Wednesday, July 30, 2025

Lack of Power

Small Giro Group. The Chef Highway asphalt overlay was still not finished.

The WeMoRi a week ago on, of course, Wednesday was kind of fun for me. It was pretty windy when I arrived at Lakeshore Drive, and looking down the road all I could see were three headlights coming in hot. I jumped on the back of the trio of Maurizio, Steven, and Wes and hung on for dear life. I figured the wind and the pace had probably shattered the rest of the group, which turned out to have been the case. Conveniently justifying my blatant and unrepentent wheel-sucking by telling myself it wouldn't be fair to assist a breakaway when there must be an invisible chase group somewhere, I continued swapping wheels at the back for pretty much the duration. This was a remarkably easy task since the trio was cruising along at an equally remarkably smooth and steady pace. I felt only the slightest twinge of guilt, but fortunately the feeling dissipated quickly. 

That evening a big thundestorm came through shortly after sunset. Lightning must have hit something nearby because immediately after a huge flash, the lights went out. Checking Entergy's outage map and text messages, it looked like it should be fixed by 9:30 or so, so I plugged the lamp on the nightstand into my battery pack for a bit, eventually turning it off and falling asleep. Around 1:00 am I awoke to find that the power was still out, and checking my text messages I saw that Entergy had moved back the restoration time to around 9:30 am. That was a little longer than I wanted to have both the refrigerator and air-conditioner out of service, so I hauled the big Honda generator out to the back yard in the dark, ran an extension cord through the bathroom window, and fired it up, only to discover it would only run with the choke on. Obviously something was clogging up the carb jet, which wasn't surprising since some of the gas in that thing is a couple of years old and as good as StaBil is, that's pushing it. Fortunately, I had the little generator I use for races, so I started that one up instead and plugged the refrigerator into it. Then I brought the basement fan up to the bedroom and plugged that into the battery pack. Naturally the power came back on around 3:30 am, which woke me up immediately since I hadn't switched off the lights. A couple of hours later I was out the door for the Thursday morning ride. By then the streets were fairly dry again, but we decided not to ride out on the lake trail because there is often a lot of runoff from the levee after a heavy rain.  Turned out that wasn't the case that morning.

On Friday morning I woke up to wet streets and decided it was a message and I should take a rest day. Turned out the streets weren't as wet as I thought, but since I hadn't missed a day of riding over two months, I figure I was due anyway.

Saturday's Giro was rather sparsely attended, and although it wasn't super-fast, it still felt hard. By the time we were halfway back I was feeling overheated and tired, so I dropped off the back when we turned onto Hayne Blvd. and just coasted in. Charles dropped back to keep me company. By then there were only a few left, and Connor and Steven were already ramping it up for the last segment.

That afternoon I pulled the carburetor out of the generator, disassembled it, cleaned a little bit of crud out of the jet assembly, and put it all back together without having any mysteriously leftover nuts or bolts. It seemed to run OK after that, so I'll see if I can run it for an hour or two next weekend to burn through some of the old gas.

Sunday's Giro was even smaller than Saturday's had been, but otherwise was fine.

Mellow Monday Sunrise

This morning I went out to meet the WeMoRi as usual. Sunrise is already getting noticeably later (now around 8:15), and it was cloudy, which made it feel even earlier and darker than usual and I made my way to the lakefront. The group seemed a little smaller than usual, which I attributed to the 15 mph WNW wind, but as it turned out there had been some disruptions as well, plus some riders had been dropped, or stopped to help other riders, on Lakeshore Drive. Jaden apparently fell somewhere around the Elysian Fields traffic circle, jumped back up, then realized his phone had fallen our of his pocket and had to go look for it. Someone else apparently had a wheel that "broke." Not sure about the details on that. Anyway, since all of that transpired prior to my arrival, and the group, what was left of it, was only a couple of minutes later than usual, I didn't find out about it all until we were on our commute back uptown. Otherwise, it was a good WeMoRi during which I felt, at least, not terrible.

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