Tuesday, December 13, 2022

A Century Ride as the Winter Solstice Approaches

"We cannot stop the winter
or summer from coming.  We
cannot stop the spring or fall or
make them other than they are. 
They are gifts from the universe
we cannot refuse. But we can 
choose what we will contribute to
life when each arrives."
Gary Zukhav
 
I must confess,  I have very mixed feelings when I decide to ride a century in December, a month when I normally did a minimum of two centuries just a few years ago:  my Christmas breakfast century whose route varied and Bethlehem whose route did not vary.  I was younger then, and stronger.  I had a pretty close knit group that would always attend. But it is time to go on.  Even past time.  I grow weak.  A weather and route weenie.  And it is not supposed to be so very cold today and the wind is not supposed to be so very wild.  So out the door I go praying that the weather does not overly beat me up.  I know I will hurt by the end.  That is the price of admission when one has not ridden a century for a bit.  But rather than paying at the door, I know I will pay at the end.  I just hope it is not too ugly.

Since December of 2014, I have lost my husband, two brothers, my mother, my sister, and a nephew.  If there is one thing age and loss have taught me is that time on this earth is limited and should not be wasted.  Which is not to say that I don't still waste time, but it is at least conscious wastefulness, and today will not be a waste.  A century ride is never a waste.  And if you don't use your body the saying is true, you truly do lose it.  Additionally, age makes it harder to get it back.  Better just to persevere until the time comes to hang the bicycle on the wall for good.  And adventure may await.  One never quite knows what to expect from a long ride.
 
The morning is gloomy with nary a hint of sunshine though the forecasters said the sun might peek through this afternoon.  I sincerely hope so for there has not been one ray for what seems like an eternity.  At least the temperature has been mellow for this time of year.  And at least some of my obligations and worries are coming to an end.  But I long to bathe in the sun despite the fact his power has waned and lacks the heat he has in summer.
 
Jon agrees to ride with me so we meet at the ride start in Madison and head out both worrying a bit about how we are dressed.  As it turns out, we are both fine though I am a tad overdressed.  I have already asked him to agree not to linger at stops.  Winter riding is not so very hard with the appropriate clothing so long as the distance is short and no stops are necessary.  To me, one of the hardest things about winter century rides are the necessity of stops.  Inevitably, within a short time I begin to chill.  To try to prevent this today, I unzip my jacket well before stops allowing the wind to reach inside my warm outer shell and dispel some of the inevitable dampness that builds during exercise.  It helps, but does not eliminate the discomfort completely.  I remember one cold brevet where another rider was upset that I left the control so quickly saying he wanted to ride with me, but my body had begun shivering involuntarily to the point where if I didn't leave, I was unsure if I would be able to keep the bike upright.   Just another reminder that in the end, however much I like to feel in control of things, I truly am not.  Even my own body has demands and needs that I cannot control.

The route we are riding does not have a first store stop so we stop rather late at a park.  The picnic table has collapsed and slants downward, but we manage to sit for a few moments and eat what we have brought.  Jon has a Cliff bar I think and I have a half whole wheat p and j sandwich.  It tastes wonderful and I need it, but I am glad we move on quickly.  I briefly think of the times we have tarried there on this route, luxuriating in the finer weather.  Today is not, however, such a day.

We have decided to eschew the traditional Subway lunch stop as it is so early in the ride and not a favorite of mine anyway.  We go quite some distance further to a coffee shop we both know that also has sandwiches.  But on our way we face a long, rather boring stretch that is, as normal, into the wind.  Though the wind is not inordinately strong, it is strong enough that I struggle and the scenery here is repetitive, not helping anything.  We have reached the point in the ride where conversation is sparse and scattered.  Jon rides just a bit ahead, stopping to wait at times as I fall behind. Barren field after barren field waiting patiently for spring and planting time.  Lush greenness is a vague memory.  The world seems sepia colored other than the occasional yard that we pass that has Christmas decorations outside.  
 
Decorations bring to mind that it is not too long before the children will visit for the holiday, and I set my  mind yet again to determining the menu trying to plan for vegetarians and young children that are not the adventurous eaters that my daughter was when young.  I quite enjoy it but it makes me hungry and I realize I will be VERY glad to hit the lunch stop.
 
Lunch is delicious and does not take overly long as I worry not only about chilling but about getting in before dark.  I brought lights just in case, but I don't like to be on busier roads when the light has faded.  Odd because night riding was one of my favorite things about brevets, but only when we were out on side, lightly traveled roads.  Even during those years, I worried when there were lots of cars.  
 
After lunch we get a good chuckle when a group of children come to the side of the road hailing and cheering us.  One yells, "Do you like ketchup and mustard?"  It takes me a moment before I realize it is a reference to our jackets.  Jon is dressed in a red jacket and I have on my yellow jacket.  I  think how refreshing it is to actually see children outside in the yard doing something rather than inside the house watching television or playing video games.  Perhaps I remember incorrectly, but I remember being outside most of the time when I was not being tortured in school.  Not that I didn't like school or the other children or the teachers or reading.  I adored reading.  But I did not like the sitting required and being trapped inside, particularly on lovely days when the earth just seemed to abound with things to do and places to explore.   

Sometimes the last miles of a century, particularly when one has been lazy, can be  more a death march than a pleasure, but despite my being out of shape, it is not so today.  I am tired, pleasantly tired, and I am as stiff, but I know I could go further, easier anymore than going faster for sure.  We are in before dark with some minutes to spare.  I would not chose a winter day as my favorite for riding, but I am glad that I did choose to ride and make use of the day and my body, to appreciate the starkness of the trees against the gray sky, to almost laugh out loud with excitement when a few rays of sun do happen to break through the ponderous gloom that has settled on the earth recently.  Yeah, it was a good day.  And I realize yet again that I am blessed. 
 
 


 

 

 

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Orleans: Trying to Make Use of Coin

"Time is the coin of life.  It

is the only coin you have, and only you

can determine how it will be spent.

Be careful lest you let other

people spend it for you."

Carl Sandburg 


Nobody in their right mind can complain about the weather we have had recently other than the dire need for and lack of rain.  Temperatures have soared above  normal to the low to mid seventies.  Skies have been sunny and largely cloudless and the sun still carries a kiss of warmth with his touch. His caress is more moderate than it is in summer when he is strong, demanding, and forceful, but it is there though without the threat of burned skin.  Less demanding and more comforting, lacking the passion of summer but gaining substance, as love between couples seems to deepen when steeped with years.  Even morning temperatures have been moderate.  In other words, it has been perfect bicycling weather.  Yes, one still has to layer a bit, but to end the day in comfort in shorts and a jersey in November.....well, it doesn't get much better than that.  


I had been excited about a planned new century route that Jon had put together, but my car is on the fritz and so I bowed out.  I certainly don't want to break down on the way home in the dark and with no shoulder to pull off on. I thought he might ride it on his own, but instead he elects to drive here to ride to Orleans with me.  For we are both celebrating and mourning, or I am.  I am celebrating that it is going to be a perfect day for a ride with mild winds and temperatures in the seventies and mourning that it is going to come crashing down and the forecast shows highs in the forties and lows in the twenties for at least a week after tomorrow.  Time, I suppose, to switch to hiking, or to mostly shorter rides.  I do not have the fortitude to face cold weather than I did in the past.  Mental, physical, or a combination of the two.....I still do not really know.


We start at a faster pace than I like for this time of year, but there is a bite in the air and the pace helps to tame it.  About a mile in, however, Jon notices that his headset appears to be loose.  We return to the house and he attempts to fix it.  It tightens and seems tight, but then for some reason loosens again a few miles down the road.  I ask if he feels safe riding or wants to back up and punt.  He opts to ride.  


The fields are mostly bare, stubbled like a man's beard when he needs a shave, almost desolate looking.  I suppose it is that lonely look that fields take on when winter hits as if they mourn the flowers and greenness that adorn them in the spring and summer months just as I do.  Farm houses stand alone, isolated, shielding those within from the winds that have no barrier to soften their blow.  Even the grass along the side of the road looks finished and disheartened, hopelessly clinging to a bit of green but mostly brown and withered looking.  In the areas we pass that have trees, they are mostly bare and seem taller somehow.  The sycamores, my favorites this time of year once the maples have lost their leaves, look lovely and graceful, their limbs like those of a dancer.  What, I wonder, do trees think of winter?  But I suppose trees don't have a brain, at least as we know it, or think.

 

I have two routes to Orleans, but I have chosen the more moderate of the two for a couple of reasons.  Firstly, I have chosen it because it is more moderate though it is 103 miles (and will be 106 today with turning around to fix the headset and uncounted mileage out to the dollar store in Medora).  Secondly, I love the stretch between Medora Tunnelton Hill, including the descent on Tunnelton that S curves under the railroad by a narrow lane.  Or I should say I allowed Jon to choose, but had I ridden alone this was the route I also would have chosen.   The stretch winds past the ancient and no longer functioning Medora Brick Plant and follows the railroad.  I think briefly of Packman, for he was the one who told me of the railroad tunnel I have never found and the reason I came this way.  He is gone now and hopefully at peace.  I think of how in the spring this stretch will explode with color and spring flowers, delighting my eyes, a painting just waiting to be captured on canvas.  


