Wednesday, October 17, 2007

Owen




Can you tell I'm smiling behind the surgical mask?
Owen's been sleeping most of the day. He had a rough start, so it's not surprising he's tired. I know Jen and I are. He's got an IV hooked up to his head (which looks way worse than it is) to make sure his blood sugar levels are correct.

Owen Harold Van Ert

30+ hours of labor, 2-1/2 hours of pushing with no luck, so Jen had a c-section. Found out the umbilical cord was wrapped around him several times and kept him from coming out the natural way. Everyone's a bit tired. Jen and Owen are doing well now, recovering.

8 pounds, 1 ounce
20" long

Monday, October 15, 2007

Still Waiting...

The stork appears to be in a holding pattern. Today is the due-date, and so far no signs of delivery. We have an appointment tomorrow and will schedule a day to induce if necessary. So, he's coming out one way or the other in the next few days. Stay tuned...


Thursday, October 11, 2007

No Baby Yet

Still no action on the delivery front. Today the doctor said if he's not here by Tuesday it's time to induce. Monday is the due date, so we're still on schedule, but Jen wouldn't mind getting the pregnancy part over with asap.

Groß in Deutschland




Apparently I got some work published in a German book on logo design. I'm trying to get a copy of it to see what they selected (should be nice and spendy between the Euro conversion and shipping). They said they are also interested in one of my websites for an upcoming book in 2008. Prosit!

http://www.zeixs.de/logo.html

Friday, October 05, 2007

Nursery Update



After enduring another IKEA adventure (love the furniture, checkout line not-so-much) I got the replacement part for the crib and put it together. Picked up some mobiles, rugs and a couple of toys. We've got a rocking chair to put in here and an awesome ceiling lamp I need to install, then all we need is the baby. As with everything I do around the house, Zoe supervised.


Monday, October 01, 2007

Nursery Update



No more races + rain + impending due date + coffee = progress. I got the nursery painted, trim and baseboard in and the changing table put together. I'm going to replace the window trim and someday refinish the ugly floor. Crib has a gacked headboard, so I gotta make a trip to the big blue box (Ikea) to get a replacement. Gonna pick up some cool stuff for the room while there.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Photos


Two of Dana's photos from Saturday. Gotta say, I think she should be the official series photographer. Her shots are great and she moves around the course to get different perspectives. Dana's shots really capture the spirit of the events and she posts monster resolution, non-watermarked files for FREE! Go Dana!
Check them out here.

Monday, September 24, 2007

MNSCS#10, Jail Trail

Season finale in St. Cloud. It was a weird race for me, as I really didn't have much to race for points-wise, and I pretty much just came to ride.

Race starts and I get my best jump off the line of the year. I was where I wanted to be towards the end of the prologue, but soon realized it didn't matter as there was a waiting line to go into the singletrack. We came back through the start/finish to start the first lap, and Jamison was right behind me. My goal was to pace him into the singletrack and let him get around me. He went by and I let off the gas a bit to recover.

I was riding much better than I had the week before when we came to preride, but it didn't matter as several singlespeeders and a few others wouldn't yield the trail. Pretty much the rest of my race consisted of being stuck behind someone in the singletrack, working like a dog to pass them in the doubletrack only to get stuck behind the next guy. I'd have paid an extra $32 for one big, nasty climb just to have a place to drop some people. Flat and twisty is not my thing.

Last lap I'm still feeling pretty good, but in the expert section a guy goes down right in front of me and jams me up. 5 guys go around us and I'm screwed. (Not blaming the dude, it's a super tight corner with a handlebar width to fit through, I didn't make it the first time through either.) I fly as fast as I can through the final loop and try to finish strong. I can hear someone right on me so I gun it. I took a corner way too hot but somehow pulled it back before nailing a tree, and got a "Nice save!" from the guy behind me. I was able to hold him off at the finish, but it really didn't matter. 15th place. 8 places separated by 30 seconds (traffic jams killed me). Jamison had a nice race, I think he got 6th.

