As perhaps mentioned elsewhere, I knew which perm *I* wanted to ride in February. And, indeed, a week or so back, the 10 day forecast looked promising. And it kept improving.
Michal wanted to ride, and I publicized after we settled on a date and time. Greg, Bill, Theo and Asta joined in. Excellent!
So, some cleaning, cooking, and preparation (ever so much easier when it isn't going to rain or be astonishingly cold); Michal arrived, a bit of visiting, and an early night. Probably one of the earlier times I've been organized the night before.
Oatmeal, coffee, and we coasted down the hill in the dark, to be at the Starbucks by 6:30 for the 7am departure. First Greg, then Bill arrived. A text from Asta - they were on the MAX, and would arrive at 7:05. We decided to wait. We watched them ride by on Canyon to the OTHER Starbucks at Freddies, and called over to retrieve them :-)
Asta and Theo LOVE rides which start in Beaverton - the Beaverton Transit Center is only a block from the start. Clearly, Bill and I will just have to create more of them. I love rides which start a mere 1.4 miles from my house.
So, only 15 minutes after 7 :-) we headed out. I had already told Michal he was the cue sheet beta tester - everyone else was local, and probably knew where they were going. Kevin had ridden on Tuesday, and reported no issues, but I wanted to make sure.
We started out chilly, but it would eventually warm up to a pretty nice day. Not much traffic heading west, and once we turned onto West Union from Cornelius Pass, we were out in the country. My favorite bits of road up through Helvetia, and I found everyone at the church figuring out the info control answer.
Through North Plains, Roy (another info control), Banks, Cedar Canyon Rd, then back on Hwy 6, up the hill, and past the plum orchards on Strohmayer Rd, which are already leafing out.
Got to hear about Asta's bike tour. This ride was her one-year Randoversary - her first brevet was the Grab Bag 200 last February!
Upon arrival in Forest Grove, we converged on Maggie's Buns. We had the sensible and healthy food choices table (Theo, Asta, and Greg), and the nutritionally dubious food choices (STICKY BUNS AS BIG AS YOUR HEAD!) table (Bill, Michal, and me). Portland Velo (my other bike club) was passing by, but not really stopping and coming in. LJ did come in, said hi and wondered if I was going to eat the whole thing. You betcha.
By now it was really warm enough to ditch the wind vest, cap, and wool mittens, so I did.
Thus fortified, we headed out to Hagg Lake. Perhaps a clarification on the cue sheet - the road curves right heading out of town; the route is straight. It is signed Pacific, even though mapping programs say Ritchey. Up and down on Old Hwy 47, passing the Lake Store and sawmill. No elk in the field. Patches of snow by the roadside along the lake. Perhaps a small cue sheet issue - there are apparently two intersections of Scoggins Valley and West Shore, although the one which was intended is at least 5 miles further along.
Greg and I rode along together here, and found everyone at the info control, another question-rich environment. I think Bill is using the very same control for a populaire route he's working on.
Suggestion to put the info control up the gravel road a bit... "that'd be cruel"...
From there, finished circumnavigating the lake, and then headed south. Theo, Asta, and Michal had pulled ahead. We passed through Gaston and headed south on Spring Hill. Strangely enough, we did not see them up ahead, even though we had long sight lines along several stretches. Must have turned on the afterburners. Through Yamhill and into Carlton. We stopped at the little convenience market on Main; I got a Ruby Red grapefruit juice and some Kettle Chips. I'd been munching on the bag of home baked cookies Michal gave me, plus a chocolate mint protein bar (20g!) that I'd gotten from a co-worker and had been saving for just this occasion.
Bill got a big bottle of water, and we topped up, finished our snacks, took some pictures and...there were Theo, Asta, and Michal. They'd stopped in Gaston and we didn't see them. :-) We offered them some water. Michal: "we left some water for you in Gaston".
The wind had been blowing steadily from the NE all day, and I figured there would be an annoying headwind from here on out, but not so. I didn't mind one bit.
Michal was leading the way along Hwy 240/Kuehne, and rode by the Ribbon Ridge turn. We yelled, and he came back. Maybe add a note to the cue sheet - "top of hill, easy to miss"?
Yet another info control at the other end of Ribbon Ridge. There were suggestions that I add one that asked for the most unusual winery name, but that would have been a hard call.
Rode in two groups northward. I was dropped at the bottom of the steep little s-curve hill north of Gaston; took me about 3 miles to chase back on. It was easier riding in a pack!
We paused at the Forest Hills golf course for snacks and a pause :-) I had a big chunk of a brownie-peanut topping confection from a co-worker. It probably had a million calories per cubic inch, so, again, saving it for a bike ride. Asta and Theo helped me with it. It was really good, and not too sweet.
Pretty sunset as we rode north on Rood Bridge into Hillsboro.
One more info control on Burkhalter Rd (on Volume Three of the card), with another round of picture-taking, then off to our last on-course control. Bought some cheesy crackers; managed to pawn some off on Greg. Called Fitz to let him know we were about 6 miles out.
Told everyone I'd take pity on them and lead us back in, although it was pretty much a straight shot from here. We did clump up and take the straight through lane crossing 185th, which made it really nice. Six bikes taking up a lane is so much more authoritative than just one. By now it was pretty mindless riding for me...
Turn onto Hocken, through the shopping center, all taking the left through lane on Hall to set up for the turn onto Center, down Center, left on 117th and yay! back at Starbucks! The folks working there were kind enough to take our picture (with more than one camera), and told us to do more rides from their store. Works for me! They seem friendlier than the crew at the other store.
Learning - Izze Sparkling Clementine is really good at the end of a ride. Then Michal and I rode back up the hill, and we fed him and sent him home.
My bike computer said 131 miles, and 6000 vertical feet, both of which are probably slightly optimistic.
11:37 total elapsed time for the permanent, 13.96 avg mph, my fastest average for the year for all my riding.
Everyone's results will be entered as soon as I get the secret handshake from the RUSA Permanista.
Pictures:
Mine
Michal's
Theo's
I'm almost ashamed to detail what I ate all day (and was just FINE, no bonks)...
oatmeal with craisins, brown sugar, walnuts, butter and milk,
coffee
a mocha,
cookies from Michal (these are really good cookies)
enormous orange sticky bun
more coffee
chocolate mint protein bar
Kettle chips
Ruby Red grapefruit juice
Chocolate-peanut brownie
a couple of blood orange segments (yum)
water
Clearly not a nutritional role model.
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4 comments:
Maybe not a nutritional role model.. but it obviously worked for you.
-Trevor
"Clearly not a nutritional role model."
Well, now you can join the Kent Peterson club. All that sugar and carbs seem to work for him, too.
Congrats on a great ride and excellent report. --Beth
well, more protein wouldn't have hurt...
Wow, Lynne, what a day! I love the pictures and the food journal especially. I think the stuff you ate is just fine. You didn't bonk and you didn't get a stomach ache - win/win.
Hope to ride another perm with you soon - maybe March!
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