This route has a late lunch stop, and with the extra miles it is later than normal.  Both Jon and I are famished when we arrive at Speak Easy Pizza.  They still have their tables outside and the day is beautiful,  and so we sit outside and eat our pizzas and share a few thoughts before heading back through Salem and home.  As we leave, I realize my legs are a bit tired.  I tell them to quit complaining and a bit of spinning convinces them that they are okay and will make it with no problem.  Sometime I wonder about Jon's willingness to ride with me because he is capable of a much faster pace, but I am grateful for his company.  I think of past riding companions.  So few left that ever ride a century.  So few that I ever see anymore. But I refuse to let sadness seep into this beautiful day.  Instead I think how lucky I have been to have known each of them and created memories that I hold dear.  


As we near Salem, Jon points out a huge cloud of smoke and asks me if there is a power plant nearby.  There is not, at least to the best of my knowledge, and we both wonder what is on fire that would cause such smoke.  We never have our curiosity sated. And before you know it, we are at Casey's, our last store stop.  I opt for a soft drink, something I have pretty much given up other than occasionally on a ride.   I wonder what Jon is up to, go outside and find he has been cornered by a stranger as so often happens on rides.  I chuckle a bit and drink my soft drink.  He enters the store and comes out with nothing saying that when he got in there, he realized there was nothing he wanted.  They have no small cans of pop.  Everything is large sized.  


We leave the route for a bit of a work around due to road construction but soon are on Quaker Road heading for the huge descent.  On Old 56 I see a young Amish boy, maybe five or six, a straw hat perched upon his tiny head and a grin plastered across his face  in the field with five or six ponies furiously waving at Jon who does not see him.  I wave back and he smiles.  Further up the road we come upon a mini Amish cart driven by children pulling out of the drive along with a full sized car driven by adults.  There is an Amish woman on a bicycle with no pedals, powered by her legs and and any downhill slant in the road. A grin lights my face and I remember how much Lloyd admired the Amish and the simplicity that seems to be their lives.  Idealized?  Most likely.  But he always longed for simpler times, something perhaps we all do at times.  I think of my mom in her nineties one time telling me that she just didn't want to have to deal with any more problems.  The world does, at times, already seem too much to handle.  And I only have so much coin to spend, and I want to spend it wisely.


This ride today was wise, almost sophic, in some ways.  I have no regrets for how I spent today's coin, on the road with the simplicity of shorts and jersey (back pockets stuffed with layers from a gradual strip tease).  I have no regrets for the too much pizza I ate at lunch or the aches in my thighs and the stiffness in my movements that reminds me that I am, indeed, aging and that will impact the soundness of my sleep tonight.  While I do not delude myself with the belief that I have not and will not waste some  of the coin that has been allotted to me, I try my best not to do so, to hold the moments more dear.  And this is one thing that becomes easier with age and the realization that there is, indeed, a last time for everything.  I am indeed blessed and have been for many, many years.  And I am grateful for the day, the company, bicycles, and the coin that I have already been given. 



 

 



Sunday, October 23, 2022

Lost in October

"September is my favourite  month,

particularly in Cornwall.  I felt, even

as a child, that if you get a wonderful day in

September, you think: This could be one

of the last.  The summer is nearly over.

When you get a wonderful day in May, you

think: So, there's more coming."

Tim Rice 

 

It is not September here in Indiana, but October, but the feelings of Mr. Rice hold true.  Today the sun is shining and it is warm enough that shortly I will be riding in  just a sports bra, jersey, shorts, light head covering, and gloves.  The blue of the sky is exquisite and the sun bright.  But tomorrow could be different.  What has been give can easily be taken away.  I head out on the Surly looking for some gravel despite the drought and the dust I know will be waiting.  

 

I am unsure why I pick the Surly, but it allows me more freedom to explore with its wider tires and ability to take some gravel.  I don't care for the thick, large gravel, but more because of the stress on older joints than the fear I used to have of falling.  With gravel, I have found that the words of Steve Rice hold true.  It is better and easier to go faster throwing caution to the wind.  So when I reach Wascum Road, I put my weight on the back tires, loosen my grip on the handlebars, and pedal as hard as I can while still being comfortable and not going anaerobic.   


I reach the point where I had to turn around the other day and think how glad I am to have this entire day to play with:  no other place to be and nothing that presses to be done.  Time is, indeed, a gift.  And the bicycle and lovely fall scenery helps me leave my troubles and worries behind in the dust.  


Farmers are hurriedly making use of the spate of good weather to gather crops, but this means at  places large clouds of dust as I pass fields that are being worked.  I am glad that I have my neck gater and pull it up as I  pass by.  I laugh when I reach to get a drink and get grossed out by the dust that has collected on my bottle, wipe it  off, and drink knowing that I need to stay hydrated.  At times, I pull off the road to allow farm vehicles unfettered access without having to worry about a cyclist claiming "her right" to the road.  My day is for pleasure.  Their day is more important:  feeding a hungry world.  I just heard on television about expected food shortages this year that includes corn and tomatoes, and in my mind I issue a thank you for their attempts to mitigate this shortage.  


I also think how farming is still mainly dominated by men.  Occasionally I will see a woman helping in the fields, but not today.  Since it looks to me, an outsider and not a farmer, like most of what is being done is driving trucks and farm machinery, I wonder why and really reach no good conclusion except, perhaps, tradition and farms, perhaps, being left more often to men as heirs rather than women.  When I worked at the horse farm, I often drove the tractor to bush hog and kind of enjoyed it as the grass and weeds feel sway to the tractors dominion, but only briefly tamed.  But then I remember as a child, my brothers were taught to drive and were allowed to drive the lawn tractor.  As a girl, I was not permitted to do so.   Our home had fairly strict divisions of labor, and they were determined by gender not abilities.  





I begin to reach roads where I must make decisions about which way to go while being not quite sure where each road will lead.  I try to go basically west or south, but sometime the road fools me turning and taking me north.  And I wander and decide until I realize that I have absolutely no idea where I am.  I am gloriously lost knowing that eventually I will find a highway that will tell me where I am or I can use the Wahoo to retrace my route.  


I really have enjoyed my Wahoo for club riding and rides where there is a prescribed course, but when I wander I miss my Garmin.  It is nice to have street names when you wander, and Wahoo only has names for roads if they are a predetermined course.  And while it has a retrace route function, it does not, at least that I have figured out, have a return to start with the option of using another route.  But Wahoo is what I have and until it breaks I don't have to make a decision about what to purchase next.  


As I begin to climb, having left farm roads behind, I notice how beautiful this road is with the trees overhanging and steep drop offs on the side.  The sides of the road are golden with leaves that have fallen yet there are still leaves on the trees in all their different colors ranging from brown to red to orange to yellow.  The wind is rather strong causing leaves to swirl down and the modest grade allows me to play my traditional game of crunching leaves with my tire.  


I laugh coming upon a chair chained to a tree alongside the road.  Behind the tree is a sheer drop off.  Above the chair is a sign announcing it is for sale.  The tree and land or the chair?  What, I wonder, is for sale.  When I stop to grab a photo, I also find that I have no cell service, something happening more and more to me these days.  I suspect my old phone is to blame, but I am not quite sure.  Another purchase I will soon need to make while prices on everything skyrocket.  





At the top of the climb I come upon a small store that I recognize and would have bet had gone out of business due to the Pandemic.  The one time I stopped previously, a number of years ago, the proprietor seemed ancient.  It is just an old shed that sits outside of a house and it didn't have much then.  I don't expect much now but hope for at least a drink because, carelessly, I did not bring food and am rather low on water.  The "open" sign blinks in bright red flashes so I go inside.  The lights are on but nobody is manning the store.  I shout hello a couple times thinking perhaps she is in back, but I get no answer.  I think about leaving a couple dollars and grabbing a drink out of the refrigerator, but I am not really comfortable doing that so I go outside on the porch.  After fiddling with my bike for a short period of time,  I leave when nobody has appeared.  


About a mile down the road, I see a sign for Delaney Park and, grateful to leave a main road, head down Rooster Hill to the road I had hoped to return home on.  As usual, Delaney Park and Eden do not disappoint.  The trees shimmer in the wind and the colors soothe my soul. Squirrels make rustling noises in the leaves scampering to prepare for winter, crossing the road mindless in their hurry causing me to be extra cautious. I giggle thinking of a commercial I once saw that said something about the only  real difference between a squirrel and a rat is their furry tail and asking if the tail makes much of a difference.  And it does. 

 

 I ride miles without seeing a car or another human being and I think how lucky I am to have access to this.  The only disturbing thing I come across is more logging which I think was happening on park land and a for sale sign on acreage up the road that I worry will be bought by someone who wants to cut down all the trees. 

