A Bike Ride
We expected a cold and possibly rainy ride on Saturday
morning, ride two of the Winter Training Series. What we got, however, was a
frigid, slushy, sleety slog-fest. I am glad we finished and no one got
seriously hurt, but if I had known the conditions we would be riding through, I
probably wouldn’t have gotten out of bed in the morning: die another day.
The start of the ride was warm and dry to the point where I
was cursing myself for dressing too warmly. My hands were downright hot in my
ski gloves and liners; I unzipped my rain jacket so that it flapped behind me
like the Wicked Witch of the West in Wizard of Oz.
Wizard of Oz |
That’s right, my friends, the weather turned and we found
ourselves riding through freezing sleet. It was so cold that Ben’s mud flap
acquired road sludge icicles! Right about this time, we lost the route and let
me tell you, it is awfully disheartening to be riding through sleet and LOST. All
you want is to be warm again and that probably won’t happen until you finish
the ride and you can’t even make progress towards that because you have no idea
where in the Sam Hill you are!
It was a dark day in bike land, but we persevered. Despite
being completely unable to find even a single coffee shop in the little town of
XXXX, we did eventually find I-5 and that was our ticket back on route. The
sleet slacked and we cranked our way out into the picturesque countryside. My
favorite memory from this section of the ride was when we got shot at…sort of.
The rapport of a shot gun startled us and I spotted a duck wildly flapping an
escape. Several more shots left the hunters skunked and the duck far away.
Tee-hee-hee-hee.
The weather didn’t hold for long, however, and we knew we
were in for it when we started seeing cars approaching us with thick layers of
snow blanketing their hoods. Additionally, the road turned hilly and zooming
farm trucks occasionally splashed road sludge on us as they zipped past. This
was when I began wanting to ask Ben, “Are we there yet? How much further?” I
refrained and we slogged on. Soon we met a rider going in the opposite
direction. “Are you with the Randonneurs?” he called. “Yep!” “Great. Can I
follow you home? I am cold and confused.” He was a tough old man, but cold and
confusion are a deadly combination. We gladly accepted his shadow and shepherded
him home.
Finally, I broke down and had to ask how close we were
getting, “10 miles.” That’s a manageable distance, I thought, but hot damn!
Those last ten miles stretched on FOR-ever. They started with the steepest
downhill section I have ever ridden on a bike, not to mention on sludgy roads,
with numb fingers and wet brakes. It was treacherous. I skid out at one point
when I mashed the brakes too hard and gravity refused to release my bike from
its iron grip; I thought I was going down, but somehow recovered. My fingers
were cramped into claw hands by the time the grade eased and I sighed a long
stream of cloud as I unclipped at the next stoplight.
Ben navigated us back to the Burke-Gilman Trail and we knew
it would be an easy four mile ride from there because we wouldn’t have to
compete with traffic or traffic lights. Nevertheless, the cold was making us
loopy. Numbness was creeping from the extremes of my extremities up my forearms
and calves. My lips had lost some muscle control and my cheeks felt awfully
funny. It was hard to focus on pedaling because I was so preoccupied with
wiggling my toes and fingers and making faces to keep as much blood as I could
flowing through my coldest bits. I’m sure the middle-aged couples out for an afternoon
stroll thought we were mad: Ben was grunting on every pedal stroke and I was
puffing my cheeks and roaring like a lion.
Getting to the car was supposed to mean we were safe and
would soon be warm, but the opposite occurred. As soon as I dismounted I
realized I didn’t bring an extra set of dry clothes and that’s when I started
shivering. I didn’t think I could get colder than I was while riding, but I
most certainly did. I didn’t bother removing my helmet or gloves while we
quickly stowed the bikes and I stuffed large handfuls of trail mix into my gob
hole. Our old man biker friend disappeared into his car with hardly a goodbye –
it was too cold for pleasantries. We couldn’t figure out where the rest of our crew
was: surely they beat us home. We had stopped multiple times and got lost. But just as we were heading into the bookshop to get
warm, they rolled up. No one could figure out how we had beaten them home
and we stood around in the cold trying to figure it out for some time before we
realized that that wasn’t the best plan. (We were all a little too cold to
think straight.)
