Sunday, June 8, 2025

Ride Report on Pottershop Century: Stage 8

"The summit is what drives us, 

but the climb itself is

what matters."

Conrad Anker

 

 I cannot tell you how very glad I am that someone reached into the archives of club centuries and dusted the Pottershop Century off.  Thanks, JOHN PELLIGRINO, the someone who did this.  And thanks to Fritz who took over captaining it when John was not able and adopted some of the changes John made to the route to decrease busy roads.   

 

For those that may not know, Pottershop is not one, but a series of hills that used to assault people at the end of the traditional Old Kentucky Home Tour, back when it actually went to Bardstown and was a two day affair.  Pottershop would pummel you near the end with ninety something miles in your legs.  My understanding is that Stuart Prather was the one who originally located this road.  I remember Mike "Sparky" Pitt saying he injured himself running one time on those hills.  Steep descents are hard on running legs.  I remember hearing, for I was not yet riding with the club then, that Packman, prior to the accident that left him paralyzed, dressed up as a devil chasing people up the hill with his  pitchfork over and over.  And I remember being on the road and seeing where Eddie Doerr, who was responsible for marking roads that year, had outlined where a cat had been hit and met  his demise writing, "Poor Kitty."  I remember Cheryl Brauner at the top of the first and steepest hill watching riders ascend. And I remember the first time I went to climb it, having driven to Bardstown just to do this and having run out of water.  It was well over ninety that day and I did not make it.  When I stopped, I paid  my dues.  A horsefly promptly bit me soundly on the rear end leaving a huge welt that itched and bothered me for days.  I have never walked that hill since, but perhaps today?

 

Anyway, I look forward to riding these roads again.  Frankly, I did not know if I would ever face Pottershop again.  And as always, I wonder if I will be successful in making the climb.  It always is rather surprising to me how one can build a hill into being more than what it is:  a hill to be climbed and conquered.  As we dream of it, it can become steeper, more difficult, and challenging to the point where, when you are successful conquering it, it is almost an anti-climax.  A few days before the ride, listening to the weather, I assumed Fritz would have to cancel as there were predictions for storms and rain.  But at the last minute, there is a reprieve and the weatherman says the rain will end prior to the ride start and won't return until late afternoon to evening.  

 

Fritz emails that the ride is on and I am ready having prepared most things the night before.  It is a smaller than normal group that arrives, maybe due to wet roads, possible rain, summer vacations, or fear of Pottershop, but it is a strong group.  Fritz Kopatz, Sharon Jeter, Jerry Talley, Amelia Dauer, Thomas Nance, Larry Preble, Jon Wineland, Harley Wise, Bob Evancho, John Killebrew, Ed Scharfenberger, Keith Baldwin, Glenn Smith, Michael Kammenish, and John Dippold all arrive ready to ride.  

 

 Amelia and I ask Fritz if it is okay if we leave early, and we do getting about a half hour jump on the rest.  We both feel this will make it easier on Fritz as he won't have to sweep at our slower pace all day though, of course, being Fritz he would do it and not complain.  He's just a nice person.  We talk of Paul Battle and how we wish he were with us even if he had only ridden to the first store stop and turned around. And we miss Bob Grable who has been a steady riding companion this year but was unable to ride today.  I struggle with my glasses due to the humidity and finally end up taking them off for the first part of the ride. 

 

Amelia and I are well matched pace wise and both bring our own set of memories of those parts of the course that mirror the old OKHT course.  Interesting that we didn't know each other until well after the ride was defunct.  Or I don't think that we did.  Anyway, we spend the day together, sometimes talking, sometimes just riding at peace with each other's company on this  road we are traveling. 