 

Summer has been officially over for awhile.  And we have had unusually cold weather.  We even had a snow that covered the ground, beautiful in its own way but not yet welcome. But that, combined with the coming weather, makes today more special as I soak in the autumn beauty and calm peace of being on a bicycle with no demands on time, pace, or course.   I can't say that fall is my favorite season for I truly adore spring and how the earth yawns and awakens graciously strewing green and colored flowers throughout the landscape.  But I don't think I could ever get enough days like today.  And I am grateful and give thanks. 

Sunday, October 16, 2022

The Unexpected: It Happens

 "Life is all about the unexpected."

Vernon Davis

 

 There are those days when, no matter how you fight it, your plans aren't going to come to fruition.  Today was one of those days.  In the early morning, when light hit, I took off on the Lynsky toward Bethlehem for the festival there.  Last year I rode with the Madison Club, but this year it was a sponsor ride and since I have not  yet officially joined that club, it did not seem right to attend as if I was.  Besides that, I want no demands on my pace today.   I am looking forward to taking my time and enjoying the beauty of this fall, for it has been, thus far, a particularly charming fall this year, with fine if rather chilly temperatures and spectacular colors.  


I turn around about three fourths of a mile in deciding I need an additional layer to be comfortable, grab my jacket and head back out.  About a half a mile down the road I shift.  Nothing happens.  Well, something happens.  My shifter freezes in the shift position, something I have never had happen to me or witnessed happening to anyone else. 


So, instead of heading to Bethlehem, I am off to Clarksville Schwinn hoping that Bob will be able to fix my bike.  He shakes his head and says not today, so I sadly leave it there heading home.  


I decide that I have other bikes and while it is too late to ride to Bethlehem without pushing my pace or running out of daylight, I take the Surly and head out to find some gravel.  Eden Road is alive with color and at the split off of Wascum, I take the lane that never appears to be a road but is.  It is a bit rougher than the other gravel, but the road itself is worth it. 


I am just thinking that I will make a day of it and ride further than intended when I get a text from the man working on my house that I need to come back.  So I turn around, sad but happy I at least got a few miles in and didn't waste an entire fall day.  As I head in, I realize my legs are more tired than I thought so perhaps it is not a bad thing.  

 

One of the hardest things I have found about exercising and aging is trying to tell the difference between necessary rest and being lazy.   And I decide that with riding a century on Saturday and century on Tuesday and fifty three miles on Thursday, I am probably really tired and need rest in a way I did not when I was younger.  

 

 

This leads to thoughts of aging and how it bothers us so much in this country to be old, as if it is a fault instead of a blessing that has been bestowed upon us.  I briefly wonder if it is that way everywhere. I can't say I like all the changes that age brings, but it is what happens unless you die and not a shameful thing but a natural thing.  To be ashamed of age is the same as being ashamed of  your eye color or your height,  utterly ridiculous. I can't say I glory in.  I rue my waning strength, the changes in my body, my lagging memory and thought processes, the wrinkles that surprise me in the mirror, the gradual graying of my hair.  But I try not to be ashamed and to remember that age is a blessing denied to some and to accept the changes that time has wrought.  I'm not always successful, but I try.

 

In the end, it has been a good day.  There is sunshine, and trees that shimmer with color as they dance their final dance with this years clothing before saying farewell.  Life is, overall, good, and I am thankful even if days don't always work as I planned.  Mr. Davis is, indeed, right.  Life certainly is about the unexpected. 

Sunday, October 9, 2022

Medora Goes PInk 2022

"The first breath of Autumn was 

in the air, a prodigal feeling, a 

feeling of wanting, taking, and 

keeping before it is too late."

J. L. Carr 

 

Medora Century......it always is a rather poignant time, falling as it does on the second week-end of October to celebrate Medora goes pink, and signaling the coming end of comfortable riding.  Yes,  one can ride all winter long.  I did it for years.  And I still ride sometimes in the winter cold.  But it is not the same and does not hold the same freedom that a summer ride does clad only in shorts and jersey and with long hours of sunlight that allow for lollygagging.  Medora, since it started going pink in October,  always brings an awareness to me of how fragile our lives are as well having lost two grandmothers to breast cancer and with my mother having had breast cancer though surviving.  


The Medora rides started many years prior to the festival start and also brings happy memories, and I feel certain that today's ride will be no exception.  I have ridden there with so many people and have seen so many changes within the town.  I remember a winter ride with Grasshopper, and how as we sat and ate our sandwiches, snug and warmed by the inside of the long defunct store as well as our friendship, the snow began to fall, flakes as big as my hand driven sideways by a strong wind, and we wondered about making it home. I remember showing the bridge to Greg Z. when he came to visit and how the main road was closed so we found a way that contained gravel yet he did not complain.  I remember the year some of the riders decorated and wore bras outside their jerseys, including some of the men.  I remember the years riders rode the barrel train in town.  I remember the many, many times I helped first time century riders finish and sharing their elation at their accomplishment, for a century, no matter how easy, is still an accomplishment. 


I change the start time due to the unexpected cold weather and wheels don't roll until 9:00.  It is, indeed, the first breath of Autumn. I don't know it this will help or hurt attendance, but it will certainly make the ride more pleasant for me.  I am not sure how many will show, but I do learn that there will be riders from Riddenfadden and SWI along for ride.  And it turns out to be a nice turnout though smaller than many times in the past.  22 riders turn out for a glorious fall day that, while cool, will be filled with sunshine.  Larry Preble, Tom Hurst, Amelia Dauer, Mark Peterson, John Pelligrino, Dave King, Bob Grable, Fritz Kopatz, Paul Battle, Steve Puckett, Tom Askew, Dee Schreur, Jessie Dietrich, Tony Nall, Steve Meredith, Jonathan Lichensteiner, Jonathan Wineland, Peggy Bannon, John Mahorney, Thomas Nance, and Beth Niccum.  Some I know, some I don't.  Regardless, all are welcome.  Smiles seem to dominate and the chatter is upbeat and falls like music on my ears.  This will, I feel certain, be a glorious day.


At the ride start, I find out that the Chicken Chase, a road race, has been scheduled for the same day.  Not only is it scheduled for the same day, but it has the same start time and the same first few miles of the course.  It slows us for a bit when the sweeping vehicle blocks our path, but he allows us around.  I try to encourage the runners/walkers and to be courteous as we pass.  Hopefully they don't mind our passage.  

 

As I expect, the crowd rather quickly divides into groups.  I stay in the back as I will throughout the ride, sweeping.  Sometimes sweeping can be a chore, a struggle to find conversation with people I don't know well, a struggle against personal needs and wants, but today is a pleasure.  For once, there is little wind, for wind often is the nemesis of this route turning what should be a fairly easy ride into a battle.  And despite the chilly start, a quick warming.  Ideal cycling weather.  

At the slower pace, I am able to nice the contrast of the trees, some fighting to maintain the illusion of green summer and some yielding to oranges, yellows, browns, and reds.  When there is a gust of wind, at a  point in the route where there are trees instead of fields, small leaves flutter to the ground giving a festive feel to an already festive ride.   I try to register each beautiful thing I pass to hold close in the coming winter, to cling to when it seems the sky will never be blue again and the sun will never share his warmth but will continue to give me his cold shoulder.  And Carr is right, I want and want and perhaps even need without being really sure of what it is that I want and need, just knowing that it is something.   And knowing that I will blink and the trees will be bare, many bicycles will be put up, and I will still feel as if I missed it, as if I missed something. 


It seems like a short time when we arrive at the covered bridge, but the first group is already coming back through having eaten and returning to the stop.  Larry takes a photo of us at the bridge and makes the comment about the photo being "Medorable" causing long though good natured groans to emerge from the crowd along with a few giggles.  Thomas comments that Larry must have thought that up last night and been saving it for just the right moment.  They tease me about some woman in Medora asking about me and saying I am there every year. And then we are off.  They head home, three of us head to the festival and to find some lunch.   

 

I am hungry as I had only an apple and some V8 for breakfast knowing that the food here would not be healthy and would be calorie laden.  Since Scotland, I have struggled to lose the weight I gained and winter will not help that struggle as cold weather causes cravings for comfort foods rather than salads and veggies.  I get my usual sandwich and sit where I can bathe in the sunlight for a bit before swinging my leg back over the bike.  As we leave, I try to remember the first rides where i put the initial Medora course together, but my memory fails me.  I remember plenty of rides to Medora, with others and solo, but that ride escapes me.  


We are rather slow on the way in and I wonder if anyone will be waiting to join us for   pizza, but there are a few that have stayed and chatted waiting for us.  The pace is fine, however, and worth the elation I see on Beth's face when she finishes and makes it up the last climb without walking. We all go to have pizza despite Dave's disappointment that the restaurant does not have beer and there is laughter and fellowship.  Henryville is a small town and for the first time it hits me that there is no liqueur store in the town and no bar.  I don't think the grocery sells alcohol either despite the fact I know it is not a dry county.  Rather interesting and probably saves the town from some problems it might otherwise have, but also affecting the economy.  For booze is popular.  


