Add a belated day seven post
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layout: post
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title: "Finishing: AIDS/LifeCycle Day Seven"
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tags:
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- alc
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- alc2022
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- cycling
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---
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Waking up on the last day of big gay summer camp is always a downer. In the
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warm and muggy air of Ventura, the love bubble starts to pop and you're left
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with one last bike ride before returning to the real world. This year was my
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second AIDS/LifeCycle, and I was _not_ excited to wake up for day seven. Once
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the tent and gear were dropped off, my breakfast consumed, there was nothing
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but a measly 70 miles remaining for ALC 2022.
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---
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I also posted a [thread to
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Twitter](https://twitter.com/agentdero/status/1535594559471685633)
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for today with more pictures
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---
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Camp closes up _early_ on day seven, so everybody is awake early. The alarm
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rang at 4:15 and there was already a flurry of activity to hear outside. People
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rustling in their tents, zippers zippering, flip-flops slapping against heels,
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the deepened morning voices of tired cyclists and roadies. I followed my usual
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protocol of going straight to the porta-potties before heading over to
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breakfast, but since everybody was waking up, there was quite the queue for
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number two. I decided I could wait, scurried back to my tent to get dressed,
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tear down, swung by the gear trucks, and then found a block of line-less
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porta-potties en route to the food tent.
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In the food line I did not grab "The Daily Spin", the little camp newspaper
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that's printed every day, like I normally do, and therefore miss a key
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instruction: gear trucks will not arrive at the finish line until 1pm.
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Methodically chewing eat bite of my breakfast I planned my day: my knee was
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doing okay, but this is the last day and the last chance to go fast with some
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of these other riders. I figured that either way I was going to sit around at
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lunch to wait for the finish line to open at 11am, so why not try to get to
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lunch as fast as I can!
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I have some short-circuit in my wiring that prevents me from "calming the fuck
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down" as Ride Director Tracy puts it. Riding fast with a group of other
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lunatics really is quite a lot of fun, and getting away from the main pack of
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cyclists has allowed me to enjoy the scenery much more than I had in 2019.
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Either way, this is the last chance to pedal hard with these folks until 2023,
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so I'm going to make every mile count.
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Bike parking opens early and I roll out with the first 40-50 riders. We cruise
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along the boardwalk and into the city of Ventura for a little bit before
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meandering through some fields and suburban sprawl. I do a lot of the usual "on
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your left" routine before I get separated from some folks due to my speed and
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some red lights. As we ride by some naval base a bunch of fast riders come
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up, including the Triathelete, and I catch their wheel.
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Bike friends!
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The group is probably 9 people large and it includes some of the fast riders
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I've been chasing all week, plus a couple of new faces. We all cruise along
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together towards Rest Stop One, each keeping the pace and trading off pulls.
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After a while of keeping up at the number 3 or 4 position, I figure it's my
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turn to pull for a bit, pop out to the left and throw down some power. My back
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wheel pops up a little bit as I do so, a bad habit I'm trying to break myself
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of, since a wheel in the air is not transferring power to the road.
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The way I have found myself passing people has been to basically do a
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mini-sprint, something I've found useful in criteriums. The downside of this
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approach is that if the group is chugging along at 22mph or so, and I'm all of
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a sudden pushing 26mph, I'm going to push _too far_ out in front. I
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accidentally turned "my turn to pull" into a breakaway. _Oops_.
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The fun thing about this group of cyclists is that somebody _follows_ my
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breakaway, and that just makes the whole effort feel very much like a normal
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crit or road race. I can feel the lactic acid building in my quads, thighs, and
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glutes. 545 miles of cycling has given me a lot of time to focus on getting
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every watt of power out of my legs, and leading out this group I'm acutely
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aware of each muscle involved. After a mile or so we all bunch back up and
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rocket onwards to Rest Stop One.
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The Triathelete comments in the rest stop that he really enjoys following
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behind me. I'm able to push a strong pace, and I'm tall, so at his shorter
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stature he can tuck in behind me for a free ride. Somebody else comments how
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fun that bit of teamwork was, and that we're all _maybe_ a little competitive.
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Once my routine is done, I leave the rest stop alone and push through the wind
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between the Santa Monica mountains and the Pacific.
