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Tuesday, November 4

And you may ask yourself, "Well ... how did I get here?"

Quite honestly, the 32" rigid single speed thing went from pipe dream to "financially committed" way faster than I'd ever anticipated.  Tom from Vassago sniffed out my desire after a fair amount of thinking out loud on FaceBook about wanting to make it happen but not knowing where to start.  The only current tire option is the Aspen 32X2.4, and I didn't think I had the kinda pull to put a pair in my hands any time soon.  Then there's wheels.  Rims from... somewhere?  Industry Nine made a system set for the Neuhaus show bike, but would they make them for little old me?  I'm special, but am I that special?

Oh... then there's the frame.  The only "stock" one I know about it is the Neuhaus.  Steel frame and ENVE fork basically $3,000 and a twelve week wait time.  

Hmmmm...

I told Tom if we could 100% make the three things happen around the same time, I'd have to give it some serious thought.

It only took him a couple days to get all the ducks in a row.  

Dammit.

So your question is, "why?"

I was an early adopter of tubeless.  I've already told the story about how Stan (yeth, THE Stan) was in my garage on Memorial Day weekend of 2001 helping me set up my Sun Ringle rims tubeless using his OG packing tape, electrical tape, valve stems, and Hobby Lobby latex system.  There was definitely a learning curve, and those early years weren't all gravy.  

I was a very early passenger on the drooper Love Boat, especially when it comes to the "endurance" crowd, and especially the single speeders.  I bought my first one back in early 2013, and just like the tubeless thing, it wasn't all smooth sailing.  I had to deal with a few turds along the way, but the advantages were worth the hassle.  I'm in the Droop or Die Club for life.

But then there was the 29" wheel party that I showed up late to.

I can remember the first 29ers I saw were back in 2005, specifically the Gary Fisher Rig that was so prevalent at SSWC.  Unfortunately, I'd bought my "last frame I'll ever buy" THE Meatplow (V.1... who knew?), a custom Dean Colonel EBB single speed.  In 2006, I did the NUE Series, and it seemed like most of the other single speeders that were competitive were already on 29ers... and I could see the writing on the wall.  My first few 29ers were real turds, cheap steel mail order Zion EBB frames.  The "industry" was slow to embrace the idea, and the first 29 forks used existing crown/steer units from 26" forks.  The offset was only 39mm, so to keep trail figures in check, they had to use steep head tube angles... for the most part.

Those of us that were tiny, we got the short end of the stick.  Steep head tube angles and short offsets meant toe overlap. So while the rest of the world got twitchy, steep bikes with big wheel capabilities, we got floppy steering piles of poop that handled like a tractor with a flat front tire.  Eventually, we got better fork offsets, and with that, 29" wheel bikes worked better for us short people.

So why jump on the 32" wheel bandwagon so soon?

Two things.

I feel like we learned a lot from the rough start with 29ers.  No round pegs in a square hole this time.  The geometry of my frame will be pretty close to my Optimus (which is my favorite bike) aside from fitting in the larger wheels.  The ENVE MTN Boost fork has the flip chip, and when set up with the 51mm offset, it has a trail figure that's pretty damn close to the Optimus with a 130mm travel /44mm offset squishy fork.  I will be gaining close to a half pound of rotating weight VS the Optimus, but a lighter setup that was on my Radimus.  I'm hoping what I lose in acceleration, I more than make up for in terms of approach angles and angular momentum.

"Was on my Radimus?"

Yeth, I sold the Radimus.

Sentimentality speaking, it was a hard decision.  It was my first "modern geometry" single speed.  I'd won a few bike races on it, including the only stage race where I saw the top step.  I've taken it on a billionty adventures, and it's been very, very good to me.

