Monday, March 02, 2026

Weekend Mishaps


The weekend weather was better than you'd expect for the end of February. Rouge-Roubaix was on Saturday up in St. Francisville, and as usual I'd decided to pass on that one for the usual combination of fiscal and musculoskeletal reasons. I had been thinking of making the trip anyway, with a plan to ride, on asphalt, up to the Pond Store for some photo opportunities and the change of scenery, but decided instead to ride the Giro and then a little group ride over in Bay St. Louis on Sunday.

We had the usual smallish group as we rolled out from Starbucks at 7 am. with the temperature comfortably in the low 60s, and I was expecting a nice medium intensity ride. As we came over the top of the overpass that comes down onto Hayne Blvd., I heard a commotion behind me and was able to make out the word "flat," so I slowed to a stop to look back. Just before the crest of the overpass, JC was stopped on the side of the road, having flatted, so I turned around and started back toward him. He quickly waved me on as I approached, saying that he wasn't planning on doing the whole ride anyway and that I should just go ahead. When I turned around again, the group, except for one other person, was already rapidly fading into the distance and there was zero chance I'd be closing that gap. So when I got to Read Blvd. (actually thinking it was Bullard) I turned right to take a bit of a shortcut over to Chef Highway. I didn't think there was any way it would be enough of a shortcut to put me back into the group, but at least I'd be able to make up a little time. When I got to the intersection with I-510 I didn't see anyone, so assumed that my group was a bit ahead of me, so I figured I'd turn around early and get swept up by the SaMoRi group that leaves half an hour earlier than the Giro. When I got to the Dong Phuong bakery I made a u-turn and then immediately saw the Giro group coming the other way. Unfortunately there was too much traffic to allow me to get back over to that side of the highway in time, but at least I knew where they were. So I continued outbound, but was afraid that some or all of them might turn around when they met the SaMoRi group coming the other way, so when I saw that group I made another u-turn (that's three in case you are keeping count) and got in with it. As I later learned, a few of the SaMoRi riders had turned around and gotten in with the Giro group, so I probably would have done well to have continued out to Venetian Isles. On the plus side, they apparently have one lane closed off somewhere out there for road work, so at least I missed that drama. Anyway, when I got back to Lakeshore Drive I turned around again at Marconi and rode back out to Seabrook in time to meet up with the Giro group as it was coming off of the bridge. It wasn't a bad ride, just a little complicated.


So on Sunday I headed over to Bay St. Louis for the 8 am 74-mile ride that Steve and Charles had lined up. It was a little chilly at the start, but definitely warmer than previously advertised, and I ended up being a little over-dressed. I think we had nine riders for this one. The pace was just a notch higher than usual for these rides, which was fine with me. Around 42 miles in we had a pretty long stop at the famous Beer  "Beer Chicken Vapes" store where I picked up a Payday bar.


Just as we were about to leave, Charles looked down at his crankset and frowned. The drive side Ultegra crank was coming apart. This was the failure mode that had precipitated huge 2023 Shimano recall of 680,000 cranksets, and I guess Charles had never gotten his checked out. We were still a bit over 30 miles from home, and the chances that the crank would hold together looked to be 50-50. Peter and I went into the store to see if they happened to have any zipties or wire of something that we could use to MacGyver into a temporary fix. Fortunately the cashier found a couple somewhere, so I put those on there to at least reduce the chances of the whole outside of the crankarm catastrophically separating from the rest of the bike. At any rate, it was fortunate that Charles had noticed the problem because having it come apart while standing on the pedals on an uphill would not have ended well. After a few miles Charles and Steve decided to take a slightly shorter route back to the cars.


Meanwhile, our group kept up a pretty decent pace all the way back, eventually coming apart a bit on the bridges just a couple of miles from the end. Back at the cars, I was glad to see that Charles had made it back in one piece. For background, he was riding his old Bianchi that day because his Ventum had developed a crack around the bottom bracket. He had just the day before gotten delivery of a new Bianchi Oltre frame. The Ventum was already disassembled while he waited for a few parts to arrive so he could transfer most of the components over to the new frame. Bad timing indeed.