 

While I was not there, from what I heard, others also had memories of the route.  Jon Wineland and John Killebrew were riding together at the start.  John shared that his father, who farmed after retiring from Dupont, had a farm near the route and John remembers fishing for bluegills in a pond and his dad cleaning and frying them.  Later in the ride, the two still together, Jon stops to move a dinner plate sized snapping turtle out of the road using his bike pump to hurry it into the grass and safety.  While he was performing this task, the fast group flew by him.  He later caught up with John Killenbrew and John laughingly asked if he had stopped for turtle soup.  Jon told him of the rescue and proudly related that he still had all his fingers.  John Killenbrew recalled catching a turtle in the pond he used to fish in and how his dad used it to make turtle soup.  John evidently was a bit squeamish at the idea of eating the turtle, but found that he actually thought it tasted good.  So I suppose the turtle should consider itself lucky that John was on a bike and not carrying a fishing pole.  

 

At the first store stop in Fairfield, Amelia and I arrive first only to be caught by the fast group.  I tease them as they arrive asking what took them so long, as if it was not quite the accomplishment that they caught us that quickly when we had a half hour head start on them.  I'm not sure if they all found it amusing, but I did.  We fix Amelia's GPS and head back out, leaving the first group at the store stop.  The second group had not yet arrived.  I later learn that there was a sign Amelia and I missed at the stop that the others found quite amusing.  On the ice lockers was a sign that read, "Don't Forge Ice."  (the t on forget was missing). 

 

Amelia and I both find that we are really enjoying riding these roads that we have not traversed for a number of  years.  In places the Catalpa blossoms line the sides of the road.  There are long sweeping vistas filled with various shades of green, weathered barns, and houses. The orange day lilies are beginning their June parade and daisy's scatter the landscape.  I also see the poison hemlock plant that seems to be taking over so many roadsides, though it does not appear as thick on these roads as it is on those I recently rode in Indiana.   The roads go from being still wet to dry. Later there will be some busy roads that are not so scenic or nice or safe, but everyone gets by these roads safely.  A couple of us wonder if there is not a work around that could be made taking off of the busier roads.   

 

As we  near Pottershop, Amelia recalls a OKHT ride when Raney, AKA Eleanor,  Self was riding and how they parted ways and Raney got lost adding a few miles and at the end, when Amelia saw her come in, saying she just knew Amelia would catch her coming in behind her.  We both talk of how we miss Raney being on the bike and how much fun she could be.  I also learn that Amelia's people are from Bardstown and actually had a farm somewhere on Pottershop and some are laid to rest in the cemetery we  pass following the climb.

 

And then we are there.  Amelia climbs the first, steep hill on Pottershop as if it were flat.  I lag behind just spinning but with my lungs feeling as if they would like to burst.  Of course, as we climb, the clouds part and the sun comes out, but some of the climb is shaded.  I had forgotten the opening at the top, but Amelia had not. It is as I remember it, however, in that it is really not the first hill that gets you.  It is the ones that follow.  I keep thinking we have climbed the last one only to find another.   But in the end, while we long for the summit, it is not about the summit.  It is about turning the pedals over and feeling your lungs and muscles working.  It is about celebrating being alive and still strong enough to climb the hills and meet the challenges that a century ride with hills brings. And it is about friends, making them, keeping them, the people that share the roads and the sweat and all the things that happen along the way. 


When we arrive at Wendy's, there is a group there already.  As I enter, Mike Kamenish is coming out of the store walking with his back curved and hunched.  I assume his back is hurting him, but he tells me he is walking that way because of the floor.  And he is right.  The entire floor is like an ice skating rink.  It makes me wonder if there is a new cleaning agent restaurants are using as Dairy Queen was similar at the last ride though not quite as treacherous.  Larry points out that it is a law suit waiting to happen and I think he is right.  I find myself emulating Mike, walking hunched over like an ancient woman and holding on to walls and other objects just in case. 

 

When I get up to order, the man taking the order is still mumbling about orders for Johns.  It is only later that I truly catch on to the reason for his consternation.  He struggles to spell my name and finally ends up spelling Milissa or something like that.  I later learn that he became confused by John Killebrew, John Dippold, and Jon Wineland all ordered one after the other.  When Mike Kammenish orders afterward and the man asks his name, Mike pipes up, "Well, it's not John."  The Johns all stand guard to ensure they get the right lunch.  Had I know, perhaps I could have told him my name was also John.  It is, after all, easier to spell than Melissa.