Before I could head to the bookshop, I wanted to trade my clipless shoes for my other shoes (house slippers), but I a tough time. I had duct-taped clear-plastic vegetable bags from the grocery
store around my socked feet in an attempt to form a wind and rain barrier and I couldn't seem to tear the tape. I
can’t believe that I didn’t stab myself as I wildly wielded a pocketknife with
numb claw-fingers. After freeing my only slightly damp feet, I followed the
crowd to the bookstore. It was a long trudge, not by distance, but by time. My
brickfeet kept slipping out of the slippers and refusing to step when I asked
them to. My hair was drenched and dread-like tendrils were escaping my do-rag to
asymmetrically and unflatteringly frame my wind-burned cheeks. My rain pants
were both hiked up far past my bellybutton and cinched tight mid-calf,
effectively giving me balloon pants that stopped above tall blue hiking
socks and mud-splattered house slippers. I was a mess. Needless to say, some
considerate patron held the door open for me as I boldly walked my dirty, tired
bones into the warmth.
It was an adventure: 50 miles through sleet. I feel like I
more than earned some sort of foul weather merit badge. You know, the one you
always knew you never wanted. I’m glad we lived to tell the tale. I don’t even know how
we could have aborted the ride midway through – we were alternately in the
boondocks and towns far outside Seattle. How does one call a cab to a farm
road? How do you stash two bikes in a cab? Will a cab take you from a farm town
into the city? These all seemed insurmountable at the time, but if the roads
had turned icy, I’m sure we would have surmounted them.
On the way home, the clouds broke and for the first time I
felt angry when I saw the day brighten
into an astoundingly sunny, gorgeous afternoon – it seemed to negate the
hellish ride we just dominated. Oh well.
<<Improvements to Consider before Next Ride>>
1. Rig a
way to reference my own cue sheet
2. Patch
and/or buy more tubes, possibly new tires
3. Diagnose
cone/locknut issue and carry appropriate wrench
4. Stash
food in a ride-accessible place
5. Bring
a camera in the car
6. Remember
dry clothes for after the ride
7. Consider
glove/shoe improvements, possibly involving HotHands warmers
8. Attach
a rear mud flap for a pack-friendly spray
A Snow-pocalypse
At 7am on Sunday morning, I cracked an eye and saw white
rooftops. I closed my eyes and the snow melted into a warm summery day. At
nine, I peeked out to find the snow was indeed real and that it was piled high and falling in great big,
puffy flakes. SNOW DAY! I started the kettle to boil for hot chocolate and made
a snowman, grinning like a two-year-old, cracked out on birthday cake.
Picasso |
Realism |
Later |
The snow didn’t stop falling until late in the afternoon and
it was awesome. Nothing transforms reality like mountains of white powder. As
if God upended a giant bag of flour, every branch and rooftop became a magical
scene. I spent most of Sunday with two hands wrapped around a mug of hot
chocolate spiked with coffee and my chin resting on a windowsill, gaping. We
have lots of windows in our house and I had to visit them all periodically
marveling at the slightly different views they afforded.
The branches collected a lot of snow. |
View from the Front/Back Room |
Blue Sky? |
View from Ben's picture window |
Spiderweb |
Two Squash
Although our larder is getting low and it was hardly a day
for grocery shopping, I dug two squash out of the back of the pantry and made
three new recipes during the Snow-pocalyse. The original plan was just to make
butternut and acorn squash soup, so I roasted and de-seeded one of
each. This yielded twice as much squash as the soup recipe required and a mound
of seeds bursting with potential. The seeds were painstakingly separated from
the strings then roasted with garlic and parmesean, while the remainder of the
squash was used to make squash spaetzle. Triple score.