So, I think I'll end up 5th overall for the second year in a row. Congrats to Brian and Jason for killing us all year and to Kevin for coming on strong at the end. Despite just missing out on my goal of top 3, it was a fun year. Looking forward to 2008.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Shanghaied


Top design is mine (view of 2 one-liter boots + insert), bottom is a recently-discovered Chinese knock-off in a 2-liter size. Nice.

Monday, September 17, 2007

Theo Wirth

Rode Theo Wirth yesterday for the first time. It's definitely a single-speeder's course. No climbing and nothing really technical (at least on the "A" loop, I didn't hit the "B" loop). There's a rock section (photo above from MORC) and a few other little rocks and log piles, but it's mostly tight, twisty singletrack. It's fast and pretty fun. If I lived closer I'd probably ride it more, but if I'm going to drive somewhere to ride (which I have to do no matter what) I think I'd probably go to Leb, Battle Creek or Elk River instead. If you need a place to go crank out laps and work on cornering (my main reason for checking it out, based on Jamison's advice), or don't have time to drive to one of the "destination" trails in the Metro, Wirth is good place to get a quick ride in. MORC did a nice job, as usual.

Monday, September 10, 2007

B to the ONK

Rode from Woodbury, through Afton to Prescott, back to Battle Creek and Woodbury. 50 miles. Felt great climbing the Coulee, then started feeling bad. From Prescott the rest of the way back I was in major crisis mode. I just had no energy whatsoever. I could spin and for some reason I could still pace on the climbs but I had no acceleration or tempo. I felt decent at Lebanon Hills on Saturday (other than bouncing off the rocks), so who knows. It turned into a death march for me. I inhaled a Clif Bar and bottle of Endurox in about 30 seconds once I got back to the car, so I'm going to chalk it up to not eating enough. Two chicken mole enchilladas, beans, mountain of ice cream and liters of water later, I feel better. We'll see how this week's rides progress.

Monday, September 03, 2007

Bees


Racing is hard enough without being attacked by bees. Left ankle is so swollen I can't bend it. Right one is gaining on it. Lot's of people got stung, some of us multiple times. I've got several. They must like the taste of Accelerade and PowerGel. Ray Nickles got nailed. Check out the Mickey Mouse hand here.

MNSCS#9, Laddie's Loppet



Most technical course in the series, hands down. Top and bottom photos are from the infamous "Lakeside Drops". It doesn't look like much from a photo, but it's about a 12-15 foot drop that goes straight down to the edge of the lake and takes a 90 degree left. If you manage to not go over the bars before the bottom, you've still got to make that turn or you go into the drink. Naturally, it's the number one spectator spot on the course. The vultures are out in full-force, waiting for the endo. Personally, I think this is the easiest drop on the whole course. It gets a whole lot scarier back in the woods, with steep, twisty drops between trees and over roots and rocks. Fortunately I made it through the paparazzi both laps. I didn't fare so well on some of the other sections. I went sailing over the bars once but managed to grab a tree to keep from killing myself. I spun out on a couple of technical climbs and I got off and ran 2 incredibly technical drops on the backside of the course both laps. There are no style points, so I'd rather run instead of crash.

It's a tough course, did I mention that? Guys were flying, falling and flailing everywhere. I finally got into as much of a groove as I could and got a gap. The lead group was gone, but I didn't have anyone right on my ass, so I could relax a bit on tactics and focus more on riding. It seemed to help as my second lap was much better. I cleared pretty much everything I tried to ride and knew where I was better off doing some cyclocross. I had some issues with my pedals, which cost me some time but at this point the podium was gone anyway. Somebody must have kicked up a beehive, because I got stung at least three times on both legs. Feeling the burn had a whole new meaning. It actually woke me up a bit. I let one guy pass since I knew I'd hold him up but other than that, I held my ground. I was able to finish strong and somehow wound up 5th.

