Author Topic: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride  (Read 5211 times)

mudworm

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Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« on: July 13, 2009, 02:26:43 PM »

The short here-are-the-stats version:

It was 40 days ago, I found out, OMG, I Will Be Riding the Death Ride in 40 Days!

During the five weeks leading up to DR, I did four training rides:

  1. A Pleasant Spin in the La Honda Hills (92.6 mi / 11,777 ft)
  2. I will just Ride up to Skyline Blvd (80 mi / 11,181 ft)
  3. My Mini Death Ride #2 (85.4 mi / 10,047 ft)
  4. Can you beat that? (89.3 mi / 10,787 ft)

Finally, July 11, 2009 arrived not a day late and ten hours of it went into my personal history book like this:

Okay, now, here is the long OMG-I'm-so-excited-I-can't-shut-up version:

During the past 40 days, my mind went through roller coaster changes. In the beginning, I panicked. For three months from Feb and mid May, I did not touch my road bike, and it's not like before that I had done any big rides anyway (my longest was around 70 miles more than a year ago).  How in the world could I get ready for DR in time?  When the panic wore off (Erik's confidence in me helped easing it), I entered a planning mode -- I would progressively do longer rides (up to at least 129 miles) and should plan a weekend up in the Markleeville area to ride at least part of the route. Then the reality set in -- it was always hard to get up early enough in the morning to get a long ride in and it's too much hassle to pull off a trip to the Sierra. Eventually, I settled with what I got -- four training rides ranging from 80 to 92.6 miles around home. I was pleased about how I felt on my first long ride. After having done the ridiculous mini death ride #1 on two bottles of Gatorade and one cliff bar, I started to wonder if I was a reincarnation of a camel. And this ride also gave me confidence that I had enough madness in me that I should be able to tear myself away from the car to leave for yet another, the final 5th pass.  I then decided to make Death Ride my very first century just to make it special. Of course, from 92.6 miles to 124 mile (or the official claim, 129 miles) and from 11,777 ft to 15,500+ ft, it would take quite some leap of faith. Would I be able to handle it? What about the altitude? Guess I would find out on July 11th.

We had known that Erik would be up in Washington States for three weeks around this time, so it was even more fitting for me to do the ride this year since he had done it before and I wanted to experience the same cool thing he had experienced before. My friend at work, Bryn, conveniently (from my point of view since the CR-V went up to WA with Erik) signed up for the ride a week ago after his other friend bailed on him on a planned Tahoe MTB trip. Since this would be his 5th or 6th time doing it, he got all the logistics down. My luck just kept getting better from then on.

We left the bay area on Friday, and took a casual lunch stop in Murphy (had great sandwiches and coffee at Aria Bakery). We also took another stop at Bear Valley to chat about MTB trails and had another coffee break there. We arrived at Turtle Rock, the DR event site,  for our registrations somewhere around 6pm. Then we checked in to our motel in the Minden area and had a humongous pre-ride carbo-loading dinner at Hamdogs. It was past 10pm when we went to sleep. We made a mistake by leaving the windows open for fresh air (instead of using the AC). There were a lot of noises outside that kept us awake for a long time.

The alarm went off shortly after I finally fell asleep (it felt that way anyway). Bryn wanted to start riding at 4:30am just like what he had always done before, and neither of us being the most efficient person, we got up at 3am. That was brutal!!!  (Note: I was not going to start my ride until the official starting time at 5:30am, but despite all other things subject to negotiations, I fully respected all the conditions he felt he needed in place to make his ride successful.) We got a parking spot on the road right at the entrance to Turtle Rock. Another lucky sign. Bryn hit the road with his lights at 4:30 am just as planned.

I took a short nap and then got myself ready slowly. After everything was in place and it was bright enough that I could see with my sunglasses on, I clipped one foot in the pedal, gave a strong push, and then pulled the other foot in, I was on my way -- at 5:27:04 am!  It was not until noon that I saw the car again, and it was not until 3:21pm that I returned with my 5-pass finisher's pin after almost 10 hours from when I started. I had seen great scenery along the way. I had chatted with various friendly riders (although most, like 95%, of the time, I enjoyed the solitude of letting my mind wonder more). I said Hi and Bi to Bryn when we were climbing up the back side of Monitor pass. I spotted (I think) my friend Jeanne's brother when I was descending from Ebbetts. I enjoyed all the screaming descents, even though I refrained myself from screaming out of joy because I did not want to irritate the people who were still ascending. I also set my personal record for descending at 50.3 mph (Imagine I was still terrified of any descents only a few months ago). This has been my longest and fastest ride ever. Talk about making it special!