I don't know what  the ride was like for most of the people today, but I hope it was as nice a day for them as it was for me, that they drank their fill of sunshine and the last of summer/first of autumn, that they got something to "keep" before it was too late.  And I wish them memories to warm themselves with when the winter that is fast approaching arrives. 







Monday, October 3, 2022

STORY CENTURY IN THE FALL: UNPLANNED BLESSINGS


"I remember it as October days

are always remembered, cloudless,

maple flavored, the air gold and

so clean it quivers."

Leif Enger 

 

I like to try to ride all my century routes at least once yearly, but despite being retired, between tour stages and doing Jon's centuries and age and increasing recovery time needs, I find it is not always happening. Perhaps sloth also enters into the equations.  Regardless, it is what it is.

 

 Story is one of my favorites.  Not necessarily because of the roads.  Some of the roads, particularly at the start, get a bit boring with miles of crops, but because of the destination.  Something about the old, pretty much abandoned, small town of Story with its outdoor dining and rustic atmosphere draws me.  





Despite the wind prediction, it is best to ride it on Sunday as there is road construction that I may have to route around if it is impassable and the outside dining and music is only available on week-ends.  Passage also is easier on week-ends when road workers are at home.  Some will  let me pass.  Others are determined not to do so even if there is a clear path through. And so last minute I shoot an email to Jon telling him what I am doing and that if he wants to join me he is welcome.  I get an email back that he does want to ride.  While I intend to ride anyway, it will be nice to have company on the journey.  


The day dawns with a chill, colder than normal but not as cold as it has been. It is fresh and inviting, this crispness that often comes with fall despite knowing what comes after.  I know I will be shedding layers to remain comfortable so don a backpack. I also know I will not be freezing at the start as happens with winter rides.  The sky is blue and the sunshine is bright.  We head off pedals briskly spinning as we warm our legs for the task ahead. 


As we ride, I am glad that the wind will be in our face on the way out and not most of the way back, for it is strong.  At one point, Jon mentions that flags are flying straight out, often an indicator of 20 mph. Regardless, it is hard work, this pedaling into the wind.  I laugh as we come upon a kettle of vultures, some sitting on the roof, telling them it is not yet time.  During our ride, we will pass three to four kettles and I jokingly tell Jon I will need to change the name of the ride to the vulture ride.  Perhaps they know, somehow, about the increasing difficulties of these rides, how they stretch me not only  physically but mentally, but how I love them.  


As always, during the ride I will think of times and people  I have ridden this course with in the past.  Bill Pustow comes to mind.  It was a nice day, that day, just Bill and I.  And Mark Rougeuz and Paul Battle one time, Mark pushing the pace as he always does while Paul and I desperately try to keep his wheel, hearts pounding, legs pushing, breath rasping.  And more.  One reason I keep this blog is to remind myself of miles and of people I have shared them with knowing that a day will come when I or they will stop riding, when I will grieve the loss of them because not all losses are due to death though that is always a possibility.  Sometimes I wonder if there is, indeed, an afterlife, as I believe, do we keep our memories?  If so, do they still remain special.  For I have loved so many of those I have ridden with, the warmth of their company, the stories they  have shared, the laughter we have indulged in.  But like the leaves in autumn, I let go while holding the memory of those blessed moments. Still, they are all blessings that have enriched my life and for which I give thanks. 


I wonder as we approach Freetown if the Dollar Store will have put the small store, Denny's, out of business.  But it has not.  Denny's is open and business is brisk. I rejoice and will gladly pay a bit more to keep these small stores in business.  According to the sign, Denny's has been there and in business since 1946.  I think of Thomas Nance saying that it was his belief that we have been our own worst enemies in this area, buying from bigger stores to save a dollar or two and helping them put the small business out of business.  And I think he has a point. 

 

 The road out, often one that has some traffic on it, is lightly trafficked due to road closures.  Along the edge of the roads, I begin to notice more leaf changes. It is beautiful but holds an element of sadness knowing that short, dark, and cold days are on their way.  But today is not a day for sadness.  It is a day for rejoicing with sun that still speaks of warmth, bicycles, blue skies, and company that I enjoy.  


At one point, I tell Jon how one of the things that bothers me about aging is that I need more rest, and that there are days like today where when I don't use the day actively but resting there is a feeling of wastefulness.  Perhaps because age makes us more aware of how days are numbered, particularly days of riding centuries.  And he agrees.  He has the same feeling at times.  


Story is lightly populated and the food service is fast though they are out of things listed on their menu outside.  Still, the barbecue is delicious and the portion is large enough that I struggle to finish it.  Music, per a woman we met there, does not start until after we will be gone.  Jon is talking with this woman when I return from a bathroom run.  She is quite interesting and certainly outgoing. A few years younger than me, her big accomplishment last year was riding her mule across the state of Michigan in a cross state event of some type.  She is here with her girlfriend to ride this area and tells us we need to go to the Garden of the Gods in Illinois sometime.


We would talk longer, but day light, while still ample, is shorter.  So we push off enjoying the tailwind that is now ours and well earned.  The morning slog into the wind has taken its toll on my legs but I still manage a decent pace the rest of the way back despite their ache.  At Dairy Queen, we find the dining area is finally open.  I rejoice because I have been looking forward to a chocolate shake to fuel me for the rest of the ride home.  Soon, as I point out to Jon, it will be too cold to sit outside enjoying the cool shake sliding down my throat. Even with the wind, I enjoy sitting outside with the sun, however pallid compared to summer, beating down on me. And my ride has paid the dues for this treat.


Other than the climb out of Brownstown, the hills are finished and we glide back in finding that while not all of the road closure signs have been removed, the road is open.  The day is spent but not wasted.  Never wasted on a bicycle.  I am, indeed, blessed. 

Saturday, September 24, 2022

A Strange Transition

"The seasons change their manners,

as the year had found some months

asleep and leapt  them over."

William Shakespeare

 

What an odd season change it has been thus far, as if one went to sleep in the midst of the steamy, hot blooded summer, rolled over, only to chill and see he was a ghost and fall is here dressed in her leafy gown that is swirling in the wind and changing colors.  On the century earlier this week, it reached or approached ninety degrees.  On today's forty four mile breakfast ride, I wear arm warmers, a vest, and a jacket as well as knickers and my wool gloves.  While I shed the jacket quickly and the day warms to the seventies, it just seems incongruous somehow, as if there should be more of a buffer.  It makes me feel that I have missed something.  One would think by now I would realize that time and seasons slip through one's fingers like sand, always elusive. 


The roads show little of the signs that portend it  is fall.  The occasional black walnut, the occasional persimmon, the occasional leaf.  The trees hint a changing but remain green.  While I have seen a few fields that have been harvested, most remain in the midst of changing from green to yellow.  And few wooly worms cross the road requiring extra diligence on the bike to keep from ending their furry little lives.  


Nobody shows for the ride today but Jon, and we ride what was the first part of the century he put together earlier this summer to the breakfast place.  This time, rather than the short stack of pancakes, I get the omelet.  Jon sticks with the short stack.  It is three medium sized pancakes.  They offer no other.  What would one call a larger stack, I later ask him.  Would it be a tall stack?  


The wind that helped us on the way out pummels us in places on the way back, another sign that fall has, or is, arriving.  I watch as our average pace declines, not really concerned about it, but interested.  Now I understand why I felt so strong on the way out.  Tail wind hero....a term I think I first heard from Greg Smith.


After the ride there is the library book sale and I purchase four books.  Then a wander around the art festival: Chautauqua.  By now the sun is out and I find I am becoming rather hot.  But I enjoy seeing people's creations even though I have no intention of buying any of them.  


On the drive home it again strikes me how the season has and yet has not changed.  Normally it seems more gradual than this year, but fall just arrived on the calendar earlier this week so perhaps it is me.  Regardless, the earth will do what she will do.  And I will ride my bike so long as I am able. 



Thursday, September 15, 2022

Scotland 2022

 “He said anything worth doing should

 scare you a little, and that some 

of the greatest stories began with a journey.”  

Mindy Mejia

 

 I have been carefully trying to prepare for my trip to Scotland despite dealing with the death of yet another sibling and a visit from my son and his family the week-end before I leave, and I think I have it mostly under control until the morning I am to leave.  I am not as prepared as I had hoped  I would be, but I am not a totally out of shape blob at this point. 

 

 I check in to ensure that my flight, that I already checked into the previous day and printed boarding passes for, is on time.  Not only is it NOT on time, but they have scheduled me to leave the following day, potentially robbing me of another day to spend in Edinburgh, one of my favorite cities.  As life is wont to do, it has been repeatedly teasing me recently with any illusion I have of being in control of anything.  As  I heard once or read somewhere, and I don't remember where, life is so random Pinky Pie.  And I do  have fear.  Traveling is something I have not done enough of to feel comfortable with it.  But fears must and should be faced and conquered or they conscript life all too much.  And we only have one life so it is best NOT to waste it hiding at home, peeking at the real world instead of participating in it.