Not bad considering how poorly I felt and rode the day before. I was 90% sure I was going to drive back home on Saturday, I just wasn't feeling it. I got maybe an hour or two of very interrupted sleep in the tent on Saturday night. To make matters worse, there was a power outage in the buildings and the Xcel Energy trucks were out digging and working in the campground at 4:00am. The only reason I even lined up was because I had already paid for it. My plan was to stay upright on Lap 1 and see if I had anything in the tank for Lap 2. Adrenaline is a powerful drug. One race to go, and since Kevin won today, I'm now in 4th. If Ryan shows up at St. Cloud, I'm pretty much looking at 5th for the season. Oh well.

Kudos to the Richards family and Maplelag Resort for the best event of the season. The course is masochistic, but the hospitality is unbeatable. Getting a call-up to the starting line was pretty sweet, too. Thanks to Skinnyski.com for the photos. That otb shot is an instant classic. Glad it wasn't me getting posterized.

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

When it rains...

Snapping a rear derailleur last week wasn't enough, so I had to smack a tree and tweak an XTR brake lever at Elk River on Sunday as well. Luckily, Curly was able to bend it back into functionality again, so I didn't have to shell out for a new one. If you're looking for good mechanics, go to Now Bikes in Arden Hills and ask for Mike or Curly.

Monday, August 27, 2007

Mini Man Utd kit

My wife rules! Baby's gonna be rockin' the full-on Manchester United kit. Real deal, direct from the UK. Awesome.

Friday, August 24, 2007

24 Hours of Afton








No race for me, gotta focus on the MNSCS. Got a few pics tonight of the first 2 laps. Curly, busting out the wheelie. Brian from Peace Coffee is drilling it on lap one. Clayton and Matt are rockin' it solo (and giving me crap for not doing the same). Jeremy near the end of lap one. Gnome base camp. I wish I was racing, but I'm happy to be sleeping in my own bed tonight. More photos and updates tomorrow.

Tuesday, August 21, 2007

MNSCS

Despite a complete meltdown at Afton, a disappointing race at Red Wing and an exploding derailleur at the Powder Monkey, I'm sitting in third. Ryan will definitely bump me to 4th and Kevin will probably bump me to 5th. I'm skipping 24 Hours of Afton and doing the last two MNSCS races instead. I've still got an outside shot at Top 4, plus we've still got team points on the line.

Monday, August 20, 2007

DNF

Derailleur Not Function. Duluth Not Favorite. Did Not Finish.

Second year in a row I've crashed out of this race. Guy in front of me goes over a log pile in front of a bridge. He knocks a log loose (which comes flying towards me) and goes down. I avoid the log, get around him and onto the bridge, but my momentum carries me too far left. Back wheel slips over the edge, derailleur snaps and I go down down hard onto a shingle covered bridge. Bike is toast and my arm is shredded. I was 5th place in the middle of Lap 2 and feeling good. I had about a 2 minute gap on the guys behind me, and I was reeling in a couple guys in front of me. I'm still pissed off today. I know there's nothing you can do about that kind of stuff, but it's frustrating as hell to finally be feeling good and riding well on perhaps the toughest course in the series only to have your bike explode.

So, weekend summary:
Saturday pre-ride: gash/dent shin on rock (the kind of pain that makes you feel like puking)
Driving-5 hours, $50 in gas
Hotel - $175
Meals- $50
Race - $32
Derailleur replacement/hangar repair (if hangar can be bent back) - $250-300
You do the math, I don't want to know.

Then driving home, driver's side windshield wiper literally explodes. There's metal scraping the glass and I can't see. So we had about a 20 minute detour to deal with that. Then at North Branch there's an accident so we are stop and go for about 15 minutes. I haul ass and make it to the bike shop in Shoreview at 4:58 and they are all leaving and have locked up for the day. Best day ever. Oh, I won a Trek baseball hat and a Giro water bottle at the race, so I guess that makes it worthwhile. Best $600 water bottle ever.


