Monday, December 8, 2008

Off Season Training

Now until January (I ll be in Wisconsin for 9 days and this will disrupt my training) I am getting back into shape and laying some base miles down.  I am putting together a training schedule for the new year.  Hiring a coach is on my mind right now, I think it will really help me attain my goals.  Also I am going to document my riding more, with a brief synopsis everyday.  My wonderful girlfriend is also going to encourage me as much as possible and help me keep on track to help reach my racing goals of being a good Cat 3 next season on the road, and a good Cat A for cyclocross.

Last night I finished rebuilding my road bike and today I took it out for a 3 hour ride.  I forgot how much fun road bikes are.  Originally I had intended it to be a shorter ride to adjust everything but just kept going and going.  My bike is going to be a perfect off-season trainer for the upcoming road season.  It is heavy (compared to road bikes), super flexy (lots of energy loss), and outfitted with fenders/lights/saddlebags, this will make my eventual new race bike seem that much faster.

USGP--Portland Cup

A few weeks off from racing since the Cross Crusade series ended.  This was a nice break and I was trying to stay in shape and get ready for the off-season by running every day for 5 miles.  This was mildly successful, usually each week I would get in 3~4 days a week.   My bad.

Overall I was having a bad race, mechanical problems with the bike on various fronts.  A course that I would normally do well on.  A fun course that sent us through a moto-cross course with lots of fun burms and a roller coaster type track.  Overall I was off, nothing was working right. 

This was a race where I wanted to quit, I wasn't having fun and generally was annoyed life.  I decided to stick it out and finished.  Not a winning and not worth a lot of write-up.

Thursday, November 20, 2008

THERE WILL BE MUD

Season in review

It is the end of the racing season for me once again, this is a time for review to see what I have accomplished this season (technically the US Grand Prix is coming up on December 6th/7th and I am racing it).

Originally my goals were to move to Cat 3 on the road.
Fail, but at least got some points on the board.

Start mountain biking.
Success and had fun doing it.

Survive Portland cyclocross and see where I fit in.
Success in my opinion. With a decent starting position I could usually work up to mid-20s or 30s out of 100 or so riders in the B category.

Super commuting
Success, my bike has full fenders, moustache bars, and a front basket now.

Overall I am happiest with my cyclocross season. This is my favorite style of racing and in my opinion where I excel, and one of the main reasons on why I moved to Portland.

Preliminary goals for next season:

Road
Actually move to Cat 3 in OBRA and compete occasionally during the road season.

Mountain
Compete in the short track series on my 29'er and have a lot of fun exploring Oregon wilderness and hopefully get a full suspension mountain bike.

Cyclocross
Be a top 20 A rider or better. This is my main goal for next season and my whole training purpose.

Commuting
Not get hit, live a car free life, and never wear an orange reflective vest or ankle straps.

Find a local like-minded team that I can join.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Cross Crusade 8 (State Championships Hillsboro)

The OBRA Cross Crusades championships, I have done all the races (except for one) this entire season, it has been a season of delicious oatmeal, hot apple cider, minor injuries, bad starts, and lots of mud.  But I wouldn’t have traded it for anything.


This race yielded another bad lottery starting position (I will never gamble) and I was third from the last out, so that started me around 80th or so.  The start was fast, but since I have been starting at the rear of every race I have been greatly improving my starting style.  I am able to quickly pass 15~~20 riders before the first technical section.  This is where it always gets complicated.


The first technical section was a “mystery” steaming wood chip pile section that was about 100ft long or so.  With a wood chip burm going into it and another wood chip burm coming out of it.  Being early into the race this yield into a 100 person pile-up.  Like everyone else I dismounted and started running passed people until I snagged my rear wheel on some guy’s handlebars and I started dragging him.  It took a second during this mayhem to unhook this dead weight and I was quickly back on the bike and riding off.