This morning was a little bit cooler but still somewhat foggy, so I went out with knee and arm-warmers, knowing it wouldn't be fast enough long enough to get very overheated. I think this is the last week before we shift to DST and the morning rides get plunged back into darkness for their full duration. I hate that.


Over in St. Francisville on Saturday they had pretty great weather for Rouge Roubaix. A number of Tulane riders were on hand for that. Pirm stayed mostly with the front group, I think, placing 6th behind Sam on the 100+ mile long route, and Josiah, Ben, and Liam finished pretty much together in the top 40 of the 98-rider group. Will apparently had a minor fall and finished a bit behind them, while Donata crashed hard and hit her head, so Dylan, who was volunteering, picked her up and eventually sent her to the local hospital for a scan to be on the safe side.

Friday, February 27, 2026

Missing the Rain


5:25 am. Shut off the alarm and peek through the blinds at the street below. It's wet but not soaked. Check the weather radar. Line of rain moving this way from the northwest. Looks like it won't get here until 7:30. Decide to take the cyclocross bike since wet streets incompatible with keeping air in road tires. Head out in the dark. Two miles later streets are dry. Meet the 6 am group. Work 20% harder because the 'cross bike is 20% slower. Get home at 7:17 am. Rain starts at 7:40. Sometimes it all works out. 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Long Streak


It had been a long time since I skipped a day. A week ago, the day after Mardi Gras, I felt great riding the WeMoRi, but by evening I knew something was wrong, and by Thursday morning I knew I had picked up some kind of Mardi Gras virus. Although it was looking like we'd have a couple more days of warm weather before the next cold front came through, I was in no condition to enjoy any of it by then. It was the first day I hadn't been on the bike since September 9 (yeah, I checked). I had a headache, low-grade fever, post-nasal drip, and scratchy throat. I dug the last of the zinc lozenges out of the medicine cabinet, and was pretty miserable Thursday and Friday. On Saturday I ventured out for a short ride on the levee, which served mainly to confirm that I was still a little sick. At least it was still warm. 

The weather was so bad on Sunday that hardly anybody rode, but by Monday morning I was starting to feel a little better. Unfortunately, the weather that morning was featuring a 23 mph north wind and a temperature in the low 40s -- not exactly ideal weather. Throwing caution to the wind, I bundled up and went out anyway. Three days of confinement had taken their toll and I needed to get back on the bike, if only for psychological reasons. Consistent with the psychological theme, the only other person at the 6 am meetup was Colin. This was both good and bad. On the good side, at least I wouldn't be alone and tempted to turn around and go home. On the bad side, having only one person to hide behind on such a day wasn't going to provide a whole lot of relief. The ride along the lakefront with a stiff crosswind, in both directions of course, was as hard as it was slow. The hardest part was keeping the front wheel pointed in the right direction. The wide Reserve wheels on the Cervelo are supposed to be engineered to be more stable in crosswinds. I'd hate to be riding 44 cm wheels that weren't, because even these were quite a handful. Anyway, we survived, albeit mostly well below 20 mph, completing the normal Mellow Monday route. It didn't kill me, so I guess it made me stronger??

I was still not feeling exactly great by Tuesday morning, and went out into the 37° darkness debating the wisdom of that decision. Fortunately there were a few people on hand for the ride, and by then the wind had died down a bit. I was still moderating my efforts quite a bit since, if the color of my snot was any indication, I was not fully recovered. As we finished up the lap of Lakeshore Drive where some riders usually split off for home I was secretly hoping everyone would do so and I could follow without feeling guilty. Instead, Charles and Rich continued, so I dutifully tagged along, again questioning my life choices. It turned out to be OK since the pace stayed steady, and I got by with taking shorter pulls for the most part.