Thursday, August 16, 2007

Welch photos



Some more pics from Sunday. Thanks Dana!

Monday, August 13, 2007

MNSCS # 7, Welch



Always fun to race the former NORBA national course. We prerode on Saturday in a monsoonal downpour, and most of the course was unridable. It rained more Saturday night, so I feared the worst for Sunday. The course was actually in pretty good shape, with some muddy spots where you had to run up.

It was a mass start of 98 riders that starts up a climb. I didn't want to go too hard on the prologue lap, but I didn't want to get stuck in any traffic jams either. So I found a good tempo and hit the singletrack about 10 back. I passed a few people who went too hard and by the first big climb on lap 1 I was doing okay. Some of the singletrack was still greasy, so the first lap was all about trying to find the best lines through, and knowing when to get off and run. I misjudged a couple of sections which cost me a bit. Then came "the Wall". This is a super steep climb straight up the ski run. I couldn't find a dry line through it so I had to run the middle section. I was able to recover a bit in the singletrack and was settling into a good pace, feeling good on a technical climb when my front wheel suddenly went sideways and I went down. No injuries or mechanicals, but it cost valuable time.

As I rolled through for Lap 2 I was in 14th overall, with no idea where I was in my age group. I was really suffering on the first big climb, but managed to pass a couple of guys. Had to walk part of the Wall again, but was able to ramp it up after that. I got passed coming out of the singletrack and played leapfrog with another guy for the last half of the lap. First guy held me off, but I was able to pull away from the other guy on the last climb and passed a singlespeeder on the downhill switchbacks. 5th place in my age group, 13th out of 98 overall. Next week, Spirit Mountain.

Photo from Skinnyski.com (thanks!)

Friday, August 10, 2007

Disco is Dead

If the most dominant team in cycling for the past 9 years can't find a sponsor, who will be next? I'm hoping this trend doesn't trickle down to the local club level. But right now, who can blame anyone for not wanting to be associated with the embarrassment that was the Tour this summer?

24 Hours of Afton

I think I'm in. I have to decide by tomorrow to hit registration cutoff or else the price goes way up day of race.

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Doors

I've got 5 out of 6 doors installed, and one side of the trim. It looks so much better already. I have to notch out the last door jamb to fit the attic stairs. I'm not looking forward to that.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

Todays Doper Update

TDF winner Alberto Contador has announced he will be giving a press conference on Friday. Will it be Floyd Landis all over again? Story on VeloNews. Andrey Kashechkin tested positive for homologous blood doping and was suspended from Astana. Astana is making T-Mobile look like choir boys. I'm still waiting for Kloden to get busted.

Am I crazy?

I've been having serious thoughts of doing the 24 Hours of Afton solo. The sleep deprivation would be good training for when the baby gets here in October. Am I crazy? We'll see how my next two races go. I will probably not decide until a few days before the race.

Sunday, August 05, 2007

2 Months to Go


Zoe keeps sniffing Jen's stomach. I think she knows somethings going on.

Friday, August 03, 2007

35W Bridge Collapse

http://flickr.com/photos/s4xton/sets/72157601157770382/

These photos are unreal. Having driven over this bridge literally thousands of times, it definitely hits home. Especially considering the what ifs. What if my wife would have left work just a bit later than usual that day and her bus drove over the bridge at 6:00 instead of 5:00? Or what if I hadn't exited before the bridge since I was running late on my way downtown Wednesday? The last 3-4 times I've driven down for the Hill Ride on Wednesday evenings, I've pretty much flipped a coin as to whether or not I should take 35W to downtown or take 280. The last time I took the bridge, traffic crept from University to the Hiawatha exit, so this time since it was already 5:45, I decided to exit on 280. I made it across the river on Franklin Ave right about 6:00. God only knows what would have happened if I had just kept going south on 35W, just as I had so many times before.