I am NOT happy at this reminder that our world has changed so since COVID. I am less happy that I did not even get the courtesy of an email about this change but had to discover it on my own.  I call the travel agent (that I am even more happy than before that  I engaged though I would have used the club member if I had known before engaging her) who does manage to get me a flight from Louisville to Chicago and from Chicago to Edinburgh today.  The catch is that I have VERY little layover time:  less than a half hour to switch terminals and gates.  The agent urges me to go to the airport "THIS MINUTE" and try to get on the earlier flight to Chicago as a standby, so I tear off my raggedy jeans and change into something more appropriate, grab my bag and head out.  Of course, I am not successful.  So now I have a five hour wait at the Lousiville Airport,  an airport nice in its own way but totally lacking in places to eat or much to do while waiting.


I call my cousin, David, who says he would like to come get me for lunch but has a repair person coming.  If the repair person gets there in time, he will call.  And for once the repair person does get there just as I have decided to say screw the parking fee and head out for Half Price Books and a solitary lunch.  It is a treat to see David as it has been awhile and it really helps pass the time though I remain wound up over my short layover time fearing that I will have to spend the night in Chicago and will miss a day in Edinburgh.  


It doesn't happen though.  My plane from Louisville gets in a bit early and I literally run much of the way between terminals making it just in time.  David King, my riding buddy that is accompanying me on this adventure, texts that his flight is being delayed yet again, then that it is okay and he will also be flying out shortly.  He is in Newark, the city of my canceled first flight.  I may have  had a bad day thus far, but I can't match his bad day.  He DOES lose a day in Edinburgh. 

 

 

On the plane to Edinburgh, I happen to sit next to someone who has ridden with the Louisville Bicycle Club and used to race bicycles in Louisville.  What are the chances of this happening?  Such an interesting and nice person. He knows Bob Peters and Clarksville Schwinn, John Molnar, Derrick and On Your Left Cycles,  Jon Kindig, Mark Luking, etc.  He no longer lives in Louisville but does research at St. Jude's in Memphis as a Phlebotomist.  He still rides, but rarely, and is more into climbing.  His first name is Chris.  He told me his last name twice, but I just don't remember it, a  problem that seems to be happening more often and is rather scary because of the long term implications.  He refreshes my memory on FB.  Nevitt. While there are some aspects of aging that delight me, there are others that frighten me....and this is one of them. But I also have decided that since there is nothing I can do about it that I am not currently doing, I am not going to dwell on it.  

 

After the dinner on the plane, we both sleep for a bit.  I am happy to find that I am able to sleep, something that rarely happens when I fly.  I know I will struggle with the time difference and making the adjustment.  Chris's conversation certainly makes the time pass more quickly and is quite interesting.  And how one has to admire someone who works for St. Jude's.


I arrive in Edinburgh and am surprised at how easy it is to enter the country.  I do pass by two officers, one of whom I have to show my passport to.  He asks me why I am coming to Scotland.  I tell him to ride bicycles and the other officer cracks up.  The one taking the passport does not crack a smile and just waves me through with a scowl on his face.  Despite his surliness, his accent makes my day bringing back happy times.  It falls like sweet music on my ears and now it begins to surround me, as comfortable as an old, worn, pair of jeans. Then to baggage check.  In light of the way things have gone I worry that my bag won't arrive, but it does and soon I am on my way to the hotel.

 

I thoroughly enjoy my drive (no I am NOT the one driving) to my hotel.  We talk about the garbage strike in Edinburgh that is just ending and I learn that there are plans to resume the strike in a short period of time.  Evidence of the strike is throughout the city where garbage remains in piles around full dumpsters in places but I am told it is much better than it was yesterday.  We talk a bit about politics and Scotland's quest for independence and I  learn that Scotland has most of the oil that is in the sea surrounding the coast and produces the majority of the gin that is a favorite in England.  It is  interesting to hear this side of the story.   We talk about the US and the refusal to regular automatic weapons.  He talks of the school shooting at Dunblane and how immediately after automatic weapons were regulated and there have been no mass school shootings since.  The Dunblane tragedy happened in 1996.  He says he does not understand the US being willing to sacrifice its children and feels it is related to money given to politicians.  I can't explain it to him as I also don't understand. I wish I could spend more time conversing with this interesting man, but we reach my hotel and I must say I will be glad to wash the grit and dirt of travel away.  

 

To my surprise, despite the early hour my room is available, probably because it appears to be a handicapped room but it has everything I need.  I message Dave King to let me know when he arrives and wants to meet.  It takes a bit, but we meet up and walk to the Royal Mile stopping to have meat pies on our way.  It is interesting how many little restaurants there are and the price differences.  Some are quite expensive and offer gourmet foods while others are simple and much more reasonable.  

 

While I don't intend to stint on food, particularly since it will be provided during the bike trip, I also don't intend to spend thirty or forty dollars for lunch unless Dave has a strong desire to eat somewhere.  My only request has been that we try to avoid American restaurant chains during the trip.  I also don't intend to miss seeing sights because it might cost a bit.  Having already spent this much and traveled this far, I intend to absorb as much as I can while I can.  I won the trip, but not transportation nor these days before and after. Always, anymore, a sign of age I suppose, is the recognition that my days of doing this are numbered.  That recognition tinges things a slightly different hue than they  might otherwise be adding specialness and gratitude.  How lucky are those who maintain their health.  I have three deceased siblings that add an exclamation point to this thought.


We pass St. Giles Cathedral and decide to tour it.  As always, I wonder about those that walked here before me.  So much history.  The artistry is stunning:  stained glass windows, arches, carvings, statues.....and in the middle someone playing lovely music on a violin accompanied by an organ.  Everything combines sending the soul reaching upward. The music is heavenly and suggestive and I think that if I had lots of time, I could just sit and listen to it for hours and that if I fell asleep, I would feel certain that I was in heaven....so appropriate for a place of worship.  It is well worth our time and a maintenance donation.  I think of the labor and artistry that went into construction and remain awed though I suspect much of it was forced labor and/or underpaid. But I don't know this and perhaps I am wrong.  I am just assuming based on what I know of history.



 

We then pass a whiskey tour/sampling place.  Dave obviously wants to go and the man says the tour only lasts a bit over an hour so I say I will come back in an hour as I have absolutely no desire for whiskey. I remind him, as I do often throughout the trip, that we are not joined at the hip and don't have to do everything together. My lack of Scots blood in my heritage? I just don't care for whiskey and I can see no health benefit from learning. 

 

While waiting, I do find  the Scottish Writers Museum down a side alley, something I was not looking for and did not know existed,  and it is open.  What an unexpected treat. I tour through seeing busts and things from Robert Burns, Robert Lewis Stevenson, and a few others.  My mother loved the writings of Robert Lewis Stevenson and I can still hear her voice reciting poems to me from "A Child's Garden of Verses."  Sometimes I wonder if she realizes the gift she gave me in reading to me, the cadence and sounds falling from those  lips that I loved.  I do return but no Dave.  I wait a bit then head out navigating my way back to the hotel.  It is nearing supper time and I want to spruce up a bit.  When I get in, I message Dave about the misunderstanding and ask if he wants to meet for dinner.  He does.  I am tired and dragging, but need to eat.  I also don't want to go to bed too early as I need to adjust to the time change, something I inevitably struggle with.


When Dave arrives we ask at the front desk if there is a place they can recommend for dinner.  She tells us to go back to the Royal Mile or to the Grass District (I think).  We end up at a small pub "World's End" a bit off the Royal Mile and have a drink while we wait for a table.  According to the pub's web page, "The Worlds End's exterior walls form part of the Flodden Wall, a 16th century fort that protected Edinburghs historic old town. There was once a time that the people of Edinburgh thought the world outside this wall was no longer theirs so hence our name."  It is cozy and the food is good.  And I am  hungry which always adds a bit of spice to a meal.  Just one of the things I love about riding a bicycle, how it makes eating a real treat because the body needs fuel in a way it does not when you don't exercise regularly and rather hard. 

 

My eating schedule has been way off since the trip started as has Dave's and we both put away what turns out to be a quite acceptable plate of food.  Not healthy, mind you, but tasty.  I think briefly that if it is like most of my trips away from home, by the time I return I miss vegetables.  I grin inwardly thinking of one PBP where at Brest I was talking to one of the volunteers and told him, "I miss broccoli." 


While I would never want to live in a city, I love the feel of walking back to the motel in the darkness and the still rush of people, the sound of laughter and conversations swirling in different languages that I don't understand.  How I wish I were like my daughter-in-law, tri-lingual.  Or at least bi-lingual.  I grin thinking of the shock on my oldest granddaughter's face when she realized Grandma did not speak Russian. I love the sound of people enjoying themselves, and particularly this  city with its occasional cobblestones and gorgeous old buildings where so many have walked before.  What is it about Edinburgh that affects me this way?  I am not a big city person.   

