I am not a long distance rider, but I  rode the Wine Country Century twice 
on my old Ram, and 4 times on my old Roadeo that I sold to someone on this 
forum. At 65, I am enjoying my new Roadeo, but shorter distances and less 
hills. I have ridden lots of centuries over the years and wish I had 
discovered Rivendell much earlier. 
For me, Rivs are the best bikes from both a handling viewpoint and 
comfort.I think the stable handling takes pressure off the rider's core.

On Thursday, November 10, 2016 at 1:14:29 PM UTC-8, Jim Bronson wrote:
>
> So I typed up this long post to Lum gim fong, and then realized that he 
> was just asking about Boscos.  Woops....
>
> I'm going to post it anyway, so I can feel like my effort was justified, 
> even if it wasn't.
>
> ----
>
> 1000K is the farthest I have successfully completed.  I'm 2 out of 3 at 
> that distance, the one failing due to a mechanical that could not be easily 
> solved in a geographically remote area of Texas.  (stripped crank bolt and 
> rounded crank arm interface).
>
> 1000K is easier to compartmentalize into seeming just a day longer than a 
> 600K. On a flat-ish one like I did most recently in 2014, I was in all 
> three days around midnight-12:30, so I got some sleep too and still 
> finished 9 and a half hours under the 75 hour time limit.  It still seemed 
> a bit long on the third day, I was telling the guys and gals I was riding 
> with that "It just seems like we ride our bikes all day every day" but 
> overall it was a manageable distance and we finished that ride in good 
> spirits.
>
> I admit to wanting to quit my first 1000K in 2007 at times but it was the 
> point to point Portland to Glacier ride, so if I wanted to quit, I was 
> going to have to hitch hike in remote areas of Washington, Idaho and 
> Montana.  Continuing to ride seemed like a better option at the time, so I 
> did.
>
> I have made a couple of attempts at 1200K, but failed in both, quit on or 
> end of the first day.  It's really in my head.  Mentally for some reason it 
> seems much more daunting than a 1000K, that extra 200K manifesting itself 
> as a 4th day on the bike gets to your psyche if you're having a tough 
> time.  I was miserable in the cold and rain in France in 2007 without 
> fenders.  I was 36 at that time and less mature, I really wanted to go 
> drink more wine and try to meet Parisian women, which of course didn't 
> happen.  The second part, I mean. The other time, I got psyched out by 
> looming spectre of the Salinas Valley headwind in California in 2014 after 
> I slept in on Day 2, just decided to sleep in and go visit family rather 
> than continue riding.  
>
> I also do better when I'm riding with people that I frequently ride with 
> with out of the Texas clubs, because I know their riding paces and habits, 
> how long they'll take at controls, etc.  In neither 1200K I attempted did I 
> have those people around me save for one rider in California but she was on 
> a recumbent, so it wasn't a great match.  Maybe next time I just need to 
> pay for a rando friend's registration and travel expenses that I know I can 
> get along with, won't quit the ride and will push me to keep going when the 
> going gets hard.
>
>
> Jim
>
> -- 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
> signature goes here
>

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