Do the math.
I'm not one to do the whole "late thing," so I got fully dressed in the passenger seat before we got to Lenoir, and pulled a "One Manbun After Another" leap out of the car to snag our number plates while Türd sought out a parking spot.
At least my heart rate was already hummingbird'esque enough that the limited time to warm up probably wouldn't matter.
The roll outta Lenoir is not single speed friendly, something I seem to allow myself to forget or else I'd probably never come back. We really don't hit a super meaty climb until mebbe mile twenty, so legions of gravel dad lords (many only doing the 58 mile event) fly by me in groups of two, seven, or a billionty. I eventually found some pleasant company in fellow single speeder, Andrew, although it brought back memories of the Southern Cross race I did a million years ago. John Karrasch and I rode side by side, chatting for many miles and discussing how stupid it was to not share the workload and draft off each other... only to have Kelly Klett blow by us at the last aid station to take the win. I shared this story with Andrew, and regardless, we just did the same thing anyways... regardless of the fact that we knew there as at least James up the road. Mebbe more.
So there we are, negative racing, knowing that mebbe if we work together, we could close the gap up to James, but...
When we finally got to the sausage meaty 1,400 foot climb, we found a rhythm... and whaddaya know? We also found James.
Andrew asked me if I thought he should bridge up to James to let him feel our presence.
"Yes, you should totally do that."
So he did. I don't know how, but he did.
And then he came back to me.
"James says there's another single speeder ahead, some guy who pulled the battery outta his rear derailleur or something."
Good. I have a good record of finishing off the podium here, and I don't wanna blow it.
James blasts away, and when I get to the first long descent, holy shit balls. These new tires are amazing.
Oh, did I forget to mention that someone at Maxxis totally came through, and I was rocking the new Aspen ST 2.15 tires (55m in garvel speak)?
I did. Thorry not thorry.
By the time I got to the bottom of the Polecat Knob descent, I could no longer see Andrew in my rearview mirror. This blows, not only because the next thirteen or fourteen miles is probably an average of 1% downgrade, but I'm now lonely. I'm flying solo, spinning along at 16-18mph for forty something minutes before finally hitting the punch in the dick known as Maple Sally, or as I now think of it, Maple Sisyphus... assuming someone was beating him in the legs with an axe handle as he pushed his boulder up a mountain. It was here that all the previous mistakes of the day really reared their ugly heads.
It's getting hotter than balls, and my lack of proper hydration is becoming a problem, as well as not putting some scoop of some powder in my water bottles at mile 34 or wherever. I've also blown through my four gels*, and had only eaten a half a grilled cheese, so I resort to throwing vanilla cookies in my cargo bibs before hitting the hardest part of Maple Sally... er, Sisyphus.
Sidenote: Being parched and trying to use dry cookies as a source of nutrition is almost as pleasant as eating pollen sprinkled sawdust.
I'm feeling mentally toasted, and I drink every ounce of liquid in my bottles (taking the lids off to sip the un-get-at-able remaining 1.5 ounces at the bottom... do better, Specialized) before getting another PR going down Staircase Mountain. Hitting the pavement, and getting that "cow in the barn" feeling, I met my next foe, head wind.
Holy schnikes. I'm doing all I can to get "aero," but I'm having to pedal to go downhill. Much sadness and also regret as I realize one bottle of Gatorade at the last aid station to make it all the way to the finish was no buenos. Lid off and licking the inside of the bottle time it is...again.
But I didn't die, so okay.
Assuming I do another gravel event down the road (single speed, natch), I'll definitely be taking this bike. No questions. Although I was ten minutes slower this year than last, I can easily chalk that up to multiple nutritional/hydration mistakes, unseasonably warm temps, a nasty head wind for most of the final sixteen miles to the finish, and mebbe spending too much time being a Chatty Cathy with Andrew. Wasn't too hard to look at all the PRs and scroll across the map to see where I lost time (lost 1/3 of the time in the head wind).
Oh well.
Yay, garvel.
* So yeah, duh. I was planning on grabbing a whole bunch of The Pie's leftover Gu gels (she's swapped to Honey Stingers), but there were no more Triple Berry, Banana Jizz, or other fruity flavors, just Vanilla Bean, Caramel Sticky, and Chocolate Enrage. I don't like those flavors, so I only grabbed four. Also, I figured I wouldn't have time to eat (or bother with) my usual sour gummies, so I left them behind. I ended up starting the race with 444 calories of CarboRocket Half Evil, four gels, and two mustard packs... for @6 hours of saddle time. I figured I would "live off the land." Four cargo bib pockets and three jersey pockets... and that's all I thought to carry. Stupid.





















