 

Another group pulls in and Fritz is not with them.  We learn that Fritz and Thomas went to the restaurant Thomas's wife's sister owns in Bardstown, "Fresh." The first group heads up but a few stay and leave with Amelia and I.  We are not too far down the road before Thomas and Fritz catch us.  By then the group that was with us has moved on and we will not see them until the third store stop.  Thomas and I talk a bit about the overnight trip coming up, but of course we still have a few details to iron out.  I do tell him I have made a minor alteration to my route changing one store stop and adding an additional store stop that I might need.  We talk briefly about how we intend to make the stop at stores on the overnight a bit longer and to slow paces due to the toughness of the course.  

 

It seems no time before we are at the last store stop.  By that point, looking at the skies, I feel hopeful that we will get in with no rain.  And I turn out to be right.  Ten of us finish the ride together and while it is still early.  Most of the others have left, but Jon Wineland remains in the parking lot.  There is, of course, the chatting that happens in the parking lot following a good ride.  I learn that Keith has a stent, something most of us did not know.  I learn that it is the first time Fritz, and  maybe a few others, have faced Pottershop.  We talk a bit about John Pelligrino and how we miss him and hope he can ride with us again soon.   It has been a good day.  No dog was left behind, but many were missed.  Come out and play!  

 

Finishing Groups:  (These vary a bit as two of the group of 3 signed in as solo finishers.  This is based on who I was told actually finished as a group of 3.  Since it was not a group of 5 it does not alter points in any way)

 

Ed Scharfenberger        2:40         group of 1

 

Jon Wineland                2:42        group of 1

 

John Dipold                   2:44        group of 1

 

Sharon Jeter                2:47            group of 3

Jerry Talley                 2:47            group of 3

 John Kellebrew        2:47            group of 3

 

Larry Preble            3:07        group of 10

Bob Evancho            3:07        group of 10

Harley Wise               3:07        group of 10

Glenn Smith                3:07        group of 10

Keith Baldwin            3:07        group of 10

Thomas Nance            3:07        group of 10

Melissa Hall                3:07        group of 10

Michael Kammenish    3:07        group of 10

Amelia Dauer                3:07        group of 10

Fritz Kopatz                    3:07 group of 10   

 

 

 

 

Sunday, June 1, 2025

RIDE REPORT ON MUSCATATUCK CENTURY: STAGE 7

"The best laid plans of mice 

and men oft' go awry."

 

Robert Burns

 

For this ride, I suppose the above quote needs to be changed just a tad.  "The best laid plans of dogs and men oft' go awry."  But we will come to that later.  

 

The day before I am not at all sure I am going to ride the century.  I want to ride the century, but I have had a summer head cold (2 negative COVID tests) and have been weak, feverish, and stuffed up.  With my Alaska trip approaching, I worry endlessly that I am losing fitness and will need to decide if riding will hinder or aid in retaining the fitness I have. I e-mail Mike "Diesel Dog" Kamenish to send me the sheets if I don't show up.  He emails me back that he will stay with me and doesn't mind riding slowly if I decide to attend.  "Backpack" Bob has also assured me that he does not mind a slower pace.  But I don't commit waiting to see how I am in the morning.  

 

In the morning, I decide that, while it is NOT the smartest decision I have ever made, I will ride.  When I later announce this upon arrival, Jon Wineland leaves me momentarily mute by facetiously asking what WAS the smartest decision I ever made.  This will need some future thought on my part. 

 

 The temperature is supposed to be pleasant and what wind there is will be a tail wind most of the return journey.  Besides, it is a new course, lengthier than the original, but without the gravel that caused flats and consternation previous years.  

