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December 2007 - Posts

  • Merry Christmas

  • Waiting...

    Life has been busy. And I have grown soft. I altered my training plans, and decided to take most of December off. Right now I am restless and eager, so much so that I have trouble falling asleep at night. It's getting time to spend this excess energy.

    It was almost full on dark by 4:30 today. Tomorrow is the shortest day of the year. And after that... ever longer days. I can almost feel the heat of July. Almost.

    I need to make a decision about Camp Lynda. I want to be there, but need to make sure life will allow me to do so. Camp Lynda is appealing as much for the riding, as for the potential company. What is better than a weekend in the desert with a bunch of enduro junkies?
  • Awesome

  • Snowshoes.

    Santa was tipped off, and he decided to get a jump on things. I have a set of Northern Lites Elites incoming. Thanks to Chris Plesko for the heads up about these. And also thanks to everyone else who offered advice about shoes, and the sport itself. I am very excited to get out and try this.

    I used to ski a lot. But it is just too pricey to do these days. As a result, I don't get up into the mountains much during the winter. That is about to change.

  • Ergon '08



    Ergon is on board again for 2008. That has me excited.
  • SS > Steroids

    Who needs steroids when you have a Singlespeed? My pants don't fit around the thighs anymore.

    Of course, that could also be due to the cookies. But I don't think so.
  • The Steroid Era

    I am a a big baseball fan. I love looking at obscure stats, numbers, and historical trends. I play a stats based baseball sim, and love above all, watching the game live. The recent decade or so has often been called "the steroid era" because of all the alleged, and admitted use of steroids, HGH, and other banned or unethical substances. I have mixed feeling about this, because while it easy to villainize players like Barry Bonds, who on all accounts seems to be a class A jerk, it is muddier for me with more likable players like Sammy Sosa and Jason Giambi.

    The Mitchell Report will reportedly be released before Christmas. I fear that many many players will be listed as drug users in that report. In fact, I think it will be an exhaustive list of names, from obvious users, to guys who nobody would suspect. Including the players who seem to be immune to all forms of criticism. Derek Jeter comes to mind. Will he be in the Mitchell Report?

    But the "Steroid Era" extends beyond Baseball. Doping in sports is seemingly rampant. Every sport that tries to police drug problems are having scandal after scandal, suspension after suspension. It is a sad state of affairs, and sadly not a new one by any stretch. Professional athletes, by and large, are doing everything they can to raise the quality, longevity, and lurcrativety of their playing or racing careers.

    The problem is that at some point, the house of cards is going to come crashing down.

    And while in sports like football and baseball have the billions of dollars to recover, what will happen to smaller sports like.....cycling?

    Can our little lycra-clad sport survive a major fallout? The last few years have seen some major players, the Barry Bonds, Sammy Sosa's, Mark McGuire's of the sport, be taken down for drug use. And regardless of the actual guilt or innocence of these riders, it has done some significant harm to the sport I believe. At least in the realm of public image. I think Floyd Landis is either innocent, or horribly delusional. Either way though, his drawn out fight against USADA, WADA and public opinion was messy and ultimately achieved nothing.

    I am not sure what I am getting at today. I am tired of the endless Barry Bonds talk, the news of more suspensions (15 days in baseball for a first offense!) and the constant trivializing of records and numerical standards.

    I have said before in this space, that the top athletes will never truly represent a given sport. Especially in cycling. That privilege belongs to me and you. It belongs to underground races, unsupported, grassroots events and promoters. It belongs to the guy who only rides his bike to work, never setting tread on anything that could be called a trail. It belongs to the clean professionals who work hard to compete with cheaters.

    Cheating is king in pro sports (see Belichick, Bill) but that doesn't mean it has to define those sports. It might define MLB or NFL or TdF, but it doesn't define baseball, football or cycling.

    More and more I am growing to love the solitude of a lonely mountain bike ride. I used to love coming through the start/finish area of a race because of the cheering crowd and adrenaline rush. OK, I still do, but I get as equally excited about coming out of a thick grove of pine trees into a high mountain meadow, or rounding a corner to be greeted by a hogsback ridge, high above the timber line.

    That's the great joy in sport for me. It isn't the winning. It is simply the act of competing. And competing well.
  • Fighting Entropy

    Entropy:


    A measure of the amount of energy in a physical system not available to do work. As a physical system becomes more disordered, and its energy becomes more evenly distributed, that energy becomes less able to do work.


    This time of year it becomes increasingly more difficult for me to get in the training hours I would like to. There are several factors. The days are short, the days are cold, and the trails I love to ride are covered in snow. Other factors are more in my control. I tend to be lazy this time of year. It's as if an ancient power takes over in the winter that coerces me into a state of hybernation.

    However, I have been able to fight this desire year after year. At least enough to maintain a respectable fitness level, so that when things get serious in the spring, I am ready to go. This year I want to find new ways to get outside. Thus the previous post. Time off the bike is not an entirely bad thing. The idea of exploring my favorite trails on foot, and over snow is appealing. Much more so than endless miles on the road bike, or on the trainer.

    It is all in the name of fighting off the natural tendency for my body to dissolve into a state of mass inertness, and not go insane in the basement trying to do so.
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