Overall it wasn’t an overly technical course, almost all the turns were rutted and slippery but compared to everything else that has been thrown at us this season it wasn’t a big deal.  There was the standard 6-pack of barriers but with a straight and fast entry and exit.


The major hilariously technical section was the rodeo arena where we pretty much had to do a large u-turn around 100 yards long.   I pre-rode this section three times to see if I could figure a way through it.  The first time I rode and got about 40% in, when I hit a hidden hole that sucked my front wheel in up to my hub, I stopped instantly and almost fell.  A quick mental note on the location and I tried it again.  This time I avoided the hidden pit, but it was still next to impossible to ride.  On my third attempt I tried constantly popping wheelies to keep my front wheel from being sucked in, this also put more weight on my back wheel yielding some more traction.  This surprisingly worked fairly well and I was able to power through this ridiculous section.


After pre-riding this section my bike was beyond muddy as was my body.  I had to go over to the wash area and clean everything off.  Oregon is probably the only place where you get beyond dirty from pre-riding the course.


Overall it was a very fast paced race.  I ended up finishing around 38th on the day, which is fairly mediocre, but considering my starting position I am still fairly happy with it.


While the Cross Crusades series is over that does not mean cyclocross has ended in Oregon at all.  The US Grand Prix series will be in Portland at PIR in December.  I am really looking forward to this race because all the fast boys/girls are coming to town to show off what they got.  This was also one of my favorite courses so far this season and I am also looking forward to some first rate super fanning to happen.  Ryan Trebon will be back and I am ready to yell at this fast fast stork of a man that has more seat tube than top-tube on his bike.


Also I just found this, Portland offers a bicycle racer specific yoga class…..interesting http://www.umakleppinger.com/bikeyoga.html


Photobucket

A Vanilla rider powering through the slop

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The easier section of the rodeo arena.

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A lot of people actually ran the whole length of it and it proved to be fairly successful. I opt to ride as much as possible because well I race bikes to not run.

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Steaming wood chip section.

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I think she has a smile on her face.

Monday, November 10, 2008

Cross Crusade 7 (PIR) SSCXWC

Now I have been bicycle racing for almost two years now and I was very unprepared for todays events. The magnitude of everything today was extremely off the charts and it has been the most fun I have ever had bike racing or super-fanning.

For starters it was Ruckus Components give-away day. One of the lucky recipients gave me a custom cowbell of epic proportions and the tastiest garlic mayonnaises french fries in existence. Also to boot for $3 you got a nice Cross Crusade pint glass. Which comes with UNLIMITED BEER ALL DAY. Yes UNLIMITED BEER ALL DAY. 21 kegs were demolished through-out the day.

My friend Alex has been in town and was interested in trying a cross race. He told me that he had been biking quite a bit. So I lent him Rita, my 29er mountain bike. Alex got the DFL award (dead fucking last) of the beginner category. He came back muddy and extremely tired and then proceeded to drink his share of beer (11 pints in total). Alex did a great job, he never quit and finished the race completely and had a great time and seems to be hooked now.

Having about 3 hours to kill before my race I got in a lot of good scouting and pre-riding in. It was very very very necessary. The course was muddy. Not wet spray in your face muddy like last week, but slow, sticky, energy sapping muddy. Some parts were so sticky that even on the flats it was near impossible to ride.

I don't know what it is, but apparently I suck at lotterys. My number was second to last today (started about 90th). Luckily the start was a decently long straight-away before it reached the first technical section. I dropped every hammer I was carrying and passed a large number of riders quickly working up to mid 60s.

The first technical section was insane. There was a tough muddy off camber uphill section which then kicked you down into a 6 inch deep sticky mudhole that basically grabbed onto you and took away every bit of momentum you were carrying. This was brutal sometimes I was able to punch it out of the hole and then attempt the next hill which was painfully muddy as well. It was really hit or miss if people could ride it or not. If you were able to stay on the bike and keep moving you would definitely pass people. But if you had to dismount at all, you were screwed. It was pretty much impossible to get riding again and you had to end up running a long ways before you could remount.