 

The parking lot fills up quickly.  Many of the people I know, but many of the people I don't.  We are joined by a number of SWI riders.  Steve Sarson, Tom Askew, Thomas Nance, Fritz Kopatz, Larry Preble, Bob Grable, David Chrismon, Julie Chrismon, Bob Evancho, Keith Baldwin, Ed Schaffenberger, Jon Minulli, Mark Rougeux, Vince Livingston, Joe Bolan, David King, David Frey, Jerry Talley, Jason Willis, Glenn Smith, John Dippold, John Neichter,  Jeremiah Westendorf, and I all sign in.  There are a few from SWI that sign only their sign in so we are never sure exactly how many are riding, but it is the biggest TMD crowd of the year.   People are still arriving while Mike is trying to give his pre-ride speech.  I am surprised to see Keith as I knew he took a spill earlier in the week and had been told he has a pretty nice bruise on his leg. 

 

During the speech Mike talks about the course being different and longer than before to take out the gravel that so many had complained about on previous rides.  The course is now approximately 108 miles long.  I giggle when I heard Thomas Nance, who has missed the last three rides, tell people that he missed them due to graduations and now they are talking weddings.  He says he told them they just have to get married some other time, that he has missed three stages for graduations and that is enough.  I smile at seeing Jason Willis.  Jason used to ride with us regularly, but I know I have not seen him on a century ride since before the pandemic.  He appears to be unmarred by the years that have passed.  It is just great to see him. Such a fine rider and an even finer person. 

 

Some of us talk about the upcoming overnight and a few more people express possible interest in attending.  Thomas and I briefly talk to each other about our routes.  I mention to everyone that there is a swimming pool at the motel we are staying at.  And it is time to ride.  What I don't mention is that despite my back to back centuries a couple of weeks ago, I have concerns about completing the overnight.  But one never knows unless one tries I suppose.  The words of Helen Keller come to mind, " Life is a daring adventure, or nothing."  I do love adventures, and I suppose they always come with the risk of failure.  Yes, the rides will be a challenge.  We'll see if this old body is up to what will be asked of it. 

 

It is always a thing of beauty to me seeing the riders spill out of the parking lot, different hues and shades and colors of jerseys creating a quilt of color and movement and the spin of wheels and gears providing the background music that I have come to love.  It also brings, for me, a tinge of sadness as I wonder how much longer I can continue this, how much longer before my body finally says that it is enough and it will tolerate no more.  I think of the dogs that aren't with us due to illness or having made other choices in life that better suit them.   Missed but never forgotten.  Their ghosts ride with us. But the joy of the moment pulls me away from these thoughts and I move on. 

 

Sometimes on a ride it takes awhile for the groups to form, but on today's ride it seems the groups form quickly.  And as it turns out, it will be a ride that has many small groups and only one large group.  I am surprised to find Jason riding with the back group that I am in because I know how fast Jason is.   It is obviously a choice on his part. We get a chance to catch up a bit and I am so sorry to learn he has suffered some significant losses in his  life.  Jason is getting into gravel riding and hopes to do some bike packing.  I suggest that he meet club member Jeff Carpenter as  Jeff rides gravel and occasionally puts a gravel ride on.

 

The roads are lovely.  Many I am familiar with but are being woven together in a new pattern.  At one point, we all see a mature bald eagle flying across a meadow, white tail and head seeming to make a statement.  

 

At the first store stop, the front groups have come and gone when the back group that I am with arrives.  There are a few of the faster riders still there, however,  including Jon Wineland who is fooling with  his bike.  (I later learn that at some point in the ride Keith also has a mechanical but I know no more about what happened, only that Tom Askew stopped to assist).  Mike stays back with Jon and the back group takes off knowing these two strong riders will have no trouble catching us.  I later learn that Jon took off and there was still rubbing and that when he tried to fix it again, the chain slipped off and jammed.  But they do fix it and catch up.  

