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| Friendly Friday rolling out through the park |
The title says it all. After narrowly dodging a little tropical storm that spun up a whole lot of damaging tornados, I ventured out on the cyclocross bike late in the morning on Wednesday when I thought there was a small window between rainstorms. It was fairly windy and plenty humid, with an occasional bit of drizzle, but I remained mostly dry all the way out on the levee to the end of the asphalt that was supposed to be fixed by late last year and still shows absolutely no sign of progress. It was about that time that I stopped to take a phone call from the wife, who wanted to know if I needed a ride home. Apparently it was storming at the house. I got as far as Ochsner before the sky opened up on top of me, but by then I was only a few miles from home. When you need to ride and the weather is questionable, you just have to roll the dice. Sometimes you win, sometimes you lose.
By Friday things were looking much better and we had a good Friendly Friday ride to which I added a leisurely lap around Audubon Park to ease my mileage anxiety. Thanks to all of the recent rains, the Lakeshore Drive duck pond east of Elysian Fields has been underwater for days, so we've often been doing an extra lap between the two traffic circles to make up the difference. Tomorrow I guess the WeMoRi will loop around the Elysian Fields circle and then add a bit past Marconi and out and back on Canal before returning to the remainder of the route at Marconi. Hopefully everyone will get the message and there won't be any unfortunate incidents. I've arrived back home soaking wet and with empty water bottles every day this week, and not always because of rain. All of which is pretty normal for this time of year.
The Saturday Giro had a good enough turnout of about a dozen, including Norman who is in town again, and Madeline from the westbank. As expected, it got fairly fast on the way out but not quite fast enough to really drop anyone. People were kind of starting to wilt on the way back, and things came apart between the bridges with some continuing straight down Leon C Simon and others turning back to Lakeshore Drive at Franklin - all because of the flooded part of Lakeshore Drive, of course. Fortunately, almost everybody stopped at the store on Harrison afterward, which was nice. It was new chain day for me, not that that's a major event or anything. I've been using the pre-waxed KMC 12 speed chains which are nice because I don't have to strip the factory oil off of them before applying the Silca drip-wax I've been using for the past couple of years. Also, they're relatively inexpensive, which is nice since I routinely replace my chains a little past 3,000 miles. Cleaning the cassette and chainrings takes way more time than installing the new chain.
Sunday's Giro had a particularly low turnout, probably because the radar was showing a bunch of storms heading in our general direction. As it turned out, most of that went north of us in the morning. Still, we were left with maybe eight when we started, and then Rob flatted on Marconi and VJ stopped with him even though he told us to go ahead and he'd meet up with us at the turnaround (which didn't actually happen). The pace was noticeably slower than Saturday had been, but we still lost a couple more on the way back. Then, as we approached the Hayne Blvd. overpass, Norman turned around to ride another out and back to Venetian Isles, a decision he later regretted after being harassed by speeding cars. I think I went over the Seabrook bridge first, and ended up alone the rest of the way home. He did, however, log over 90 miles.
That afternoon I got delivery of a pair of 140 mm Galfer rotors that I'd bought on impulse. The Cervelo came with 160 mm rotors front and back which worked great, so there was really no rational reason to change them other than cosmetics and entirely insignificant weight savings. I figured that since trying to buy more speed has always been futile for me, perhaps stopping less slowly might help. You never know. Going down to the smaller diameter meant removing the adapter from the rear caliper and flipping the one on the front, and then of course re-aligning them. That went smoothly on rear caliper, but it took numerous tries and some fiddling with the calipers and hydraulic fluid to get the front one lined up so it didn't rub. In fact, it still seems to rub the rotor a tiny bit, so I may be back at it again. I figured I'd give it a couple hundred miles to see if it works itself out first. I really miss rim brakes. Hydraulic disc brakes are really overkill for 99% of the riding I do, but that's where we are now.
So on Tuesday I felt I needed a bit more pressure on the brake levers when stopping, which of course was to be expected, but with the terrain around here and the amount of mass that needs to be stopped, I seriously doubt it will ever be an issue. With the 160 mm rear rotor I kept seeing little skid marks on the tire, so hopefully that will be less common now and I'll be less likely to lock up wheels, especially when it's wet. We had a fairly small group, and with Charles committed to some structured time staring at his power meter, and Maurizio apparently taking an easy day, it was just me and Dave as we hit the lake trail. Dave turned off around Bonnabel, leaving me solo out to Williams into a light headwind and then back to around Causeway where I picked up Charles after his workout, and briefly Russell B.

