Part of this section also had a rutted muddy downhill section which put you in a water pit area about 30 ft long. This was almost a relief because your tires would get cleaned off a little, but shortly there after more energy sucking mud.

After this brutal hell hole of mud. You had a short section of crushed gravel which lead to a large concrete "barrier". This was a great place to super fan because various people were able to launch up it and jump it. Following the "barrier" there was a calm section of large swooping grass turns. A lot of riders were recovering here and going slower. This is when I would turn it up and pass a lot of guys.

For the B race, they decided to add more barriers and put in a small double barrier section along the grandstands. After this there was a few quick turns a short downhill and then a four pack of barriers up a muddy hill through a wind mill that would turn periodically. Following this set there was a very slippery off camber turn and then onto some more crushed gravel onwards to the second technical section.

A quick uphill and then a mud pit which would quickly wreck any plans of holding a line going into the hardest section of the day. A very very very steep dowhill section with a 180 degree turn at the bottom and then back up it. Imagine the steepest hill you know, run down it go 10 ft then try and run back up. Now do this when it is extremely rutted out and so muddy that you can hardly stay upright. This was the best place to super-fan because everyone was sliding down the hill hilariously. The uphill was way too steep to ride so some riders would just run the whole section. These got heckled. Others would try and coast to the bottom, sometimes successfully and other well lets just say they made it to the bottom. I slid down this hill on my side four out of nine times I attempted it. Luckily three of those were during warm-up laps. Once past this section there was a long twisty fast and muddy section and then the finish line.

Overall I felt great and raced fairly well. I passed over a hundred some riders and ended up 30th overall. My main personal victory is that I only got lapped ONCE by Ryan Trebon.

SIDE NOTE: They made a special qualifier for Ryan Trebon for him to race the SingleSpeed World Championships race. He had to win the regular SingleSpeed race and then must win the Mens A race on a SingleSpeed if was going to race in the last race. Three hours of brutal racing should tire him out and it kind of did. He very very easily won the first two races and then got third in the championship race. Also I heckled him to a hilarious degree every time he would come by.

Now that I was done racing it was time for some serious super-fanning with my new cowbell for the SSCXWC. I got a good number of beers in me first and then was ready. I really regret not doing this race. It looked like an amazing amount of fun. They were setting off smoke bombs on the course, had the windmill rotate faster, put out more barriers and turned on a large foam machine to make a foam wall. More than half the field was in costume of some sorts to some ridiculous degree. Tandems/burleys/eXtracycls/bmx it was all legal as long as it was singlespeed. My favorite of the day was one guy had nine 19 tooth cogs in the back and two 39 tooth chainrings in the front and full derailleurs. Now he could shift but it would always be the same gear. This race was amazing too watch, it was pure insanity.

 

EDIT:  Bike weight before race 17.2 lbs.  Bike weight after race 24.5 lbs.  That is a lot of mud.



Cutest tandem couple ever.  This guy from Canada got heckled a lot.

 



Who wears white shoes, white socks, and a white shirt to a muddy cross race?  Oh wait Alex does.

 



Pink Spider Man attacking the foam.

 



Me running the concrete barrier.

 



Polka dot biking+Cowbell+leg warmers+rain boots = Portland Cyclocross



Foam wall part 2.



This area was hilarious to watch. 

 



This guy and I went back and forth for the last two laps.  He could bunny hop barriers and ride everything I couldn't but was slower on the straight aways.  He beat me.

 



Alex attacking the barriers, shirt still clean.

 



Awesome drum group.

 



Painfully running towards the windmill.

 



This section was tricky.

 



This is the tricky downhill off camber and then run up section.

 



There was a sit up contest to decide to won this frame.

 



I am not sure exactly what this guy in PBR cans was.



Crowd shot.

 

This guy could jump the concrete barrier quite well.