Following table sums up my DR ride:

Since I saw a note from Bryn at the car that he left for Carson at 2:20pm, I knew I had a lot of time to relax. I had two big plates of dinner and walked around the Expo. What people say about the crazy weather in the high country proved to be true -- at one point, the clouds rolled in, the wind got very gusty, and it even dropped some rain drops. I looked up in the Carson direction and knew that many riders were battling with the changing weather up there. I heard later that the rain did come down, but it was not as bad as it could have been (like the hail storm last year) because it came and went very fast and did not last long enough to make the road too slippery.  It sure turned nice again fast at Turtle Rock. I chatted with Steve from Massechusstes for a little while (and he was so kind that he let me use his cellphone to call Erik). His friend David, a BA local, later also returned and joined us. I could not get enough of DR talks and really enjoyed the friendly chats with people I met randomly like Steve and David. But Bryn was the opposite, which he did warn me about ahead of time. As soon as he returned (around 6:30pm I think), he jumped in the car (I drove), and we returned to the motel. His reason was he wanted a shower right away. He is a Brit. (Shhh... don't tell him I said it.)  I was very impressed with his five-pass finish because he got even less training than I did before the ride, and he just got stitches in his forehead after a nasty trip-and-fall in the office building on Thursday!

Okay, that was my Death Ride story. Where is yours?

The drum band started playing very early.

Many riders started their ride when it was still dark. (As early as 3am from what I read.)

Another band at the dinner tent.

Riders at dinner

I saw three of these on the ride. Peculiar thing. They were trying to promote this new innovation. Wonder how their descent was.

Post Ride shot at the motel

Bryn said the cuts were ideally located so that they did not hurt under the helmet. (I have his permission to post this picture.)

My bib number plate and finisher's pin.

Inch by inch, I will get there.

Uncle Stinky

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Re: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« Reply #1 on: July 13, 2009, 04:00:55 PM »
Nice TR- I would have drank 3 times the amount of water. Good job again.

F'ueco

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Re: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« Reply #2 on: July 15, 2009, 09:32:33 PM »
Like we said.. No problem! Now sign up for a double!  ;)
Live from Boulder, CO...

mudworm

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Re: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« Reply #3 on: July 15, 2009, 10:05:29 PM »
Like we said.. No problem! Now sign up for a double!  ;)

Well, we'll see. Getting up at 3am was brutal, but getting done around 3pm kind of made up for it. That won't happen with a double though.

How did Joan's ride go?
Inch by inch, I will get there.

F'ueco

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Re: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« Reply #4 on: July 15, 2009, 10:34:53 PM »
We took 12 hours on the Death Ride last year... You could easily finish a double in a reasonable time! My fastest double was 12:48 (Eastern Sierra last year).

Joan was going great until her sciatic nerve started acting up. We lost a lot of time trying to minimize the pain. When we finally learned a stretch to ease the discomfort (thanks to another rider's crew) it was really too late. But she almost had it... If the headwind hadn't been so damned strong coming into Maupin (the last time station), she might still have had a chance to finish.

 But hey, 453+ miles in 43 hours isn't anything to sneeze at. Considering that the woman who won took 45+ hours (and has done the 508 in 32 hours!), finishing would have been almost superhuman.
Live from Boulder, CO...

mynameismud

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Re: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« Reply #5 on: July 16, 2009, 08:10:12 AM »
Whoa!

Congrats to Joan.  It has been windy up here in the Puget Sound.  Returning home will be nice.
Here's to sweat in your eye

mudworm

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Re: Road: My First Century -- Death Ride
« Reply #6 on: July 16, 2009, 09:04:08 AM »
Hey F'ueco, I'm sorry to hear that the pain in Joan's sciatic nerve robbed her finish. Bummer. Yeah, with these endurance events, you never know what might act up. But 453+ miles in 43 hours, that's smoking! Sounds brutal too. Joan is a superwoman!
Inch by inch, I will get there.