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Sadly, we lost Scott (far left) on Saturday. This image from the 2020 Tour de La |
Well, as predicted, the weather last week was, in a word, miserable. Miserable enough, in fact, that I never even tried to fish my phone out of my pocket to take any photos. So use your imagination.
Tuesday morning was in the 30s and windy as all hell. Remarkably, three of us showed up for the 6 am ride - Charles, William, and me. A strong NNE wind kept the pace down on the way out to the Armory on Lakeshore Drive, and a lack of motivation, together with the temperature, kept it pretty much down in the other direction as well. We all bailed out at Canal Street, each with his own reason, or excuse, as the case may be. I was cold the rest of the day. Actually, I was cold the rest of the week.
Wednesday was supposed to be WeMoRi. It was again freezing cold, and after multiple days of cold and wind and rain, I just could not drag myself out of bed onto the dark streets that morning. Apparently, I was not alone in that regard. Charles went out there to find the parking lot deserted, and ultimately found only Will, who was also out there alone. The rest of the WeMoRi never got out their respective doors. The temperature was just above freezing, with the lately usual 15 mph wind. It was not fun.
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Yeah, I knew that. |
On Thursday the situation was just marginally better. The temperature was still in the 30s and the wind, which had shifted a little bit more to the NE, was strong. Once again, it was just William, Charles, and me. I think Will pulled us basically all the way out and all the way back along Lakeshore Drive - 17 mph on the way out, 28 mph on the way back. Also, once again, we all bailed at Canal. I had a staff retreat that day over at the Audubon golf club where I was freezing the entire time. It was not fun.
Mother Nature threw some rain into the mix on Friday, so I dragged out the old non-smart wind trainer and stared at the Elapsed Time on my Garmin for an hour down in the basement. It was not fun.
Saturday morning the temperature was just a bit under 40°F with the now ever-present north wind. There were enough desperate riders that we had a decent enough turnout for the Giro. The wind, however, was playing games on the group, though, coming sometimes a little from the left, and other times from the right, but not quite so strongly that the riders up at the front could tell. At one point we were just a long single file up against the left lane divider because the guys in front were, I guess, thinking there was shelter to the right, and the guys at the back weren't willing to get out in the wind to ride up there and let them know. I eventually did myself. Anyway, it was probably the least miserable ride I did all week, even though I flatted on the way home along the Greenway. It seemed like a slow leak, so Charles tried out his new electronic pocket pump, which worked fine. I then took off with Will, hoping I could make it home before it went flat again, but of course no such luck. It was flat again before we got to Tulane Avenue, so I had to stop and put in a new tube with barely functional half-frozen fingers. That was no fun.
Later that day I learned that a friend and long-time cyclist, Scott Gumina, had unexpectedly died while on his bike up on the northshore. I think he was only 52 or so, so it was quite a shock to everyone. I heard that he had started with the regular "Posse" group that morning, and then turned back early. Another rider who had turned back later, or perhaps just happened to be going the same way, found him and tried CPR, but unfortunately to no avail. I think it happened somewhere on Old Military Road.
On Sunday I, somewhat reluctantly, drove over to Mississippi to do a 72-mile ride that Steve and Charles had cooked up. The forecast was calling for a cold, dreary morning ahead of a lot of rain. It wasn't wrong. I guess it was barely 40°F when we rolled out north into a NE wind at the relatively luxurious hour of 9:00 am, comprising a group of 7. The sky was overcast and the forecast told me that it, and the temperature, would pretty much stay that way. After so many cold mornings, I wasn't playing around with my wardrobe any more, and had full tights, shoe-covers, Gore long-sleeve base layer, summer short-sleeve jersey, long-sleeve jersey, and wind vest. I was never hot, at least. Jess and Connor showed up, and Jess started out with little more than a long-sleeve jersey and tights, and without gloves. Yeah, she was freezing for most of that ride. I knew this would be mostly a winter Long-Slow-Distance kind of pace, so I also knew that overheating would not be a factor. On the plus side, despite the dreary winter landscape, traffic was light, consisting mostly of hunters in pickups splattered with red clay, loaded up with either dogs or ATVs, or both, only one of which tried to kill us. All-in-all I was glad I'd gone, if for no other reason that the forecast for the rest of the day, and Monday morning, was calling for nothing but rain. In fact, by the time I got home it was raining. I guess the rain eased up some time around dawn, but it was way too cold and wet at 6 am to even consider doing a ride. Another weather impact day, I'm afraid.
As expected, Monday there was still a little bit of rain falling before sunrise on Monday, so once again, I didn't ride, unless you count riding to work, since by then the rain had moved on.
Meanwhile, the City is gearing up for the February 9th Super Bowl, which will probably feature some seriously blockaded streets and airport-level security. Of course everybody is trying to get in on the action, so all forms of advertising and special events are planned. Looking out my office window I can see two giant advertisements on buildings along Poydras, and more stuff being put up on the Superdome itself. All I hope for is that it will be relatively problem-free.