SMOKE BOMB

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Viewing Pleasure

Monday, November 3, 2008

Cross Crusade 6 (Barton Park)

Now this is cyclocross.


Try to explain to anyone why you would pay $22 to possibly injure yourself, break expensive components, get soaking wet, eat large volumes of mud, and stain everything you brought that day and they would certainly not understand unless they also raced cyclocross.  Barton park is a race of what cross dreams are made of.  It was impossible to look around at the some 1200 racers and spectators and not see a huge smile underneath layers of mud on the faces of everyone.

Best photographer at Cross Crusades, I highly suggest click through the slideshow.

http://pdxcross.com/2008/11/03/barton-park-photo-slideshow/

As the Mens B and Singlespeeders were lining up, the sky opened up and began to rain even more.  As this happened the approaching sounds of sirens were heard.  First an ambulance and then a firetruck and various police cars.   Brad Ross explained that someone just got seriously injured (later found out that it was a broken jaw) on a very very treacherous off-camber/rocky/muddy/slippery/steep downhill section.  The OBRA officials decided to quickly cut out this part of the course because someone had already broke their collarbone on this same section earlier in the day.  Honestly I was relieved this part was really scary to ride and I mainly just held on for dear life and tried to keep my wheels underneath me.  

The lottery system was once again my foe.  My number was third from the end.  Oh well today was more about having fun than racing at this point.  The start was a fast pavement section that lead to a sweeping gravel road.  This was one of two portions of the course that were moderately safe.  All of the downhills had large smooth rocks on them (very very slippery) and there was mud and standing water on every section of the course.  

According to UCI (cyclocross governing body) barriers must be a maximum of 18 inches in height unless they are natural barriers.  In the Cross Crusades the word "natural" means large concrete walls much much taller than 18 inches.  There were two sets of these "natural" Portland barriers.

It was hard to hold any sort of line while riding through this course.  It was very easy to slide off track and quickly go out of bounds (I lost track of how many times I did this).  Overall I was not on my A game at all.  Clearly lacking techincal skills I was going fairly slowly and then kicking on the turbo boosters on anything that was moderately safe.  I did alright to hang with a group of riders for the most of the day.  Overall I was having too much fun too focus on going extremely fast (loser talk) and finished 68th out of 100 riders or so.

My victory is that I didn't fall and hurt myself or wreck anything.  I also finished the day with a few beers, some complimentary hot apple cider from Chris King, and a bowl of the most delicious oatmeal from Bob's Red Mill.  These two sponsors are at every race feeding and hydrating everyone for free.  

The highlight of the day was watching everyone clean off themselves and their bikes in the biggest "cleanest" puddle.  After the Womens A race, there were many ladies soaking wet and covered in mud cleaning off.  I am sure many guys were dreaming of this moment all season.

It took me 45 minutes to clean my bike and 3 repeated loads of laundry to get my jersey clean.

Here is a video shot from the day, it shows all the hilarity that ensued from the steep hills and wet slippery conditions.


 






Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Cross Crusade 4 (Clatsop Fairgrounds)

This weekend was a double Halloween race weekend in Astoria, Oregon (coastal harbor town) at the Clatsop Fairgrounds.

Andrew wasn't able to race anymore due to an "accident" that his bike sustained, but was still kind enough to come along for the 2 hour drive. He brought his road bike to climb the Astoria Column, while I was racing around. It was supposed to be a 2 hour drive to Astoria.  We successfully made it a 3 hour drive by attempting to get closer to Seattle.

Strange side note, the weather prediction for Oregon has been nothing but 65 degrees and beautiful. The closer we got to Seattle the more it clouded over and soon began to rain.

Since we took some extra time to get to the Astoria, I only had one hour before my race.   My favorite part of racing in Oregon is that it literally takes one minute to register.  I suited up and dropped my wheels in the pit and went off down the road to warm up a little.  There was no way that I would be able to pre-ride the course at all since there were people racing back-to-back before my race.

