Tim, 

I studied about you in abnormal physic at Campbell. 

Absolutely incredible Tim. Your a great athlete. 

Steven b

Sent from my Verizon Wireless Phone

----- Reply message -----
From: "Steve Sullivan" <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" 
<[email protected]>
Cc: "<[email protected]>" 
<[email protected]>
Subject: [COWs] 600K Ride Report !!!
Date: Mon, Feb 13, 2012 9:45 pm
All I can say is unbelievable!  Thanks for sharing Tim.

Sent from my iPad
On Feb 13, 2012, at 9:27 PM, "Tim & Susan" <[email protected]> wrote:









Where to begin?  This may be a little long because I may 
use this as a proof of insanity plea later on down the road.  I signed up for 
this ride about 10 days 
in advance when the weather models predicted 60 degrees on Saturday and 35 
degrees for a low.  5 days later the 
forecast tanked.  13 riders had 
already signed up, loaded with rando all-stars including Mr. RUSA president 
himself, Mark Thomas from Seattle and 2011 U.S. Rando of the year, Mike D. from 
N.C.  Thursday before the ride I 
wanted to change my 600K registration to the 300K route which also had several 
riders signed up, but I wanted someone else to blink first.  No one blinked.  
This list was full of Bad A$$es. 

13 riders showed up Saturday morning knowing this 
was gonna be an epic event.  There 
were another 10 riders cruising the 200K and another 10 riders on the 300K.  4 
riders drove in from  Ohio hoping for warmer 
weather.  It just finished raining 1 
hour before the start.  Temps were 
very pleasant in the mid 40’s.  We 
cruised out at 7:00am.  The first 45 
miles to Roseboro had a slight tailwind and we were all smiles.  At mile 85, 
the peloton stopped at 
Andy’s in Wallace for cheeseburgers and milkshakes while 3 riders continued 
on.
Mile 132 it rains a bit so we stop at a Subway in 
Rocky Point for more fuel.  Mile 137 
we’re cruising along when just behind me I here commotion and glance in my 
mirror seeing Mark crashing to the pavement.  We all gather around trying to 
access 
the damage.  He seems ok but his 
front wheel is toast.  A replacement 
wheel is an hour away.  We all 
decide to stay together and hang out at a little country store while we 
wait.  We are making good time on 
the bikes but our down time is adding up.  
After starting back up again, the fun begins.  The wind roars in and temps are 
dropping 
fast as the skies clear.
Mile 180, around 9:30pm, it’s getting nasty on the 
playground.  We cruise by a little 
Mexican grill near Garland and we can’t pass up warm food and a 
warm atmosphere.  At this point we 
have one rider to DNF and one rider whom has fallen back a ways.  Later we find 
out the second rider was 
suffering from hypothermia and could not get a phone signal from where he was 
and tried several houses before he found someone that would help him out.  I 
guess we were all taking a risk being 
out there, luckily that was the only scary event of the weekend and it turned 
out ok.  This guy Bob was also a 
very experienced rider which means that it could have happened to any one of 
us.
We leave there and the wind is awesome.  We get our bikes ready, run back 
inside 
until we’re all ready to go because you can’t just stand around in that wind 
waiting.  Wow, this is brutal..  We get Gail force winds at 40 plus.  Sometimes 
our speed is down to like 7 
mph.  Big gust roars through and 
bikes go everywhere.  No one goes 
down but a few get blown off the road.  
We’re now headed for White Lake, dodging limbs, pinecones and other 
debris in the road.  It’s very slow 
going and the temps are now below freezing.  It feels surreal; like I’m 
watching this 
from the outside then the next big gust brings me back to reality.  Mile 197 we 
reach White Lake and dive in the store for hot 
chocolate.  We’ve ridden like 20 
miles in two hours.  Another 10 
miles to Elizabethtown then we dive south towards 
Shallotte.  It’s getting colder but 
no more headwinds for a while.  We 
relish that left turn, but we are too tired to really take advantage of the 
tailwind.
It’s very desolate out here now with the next 24 
hour store located in Shallotte at mile 258.  We did pass through Hallsboro 
where my 
friend Ian was so sleepy that he camped out inside the town’s post office while 
the rest of us continued on.   Less than an hour from Shallotte 
Joel and I both run out of fuel.  We 
start drifting back from the peloton.  
I start doing sprint intervals to wake myself up and to help with some 
warmth.  For several miles I’d get 
out of the saddle and count 50 pedal strokes then rest a few minutes and 
repeat.   Up ahead I could see 