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At some point a cyclist I will come to know as Nils passes me, and as is my
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customary response, I sprint to catch his wheel and start to work together with
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him to keep a strong pace towards Rest Stop Two.
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Nils is dutch, is about as tall as I am, has been cycling seriously since
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sometime last year, and is **fast**. He is inexperienced though, and I learn as
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we cruise along working together that he hasn't really had much of this
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teamwork experience on ALC thus far. We trade off and on into Rest Stop Two,
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and then depart together to continue flying towards lunch.
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Between Rest Stop Two and Lunch is Malibu. I hate Malibu. The Pacific Coast
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Highway is flanked on the east side by mountains, and on the west side by
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expensive homes and cars parked ever-so-slightly off the road. Everybody in
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Malibu drives like they're the only ones on the road, and cyclists can get
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squeezed between aggressive drivers, and the door-zone from parked cars. The
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city is basically 20+ miles of coastline, and it _sucks_.
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Fortunately the flying dutchman and I are making insane time. We spot a number
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of large cycling groups riding together on the PCH, which is genuinely cool to
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see. It seems like every cyclist north of LA has come to engage in battle with
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motorists for who should really get to own this stretch of beautiful highway.
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At a stoplight some local cyclist with some aero kit, a fast looking carbon
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bike, and stacked legs pulls up next to us. When the light turns green, Nils
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takes
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off, followed by me, followed by the local. No more than a quarter mile down
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the road, the local flies by Nils and I.
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Rabbit!
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We have probably ridden 45 strong miles at this point, but I'll be damned if
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I'm not going to give chance. I pop out of the saddle and put in the best
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sprint I can muster to chase him down. I get within a few bike lengths but
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cannot get into his draft. Nils later told me that I had left him in the dust
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on that sprint too!
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Disheartened I settle into cranking at my 21-22mph pace, which is meager
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compared to the local. Nils comes flying by me and says "why don't I give it a
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shot!" So of course now I have to keep up with Nils in his sprint. His effort
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falls short as well, but we fall into a tight rotation and chase this local,
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less than couple hundred yards away, for the remainder of the PCH until we pull
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off for lunch.
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I haven't been smoked like that all week. Good lord was that dude fast.
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Reviewing my app over lunch, I had put down 55 miles at a 20mph average speed.
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That's not a straight 55 either, there were a lot of little rollers, headwinds,
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and stoplights in between mile 0 and lunch.
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We talk a lot about racing, triathalons, and what motivated us to get into
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cycling while killing time at lunch. From here there are about 15 miles to the
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finish line, and we roll out at about 10:15.
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The pace is slowed due to traffic, more climbing, and the general mayhem that
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comes with riding through Beverly Hills and West Hollywood. At one point a car
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almost turned right into my, leading me to loudly share some profanities.
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The last couple miles of ALC are some of the more dangerous ones in my opinion,
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a very hectic urban environment with tired cyclists and weekend drivers.
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I crossed the finish line at almost exactly 11:00am and ALC is over.
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---
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As luck would have it, I forgot to pre-arrange shipping for my bike. I just
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kind of forgot that I had to register ahead of time for it to be put on a truck
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and driven back to San Francisco. Instead I had to pay a bunch of money so my
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bike could be packed and that I could safely take it home on the plane with me.
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I also didn't realize that gear wouldn't be there until 1pm, so I had to sit
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around in the shade chatting and napping until gear trucks arrived.
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Once I had everything collected, my gear, my giant bike box, my sweaty ass,
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trying to get a giant car to carry all of my stuff to a hotel proved to be
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equal parts annoying and time-consuming. I ended up leaving Fairfax High School
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at about 3pm, and didn't get find a shower until after 4pm.
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The beauty of ALC as a cyclist is that you kind of just have to wake and ride
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your bike. Life on the ride is simple: eat, pedal, eat, sleep, repeat. Once ALC
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is over however, you are quickly reminded at how much _other shit_ there is to
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do other than cycling.
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From a cycling perspective, day seven might have been the most "put together"
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of the days on ALC. Great teamwork, good legs, and high speeds. I felt
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challenged and like I left nothing "out on the road" when I was done. The
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change in skill and perspective from 2019 to 2022 was significant, I can only
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hope that I continue to improve and 2023 that much better!
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