"Hey, where'd my brake shoes go?" It was the first time I'd ever heard that on a group ride. Graeme, Ryan, Brett and I were on our way back uptown after Saturday's long Giro Ride, somewhere over 90 miles from that cold dark trip out to Starbucks nearly five hours earlier. I had dressed for the 40-degree weather at the start, rather than the 60-degree weather I knew we'd have at the end, but I wasn't really regretting it. Once the ride got going, I could tell that a lot of the guys were planning on doing the long ride because the pace felt more or less controlled for a change. There were also a few strong riders who were absent, mostly off doing other rides on the first weekend of nice weather we'd had in a while. There was also a significant northeast wind that was keeping the speed down a bit, making it particularly easy to sit in middle of the group.

The sky was clear and the temperature was starting to warm up as we turned onto Chef Highway, and although the pace wasn't slow, it wasn't terribly fast either. A little sprint at Venitian Isles, and at least half of the group continued on over the bridge toward Slidell. This whole stretch was nice smooth paceline into the wind at 22-23 mph. As we came to the foot of the long bridge over the Rigolettes I found myself on Ed's wheel. I had a feeling he was going to hammer up the bridge. I was right. I stuck on his wheel about a third of the way up, finally easing up out of necessity rather than choice. It was still a long way back home and I didn't have cab fare. After a long stop at the gas station in Slidell, the first few miles east felt cold because we were still wet from sweat but all cooled down. Another semi-sprint up the bridge, a brief regrouping, and then it was some fast paceline with the wind more or less at our backs, ending it a little surge that topped out at 33 mph. Some more fast stuff along Chef Highway, and by then everyone had about had enough and things settled down a bit for the last fifteen miles or so. All-in-all it was a pretty good ride and as we made our way down Lakeshore Drive and Marconi riders started peeling off to go their separate ways until it was down to just four. We headed down Orleans to Moss and onto Jeff. Davis, and then, as we slowed down for a stoplight, I heard Ryan say,
"Where'd my brake shoes go?" He and Graeme turned around, riding against traffic looking for them. Brett and I waited there for a bit, expecting that he'd find them right away, but as they started to disappear around the bend in the Bayou, we turned back too. We were all the way back on Orleans when we finally saw them coming our way, but way on the other side of the wide neutral ground. I yelled at them but they didn't hear and kept going, so we turned around at the next crossover, waited for five or six cars to go by, and by the time we got going again it was clear we wouldn't be catching them. Oh well.
So when I walked out the door Sunday morning I was expecting it to be just like Saturday, only warmer. I was surprised to find a thick fog, and knew immediately I'd be a little under-dressed, but it was already getting late so I headed off anyway. It wasn't really too bad, and at least the wind had died down a little bit.

Arriving at Starbucks I was surprised to see so many riders there. A few were planning on going long again. I wasn't. My legs were a little sore from Saturday's ride, so I didn't feel up to another 95 miler. In fact, the Sunday ride turned out to be a fairly easy one. After the turnaround where the Slidell group split off and the rest of us turned around, the pace was mostly pretty tame and conversational. Brian eventually rode off the front and disappeared down the road. There was a little surge at the Goodyear sign, and then very easy until Matt suddenly decided to keep us honest by upping the pace from 16 to 28 mph along Hayne Blvd., which of course set up a hard effort up the first bridge, and fast mile, and a final hard effort up the Seabrook bridge. Coming back along Lakeshore Drive we rode past the squirrel. I swear, we didn't stage that photo. Someone, perhaps Ryan, must have been back out there later and posted it on Facebook. The little fellow looked pretty wasted, so we figured we'd just let him sleep it off. After all, we
are in the middle of both Mardi Gras season and Super Bowl season!