This is what the squash looked like before I ate it. |
The curried squash soup recipe was taken from Mollie Katzen’s The New Moosewood Cookbook. Unfortunately, I discovered that I don't particularly enjoy curried squash soup and thus will not pass on the recipe.
The seed roasting procedure was taken from Mark Bittman’s How to Cook Everything Vegetarian and the buttery, garlic Parmesan flavoring was a tip from here.
Garlic and Parmesean Flavored Squash Seeds
Clean and dry the seeds. Spread them into a single layer
on a baking sheet. Drizzle them with olive oil, sprinkle with salt and
stir them to coat. Bake at 375F for 5-10 minutes, until you hear the
first seed pop or they start changing color. Add as much butter as you
are willing to eat in one sitting, sprinkle with garlic powder and
Parmesan cheese (shredded and not from a green plastic container,
preferably). Stir to mix as the butter melts. Return to oven for five
minutes.
Garlic and Parmesan Flavored Squash Seeds |
The squash spaetzle recipe is from Hank Shaw’s Hunter Angler Gardener Cook blog.
Too much nutmeg though.
Cheesy squash spaetzle on a bed of sauteed kale |
Dinner Journal:
Tuesday: Cheese Enchiladas from Homesick Texan (added
roasted poblanos and black beans), Cilantro-Lime Rice (left it too long in the
rice cooker == GUMMY), Tomatillo-Avocado Salsa adapted from Mark Miller’s Tacos.
Tomatillo-Avocado Salsa
First set of ingredients:
1 pound Tomatillos (husked and quartered)
1 small white onion (quartered)
2 cloves garlic
2 serrano peppers (seeded) -- pepper content is flexible
2 jalapeno peppers (seeded)
1.5 cups H2O
Second set of ingredients:
1 bunch cilantro
2 tbs lime juice
1 tbs salt
1 large avocado
First set of ingredients:
1 pound Tomatillos (husked and quartered)
1 small white onion (quartered)
2 cloves garlic
2 serrano peppers (seeded) -- pepper content is flexible
2 jalapeno peppers (seeded)
1.5 cups H2O
Second set of ingredients:
1 bunch cilantro
2 tbs lime juice
1 tbs salt
1 large avocado
- In a sauce pan, add first set of ingredients.
- Boil until tomatillos and peppers are blanched (about 5 min)
- Transfer to a blender and add second list of ingredients (maybe go easy on the salt if planning to eat on salty chips). Blend.
- Can eat warm or cooled.
Wednesday: Tacos made from the enchilada fixins’ leftovers
Thursday: Mushroom Casserole from Heidi Swanson's 101 Cookbooks blog (made by my friend Shannon)
Friday: The Veggie Chimichurri burger from Schultzy’s bar
Saturday: Porto Risotto from Coastal Kitchen (dinner with Libby and Taylor!)
Sunday: Curried Squash soup
Monday: Tortilla Soup from Amanda McGlothlin's Little Kitchen and Hindu-ritos and Short Chuck's Tall Sauce
2 comments:
I read about a guy who does everything in his life based on its anecdote-ness. You story passes this criteria, but not on the things to do to live a long and alive life. :-) Glad you made it. Jealous of the snow! (Although, it is supposed to be 80 degrees this week.)
Favorite phrase in this post (though there are many): gob hole.
Hmmmm....that ride seemed to suck. Why do you do these things to yourself? Why not sit in a warm home, with spiked hot chocolate (with amaretto, not coffee, silly Jenn), and read a fantastic book?
Just kidding - I admire a girl with spunk. Let's face it: you've got that to boot.
Will there be snow when we visit?
By the way, who are all these people you're having dinner with? I object to you making friends outside of the old pals.
Well, okay. If you must...
Can't wait to see the sights. I hope you've picked out some fantastic stuff for us to do and see. Of course, doing anything with you, Amanda, and Lauren will be awesome.
Much love!
Post a Comment