide road and I keep slowing down to stay out of the dust. After falling about a quarter mile behind splat, I realize that the dust never really completely settles, so I decide after much consternation that I'll only stay as far back that the dust is greatly minimised. It's easy to follow Splat's lead, because of said dust, so I meander along. Splat stops at all the intersections so I don't get lost and end up eating body parts to stay alive(He's ridden with me before, so he's well aware of not only my limitations, but also my phobias. He fraternises with me in spite of this, which although I don't understand, I am truly grateful for). We end up on trail 23 which seems to have been designed by a person immune to motion sickness who also has great knees. It's a trail that runs a mile or two with constant whoops, not always being rythmic. At the end of this trail, I can actually feel my lower leg bones fighting it out to share space with the upper bones, and am thrilled when Splat stops us for what he ever so kindly calls a "photo-op break". For those of you who ride with pansies, you can make them feel a lot better about their lot in life if you call all the times that they have to stop in order to stuff a lung back down into it's proper place a "photo-op". It's like calling the first loser a "runner-up". It's the kindler, gentler way, and all of us losers are very grateful to you for it.
After the photos, we travelled some more narrow track until we got to a couple granite steps and rises which unbeknownst to me, we were expected to traverse. After looking back at Ken, I decided that; 1) If I fall, I'm only going to hurt the bike, & 2) It's his bike, so I putted up the rock slope. It was painful to accomplish, bouncing around and trying to hold on. I can only imagine how painful it was to watch unfold. I'd like to take this moment to apologize to Ken for having to watch that. At the top, we continued on, going between two rocks in the shape of a "V" that was pretty cool, and eventually getting back to some wider wash type trails. Allow me this moment to say that I don't like going fast. I'm missing that gene that's in the rest of us to try to get to point B quicker than the other guy. For all I care, that guy can not only get there before me, but wash up, eat some beanie-weanies and have time to mock me at the finish line when I cross. Of premium importance to me is the fact that I make it across that line with a total of zero injuries, and if at all possible, no get-offs. I will do almost anything to make sure this happens. So in my mind, slow == safe. Well in a sand wash, slow doesn't equal safe. It equates to an incredibly painful and at times heart stopping slidefest. So, at these times, I compromise. If I can see well ahead of me, I'll lug it in 6th. No crazier than that. If I come to a hill or a corner, I slow down, front wheel diving be damned. It's just the way I'm programmed, which I'm totally ok with. The guy behind me however(Berger, if you'll remember) is probably not as OK with this as I am. I check behind me every once in a while to make sure that he's not drawing a bead on my helmet in the smooth sections. Having the patience of a saint, he settles for what I take to be the visual display of "You're number 1!!!".
We make it back to the truck, load up and bid Brian adieu until day after next, when most of the other guys will be there. We head back to Berger's house, stopping only for some pizza before doing some required maintenance on the bikes. Oil changes, new air filters, plug and valve adjustment along with some rewiring on the Berg, and we're ready to go. I end up in bed at the early hour of 1am(which is still 3am to my body) where I lie wondering what kind of killer cacti I will land on in the coming days.
I fall asleep with the thought that it will probably be more than one kind.