 

It is not so long after they catch up that we come to......what.....GRAVEL.  Jon, who had ridden ahead, has ridden back to join us to watch our reactions.  Wait, Diesel, we were told that we were riding the extra miles because you took out the gravel.  Ahhh, the best laid plans of dogs.  I am glad I am riding the Lynskey rather than my new bike, but my heart sinks when I see it is 5.2 miles to the next turn.  As it turns out, all but about one mile of that 5.2 miles is paved, but the roasting of Diesel Dog begins.  Fortunately, the gravel is easily traversed in most places, but I later learn that David Frey (at least I think that was who said it) almost went down when hitting one of the thicker soft spots.  I laugh and tell Diesel he is lucky I am on the Lynskey or he might be carrying my Calfee.  I also chuckle thinking of a story that Paul Battle told me.  He was on a ride captained by Mike Crawford and Jim Tretter was with them.  Mike missed a turn on the course and took them all down a super long hill that they were going to have to climb because of missing the turn.  Jim Tretter suddenly yells, "Let's hang him."  There are, indeed, consequences for screw ups.  But no, Mike was roasted but never got the noose. 

 

While we roast Diesel Mike periodically throughout the day, I realize that one of the things I love about riding with the dogs, most of whom are experienced distance riders, is that they just take it good naturedly and deal with it.   Nobody is mad or pissy about the gravel.  Everyone realizes that distance brings challenges and sometimes requires using your head as well as your lungs, legs, and heart.  

 

At lunch, a small group does not want Subway so we had to Dairy Queen.  I know Dave will be there and tell Steve and Bob that, but they still seem a bit surprised to find him there. The faster riders have eaten and left before our arrival.  We eat quickly. ride back to Subway, and rejoin Diesel and the rest.  We talk at lunch about how we like how Diesel found a way to take us off the busy road that leads to the eating places.  We talk, of course, about the gravel.  Like me, Dave thought he was in for 5.2 miles of gravel.  Steve, at one point, maybe other than lunch, says that maybe we should ask Diesel to do a bike wash to get the dust off our rides.  Everyone knows that bike cleaning will be on our weekly agendas this week. 


It seems like a rather long trek back to the third store stop.   My lungs are gasping on hills partially because they always gasp on hills but partially because of the mucus filling my body.  The scenery which includes lots of green fields, daisies, and falling Catalpa blooms delights me eyes, though, and the stories and conversation make the miles pass.  At the store, Jon laughingly tells the group about my text to Dave following our pre-ride century to Story checking the roads for the stage. 

 

There are only 22 miles left following the store stop and only a couple of climbs, then where is a long downhill section toward the finish in Henryville.  A large group has formed.  At the store stop, Glenn, Tom, and Dave Frey have joined the rest of us forming a group of 9.  And we finish with laughter and smiles on our faces.   Four of us go for pizza before heading home.  Thanks, Diesel, for captaining.  Your course rocked.   And as I think about it, the roasting was so enjoyable that the ride would not have been nearly as enjoyable without the gravel;-)  

 

Finishers:

 

Vince Livingston        3:40         group of 1

 

John Dippold            3:42            group of 3

 Ed Shaffenberger    3:42            group of 3

 John Minnuli           3:42            group of 3

 

Joe Bolan                  3:46            group of 1

 

Fritz Kopatz            3:53            group of 3

Thomas Nance        3:53            group of 3

Jason Willis            3:53            group of 3

 

Jerry Talley            3:57            group of 2

Jeremiah Westerndorf    3:57    group of 2

 

Keith Baldwin            4:02        group of 2

Bob Evancho               4:02        group of 2

 

Jon Wineland               4:42        group of 1

 

Larry Preble            4:48        group of 9

Glenn Smith            4:48        group of 9

 David Frey            4:48        group of 9

Michael Kamenish    4:48     group of 9

Bob Grable            4:48        group of 9

 Steven Sarson    4:48        group of 9

Tom Askew        4:48        group of 9

Dave King        4:48         group of 9

Melissa Hall    4:48        group of 9