another rider drift back then they all slowed up a bit and we regrouped.  
Finally 258 miles down, 4 riders have a 
motel in Shallotte, 3 of us will continue on to Sunset Beach 14 miles away but 
not before some more hot chocolate.   
>From there it’s more brutal headwinds all the way to SB and the bank sign 
reads 25 degrees.  We were cussing 
like sailors.  We have ridden our 
bikes nearly through the entire night as we arrived at SB at 5:30 am.  In to 
our base room we eat and chat for 
a while then I crash at 6:15, up at 7:30.  
Ian comes in as I’m getting up and wants to know if he has time for 
another nap.  I tell him our plans 
to cruise out around 8:30.  As I’m 
sitting there trying to piece together the reality of what’s going on, we’re 
watching the Weather Channel.  
Sunset Beach, 26 degrees, and they pan over to the northwest 
and currently in Anchorage, 
Alaska it’s a balmy 30 
degrees!  WTH?!?!?  That is so not right!
2 riders left out of SB at 5:30 as we were riding 
in.  5 of us left shortly after 
8:30am as the Gail force wind warnings lifted at 8:00am.  The four staying in 
Shallotte hadn’t 
showed up yet.  275 miles down and 
only 105 miles left, but it’ll be the hardest century ride of my life.  Still 
15 mph sustained headwinds all the 
way home with 20+ gusts.  Ian and I 
stopped at McD’s about 8 miles out already busted and needing fuel.  We crank 
it back up cruising along about 
12 mph.  Ian’s like “I can’t do this 
all day” and I settle us down into slow motion around 10 mph.  If we don’t 
fight it we’ll be fine I 
say.   Our next stop is 
Tabor 
City on the N.C./S.C.. 
border at mile 310.  It took us over 
3 hours to put down 35 miles averaging 11.4 mph.  The wind is giving no breaks, 
but we’re 
still ahead of four riders and we picked up a 3rd rider, Roy, from 
Ohio to ad to 
our group which will help.
We now start out for Boardman, N.C.  
Even with the constant headwinds, we are having an enjoyable ride.  Suns up, 
and 36 degrees feels a lot 
better than 26 degrees.  We are 
joking around and really having a good time.  We know we’ve just taken part in 
an epic 
event that will go down as one of the most memorable rides ever.  A few miles 
from Boardman the 3 of us 
all get sleepy at the same time.  We 
dismount and walk our bikes 100 yards or so.  Ian has some caffeine pills and 
we all 
partake.  These things never did 
much for me while I was cramming for test in school, but I never got sleepy 
again for the rest of this ride.  
Mile 332, Boardman, 
N.C.  Tony, the ride organizer meets us there 
and we grab some lunch.  The other 
riders are like 10 or so miles behind us but we decide not to wait as we know 
that we’ll join up before the end and we can take it easy until then.
On to Clarkton.  This is a short 19 mile section of 
today’s ride that is traveling east and for one hour of today’s ride we do not 
have a headwind.  I know it wasn’t 
heaven but it was a good place to be.  
Oh yeah baby, we’re like getting in the big chain ring.  Life is good!  Ian and 
I are setting up for a county 
line sprint rematch from last year.  
I usually take him but this one is uphill and he got me last year.  Well, he 
got me again.  Dang it!  He is half my age though, so I don’t 
feel too bad. Clarkton, mile 350.  
4:30pm Sunday afternoon and 30 more miles to go.  Time limit for this ride is 
40 hours, so 
no problem there though we were hoping to finish before sunset as the temps 
would tank again.  No chance for 
that as the headwinds returned for the last leg.
Again we took it sorta easy thinking we’d join up 
with the other group and we’d all ride in together.  10 miles left we sealed 
the deal by 
taking a wrong turn, realizing a mile later our mistake and when we returned to 
the route we met up with our friends and it was a big party to the finish.  
Tony had hot pizza and subs waiting at 
the finish.  We all gathered for a 
group photo a few minutes later.  It 
was a huge high to be a part of that group.  I met some new friends including 
Roy from Ohio and then there’s Ian that I always seem 
to hook up with when things get really crazy.  I usually spend a lot of time 
with Bryan 
R. but knee problems fighting the wind led to his first ever DNF.  Mines 
coming, but it’ll have to wait 
another day.  That was 382 miles in 
36 hours on one hour of sleep.  I 
kept fairly warm on this ride.  Toes 
and fingers were never cold.  I 
think I finally got it figured out, though I don’t plan on testing it again 
anytime soon as my next overnight ride will be in April.  What a 
blast!



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