That said, I finally figured out how to look at STRAVA and what bike got ridden when.  Nine rides in 2025, and three of those were stages at the Trans Sylvania Mountain Bike Epic after my cranks failed on my Optimus.  So really six rides... and two of those were farting around at Horny Cat and the ten miles of putzing around with some yutes for the Tarheel Trailblazers 35th anniversary ride (because my Optimus was all cleaned up for the King and Queen of the Watershed the next day).  I'm just not riding the Radimus enough to justify owning it.  As I noted before, the line between the Optimus and the Radimus got extremely blurry when I upped the front travel of the former to 130mm.

The stats show it.

Oh... and the second thing.

I'll be fifty fucking seven years old in 2026.  Good lorb.  I'm running out of "seasons."  I could wait until the masses decide if 32" wheels make sense, or I can just kill some boredom, time, and money and find out myself.  Time to YOLO and FAFO before I YODO.  I'll allow six bikes in my life, and since the Radimus needed to be culled, and I don't really need a road bike... a 32" bike it is.  I've listened to all the poodcasts and read all the pundits have to say, although many (most?) of the "pundits" haven't even thrown a leg over one.  IMHOMO, I'm at the extreme end of the spectrum height-wise as to whether or not it will be a good fit for me.

Is it gonna work out?  Who knows?

But I'm looking forward to trying.

Tuesday, October 28

Is that... all there is?

With the same sadness that I felt at the end of every episode of Big Chuck and Lil John (no relation to Lil Wayne, I think), I say goodbye to the '25 "season."

In retrospect, a "good one?"

My reminders that I chose to be on a start line some twenty plus times this year.  Depending on how you look at it, I ended up on a podium all but one time at the Bootlegger 100... basically anyways... some three deep, two five deep, and one just overall in the Winter Shart Tarck Series.  In the past, I woulda said it was a great "season," but if I'm doing so well at fifty six years old, is this a sad reflection that the single speed "class" is, if not ded, is mebbe dying?  At the start of the year, we had at least thirty single speeders give it a go at Shart Tarck.  Then at last week's Barnburner 50k, we had seventeen finishers (19 signed up, so mebbe they DNF'ed or they were just ded and automatically entered from a Democrat voter roll?).  Breck Epic and Trans Sylvania Epic had lower than normal numbers, so mebbe our current crop of single speeders aren't dying, they're just less willing to do the big stupid things as a matter of self-preservation.  Hopefully they're just spending more time drinking beer and throwing rocks at things.

That's what I like to do.

Regardless, I think I had fun.  Pretty sure that I logged a four apple tall man's buttload of saddle time this year and mebbe reveled in the utilization of the associated fitness that came along with it.

That said...

I think all that has put me into a deeper post-season sad hole.  The timing is so on point.  It's the end of tiny saddle bag commutes and the start of sling bag season for carrying layers... covered knees on the way to work every day... walking out of the tall tower at 5:00pm to ride home to no sunshine... working up the self-motivation to get out the door to keep some fitness on the weekends over the winter... cold fingers... fewer opportunities to see "my people" at events... 

Perhaps coming off a high high makes my normal, previously acceptable low seem more poopy.  

Mebbe in a week or so, I'll be able to appreciate the even better '25 story.  I made it through a year without one race or event being affected by even a sniffle.  I had zero DNFs due to mechanical issues or injuries, although I had close calls with both scenarios more than once.  The Horny Cat 69 came off without a hitch (at least IMHOMO).  My wife still loves me somehow, and my dog will accept me no matter what I do...

So, I got that going for me... which is nice.

Yeth... please don't call the wahmbulance.

I've already signed up for the '26 Winter Shart Tarck Series AND it's coming back to the OG location Renaissance Park for the first time since 2000.

Gotta love the five deep series podiums which allows for the attendance awards.

On the plus side, the park is close enough that I can ride over to the start four and a half miles away from my house (85% of which is safe).  I can have a couple beers after the race, hang out, and not find myself on Interstate 77 on the way home wondering where everyone is going.

It's also better for getting some dead sailor hang time.

On the negative side?