This morning I went out to the WeMoRi. With a light south wind and the temperature rising into the mid-60, I was a little over-dressed but pretty comfortable. Still dealing with some upper respiratory sequeale, some of which was dripping from my nose, I was again planning on limiting my efforts. As usual, when I saw the lights coming down Lakeshore Drive around 6:10 am, I turned onto Marconi and waited to be swept up by the group. First, though, Rob and Maurizio came flying past, well off the front of the group. Of course, I made no effort to go with that. I figured Rob would probably turn off for home on City Park Avenue anyway (he did). The group came by maybe fifteen or twenty seconds later. Not surprisingly, since Rouge Roubaix is this coming Saturday, it was smaller than usual. Also not surprisingly, there did not appear to be any interest in closing the gap to the breakaway. Fine with me, considering. So it was a somewhat subdued WeMoRi - basically just paceline at like 23 mph. Maurizio picked up Lisa for a while after Rob turned off, so we didn't see really until he met back up with us on the cool-down. So I'm not feeling fully back to normal yet, but at least I think I at least avoided pneumonia this time. Earlier I'd been thinking about a last minute entry into Rouge Roubaix, but the combination of having been sick, and the $150 entry fee, killed that pretty quickly.

On the home front, I should now be all set up with Medicare and Blue Cross and Humana for health insurance starting next month, so that's good I guess.

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Fash Wednesday

King and Queen as the cannon signals the start

Yesterday was Mardi Gras here in New Orleans. Elsewhere it was mostly just Tuesday. I didn't have a game plan this year, so it was a pretty quiet one for me. I went out early, skipping the sparcely attended holiday Giro, for a short easy ride on the levee before making my annual stop at the 7:00 am Royal Run. Although it was overcast, the temperature was comfortably in the 60s and the wind light as I rolled up to the crowd of people at the Magazine Street entrance to Audubon Park. 


Dylan and Josiah flagged me down as I got there, and shortly afterward Will and a couple other Tulane folks showed up. I wandered off to get an official Rex 2026 T-shirt, and waited for Rex and the Queen to arrive in their long black limousines. 


First to arrive though, was a black van from which emerged a black Lab wearing a tutu. This year, both the King and Queen lined up for the official start, signified as always by an insanely loud brass cannon over in the grass. Some years the day's royalty don't actually participate, but I can verify that both of them at least started the run. I have no idea if they did the whole lap around the park, though. Anyway, I cruised back home, arriving just as the first of the truck floats were starting to line up on S. Claiborne, right outside the window. The truck floats don't even start moving until maybe noon, and likely later than that, but I can verify that the loud cacaphony of music begins by 8:00 am.


With the Rex parade scheduled to roll from S. Claiborne and Napoleon at 10:30, we decided to walk down to the end of the streetcar line at Carrollton to take the streetcar down to Napoleon where it stops on parade days. Since we both qualify for the senior discount, a full-day "Jazzy Pass" for the streetcar costs all of 80 cents each. 


Of course we arrived a good hour before the parade even started, so we walked around a bit and then headed up Napoleon to near Freret where the Rex reviewing stands were set up this year. The front row was lined with women wearing big fancy hats like you'd expect to see for the Easter horse races. 


The parade was spot on time, and we watched I guess twenty of the thirty floats go by before starting our walk back to St. Charles for the return trip on the streetcar. I had kind of flexible plan to then ride down to the French Quarter after we got home, but I was convinced instead to go out to Oak Street to find something for a late lunch. The only place that seemed to be open on Mardi Gras day was a fairly new pizza type place in the first block off of Carrollton. We had the dog with us, and they have three tables out on the street, which was otherwise pretty deserted, so we sat down and ordered. Then, two other couples showed up, each with a dog in tow, taking the tables on either side of us. Of course Charley wasn't too comfortable with that and barked at them, so we ended up taking lunch home in boxes. The pizza was pretty good, though. By then it was nearly 3 pm and the last of the truck floats were roing by, followed by the army of street sweepers and trash trucks, so it really wouldn't have been worth going down to the Quarter, at least for me. Also, I was starting to feel some scratchiness in my throat and figured being in the MGD crows wouldn't be such a good idea anyway.


