Today was the SFRandonneurs Russian River 200k brevet.  Executive summary: 
I did it on my Legolas, and finished in 9 hours on the button, clock 
running, which is a very good time for me. I'm fired up to tackle the 300 
in March.  

TL/DR

I was signed up for the 2/24 200k, in preparation for the 3/9 300k event, 
but a family gathering got arranged on that weekend and I had to pivot to 
the 2/10 event.  It's fortunate that SFR has so many events, especially in 
the Winter months.  The Russian River 200k route looks like two lollipops. 
Unlike most SFR Marin County rides, it doesn't start at the Golden Gate 
Bridge.  Instead it starts at the end of Lucas Valley Road in San Rafael. 
 The "stem" of the first lollipop follows Lucas Valley Road all the way to 
Nicosio. Then you go counter clockwise around the first half of the first 
lollipop hitting the tip of the stem of the second lollipop in Fallon.  The 
second stem ends in Valley Ford, and then we go counter clockwise again up 
through Occidental, Rio Vista, Guerneville and alongside the Russian River. 
 That second lollipop loop meets up with the Pacific Coast and curls back 
down to Valley Ford, retraces stem #2 and returns to the coast along 
Tomales Bay before meeting back up with stem #1 in Nicosio, and it's back 
Lucas Valley Road to where you started.  It was a gorgeous route and a 
splendid day.  After a ton of heavy rain, there was a lot of evidence of it 
having been stormy, and lots of wet roads, but no rain today. 

At the start at 7AM temperatures were in the low 40s, so I wore bib shorts 
plus knee warmers.  I wore a wool base layer, and a thermal SFR long sleeve 
jersey, with my rain jacket over that and a reflective vest on top of that. 
 I wore some light full finger gloves, and over socks over my road shoes. 
 It dropped to the mid 30s in some of the valleys and my fingers were in 
pain from the cold.  I was just barely warm enough on the feet, and for a 
minute I wished I had worn a buff or similar to pull over my nose and ears. 
 By 10AM it warmed up enough that it was no longer a problem, and in the 
afternoon a lot of the layers came off as the temperatures got up to the 
mid 50s.  

My Legolas was originally a 1x10, but I changed it out to a 2x10 late last 
year.  I used It on my birthday to summit Mount Diablo, with Barlow Pass 
Extralight road tires.  The bike did great on that ride, but after 55 
miles, my saddle was not comfortable.  I've got an ultra lightweight Selle 
Italia saddle on there, because it's a cyclocross race bike!  Races last an 
hour and you're running part of the time.  Who cares if your saddle is 
comfortable?  The night before I swapped out my Gilles Berthoud Soulor 
leather saddle, and I'm glad I did.  My hindquarters handled the day 
without any objections.  

The bike did perfectly.  Fast and nimble, but easy to control.  No 
mechanicals and no flats.  I hammered the last 40km to just get under the 
wire at 9 hours.  Strava gives me 8 hours 40 minutes moving.  My fitness is 
progressing nicely.  I've lost about 12 pounds of pudge I didn't need, and 
my general strength from Orange Theory Fitness seems to be paying 
dividends.  Despite a couple nagging aches and pains, the body did well 
today.  

Another last minute bike setup change was I decided to run Look style 
pedals, instead of SPDs.  My left ankle has been bugging me and I feel a 
lot more planted on the solid wide platform of Look pedals.  That choice 
served me well all day, with no foot, pedal or ankle issues.  

Nutrition-wise I did nothing in preparation.  I had a biggish breakfast and 
packed no food.  In Valley Ford I bought a chocolate chip cookie, a package 
of cashews and a bag of Hairdo ginger candy.  On my second trip to Valley 
Ford I restocked water and had a slice of Lemon Cake.  That all did fine, 
and I didn't actually get into the cashews until after the ride.  

I did my normal Four 50k sections.  Section 1 I took it easy and warmed up. 
 Section 2 I pushed harder.  Section 3, I dug deep and got after it. 
 Section 4 would normally be a mellow victory lap to get you home, but I 
really wanted to make 9 hours so I hammered, and it worked out.  A couple 
of the "fast group" riders who went off the front at the start were still 
at the finish when I got there, so I wasn't far behind them.  

Anyway, I'm pleased with my ride and feel ready for the 300 next month. I 
do NOT intend to use my new RoadeoRosa on the 300, but I'm holding an 
outside shot that I may use it for the 600.  

Bill Lindsay
El Cerrito, CA

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW 
Owners Bunch" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to rbw-owners-bunch+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/rbw-owners-bunch/0e6accb4-09b4-407f-94f6-97848029ab44n%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to