I bought a fourteen tooth just a few months ago.  My 30 (oval)X13 experiment was an abject failure but at the same time, what I felt like was going to be a cheat code for 2026.  I really think the 32X14 was gonna jive with my body type/weight/style/idiom...

at the Rock Hill course.

I'm not so sure the chunky and punchy course at Renni is gonna be copacetic with the taller gear, but I know we'll be doing trail work to get the course ready after all these years, so mebbe?  I ran 32X16 at multiple events this year, so obvs I'm only getting stronger as I get older.

I believe I can fly.

Time to add that pile of number plates to the stack I've been collecting since the early '90s that will be in some random drawer when the machines come to tear my house down after I'm ded.

On that positive note...

Time to make a 32" rigid single speed happen.

Tuesday, October 21

Barnburner 50k '25: The Homma Tawk Steak Year

Dr Mike probably had a brilliant idea when he decided we should stay in a hotel closer to the start than our houses in Charlotte to avoid a 4:30am alarm.

Probably.

Mebbe a hotel that's across from a brewery and there's a hotel bar on the first floor and your room happens to be on the first floor also isn't the best choice for those that might be apt to YOLO themselves. 

So it all started off well enough around 9:03pm when we got back from the brewery, but then a few hotel drinks an Dr Mike was pretty sure he was witnessing an ICE'ing in the parking lot close to midnight, misplaced his phone, woke Türd and I up, the hunt was on...

and Türd saved the day.

The 6:00am alarm is a rude wake up call in the most literal sense.  We roll out of the parking lot a little later than anticipated, thus I'm already 90% geared up on the drive over, and I head out to the pavement to warm up to the thought of using a 32X16 for at least a couple few hours.

I miss my chance to line up proper a couple rows back where I feel like I belong, so I do the jerk move kinda lining up alongside the actual corral as I'm anticipating I'm not going to be able to go too slow up the initial climb on my dumb gear.

All race images: Icon Media Asheville

We start and hit the climb and there's not too many people ahead... I assume some fast single speeders are up there, and a yute on a Spot Rocker comes cranking by me so mebbe today is not my day.  I'm still feeling outta sorts from last night's shenanigans, and at mile ten or so, Türd makes his way around me on his Vassago Radimus.

"I'M BEATING DICKLES!"

Dammit.

I start to feel normal thirteen miles in, but my back is having all the feels of pushing a tall (for me) gear in cold'ish weather.  I further settle into my dark place when Bruce (who bested me two weeks ago at the K&Q of the Watershed) passes and immediately leaves me for dead, although I'm sure he thought "bless his little heart" when he went by.  I can feel my previous best of three fourth places in a row at Barnburner slipping from my weak grasp.

I hit the long paved bit that connects to two trail segments, and I can see Türd's neon beer light of a jersey up ahead.  Time trial mode up the climb, and close down the gap when he gets caught up behind a couple slower geared riders on the Wolf Pit Trail.  Staying on top of my stupid gear on the pitchy bits meant I needed to get around, so pass Türd and the others... with Türd making the pass on them as well.


We cross the road to the final bit of trail, which although I've ridden it multiple times now, I'm still fuzzy on the exact deets.

Türd closes the gap on the first descent, he being a better descender and on a much more aggressive bike than my turgid and now dated 2017 Vertigo Meatplow V.7.  I pull off and let him around.  

"Are we mebbe on the podium?"

I assure Türd that we most definitely can not be.  I know at least two (Bruce and the yute) are ahead, and there has to be more than one single speeder who had a better start than me.

The trail pitches back up, and I now start to member that although this trail starts higher than the finish, it sill offers up many kick-in-the-dick climbs.  I make my way back around Türd and go all in to the end.

"Hey, Dicky.  You got third single speed."

Well, shit in my hat.

I don't know if I'm more bummed that I let a defeatist attitude crawl into my brain so early, or that my fourth place "winning" streak is over, or that Türd was soooooo close to a podium too that I'm sure he could taste it.