Since my number was drawn last for the race at Rainer Highschool, this week I got the chance to line up first.  I got lined up around 30th place or so behind the points leaders. The major downside was that I didn't know where I was going at all, this makes it incredibly hard to go really fast.

After the customary feat of strength (this week it was an egg toss) that is performed before every race to decide who goes first (Mens B vs Singlespeeds), the singlespeeders were off first. The B's were off a few minutes later.  We were quickly led down a steep bumpy section that had lots of swoopy turns.  These turns at first seemed really slow to me and I was taking them slow and getting passed.  The bottom section then led into steep climb, which was very rideable until they put a barrier in the middle of it.  

It is generally very difficult to remount your bike going up hill so I just ran it.  This was the last time I ran it because I was getting passed here as well.

This hill kicked us into section that went like this
dark horse barn (100 ft)
180 degree turn
race between barns
180 degree turn
dark horse barn (100 ft)
180 degree turn
race between barns
180 degree turn
dark horse barn (100 ft)
180 degree turn
race between barns
180 degree turn
and finally out.  All the turns going in and out of the barns were strangely wet and slick.  Various people were sliding out here.  This was one of my favorite sections of the course.

We were then kicked through the standard 6-pack of barriers.  My barrier skills have really improved a lot and I have been passing many riders through them.  I pass people not because I am a fast runner (which I am not) but due to the fact that I dismount at the absolute last second before going in.  While everyone else is already running or in the middle of a dismount I am still pedaling into it.

The next section was a longer and steeper uphill bumpy climb.  The first lap I wasn't very efficient in this section and just held my line.  Everyone had little traction because of the bumps and were pedaling in the same fashion.  Mashing down and then relaxing with each pedal stroke.  I noticed this quickly and changed my own tactics.

I started saying "round round round" in my head.  I was trying to apply power all the way around the stroke.  This worked extremely well, this evened out my power transfer and soon on every lap thereafter I was able to always pass multiple people going up this section.

Following this hill there was a long bumpy downhill section that was super fast and fun.  This course was so bumpy and fast that I actually gave myself blisters on the sides of my hands from holding my brifters (brake/shifters). FYI: I was wearing bike gloves as well.

A few large swoopy off camber turns, an awesome kicker for air and then another horse barn.  This one was a large show barn, this was trickier to ride than it seems. Mainly because you were coming in from the outside sunshine and coming into a shadowed area of loose dirt/gravel/sand.  It was amazing.

It took me about two laps to figure out the course completely.  This is when I started taking every turn at full speed and hammering out of turn.  I dominated the barns and hills.  I started passing all the riders that took off in front of me.  I felt fatigue during part of the race and this is mainly due to my lack of road miles right now.  Overall I finished 25th out of 80 some riders.

This has been my best finish to date.  This was a great race for many reasons.  I was tactically paying attention to the course and the other riders going my speed, this helped immensely because I knew where to recover and each lap I knew what I had to improve on.  I attribute a lot of this to my good starting position.  

Usually the first two laps I am much too focused on passing all the slower riders to get up to a good position that once I get up there I don't have a good tactics base yet.



Awesome photo from http://www.cheryljwillson.com/gallery/v/album_010/IMG_8056.JPG.html








People are strange in the cross crusades.  From Cross Crusade 4









Between barns.  From Cross Crusade 4









OH SNAP!!!   This guy ran over a junior racer, strangely no one was hurt and all the wheels stayed true.  From Cross Crusade 4









Uphill bump section.  From Cross Crusade 4









One of the horse barns.  From Cross Crusade 4









Part of the 6 pack.  From Cross Crusade 4









Pit row.  From Cross Crusade 4









Bumpy downhill section.  From Cross Crusade 4









Absolute crusher, she finishes so much ahead of all the all the other A racers it is scary.From Cross Crusade 4









The single barrier in hte middle of the uphill.  From Cross Crusade 4

 

Sunday, October 19, 2008

Cross Crusade 3 (Rainer High School)

With last week's suck fest far behind me.  I woke up this morning once again really excited to be racing cyclocross.  There is nothing I would rather be doing on race days....training is a different story.