 

I love Edinburgh despite the strange sights I see some of which make me rather uncomfortable. Don't get me wrong.  I loved visiting London a few years back and, of course, as a child lived right outside for a year in Wimbledon.  I love the accents of London and the sights to be seen. Paris is fantastic pulsing with romance and possibilities.  But I believe I love Edinburgh a bit more. 

 

I tell the driver that this will probably be my last trip here.  He laughs and says, "You'll be back."  And I hope he is right. I know if I were to live in a city, I would hope it would be like this.  I enjoy the street artists and musicians, many of whom seem quite talented and don't give off the odor of despair that I often see in the states under similar conditions.  But then, I am not often in a big city in the states preferring the less inhabited countryside, particularly while on a bicycle. I see the bicycle riders and am in awe of their bravery.  Each pedal stroke seems a lesson in defiance.  Most of the cars seem respectful, but there are LOTS of cars. 


Dave still has to go back to his hotel, a place he describes as a dump and where he got placed in a room without a window, but since it is so light here most of the time perhaps the no window thing will be a benefit.  As tired as we are I doubt it, and I already checked and the curtains in my room truly do blacken the room.  But I am so tired at this point that I doubt it will matter.  I don't know if I was this tired when Bill and I slept underneath a table somewhere at a control in France in 2011.   I am grateful for Dave's company as it has kept me from going to bed, but when my head hits the pillow I am out and I do not stir, not even for my usual bathroom trips, until morning.  


When I awaken, I head out the door to find a reasonably priced breakfast.  There are few tourists out at this hour.  People stroll determinedly by, obviously off to work. I come upon a small shop that has chocolate bread and coffee, blessed coffee, for I am still a bit tired from my trip despite the good sleep.  I bring it back to my room and savor the bread that I learned to love in France and yet again wonder why it is not available at home. And this is brewed coffee, not the crystalized, pour in hot water kind of coffee.  When  I return, I text David to let me know when he intends to get here as I want to get the day started.  He arrives shortly afterward and we decide to go climb Arthurs Seat.  


When we arrive, the route the children and I used before, the radical road,  is now closed due to rock falls and there appears to be no intent to reopen it.  The climb now is much, much easier and seems much shorter for some reason.  Despite the chill, however, I find I am sweating as I climb and take off my light base layer and jacket.  As I do so I think how lucky we have been thus far weather wise and rue the upcoming predicted weather for when we are to ride our bikes.  But that is just how these things go. Everything changes.  At one time, as a child, I touched the stones of Stone Henge:  now they are roped off to protect them from thoughtless people like the child that I once was.  




While on Arthur's Seat, I laugh as a father instructs his young son, maybe four or five, to slide down on his "bum."  The child, of course, ignores him, then laughs telling his brother that their mum will be in a panic if she sees how close they got  to the edge.  Oh, the invincibility of youth.  Oh, the worry of being a mum, of ensuring that our precious responsibilities live to grow up without instilling them with the fear of falling down.  For life is partly about falling then getting back up again. 

 

While up on Arthur's Seat, we are directed to Crow Mountain, a bit off to the side, aptly named as we notice several crows  up there, and then we descend a different path than that we went up.  Dave complains of his ankles so we stop at the cafe at Holyrood Palace and have a drink before proceeding on in search of a bicycle shop the lady at the gift shop there tells me about.  

 

We find it and Dave has a long conversation with one of the workers.  I hone in on a beautiful old Pinarello and it is just about my size.  I know that if I were home that gorgeous bike would be making its way home with me, and at four hundred pounds, assuming they don't bargain, I would feel I was getting a deal.  But I am not home.  We also see a beautiful tandem that was built by the owner of the shop and other bikes, some not for sale and only for display.  I think of Alex Meade who builds bicycles at home and how much I think he would enjoy seeing this tandem with its intricate carvings and lugs.  Dave lusts after several of the older steel bikes that are not for sale.  The Flying Scotsman.  And they are beauties.  The bike shop person said they often have London Edinburgh London riders come in that were unable to finish the ride which was also interesting.




After leaving we decide to look for something for lunch and run across a sandwich shop that is out of this world.  We both have huge sandwiches on homemade bread and split two cannolis, one pistachio and the other chocolate chip with orange.  We walk to a nearby park to eat them and are eating when a passerby refers us to another close by park that has  view of Arthur's Seat.  The woman said this park was  used quite often during the lock down.  Despite my best effort, I can't finish the huge sandwich and some of it goes to the sea gulls and crows as there is no good way to carry it without getting mayo all over everything. 

 



When we finish we end up at The National Monument that is high on top of Calton Hill, though not nearly as high as Arthur's Seat.  As we descend, I suggest that since we are, per the map, near the train station we find it as tomorrow we will need to meet to go to Sterling.  We eventually find it and plan where to meet the next day.  I am much more comfortable knowing where the station is, and it did take a bit of asking to find it due to road construction.




 

It is getting late but with the large lunch, I am not really hungry and we decide that a pizza shop looks inviting. While on our way, we pass a young lady wearing fishnet stockings and a short jacket.  I wonder at first if she has anything else on, but she does:  the skirt is just very short reminding me of the early seventies.  I also notice lots of women wearing the navy blue hose that were in favor when I was in high school.  And, of course, the wide variety of tattoos and piercings.  Dave and I get different pizzas and sample each others.  Both are delicious and very unlike any I have found at home. We eat outside  on their patio and then part ways looking to meet in the morning to get to Sterling in time to look around. 


Despite being tired, I can't sleep.  No matter what I try, I am  unsuccessful.  I fret that I will have this insomnia throughout the trip.  (Luckily for me I don't). I finally nod off in the wee hours of the morning for a few hours of sleep before awakening to a message from Dave that he is on his way to the train station to leave for Stirling.  I have no time for breakfast but that is okay.  I have been overeating and know that will probably continue throughout the trip.


Before you know it, we have made the transfer to Sterling.  My hotel is halfway up the long hill leading to the castle and the local gin distillery. Dave and I decide to tour Sterling Castle.  Neither of us have been there before and it is fascinating.  I was interested to find that the gold color comes from mixing yellow ocher with the paint and that the entire castle was once painted that color.  It is amazing to think I am walking where Mary Queen of Scots and so many other royals have walked.  After the castle, we walk to the gin distillery, but while it is not crowded, service is slow and we decide to skip it for lunch  and then the Robert Bruce memorial.  It is closed when we arrive but you can still walk around it, just not inside.  




 

So far the weather has been delightful with no rain.  I warn Dave that the weather for the week does not appear to be so delightful, but we both are eager for  our adventure to begin and after a dinner of fish and chips at Number Two Baker Street pub agree to meet in the morning at the train station to meet our group. I am firm in my decision that I will not allow rain to ruin my good time.  I have planned for rain and packed appropriate clothing.  I worry more about if it will affect Dave and his enjoyment of the experience as I was the one who suggested that he come.

 

  Dave seems to have  a knack of picking restaurants with good food (though I suspect it might have more to do with the ale available;-)  and Number Two is no exception though the name, well, you figure it out. And it is always a treat to eat with him. He takes such joy in food. As I walk home,  belly full and heart full, I am happy that I am not toting my suitcase up that hill yet again and that tomorrow morning it will be a downhill. New roads and bicycles:  what a treat to look forward to.


I sleep well and get up in plenty of time to have a good Scottish breakfast before heading to the train station. I should have gone out and walked with my extra time as I will do on most of the days ahead, but I just don't think of it with my excitement for the trip beginning. Dave is at the train station when I arrive.  We are not exactly sure where to meet, but see a couple in riding clothes and meet our companions for the trip:  Ken and Jean are from America:  North Carolina if I remember correctly.  Karen is from British Columbia.  Peter and Karen are from Yorkshire. The guides, Dan and Jo, arrive.  Dan is from Wales but has lived in Scotland for awhile and Joe is from Yorkshire.  


We take a brief van ride out of the town and have our bike fits at the  University and our adventure begins.  Karen from Yorkshire passes me on the first hill like I am standing still.  I am rather surprised, but she does look fit. It springs to mind that I have not seen a woman climb that well since Marcy married and quit riding with the club.  

 

The bike I have rented is a Trek and quite comfortable with easier gears than at home.  I think that I will be glad of this during some of the more challenging climbs. Dave later points out to me that three of the riders have electric bikes thus the outstanding hill climb.  We are getting to know our bicycles and our companions.  I ride quite a bit with the group, something I will not continue to do as I miss scenery if I am talking.  I feel certain some people feel this is quite rude, but they will just have to deal with it.  I don't want to miss a second of the scenery if I can help it. 

 

 The ride heads toward the hills of Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park.  We pass Duane and Dublane though, disappointingly, we don't see either castle.  Some of the roads are rather busy, but soon we are off on side roads that are much less so.   I laugh to myself as we begin to see sheep. On this day, they are all contained within fences, but as the rides progress they will be stretched out alongside the road or grazing at the roadside reminding me of Texas. It is raining and one sheep has been smart enough to take shelter under a wagon causing me to smile.  Outside of one town, we pass small plots of vegetables.  I ask the guides if these are plots that people rent and they seem unsure, but Peter later confirms to me that they are.  I had guessed this because I read of some cities in the US doing this.  