Climb on to the boxes once again with Bruce above me, making him still the fastest, oldest single speeder for the second time in two weeks, and also the yute who is only 22 years old... meaning I'd already been racing mountain bikes for eleven years before he was born and I was also 22 years old then... ?

Still couldn't get the crowd to chant "WE HATE BRUCE."  I'll keep trying.

Shit birds.

Once again, stoked that I can make my 56 year old body race at an average heart rate of 174 (with a max of 188bpm) for over two hours, which is 100% better than being ded.  I don't do any other event all year long that let's me stress test this meatbag any better, so... I'll probably be back next year.

But I'll be in bed (and stay there) by 10:00pm next time.

Don't be surprised if I don't post up for a week.  I might.  Mebbe not tho.

Bonus Dr Mike photo for proof of life.

Wednesday, October 15

'25 Horny Cat 69 AKA Putting on the Ritz

Everything went as planned.

That is to say, I planned for everything to not go as planned in such a manner that I could be able to pivot all day long and mebbe it all works, out and it essentially did.

At the last minute, I decided to leave work two hours early on Friday to get a head start on getting the house ready for stinky people.  Josh the Wonderboy came into town that evening and aided in all manner of minor ways, and some really important ways. 


Dr Mike showed up with extra coolers when I realized I'd grossly underestimated the quantity and variety of liquid beverages I'd be dealing with to keep the masses quenched and to numb their pains.  Lastly, Nathan showed up so he could see Hot Tub Time Machine for the third time and also the hundredth time for me. 

Saturday morning, the house was as much chaos as I'd anticipated a month ago... and then some.  Frands sleeping van life style outside (not so much chaos, but I worry about my kids everywhere).  Two dogs (one diabetic, one idiot) and a wife who planned on being out of town Friday but then couldn't and all the associated barking at everything and everyone and being underfoot (dogs not wife).  Watts shows up... the route still not loaded on his computer but at least already fed.

Me... totally unprepared for the ride that I'd announced I'd do in the last minute pre-race email... calling out the "leaving in X minutes announcement" every four minutes... Josh being even less so ready than I.

From the email:

"I'll be joining in on the first 15-17 miles of the course at a semi-ho-hum-diddly-dum pace.  Take that for what it's worth.  I need to get back the house and polish the silverware."

I wanted to get some riding in, and I told everyone at the pre-race speech I'd be out there, but I definitely wasn't waiting on anyone because... "reasons."

I'm very proud of everyone for not running during the LeMans start.  No sense in turning an ankle just to get somewhere in a hurry.

Despite announcing that I would wait for NO ONE on the trail, I ended up on the most diverse group ride I'd ever been on.  The Backyard is such a choice place for group rides, what with all its intersections, bonus loops, and social cut-throughs.  Josh the Wonderboy, fresh off a Coors fever dream, on a full suspension bike with no bike computer and a dead phone and no idea where he was all day.  Carl on an e-bike.  Kangalangamangus on his pre-boost rigid Waltworks and a stubborn Garmin.  Two guys on Surly hardtails laden down with bike luggage.  Two yutes from Durham, one on a DJ bike and on a fixed brakeless 26" bike.  Davis, on the fixed gear, was a late entry who I woulda swore was just pranking me when I got his email (abbreviated for brevity's sake).

"i am interested in making a late entry bribe to the tune of 3x the suggested donation... 39 smackeroossss... i will plan to ride a loaner fixed-gear monocog 26er, if i can get in."

So the ride through the Middle Third at the start (which isn't a third of anything) stopped at pretty much all fifty six intersections to regroup... mostly because I had allotted three hours to get through the first fifteen miles, so it was going "well enough"... not anticipating the slow down caused by the passed out homeless guy at the water fountain later tho.

All that said, I will never forget that ride.  Ever.  And I've forgotten so many rides.