Andrew and I left Portland around 7:30 am with a chilly, dampness in the air.   It stayed with us until 1 in the afternoon.  We got in a lap before the beginner race started.  The course was a classic cyclocross course.   About 6 ft wide fast grass, off camber turns,  some wooded tree ruts, and then the uniqueness that is the Cross Crusades steps in.   Most barrier sets around the country have two barriers in them.  Portland has six barriers (called six packs).  There is also a monster of a loose gravel uphill climb.  Which was ridable for some, also a very popular spectator area.

With the increasing popularity of cyclocross (over 1300 riders once again), the officials decided to try something new with setting up the starting area.   They devised a lottery system based off the last digit of yoru number.  My number is 344.  Number 4 was chosen last, this meant that I got to line up at the back of my field..........not awesome.  But on the upside of being last means that you get to go home with a 6 pack of beer.  There ended up being 102 riders in the category B race.   I was tied for 102 place.

The race started and was a sprint fest.  I was only able to move up 10 spots in the begining before it slowed down.   This is where any ideas of winning or finishing well went out the shammy.   There was absolutely no way to get through 3~4 riders on a 6ft wide track through the woods.   I had to wait for the race to start stringing out.   

I was very fatigued the entire race.   My usual pop that I can kick out at points was gone.  I was plodding through the course at what I thought was turtle's pace.  I felt like racers were going by me constantly.  Everytime I would come through the uphill I was dead tired.   My body was never able to recover.  It was extremely frusterating and I was very happy when I heard the bell signifying one more lap.  

I assumed I got like 80th, but it turned out I actually got 45.   Which is really surprising to me because I DO NOT remember passing 57 people at any point.  I mean I know passed a few people.  This actually lifted my spirits quite a bit.  I know I could have done 100000 times better in this race.  I m not sure what was holding me back besides starting in 102 place.  One of these days I ll get a good start and drop the hammer or lay some pipe, insert whatever biking analogy you like.

EDIT:  Lots of riders were being destroyed by the 6 pack.  You could see with every  barrier that their legs were not going as high.  There was lots of epic summersaults/barrier smashing.  Also there was a mountain biker in the C race that was determined to bunny hop them.  Lap 1 he got over 2 barriers before endoing.  Lap 2 he got over 3 barriers.  On the last lap he made it over 5.  Very very impressive none-the-less.

 

Disclaimer: I didn't take many photos today because the course was kind of hard to walk around and quite frankly I was tired.



Spectators viewing the 6 pack.

 



About to hit the 6 pack.  Good form.

 



Hitting the first barrier.

 



This is actually a 3 ft kicker.  I was waiting for one of the A riders to do something fun.  I lost patience.

 



Loose dirt/gravel climb.

 



She finished 4th in the Women's A race and is also my CycloCrush, partially because she is an awesome rider and partially because she is on a really cute bike.

 



 

EDIT EDIT::  I keep forgetting to add stuff.  A qucik background story.   Last weekend at Wilsonsville a Team Beer member urinated outside and some stuffy old guy saw it and bitched on the forums about in a less than classy manner.  About 3~4 people joined sides with the stuffy old guy.   Team Beer in their infinite class rented out 3 special Honey Buckets (port o potties for you non-NW) and they had a concierge standing there all day with special amenities.  Also posted on the doors of the Honey Buckets was a no user list of the stuffy old guys.  Class.   Quick interview here.

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Cross Crusade 2 (Villebois/Dammasch State Hospital)

EDIT: There were around 1300 riders at todays race. Also cyclocross out here is completely not predictable.

When you look up the race on google earth you see two different tags for the area.