 

The scenery is lovely with the Rowans bearing their bright red berries and the moss and heather in places.  For some reason, I always thought of heather as a spring plant, but on this journey I learn I am wrong and it blooms on the moors in the fall. Some is blooming and some is in bud.  Regardless, it is lovely. There are two types of pink flowers, but nobody seems to know their names.  One  of the guides, I can't remember which, tells me they are probably weeds.  Regardless, they are quite lovely.  We pass one of the Lochs whose name I should probably know but don't remember.  I really had no idea there were so many, and the Scottish words, while I love the sound, are often hard for me to make my mouth produce.





When we reach the lunch stop, we find that it is not open.  They manage to make arrangements for us to have lunch elsewhere though there is not enough seating for everyone.  The woman working there says she believes the other restaurant was unable to open due to staffing issues.  Staffing issues are mentioned throughout our time here everywhere we go as are supply issues.  I had wanted to buy a jersey that said Scotland, but was told at the bike shop that they were sold out and did not expect their stock to be replenished until perhaps Christmas due to supply issues.  There is also an issue getting new bikes and parts, just as there is at home.  Dave does manage to find buffs with the Scottish flag on them and is nice enough to buy one as a gift for me.  His kindness makes me feel good, but Dave is, essentially, a kind person and certainly a treasured friend. His presence here will make this journey even more meaningful that it would be otherwise. 


Before you know it, the ride is over and we are at Poppies in Callander where we will spend two nights.  This will be my favorite place that I stay during my time in Scotland. Not my favorite roads or scenery, but my favorite inn.  My room is delightful though, of course, as always the plumbing is strange. (I have already worked though one hotel where the cold was labeled as hot and vice versa and the stopper in the sink was operated by a switch on the back of the faucet).  Outside the shower is a cord I have to pull for the shower handles inside to work.  Obviously, others have struggled with this as there is a note on the wall.  Susan, the proprietor, and I get along fabulously and she is a font of information.  When I go down to have a glass of wine before dinner, she tells me of a nearby trail that goes up the craig.  She warns me to take the easier path to the right rather than to the left due to the rain and the steepness and the danger of slipping.  

 

Prior to this, Dave and I take a short walk around town discovering a lovely, though rather unkempt, hidden cemetery as well as enjoying the views of the water.  The route took us for a short bit on the water's edge to keep us off the main road.  As always, I am amazed at all the lovely places to walk everywhere we go.  




 

 

The rest of the group comes down to gather and have a drink before dinner and we all get to know each other a bit better.  Everyone  is friendly and excited about our journey.   The dinner is absolutely delicious.  I don't remember my appetizer, but the main course was salmon followed by Sticky Toffee Pudding, a treat that I never see at home.  Dave chose venison and informs me that deer are raised inside fences here for food purposes and that the meat tastes differently than those that are wild.  Everyone seems quite happy with their meal.  We fill out papers, as we will each night except our last night, with our breakfast request.  


The next morning, I leave while it is still a bit dark outside hoping to reach the top and be back in time for the eight o'clock breakfast that is scheduled.  Everyone else appears to be sleeping.  I feel rather like a thief, sneaking out of the house with its locked doors. At times, I am not quite sure which way to go and have to make a mental note so that I don't lose my way on the return, something Dave warned me about the prior evening.  It is gorgeous.  I hurry as fast as I can as time slips by climbing faster and faster while the terrain and vegetation seem to change.  I have to pass through a gate, carefully closing it behind me,  and hope that it is okay.  And I reach the top just when I had given up hopes of being able to do so and still make it back in time to eat and ride.  


From the top of the craig I can look in one direction and see a rather large loch.  I can see around me for what seems like forever despite the gray skies that promise rain, rain they will deliver in plenitude.  In places I can see the town below. All around me during the walk are moss and trees that seem as old as the earth.  At one point, I think how it is like a fairyland and that I would not be at all surprised to see a fairy or ogre or troll emerge, startled by my presence.   I only pass one person walking their dog the entire time, and that is early on my walk well before the long ascent.  I wonder  to myself if the stone steps during part of the ascent  were made to control erosion.  I have to believe that they were.  When I reach a fairly flat surface nearer the bottom of the descent, I realize I will have to run to make it in time.  And so, however awkwardly and slowly, I do.  I think how  glad I am that I pried open my pocket book  and bought some trail running shoes at Swags for my trip.  A turned ankle could ruin the trip, and I don't have strong ankles.  Plus, I no longer run due to hip and foot issues.  Today is an aberration.











I reach the inn just as breakfast is being served.  And what a breakfast it is.  Scrambled eggs and salmon.  Fruit, toast, and nuts.  Just a wide assortment of goodies.  Dan is able to tell me the name of the loch from the directions I give him, but of course my pea brain does not retain it.  I later look on the atlas that Jon was kind enough to send with me and see it is Loch Vennachar. 

 

On this second day it pours rain most of the time.  It will become an inside joke that whenever it is Jo's turn to captain the ride it will rain. We are scheduled to take a boat ride on a steamship on Lake Katrine.  By the time we reach there, we are sodden.  Wool keeps me warm while riding, but I worry about on the boat, particularly if we have to be outside on the boat.  While there is a large group of elderly people waiting (LOL as this is now me), they manage to find space inside for all after loading our bike.  One tells me we are quite brave to be riding in this weather and I remind them, with a smile on my face, that there may be a very fine line between brave and stupid. Inwardly I think how grand it is to still have the health to ride a bike, even in the rain. There is no place I would rather be than Scotland on a bicycle, rain or not.  I try to listen as the boat master tells us about what we are passing, but the conversations around me are too loud and varied so the words of all just become a meaningless jumble.  


 

I am surprised to find that many of the roads on this day are gravel.  There are also, as there were the previous days, narrow roads only wide enough for one vehicle that in the states I would assume to be a bike path.  I do here as well until a car comes.  After a delicious and long lunch at Aberfoyle, we traverse the Duke's pass in the Trossach's with all its twists and turns and lovely scenery.  I learn that the Duke of Menteith developed to path to get around his estate  more easily.  It is the first decent climb of the trip and my muscles rejoice even as they protest the demands being placed on them.  Despite the rain, I stop often to take photos.  It is Scotland after all.  Rain is to be expected, though perhaps not so much as we receive this trip.  I remain amazed, as I will throughout my ride, that there is no trash littering the sides of the road.   Maybe because there are no fast food restaurants out here and people seem to actually sit down and have a meal rather than grabbing it in a bag and eating as they drive.  Maybe it is that people are raised to have  more respect for themselves and others.  For whatever reason, it is a pleasant change and enhances the journey.  


At one point, I pass a couple of ducks on the road.  One waddles quickly across the road and enters the water.  The other, however, goes more slowly and stops by the edge of the road, obviously eating something.  I look and it is wild blackberries.  I didn't realize ducks eat blackberries, but this duck obviously relishes them.   This is also the first day I see a Scottish cow.  Despite the wretched weather, I am enjoying myself.  But I dare not stop long at the rest stops provided because of chilling.  I realize that I should have bought a new Showers Pass jacket, that my old one is.....old.  But it still keeps me warm enough despite its age but the seam tape beginning to loosen.  I treated it to renew water repellancy prior my trip which helps some. Bicycling is, indeed, an expensive sport, and not just the bicycles.  


The following morning there is only time for a short walk.  I am up early enough for a long walk, but as I open the front door the heavens let loose and I don't want to pack a bunch of wet clothing adding dampness to the few clean clothes I have left.  Today we go from Callender to Aberfeldy where we will stay three nights.  The last trip I did with this company, we moved to a new town/inn every night.  I prefer that to this, but since it is free certainly can't complain.  And there are benefits to being in one place.  I don't like this new place as much but it is clean.  And it is situated near the Birks which Dan is kind enough to inform me about knowing my penchant for walking prior to breakfast and the ride.





Today's ride surprises me as rather than being mainly on the road, we are on gravel, cinders, and even have a bit of single track.   Jean falls twice during the ride.  We stop along the way at the grave of Rob Roy Macgregor and Dan gives us a history lesson.  It appears that he was really not quite the Robin Hood that he is sometimes made out to be.  I ponder a bit about how we often take criminals or people with character issues and make them heroes, thinking specifically of Bonnie and Clyde.  What strange creatures we are.  Is there something about those that break the rules that is attractive to us? 







We pass falls that make me glad for the rain because the water is that much stronger.  The creeks here seem rockier and more  powerful than at home.  They are also noisier.  I begin to look for red squirrels after learning they are endangered due to the introduction of grey squirrels from the US.  We pass a castle.  Lastly, we stop for snacks along the edge of the loch where children are playing in the water.  I take off my shoes, sit on a concrete wall, and cool my feet in the water before we head back to the inn and the only dinner that I had while on the tour that was edible but not really good. 