Oh... and I got a call from Papa John's while I was riding which I was pretty sure was going to be a cancelation of my order but was just a notification that they were out or salami for the MEATS pizza followed by another call to ask me is I wanted to substitute for the lack of preferred meat (I had no preference as I pretty much closed my eyes when I picked out fourteen pizzas which is a more exhaustive process than I'd anticipated).  Oh and the multiple alerts from my home security cameras which I was sure meant many people had quit and went back to my house early to be disappoint which just turned out to be squirrels and also Nathan who was pacing outside my house waiting to get back in.

Coolers were filled by 12:30pm as promised.  Pizza arrived at 12:45pm as promised.  Southern Ditch Living Jim showed up with two cases of High Life as not promised, and the wait began.  While we ate hot & fresh pizza and expected quitters and also people who curated their own shorter routes from the one I created, we were disappoint.  One o'clock became two o'clock whilst we googled and debated if it was safe to put carboard pizza boxes in the oven.

I think it was 2:20pm before we had our first finished-but-not-finishers and the party began.

I don't know what time we finally got three finishers who had finished all there was too finish, but here they are.

The rest of the night was a mix of worrying about people that hadn't made it back to the house yet, people coming back in ones, pairs, and small groups, fourteen pizzas gone, two more ordered, more people, darkness, the two from Durham coming in... somehow?    

Two more pizzas ordered... until I think it was just Watts, Josh the Wonderboy, Brett, and I in the backyard.  Then a trip over to Lucky Lou's where Josh and I liberated someone's half-eaten abandoned food only to have the owner return much later wondering where his food went when it's obviously in our hands and mouths but him being nice enough to accept my $20 bribe to not report us to the staff. 

Walk (stumble) home and in bed by 1:30am.

I'd like to thank everyone.

* The people who donated money despite no intention of showing up.

* The people who paid up, couldn't make it, but didn't ask for a refund.

* The people who signed up late and paid extra bribe money.

* The people who donated more than $13, and in some cases, way more than $13 to play.

* The people who paid up, mebbe didn't get what they came for, but didn't complain anyways... at least not to me anyways.

* The people who dealt with a glitchy route or device.  I can't explain it.  I was next to someone with the same data acquisition device, and his said we shoulda been on the other side of the creek (where no trail, road, or greenway existed) whilst mine was dead-to-nuts-on.  I've done enough Mountain Cats (and other events) that I know it happens... but it still sucks when it happens to you.

* Jay and Jim and whoever else that brought enough extra beer to really halp save some money to go to the Tarheel Trailblazers.

* HandUp for giving me enough swag that I think if you went home empty handed, you chose to... or left it in my yard in a stupor.

* Lee for taking a bunch of awesome photos.  He tried to goad me into riding the log skinny, but I rode it four times after we built it and never again under the assumption that if I ride it a thousand times, I might fall off it once.  I'd love to have the photo for vanity's sake, but ever since my ER incident two years ago, I realize I've taken on a fair amount of responsibility tryna put on a one man show, and a single stupid mistake can make for a whole lotta PITA for everyone. ASK ME HOW I KNOW.

I was still dumb enough to jump off the cannons tho... so I'm not always SMRT and I love to go "WEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE."  I did ask myself midflight, "am I making good decisions?"

The answer is no.

* Anyone and everyone that made an effort to keep my yard from looking like complete shit Sunday morning.  I only found a few mislaid cans, one pizza crust, and one piece of leftover pizza (out of the 144 slices I ordered).  Y'all weren't the worst people to come to a party where I live.  I did end up with a couple items that very much ain't mine, so holler at me.

Hopefully all were pleased or at least most of all.  After so much hand-wringing and worrying later, I don't think I'll forget about it soon enough to do it again next year.  2027?  I'll be old... mebbe too old to do this again... and our nine floor office (my day jerhb) is going to be moving, and I have no idea how much of a role I'm going to be playing in the painful logistics, but I'm anticipating my anxiety-riddled brain to be at least slightly taxed.

After yinz finished off 18 pizzas (almost), two Fantas (disappoint), and countless beers, bubble waters, and Cokes, the leftover donations added up to @$395 (yeth, I rounded up some cents).  Your fundage is going into the Tarheel Trailblazers Backyard Trails: Equipment Fundraiser so we can buy a machine to move dirt around and make cool shit.