On our ride, I kept hearing people's cell phones ringing, but thought nothing of it. Heard lots of sirens, thought nothing of it. When we rolled back to Minneapolis on River Road and saw masses of people out walking, I thought there must be some kind of event going on. Once back at the Birchwood at about 8:00 I heard the bridge had collapsed and there were dozens of cars in the river.
As I made my way out of Seward and across Lake Street I saw entire neighborhoods gathered in front yards listening to their radios. State Patrol was out in force on 35W north of 36, shutting down the freeway and setting up detours. My cell phone was useless with the volume of calls, and Jen was at home wondering for 3 hours which way I had taken downtown.

I got home around 9:00 and Jen gave me a big hug when I walked in the door. I saw the footage on TV and then heard what time it happened. That's when it all began to sink in. Absolutely insane.

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Holy Sh!t

My wife's bus was on this bridge an hour before this happened. I was driving down 35W on my way to the Birchwood for the Hill Ride at 6:00. I decided to take Hwy 280 to avoid the traffic by the Metrodome. I'd like to give a shout out to my guardian angel.
Photo from NY Times

Monday, July 30, 2007

Muddy River Rock and Roll



Another hot day, though not quite as bad as last year where it was bad enough to consider calling it off. Still, temps were in upper 80's/low 90's.

Got squeezed in at the start, falling back to about 10th or so before the singletrack. My podium chances were dead already, as I got stuck behind a string of riders. Finally, we popped out of the singletrack and I passed as many as I could before the next section, moving up into about 5th. The only thing hotter than the temperature was the pace being set by the lead guys. I was able to keep pushing along at this tempo most of Lap 1. I nailed the descent into the quarry, but was thrown off at the bottom when the course was re-routed directly to the drop, skipping the last rocky switchback. I hit the brakes and started left and made it through the rocks to the climb. Super technical, steep twisty, rooty/rocky climb. I rode this section about 6 times last week to get it down and I still screwed it up. Had to run the bike all the way up, which sent my heart rate through the roof.

Lap 2 I started my usual fade, only today it was worse. I decided to ditch my CamelBack before the race and just go with a bottle. Big mistake. I was getting super dehydrated and starting to bonk. Adding to the good times was my chain, which kept getting stuck when I tried to get into the big ring. This caused me to get passed by about 4 guys, who I never saw again. Trying to make up for lost time, I never really recovered and felt the bonk getting worse. Somehow, I managed to clear the entire climb out of the quarry, but it took a huge toll. Rolling through the start/finish for Lap 3, I felt like crap. I saw Tom coming up and we spent most of the lap leapfrogging each other. I kept yelling at him to get up to the faster group, he did the same for me. I thought for sure he had the better chance, but in the end we finished 9th and 10th, with me about 8 seconds in front. I'm sure he could have come around, but maybe it was just good karma being repaid from the Dirt Spanker, where he got me by about the same margin. It's all about the team points anyway.

Next race I'm rocking the CamelBack and that's that. It's the only thing I can think of as to why I'm not doing as well as I should be. Oh well. We had a sweet spread of burgers, brats, salads and cookies waiting for us afterwards. Gary's Heiniken mini-keg was quite popular as well, although I don't know how the hell you can drink beer in the hot sun after a race. It took me until 10:00pm to get fully rehydrated, and I haven't had a beer since February.

(Thanks for taking photos, Dana).

Friday, July 27, 2007

Doping

"Doctor" Ferrari must have it all figured out. He's got the magic potion that guarantees victory and evades WADA's doping control like a stealth bomber. I'm sure it makes it easier for "athletes" to stare straight into the camera and declare to the world that they are clean. After all, they have never tested positive, have they? Easy to say when you're using a banned substance that hasn't been banned yet because there is no test for it and nobody knows it exists. It's a bit like being a money launderer for the Cali cartel in the 1970's and 80's before money laundering was written onto the books as a crime. They weren't doing anything wrong either, were they? It wasn't illegal.