So this morning it was even a bit warmer as I headed out in the dark for the WeMoRi. The group was a little smaller than you'd expect for such nice weather, but about exactly what you'd expect the morning after Mardi Gras. I soon found myself nearer the front than usual, which confirms that the pace must have been at least a little subdued. As we came to the light, which had just turned red, at Harrison, someone went around the stopped car on the left, so I squeezed by on the right, but I think everyone else stopped for a bit and so it didn't come back together until after the overpass. Then there was a split as we approached the City Park Avenue sprint that wasn't stitched back together until the Marconi underpass. I found myself on Lisa's wheel and pretty much stayed there the rest of the ride. Things settled down for a while as Steve seemed content to tow the whole group, with an occasional assist from Joe Paul. At one point Steve dropped his water bottle and I hit it. Fortunately it was at the moment oriented perpendicular to the road, and apparently not full, because I slammed right over it without incident. As we came to the Bayou St. John bridge I saw Lisa move her hands to the drops and knew what was about to happen. I stuck to her wheel like glue when she kind of attacked the overpass and continued to push the pace, fully expecting to get streamed by the rest of the group before Marconi, which for some reason didn't happen. So there were definitely some fast segments to the WeMoRi this morning, but nothing too severe. It looks like we'll have a few days of unseasonably warm weather now until the next front arrives for the weekend and the temperature plummets down into the upper 30s or, more likely, low 40s. Typical February weather.




Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Another February

View from the ferry

Today is February 11.  It's currently 75 F outside. I'm not complaining, you understand. I'll take 75 degrees over 45 every day of the week. Even better, I'm not seeing anything below 52 for the next ten days. Of course, the early part of the month, and most of January, was the usual roller-coaster of freezing cold and tolerably mild, most of which felt cold and miserable to me. This is always the hardest time to be training, outdoors, in the dark.


Last weekend Charles coaxed me into a last-minute decision to join a little group for a long ride up the river on the westbank to Gramercy, returning on the east bank bike levee bike path. It would be a bit over 100 miles with a small group, but all at a moderate pace. As it turned out, though, Charles had to back out early that morning. I headed out in the dark for the Canal Street Ferry where I would meet up with Joe Paul, Alison, Mary Beth, and Jason (and wonder where the heck Charles was) for the 6:15 am crossing. The weather was looking pretty favorable, except for the expected east wind that would be increasing all day. It had been quite a long time since I'd ridden much of the westbank levee bike path. Unlike its counterpart on the east bank, this one takes a rather torturous route from Algiers to Avondale, sending you back onto the street here and there where industrial operations or the canal bridge superceded bike path priorities. 

A nice quiet River Road paceline

By the time we got started the sun was almost up, so at least visibility wasn't a problem. Once past Avondale we got back onto the levee, and I was surprised how far the bike path now goes upriver. We were nearly 40 miles into the ride before we dropped down onto River Road for the last time, stopping briefly for a store stop there. I'd been worried that the next 20 miles on River Road would be sketchy, but other than a few miles of dump trucks due to some work at one of the plants, we mostly had the road to ourselves.


Toward the end of that stretch we picked up a nice little tailwind, my enjoyment of which was somewhat moderated by the knowledge that we'd soon be riding in the opposite direction for 50 miles.


I knew that crossing the Mississippi via the Gramercy bridge wasn't going to be as much fun as I'd have liked. Although there is a reasonable shoulder to the road, traffic is generally moving at Interstate speeds, and I'd been forewarned about the infamous interlocking finger-like expansion joints. Indeed, a couple of them were almost entirely disconnected, and most of them would be dangerous to ride over at any significant speed. I ended up coming almost to a stop for each of them and putting a foot down as I crossed. A few of our group just walked most of the way, so when I got to the bottom, I looked back and didn't see anyone!  I was afraid someone had flatted or something, but eventually they appeared.