Now... the Barnburner 50k... selfishly... FOR ME.

Wednesday, October 8

'25 King and Queen of the Watershed

Wow, my fifth run at the King and Queen of the Watershed.  The last six years have flown by.  Its one more of those events that I just don't know if I'll ever tire of it.  It's a unique format, five full-gas stages over twenty five miles, an excuse to see my frand Watts, and an excellent post-race hang with super awesome food stuffs and beer. 

Oh, and that we turn it all into a fifty five mile all day affair is all the buenos.

I can't say the wisest decisions were made Friday night, but I don't think Watts and I have had the pleasure of each other's company since... early June?  There was a fair amount of catching up to do after he closed up the shop, so that allotted enough time for Watts to transition from beer to bourbon... and then beer.  

Wake up at 8:00am, force some processed food squares into my maw, and head out the door for the thirteen miles of spinning 32X18 to the first trail head.

Checking in at the start and whadda I see?

99% sure that is my OG custom Dean titanium Meatplow that this blerhg started with, the last mountain bike frame I'd ever buy...

The new owner had no idea that I was the first person to ride that bike or any of its storied history.  Originally purchased in early 2004 (or '05?), I rode it at my first stage race, the '04 La Ruta de los Conquistadores (or was that the Spicer prolly?).  I know it went up to the '05 Trans Rockies... 

and '06 Trans Rockies...

and also did the first year of the NUE Series and got third SS (don't tell Ryan O'dell the year was 2006).

I won the first Cohutta 100 on it in '06, and took the fixed gear win at the Shenandoah Mountain 100 (yeth, we had enough people that stupid to have a category back then).  Oh, and I won my 24 Hour Solo Single Speed World Championship on it as well.

Club fit "World Champ" jersey for a guy with club fit fitness.

If 29ers had never been invented, I might still be riding it.  The writing was on the wall back in '06 tho, as I watched my fellow but more forwarded thinking single speeders rolling over the chunk with aplomb.  The Meatplow V.1 was sold to Tommawicki, who then sold it to Moni (pretty sure those wheels were Bill Fehr's R.I.P.).

So... that was strange and neat.

After a gentle thirteen mile commute to the start, the first stage is a super eye opener.  I can't remember the last time I spent a decent duration of time well above my lactate threshold and bumping all up into my maximum heart rate.  Mebbe somewhere at the Trans Sylvania Epic, but who knows?  My Wahoo data acquisition device was throwing garbage numbers at me all week in May.

It only takes a little rolling along before I'm shooting through the 170s and then remaining in the 180s (touching 189 once), so I guess my 56 year old hummingbird heart still works like it used to.  The trails couldn't have been in better condition, and I finished like I gave it my all... that is, I finished the first three mile stage like I gave it my all.  The second stage was more of the same, and I was feeling like mebbe I could do this all day.

Nope.

I'm almost immediately gassed on Stage Three.  My breakfast has been fully burned off, and the self-doubting thoughts are creeping in.  Mebbe I've bitten off more than I should be chewing these past couple months?  Watts starts to catch up to me, and I don't know that he didn't have the full one minute delay between our TT starts, so I think he's just closed down a full minute.  Sads.  I pass a turtle on the trail that I almost didn't see in time and screamed "TURTLE."  Knowing Watts's empathetic approach to living creatures (non-human), I realize he will stop to halp the turtle.

I appreciate this.

He does stop for the turtle... and still catches me.

"You moved the turtle, didn't you?"

"Yeth."

And then he passes me.

FWIW, I finally take the time to put some more nutrition inside me and add a little Coke to my system.  Being that the last two stages are climb-heavy, I take a short break to sort myself out before hitting the trails that should lean towards the minor advantages of being a tiny man.  It musta done the trick, because I felt more like myself again, albeit an on-the-edge-of-cramping version of myself.