Pretty good racket "il dottore" has going on. He can handpick the rider to win the Tour, commanding a pricetag of Bill Gates proportions from the highly-gifted but ethically-challenged cyclist who can't win on his own, in exchange for exclusive access to his bloodstream. I wonder how much money Ferrari has bet on cycling over the years?

A 2-year suspensions means nothing to these guys, especially those in the last years of their careers. If you can make a few million dollars, get busted and the worst that happens is that you can't race again for 2 years, or even ever again, the money will win every time. How about prison time for fraud, for starters. A fine of at least double the riders earnings from winnings and endorsements. What about the teams that were passed over for inclusion in the Tour in favor of these doper teams? They should be compensated for being fraudulently denied entry, missing out on lucrative exposure. What a mess.

Tuesday, July 24, 2007

Vino

http://www.velonews.com/tour2007/details/articles/12910.0.html

So the entire Astana team is gone, what a shock that former T-Mobile riders would get busted. I hope every team loses their sponsors and all the advertisers pull their commercials off the air. It'll never happen, so instead I'll just stop watching. There, I'm done. I now have an extra 3 hours of time for 3 weeks in July.

Lance, I still want to believe you. In 1999 as my mom was in the hospital, slowly and painfully dying of cancer, I turned on the Tour and explained your story to her. She had no idea who you were, but she was as proud of you as if you were her own son. She was dying and she started writing you a letter to give YOU encouragement. While she only lived long enough to see that first victory, I know it gave her hope. Maybe not as much for her as for others, as she would tell other cancer survivors and patients your story, despite her own condition, showing what was possible.

So, Lance, I want to believe you. I want that memory of my mom to remain positive, untainted. I want that hope to be real for all people affected by cancer. I still want to hold back tears whenever I think of that first tour victory, just as I did all 7 times you crossed the finish line on the Champs Elysees. Please don't take away one of the last really good memories I have of my mom.
People always ask me if I think you doped or not, and when I say you didn't, it's not because I want to believe it, I have to believe it.


Sunday, July 22, 2007

Do Goldens Shed?


A few months ago at Petco some guy asked us if Golden Retrievers shed alot. Uh, yeah. This is what the wind didn't blow away, and that's after being brushed 3 out of the last 4 days.

Thanks!

Monday, July 16, 2007

70 Miles


Got out for a nice leg burner yesterday with some of the R&G boys. 70 miles from Withrow up to Trollhaugen and back. Weather could not have been better. Lots of rollers, a couple of nice climbs, and some good tempo. After a shaky hill ride last Wednesday, I'm happy with how the legs responded. Felt good on the climbs and I was able to ride strong the entire time, setting tempo most of the way. Hopefully this will carry over to the mountain bike. Oh yeah, um, note to Minnesota: take a look across the river at Wisconsin to see how to fund highway maintenance. Even the Rustic Routes were in better shape than the main drags in the Land of 10,000 Potholes. There is some sweet riding over there in my homeland.

Zoe's Birthday Party 2


Top: Zoe, Siggie, Sadie, Jack, Me.
Bottom: Sadie & Bob. Bob was rescued by a friend from a puppy mill. Despite his horrible treatment as a puppy, he is a super sweet dog. It took a little while for him to get comfortable, but he was mixing it up with the others and having a blast. If you are looking for a dog, please consider a rescue dog or adoption. If you choose a breeder, make sure they are reputable and the animals are treated like family, not products.

Zoe's Birthday Party



Zoe had some friends over for her 3rd birthday party. Sophie, Bob, Sigfried, Sadie (and her boy Jack) had fun chasing each other around the yard, splashing in the pool, and trying to steal people food from the table when the opportunity presented itself.