As expected, the return trip on the east bank, which was mostly on the bike path except for that 2-mile stretch where they've been working on the levee around St. Road, featured a lot of headwind. Fortunately Joe Paul spent a lot of time on the front of the group with me on his wheel. Nobody was pushing the pace, so it wasn't really all that bad, and of course we had another long rest stop along the way. So I ended up with 107 miles of Zone 2 with a total of 400 feet of elevation.  Yeah, 400 feet in 107 miles. In the end I was glad I'd gone, but it was of course a long time in the saddle that took me a couple of days from which to feel fully recovered.

Friendly Friday

This morning's WeMoRi was, as one might expect given the unseasonably warm temperature, very well-attended. As usual, I met up with the group on Marconi, slotting in easily near the back. Although the pace was pretty fast, it's still amazing how much easier it feels when you have a big group like we had today. Earlier rides this year all seemed to suffer because of the weather, and to me it feels infinitely more difficult to do a WeMoRi wearing full winter kit with a small group at 23 mph than when wearing summer kit with a big group going 28. We had four Tulane riders for this one, and I think they all survived. We stopped for coffee at French Truck afterward, which took just enough time to ensure that we got rained on just before getting home. Fortunately, it wasn't cold this morning.


Since my somewhat unplanned retirement the first week of January, I've been navigating my way through Medicare and TIAA and LTRS and supplemental health insurance, most of which is still not quite fully settled, but at least moving in the right direction. Unfortunately, that has distracted my attention from cycling related things, such as the NOBC, LAMBRA, and the Tour de La. Some of that is going to be a little late this year, I guess. USAC finally killed off the legacy system around the end of last year after ten years of trying, and changed up the membership and racing license systems completely, again. Registration and results for any races we put on this year are going to have to be handled quite differently, I suspect. As far as I can tell, I can't download the rider data, for example. At any rate, we need to get some fresh blood into both NOBC and LAMBRA and see if we can reinvent bike racing around here. Hopefully I can get set up as a volunteer coach for Tulane Cycling and Triathlon. I feel like we will be pulling ourselves up by our own bootstraps, so will need to be thinking "outside the box" as they say. We'll see.

Monday, December 15, 2025

End of Summester

Christmas parade awaiting Santa's helicopter arrival

In typical fashion, the cold fronts have been coming through in close succession lately, bringing with them some wild swings from spectacular weather to miserable weather and back again. 


A week ago on Sunday, the 7th, it had again been rainy in the morning, so I headed out in the afternoon for a long solo ride out to the end of the levee bike path, which makes for a 90 mile ride with essentially zero elevation. I'd gone out to the levee the day before when the road was still wet from rain, and managed to puncture twice, which is actually not that surprising. There's something in the asphalt up there that always causes flats when it's wet. Anyway, by the time I headed out the next day the temperature was in the 60s and there was a moderate east wind, so it felt fast and easy heading out and not so much so heading back. Along the way I had to pick my way through the crowds gathered for the Norco Christmas Parade at which Santa arrives via helicopter. The police almost stopped me because the helicopter was approaching, but I made it through just as it was circling overhead. 

Upriver from the Spillway there were multiple groups working on their Christmas bonfires. The bike path drops down to street level in a few places there, and was designed that was specifically to allow for the annual bonfires. It was a nice steady LSD type of ride.


Last week was the usual roller-coaster weather. Wednesday morning started out in the low 40s with a small WeMoRi group. I jumped in as usual, but some big gaps opened ahead of me on the Wisner overpass, leaving just Rich and me to fend for ourselves. We backed off pretty quickly. Then, on the way home, two cars nearly killed me by cutting in front of me. One at the start of the Norman Francis overpass, and the other along Vendome. For the latter, I had to lock up the rear wheel to keep from hitting the idiot. Thursday was a bit warmer but also quite a bit windier. I was left to my own devices heading west along the lake with a nice little tailwind. I turned back a little early since I knew the headwind in the opposite direction would take its toll, but was lucky to have a little group come along just after that, which made it much nicer. Friendly Friday turned out to be pretty nice, and it was looking like Saturday's weather would be ideal for the Tulane "end of the semester" ride. 