At the finish, beer, foods, frands... wait for the results to slowly come in.  They can't be posted until they get all the riders through each stage.

Anyhoo...
 
Bruce, my occasional single speed nemesis won this time.  Watts and I just did what we do, get on a podium sometimes looking up those who have bested us on the day.  Watts did try to get a round of "WE HATE BRUCE" going, but the crowd would not join in.

Once again, Watts and I rolled around in the grass and accepted free and/or leftover beer until we were the last ones there.

Yeth, it hurt.  A lot.

Yeth, I will be back.  A lot.

Now... I gotta deal with the hot mess of a backyard party I have planned this weekend.

Monday, October 6

FINAL WARNING'ish

I'll get around to the King and Queen of the Watershed thing from this past Sunday ASAP, but I wanted to put out one last reminder that tonight at midnight is your last chance to get $13 coming my way to get in on the Horny Cat 69 semi-organized ride and also slightly more organized fundraiser party.  I'll wake up Tuesday, get any last minute people on the email list, and send out all the pertinent information about the route and whatnot... to include Ride with GPS links so you can get it loaded up on your data acquisition devices.  Bear with me (or bare with me), as I have a poorly timed dentist appointment tomorrow morning.  I swear, I'll get this done.

Once again, here are the details:

It will be this Saturday, October 11th.

The unsupported ride-at-your-own-risk group ride with an absolute "will drop you" policy on an arduous unmarked route knowing that the "group" will probably fall apart immediately will start almost promptly at 9:00am.

There will be a Tarheel Trailblazers fundraiser pizza/beer/one six pack of Fanta jubilee at my house which is also the end point of the ride.  An expected donation of $13 will get you access to yum yums and wets, and also you will be emailed a DOWNLOADABLE route Tuesday.  You can donate more if you choose to feel generous.  You can also donate, skip the ride, and just make great party as well.

SEND AN EMAIL TO SMELLYCAT100K@hotmail.com, and you will get payment information AND be added to the email distribution list.  

DON'T FORGET!  I GOT A PILE OF GIVEAWAYS FROM HANDUP TO THROW AT YOU!

THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION TO THIS MATTERED.

Tuesday, September 30

"I don't care if my jokes are appropriate for a kid." ~ Drew Carey

Next up on the menu...

My annual "go to Greensboro, make bad decisions, turn a twenty four mile event into a fifty mile ride, and hang with my other better half, Watts" trip.  The King and Queen of the Watershed is the "Race.Ride.Party." event with the priorities listed in reverse order, or mebbe just in our case.  Dunno.  Pretty sure they give you beer tickets, and if you don't need them, I know two guys with four thumbs and two bad haircuts who do.  A couple hours of intense effort over five stages is exactly when I've not been training for (never have tho TBH), but it's a great way to blow out my entire body at the almost end of the "season."  The scabs from my wreck three weeks ago have fallen off my bendy parts like autumnal leaves (with some encouragement), but my AC joint and hand are still slightly angry at me for still being alive.  Guess I'll ride my mid-squish single speed and load up on ibuprofen Sunday morning.

And when I get back...

Monday is the last day I'm taking donations for the Horny Cat 69 bike ride/party.  FWIW, HandUp just sent me a buttload of giveaway "prizes."

There's like 50-60 something pairs of gloves, socks, jersey, fenders, hats and whatnot in that pile.  These will hopefully be distributed in a more organized manner this year, assuming I'm not in the emergency room for the better part of the day.  So for your (minimum) donation of $13, you get pizza, beer, a bike ride of some distance up to 69 miles, and something worth something.  This has to be the best idea for a self-sustaining economy since the invention of Paddy's Dollars.

Most of the details are here in an older post or on the Facebook events page (which just sends you back Paddy's Dollars' style to the blerhg post).  If you know enough already, and just wanna throw your money in the cup, send me an email at smellycat100k@hotmail.com, and I'll get back to you at my convenience.