Monday, July 09, 2007

Robbie McEwen Rules

I love this guy. You never see him in the peloton until about 200 meters from the line and then , somehow, some way, he squeezes through an army of elbows at 40mph and wins. Yesterday he got caught in a crash, was sent over the bars and got banged up. He was completely off the back, and even with his entire team just totally drilling it, it didn't seem like he would even reach the peloton, let alone make his way back to the front. So, final kilometer to the line and Quick Step has the perfect lead-out in place for Tom Boonen. He can't lose, right? Then, about 100 meters from the line, from out of freaking nowhere comes McEwen, completely smoking everyone for the win. It wasn't even close. That was awesome. That is why I watch the TDF. That is why you NEVER give up in a race, no matter how dismal things look.
Photo from VeloNews.

MNSCS#5, Mankato

This race is always hot, this year was no exception–mid 90's and humid, with a sun-baked climb to the top of the ski hill right at the start. I couldn't clip into my left pedal until about the first switchback of the climb, which dropped me further back than I wanted to be. This climb is on loose-gravelly singletrack, with very little room to pass (there are wheel-eating holes on either side of the trail from erosion, and more than one person went down), so I did my best to avoid the crashes and started passing about halfway up. I think I got into about 3rd or 4th at the top, and was able to hold onto top 5 for the first lap. I even caught and passed Jason Walters (and then I promptly spun out on the Staircase climb right in front of him, sorry bro). I was feeling pretty good, or so I thought.

Lap 2, second time up the climb I was really feeling the heat. I could tell I was slowing and needed to recover. I tried to push it into the singletrack, but was still a bit woozy. I was able to hold off most challengers until the bottom, where about 4 guys got around me, one of them my teammate Jamison. There's a wicked, technical downhill section called "The Luge". As I made my way down I saw Jamison down off the trail with his bike on top of him. He was okay, but his race was over. Too bad, he was flying and I'm sure he would have caught Walters for some team points. About 10 seconds later I almost ate it after taking an s-curved downhill way too hot. My ass was about as far over my back tire as I could get it and I still thought I was going OTB. The tires finally gripped and it was back to racing. (Note to self: replace brake pads before next race.)

Lap 3, climb felt a bit better. The cold water splash from the feed station worked wonders and I was able to ramp it up a bit. I had lost some ground on Lap 2, but at least now I was able to maintain my pace. I could hear someone right on my wheel through the "Maze" section on the bottom, and could see Tom and a few others not too far behind. I gave it everything I had up the Staircase climb, passing one rider at the top of the lift. He grabbed my wheel and was right on me through the entire Luge section. When we popped out of the woods for the final 200-300 meters to the line, I popped it into the big ring and hammered. He was still right on me when we approached the final left-hand bend to the line. This is singletrack cutting across the grassy ski hill. He tried to pass on the outside in the grass which gave me the advantage and I held him off for the sprint finish. That was a lot of work for 8th place, but a small victory nonetheless.

8th out of 30 in my age group, 12th overall out of 98 Sport riders. 3 weeks until Red Wing to work on that second lap recovery and endurance. It was nice to have teammates to hang out with after the race, glad I joined PCR. Should have some photos soon.

Tuesday, July 03, 2007

You Can't Have Too Many Pictures of Your Dog

Jen snapped this the other night before the sun went down. How can you not love that dog? If we charged money to everyone who asked to pet her when we take her to a bike race, I'd have the entire season paid for.

How I Spent My Summer Vacation


After 5 years of staring at ratty old doors and trim, I finally did something about it. The hardest part is getting everything level and plumb, especially in our house where everything is out of whack. I've got 3 of 6 installed, 2 completely done (installed, stained, hardware). Lot's of prep work, sanding and staining each surface twice, but totally worth it. Even without the trim installed it looks so much nicer (see second photo showing new door on left, old on right). Top photo you can catch a glimpse of the project supervisor peeking through the door.