I'd been fighting my handlebars for a week or so because of an inexplicably pitted headset bearing. Perhaps I'd over-tightened it at some point, or maybe just slammed into a bump somewhere. The Cervelo has only around 2,600 miles on it thus far. I had gotten replacement bearings plus a bleed kit, olives, barbs (as they are called), mineral oil, and isopropyl alcohol since the brake hoses go through the headset bearings. The weather for Sunday was looking like rain in the morning, so I penciled in a few hours of bike maintenance for then.


On Saturday I met up with some of the Tulane riders for a nice 67 mile ride out of Abita Springs. Earlier that day I'd gone out to Starbucks to meet the Giro riders, but turned back at the end of Lakeshore Drive. The northshore ride didn't start until 1:30 or so. By then it was a beautiful day with light winds and a temperature in the low 70s. We had a nice little group of six, so it was a good steady ride for the most part. We had to stop on Dummyline to fix a flat at which point some woman drove by, stopped, rolled down the window, and asked Ben, "Y'all aren't from around here, are you?" to which he responded "Yes m'am, I am." We were planning on dinner and a bonfire at his house in Abita Springs after the ride. Regardless, she felt compelled to tell us that we should know better than to stop at the top of the hill there (where we had a clear line of sight for about a mile in both directions, making it arguably the absolute best place to stop). Go figure. We were probably 20 miles from the end when Pirman kind of launched with Josiah on his wheel, at which point one of the guys dropped his chain as we started to chase, so the rest of us stopped. That was the last we saw of Pirm until Abita Springs, but he did manage to drop Josiah, so we regrouped after Isabel Swamp Road for a nice quick ride back, followed by gumbo and beer and stuff. I left pretty early since I'm old and it was already past my bedtime. I later noticed that I'd ended up with 99.7 miles for the day. If i'd known I would definitely have ridden another 0.3 miles just to round it out!

Silly disc brakes

Sunday morning was once again wet and a little rainy as predicted, so after breakfast I worked on the bike for a couple of hours. Since I had to pull the fork to replace the bearings, that meant I also had to disconnect both brake hoses, then reconnect them and bleed them. I cheated and didn't cut the ends to install new olives and barbs, and it looks like that worked without causing any leaks, but I'll be checking on it for a while to be on the safe side. Since I had the fork out I went ahead and cut it down by about a centimeter so I could eliminate the spacer I had on top of the stem, and also took the opportunity to swap the short bearing cap for the tall one, eliminating another couple of spacers, and adding the plug that they'd neglected to install earlier. Of course, the morning rain had been the next cold front coming through, so by the time things dried up and I went out for a short ride on the levee there was a 20+ mph north wind blowing. On the plus side, the headset felt good and the brakes worked, and most of the levee runs more east-west than north-south. Meanwhile, the temperature was starting to drop rapidly.


This morning it was around 34° at the house with a 25 mph wind at the lakefront. I piled on a bunch of bulky clothes that I hadn't worn since last winter and met up with Charles at NOMA for a low-gear Mellow Monday. We did not see any other riders, but it wasn't super cold at the lakefront, and once we turned back toward the west, it was not bad at all. Still, we did cut it a little short since there were just the two of us and we were mostly going barely 15 mph. It's looking like the morning temperatures will be mostly in the low to mid-50s through the holidays, so that should make for some decent riding. This will be my last week at work until January since the daughter is coming in on the 23rd.