The next day, on my pre-breakfast walk through the Birks, I get my wish and see what I believe is a red squirrel.  It happens near my turn about time (determined by how long until breakfast).  I notice a rustling in a tree above me and a few leaves fall.  And there he is, as bold as brass but a ball of constant motion moving from one branch to another, branches so slender you would think he would surely tumble.  It is also upon this walk that I come upon a solitary figure sitting on a bench.  As I spy him, I think that he looks quite pensive and I am reluctant to approach.  But the path goes by there and I am not yet ready to make my way back.  I break out in peals of laughter when I discover that what I thought was a man  is a statue of Robert Burns whose wrote works inspired by the beauty of this place.  






We ride around more lochs this day, but while they are beautiful, I long for more mountainous scenery, the scenery that so makes me admire those that can survive there.  But that will not happen for yet another day.  I think this is also the day we stop at a famous chocolatier:  Iain Burnett.  But it could have been another day.  As always happens with me, the days and their happenings begin to blur together. 

 

 

When we discuss the next days ride that evening, some are dismayed at the distance:  62 miles.  But it is pointed out to them that they can sag back at any time.  One rider is not too happy with this option saying she did not sign on to ride that many miles, but when told to cut it short replying that she did not want to cut it short. I go to bed hoping she is not going to make it where those that want to can't ride the entire ride. Later she is one that is positive for COVID and I suspect that played a part in how she was feeling as it leaves one so very tired. 

 

They van us to the top of the hill we climbed yesterday to start the ride.  Everyone meets at lunch and decides the distance they want to ride.  Dave sags in early as Ken and he want to visit a whiskey distillery in town.  I ride much of this day by myself meeting the group at rest stops and at lunch.  I would have liked to have climbed the hill again, but I did not want to disrupt the tentative peace we seem to have reached. On this ride, a fawn darts across the road in front of me, frightened and alone.  I look for his mother worried she will cross and I might not have time to stop, but I never see her.  I see a large bird in a field with a reddish brown chest, but I am not able to identify what it is.  I also run across a quaint stone figure someone has created.   It is amazing how much one sees when one is riding by oneself. 





 

There is a climb at the end and I am singing when I near the top.   A man working there yells asking me if I need a spot of water.  I yell back that I don't but thank him and begin the descent.  It is lovely.  Jo passes me in the van with the riders who sag in and for awhile I almost keep up I am moving so quickly.  But she and the van disappear.  I ask others later, but nobody else saw him and he did not offer the others water.  Perhaps he had moved on by them or perhaps he did not see or hear them if they were not singing;-) 


When the day is finished, I happen upon Peter and Karen celebrating.  62 miles is the longest ride they have yet managed, and they feel quite proud as well they should.  I am happy for them and head to my room with a smile.  It is that evening that COVID hits.  The next day  Jean and Ken are no longer riding with us.  I pray that I don't pick it up as well, but feel quite well other than the tiredness that comes from riding with no rest days.


And so we reach our last full day on the bike when we travel from Aberfeldy to Braemar.  Finally we will get to the Cairngorns, a place I have longed to revisit since first seeing it.  We have lunch right inside the park and I am happy to find large packets of the tea my daughter-in-law likes for sale.  I buy some to take home for her and for my daughter.  As we leave, I make the mistake of  pointing out that even though Jo is the one riding today (I have made a joke about it only raining the days she leads) it is dry.  We are not one mile down the road before the sky opens up and turns loose.  Peter stops to put on his jacket and I am glad I follow suit because it does not ease for quite some time.  The same thing happens as we crest the Cairnwell pass.  It has stopped raining until we begin to descend and then it literally pours.  I think of the poor young woman who was near the bottom of the climb with her panniers and heavily loaded bicycle and hope she has appropriate clothing. 








The last day of a group trip is always one of mixed emotions. I have shared a week with these people and have come to know them a bit, but I will never see most of them again. There is a sadness in that. But I also look forward to the familiar: my own bed, a purring cat by my side, my regular routine. We have our last breakfast together, but I am not really hungry. The excess of food has lost its appeal and my appetite has faded. Still I manage to down more than I should, then it is to my room for the final packing and to prepare for the final ride: a bit over 15 miles.


Last night I considered not riding as I didn't want to have to pack wet clothing, but it appears that despite our soaking the prior day we will be granted a reprieve, though without sunny skies. Plus, it IS the last ride that I will do this time, and possibly forever, in Scotland, a land I have come to love and cherish.


Prior to breakfast I message Dave to bring the whiskey he wants me to bring home for him prior to breakfast. He comes to my room and I pack a fifth in my suitcase. It will later strike me, during the ride, that I have never had a man come to my bedroom with a fifth of whiskey and no ulterior motives in mind. I laugh and laugh about this at various times during the day, glad that I can laugh at my aging and not cry. It would be nice to be loved again, but I have accepted that it is quite unlikely.


We gather around the van at our 9:00 start time and I know some of the others have similar emotions. Dan is the rider today (Each day one guide rides and the other drives and then the following day they switch). The lack of the predicted rain leads to a few more jokes about Jo causing the rain that has plagued us repeatedly and mericilessly throughout this vacation.


A bit melancholy, we head out only to encounter a climb. It is not a monster climb, but it IS a climb and my legs are tired from a week of riding in a way my mind is not.. I think once again how pretty it is here and how I wish we had spent one less day at the prior National Park and one more near the Cairngorns. At the top of the climb, there is a monument to the local lads who lost their lives in World War 1. It brings to mind the death of Queen Elizabeth the prior day, but I realize she was not alive during that war.  How strange that we rode past Balmoral within an hour of her passing.  I think of my mother talking about the parades at home that would have the veterans marching in it and how respected they were. Things are so different. But it is good that they are remembered. I like it when those that came before are remembered and honored. It saddened me at Banearan House, the inn where we stayed three days, to see the neglected church next door, overgrown and unloved and being allowed to fall into further ruin. Scotland seems to do a better job than the US in preserving their history, but even they are not perfect.  The graveyard in Callander and the church.  Money, I suspect.  Everything costs money and there is only so much of it.


Dave and I ride together for a bit and take the lead entering the town where our journey ends first and all too quickly. We are not sure where to go and Dan guides us. I tear up and begin to cry a bit turning away so nobody will notice. We grab our drop bags, head to the cafe where we are to lunch, and change for our transport to the train station at Aberdeen. Nobody is hungry. We order drinks and spend one last gathering around the table with each other. Karen is meeting her mother to tour for two more weeks, but not by bicycle. She starts her new job in October. The other Karen and Peter are traveling to their home in Yorkshire today and will sleep in their own beds. The other two, Jean and Ken, are not with us due to COVID. Joe and Ben will go to their homes for a well deserved rest after guiding the likes of us. I am off to Edinburgh and Dave, well Dave has a hotel in Aberdeen but is not sure where he will be spending his final few days in Scotland. During the ride I asked him if he was glad that he came, afraid that the rain might have spoiled it for him, but he says absolutely not, that he had a wonderful time.....and I don't think he is saying it just to be polite.


Jo and Dan drop us off near the train station and at the station we split except for Dave who is kind enough to help me purchase a train ticket to Edinburgh and stays to see me off. I am so grateful for his help. I am unused to public transportation. I had attempted to buy a train ticket on line so as to reserve a seat as Peter warned me that on a Friday going into Edinburgh it might be crowded and I might find myself having to stand the entire journey, but I am lucky and find a seat. Indeed, one man is kind enough to take my luggage and place it on the luggage rack. I don't sit next to him, but I am just across the aisle and back. It interests me to see him pulling out a fifth of vodka and mixing it with coke throughout our journey. This would be a big “no no” back home though it does not seem to cause any type of problem. Things are just different here.


I reach Edinburgh and decide to disembark at Haymarket as the train announcer says this is where to get a tram to the airport. I am surprised to find the way to the tram very well marked and I have no trouble finding my way or purchasing my ticket. I had debated staying in Edinburgh for a last look around and dinner, but it is late afternoon, I am tired, and I don't want to lug my baggage around with me so I get on the tram and head to the hotel where I later will have the worst food that I have had during my stay in Scotland. Still, I am glad that I came to the hotel. Hot water, a bit of food, however bad, and bed sounds good. On television is a documentary on Queen Elizabeth that I would love to complete watching, but I fall asleep completely worn out. 

 

Travel.  There is  no doubt it changes you a bit.  I am proud that I learned a bit from my previous trip, that I was more flexible and more adaptable.  But I forgive myself for my past realizing how close it was to loss and how I was struggling to maintain the illusion of control.  Everything that happens molds us and changes how we view things, sometimes for the better and sometimes not.  Perhaps we can give some direction to those changes?  I remain unsure.  I only know that I will treasure this trip and I am glad that I did not let fear keep me from the experience.  Three of my four siblings dead in their seventies.  I mustn't waste the time that has been granted to me. And I am glad for bicycles and the health that allows me to continue riding.   I know that I am glad Dave decided to accompany me and wish some of the others I asked had come, for I know he added to the experience and is someone that I can share memories with in the future.  I am blessed.