1) Haunted abandoned insane asylum

2) Cross Crusade Race 2

At first you think that is silly, why would there be a cyclocross race at a mental institution.   Then you realize wait....it makes perfect sense.  Sadly all of the buildings are torn down and the race was just on the grounds of the institution which is under heavy construction.

We arrived very early (8 am) at the grounds to get Andrew off for his first cyclocross race.   He raced very well and got third place in the Beginner Category.    While I didn't race until 12:40 this gave me a lot of time to preride the course.   Which is usually something I neglect.   I got a total of 3 laps in before my race,  I found all the good lines (this all proved to be in vain later) and routes.

The course wasn't much of a cyclocross race as much as it was a short track mountain bike course.   It was all crazy rutty, hard pack, off camber, large really loose gravel, hell of a course.   As each race went on, there were a growing number of flat tires and trips to the first aid tent.

I got a mediocre warm-up in before the race, mainly because I was trying to get a good line at the start.  I got lined up around 4 or 5 row which is pretty decent considering it is an absolute cluster-fuck of a 120 riders.  This was a much better start already than last week.

We were off fast and I quickly moved up to top 20 on the first lap and was feeling great.  There was a lot of hitting and sliding on every turn.  I m not sure if I got taken down or just slid out.  But I hit the ground hard.  I jumped back up and got on my bike.   My right shifter was twisted in, not a big deal I can fix it later.   (later I found out that I was actually fairly bloody from my arm, hip, and leg).   Whenever I crash pretty hard it tends to make me slighly sheepish for the rest of the course.

With my fall and new sheepish attitude I dropped to around 30th and finished the lap.   Now this course was intense, I was running my tires soft and cushy for traction and it was just way too bouncy with large rocks to wreck your life.

On my 3rd lap my rear tire started feeling weird, I looked down and it looked really low on air.  I thought I had a slow leak or something and it was causing the weirdness.  Luckily I was right by the pit, so I pulled in and jumped off to check my tire.   It felt fine so I was back off.   Very shortly there after (just passed the pit) my tire rolled off the side of my rim.  I just thought to myself damn it.   I am fairly new to tubular wheels and wasn't entirely sure on what to do.  So I just pushed it back on and tried to ride it.  It was sort of rideable  but it felt really weird and considering it was such a bumpy/rocky course I didn't want to damage my carbon fiber rims.

So I decided to run for awhile and run I did.  I ended up running about 1 mile back to the other side of the pit and ended up getting passed by a lot of riders.  I changed wheels and just finished the race, in a leisurely fashion.  Too much had happened already and I wasn't going to tempt any more.   Overall I finished in 81st place which isn't too shabby considering what I went through.   Also I escaped with only three areas of gravel rash, which is good considering one guy finished with his teeth sliced through his lips.  There is always next week.   I would like to thank my great support crew today: Jen, Andrew, Zach, Vivian, Lindsay, Jon, Preston, Tarah, and Mandy.

Also this weekend is the Oregon Handmade Bike Show, all the local builders took a special lap with all their bikes. BLING



One of the easier parts of the day,  steep downhill with loose gravel everywhere else.



This was a giant mountain of dirt that contains a course.



Super rutty turns, is this cyclocross even or a mountain bike course?



It looks like a barren waste land here of dirt clumps and small ride lines.



There were three different tracks you could take through this waste land, all bumpy and painful.



At one you point you come down this hill.



This was part of a special surprise for the B and A riders to lengthen the course.  There was nothing I hated more.



While this kind of looks like fun, it was also kind of tricky.



Lots of weird riding here, the video below shows it better.



Downhill section.



These ruts made it really hard, because they were deeply rutted around 6-8 inches.



Line of riders.



Very short and steep run up.



Top of the run up.  Love the pink Gentle-Lovers kit.



Special Ira Ryan single speed racer.



Speedvagen Fuck Yeah.



Seriously awesome.












The part that I didn't like (As racers make everything look easy though)
From Cross Crusade 2 10-12-08











Kind of fun tricky section.
From Cross Crusade 2 10-12-08