Thursday, December 04, 2025

Wind, Weather, and Winter


Well, it looks like winter, such as it is in New Orleans, is here to stay for a while. The 10-day forecast isn't offering any morning temperatures above 54°, and for me that crosses the line from Fall to Winter. At the moment I'm looking out my office window at a gloomy, dark, and rainly Thursday, and feeling lucky to have gotten in an hour or so this morning on the levee, on the 'cross bike, before the rain moved in. At least it looks like there's a chance of rideable weather tomorrow morning if you consider 51°, wet streets, and a 10+ mph north wind rideable. It's going to be one of those mornings when you look out the window and then look at the radar and then look out the window again while contemplating the level of misery you are willing to tolerate that day.

Nice try, Mother Nature

This morning the forecast was pretty bad. It had been raining overnight, and at 5:30 am the radar was showing a huge line of heavy rain stretched, as it typical this time of year, from southwest to northeast, moving slowly in our direction. I figured I might get in an hour or so before the rain started again, so I intentionally overdressed, stuck the ass-saver under the saddle, and rolled out in the dark on the cyclocross bike that hasn't seen any cyclocross in over a year. The heavy gravel tires that I have on it right now at least minimize the chance of flatting on the wet levee bike path, though, and in general the bike keeps my speed down enough to limit the wind chill while still requiring enough effort to make it worthwhile. I managed get in 26 miles without getting wet, so I guess that will just have to do for today. On the plus side, that ride put me just over 12,000 miles for the year. On the minus side, that's almost 1,000 miles fewer than recent years thanks to that unfortunate crash back in the spring.

The weather, and in particular the wind, has definitely been having an effect on the local rides lately, and I'm seeing more and more Zwift and Rouvy rides showing up on Strava as people resign themselves to the realities of December. Tuesday's weather was just as bad, and I was lucky to get in 20 miles on the levee, again on the cyclocross bike, on soaking wet roads. It was slightly miserable, as you'd expect. The following day I went out to meet the WeMoRi with the temperature hovering around 40° and found only the dregs of what had been a small group to begin with. I saw Steven zoom by as I was on Lakeshore Drive but didn't really have a chance to go with him, which was unfortunate there were only three riders behind him and they were clearly not chasing. I made my usual U-turn and headed down Marconi, but by the time I was caught, only Charles was left, the other two having gone straight back toward West End for unknown reasons. We did a lap around City Park and called it a day.

At least last weekend wasn't too bad, and I was able to make both Giro Rides. Sunday's Giro was going along nicely until we got to Lake Forest on the way back. As we started to get up to speed after turning onto the road, JC somehow managed to snag his rear derailleur on a spoke and ripped it off, shearing off one of the spokes in the process. A few of us stopped to assess the situation and since someone had a multitool with a chain tool, we decided to shorten the chain to see if we could make it rideable again as a single speed. After much effort we finally got him going again, but then the chain decided it would rather be one cog higher, which made it so tight you could barely pedal. We stopped again and set it up on the small chainring, which meant shortening the chain again. That seemed to be working great, and we got about halfway down Hayne Blvd. before the chain broke. 11-speed chains aren't made so you can push the pins back in like you could in the old days, so it wasn't too surprising. Anyway, we just went ahead and pushed him the rest of the way, except for the bridge which he had to walk, and got him back to his car at Elysian Fields. 

MacGyver would have been proud.

Meanwhile, I have noticed that the headset on the new Cervelo has somehow become slightly pitted. I may have overtightened it at some point, or maybe just hit a pothole somewhere, but I wasn't expecting that with only around 2,200 miles on the bike. Of course, thanks to disc brakes, that means I will have to disconnect the front brake hose to replace the lower bearing. I was hoping to avoid having to deal with the hydraulics quite so soon. So I ordered new headset bearings, plus a bleed kit, plus the compression fitting (aka "olive"). The headset isn't bad enough to make much of a difference at the moment, although it's somewhat noticeable when riding with hands off the bars. It'll probably be next week before I have everything I need and summon up the motivation to take everything apart. Hopefully there will still be enough tubing so I don't have to replace that as well. We'll see.