Excessive confidence in my case, me thinks. What have I done I hear you ask... (no, I can't really hear you... I'm just saying that as convenient segue), yes, I know it is supposed to be without interruption... yes, I did fail... shut-up.
Anyhooo... what was I saying before my ADD kicked in...? Ah yes, Hubris.
Two years ago I started riding bikes... it was tough, it was hell, it was brutal... but as Katie Kookabura says - 'it is only riding a bike' ha! Bitch.
Five weeks ago (as I write) I signed up for the Japanese Odyssey.
Two years ago, for the first time, I rode up and down Big White road -
- 45km
- 1000m elevation gain loss
- Roughly 2 hours and 30 mins
Fog Me! It was hell, I think I left part (if not all) of my soul on that first ride...
I then took Fall, Winter and Spring off, starting again in May 2017 - unfit, and the opposite of un-fat. Again it was brutal. I didn't stop this time though, I got a trainer and rode through the Winter, courtesy of Zwift. Spring came (for those struggling with the math, this is May 2018) and even though it was tough again, it wasn't complete hell... not complete.
Four months later and I'm kinda fit, enjoying riding, 250kms, and 4000 meters climbing a week... I'm even watching GCN - don't start watching it, (it is too late for me) it will show you stuff you didn't know you need, can't afford to buy, but will definitely get. And watching things like Tour de France, Giro d'Italia, La Vuelta... Yes - I have become a mamil - middle aged man in lycra. No, not a pretty sight. But there is a good reason - it is my mid-life crisis and I will do what I... wait... what my wife allows... yes. Besides, I couldn't afford a real crisis.
And then Hubris kicks in... all by itself, nope, I'm pretty sure I had nothing to do with it. 'Let's sign up for this bike ride...' it says... 'er... okay...' I say.
Ever been to Japan? No, me neither. Did you know that Japan is basically a mountain range? No...? Nope, I didn't either... not until after I'd signed up anyway. I'll give you some statistics about the odyssey vs the 21 day Grand Tours
I then took Fall, Winter and Spring off, starting again in May 2017 - unfit, and the opposite of un-fat. Again it was brutal. I didn't stop this time though, I got a trainer and rode through the Winter, courtesy of Zwift. Spring came (for those struggling with the math, this is May 2018) and even though it was tough again, it wasn't complete hell... not complete.
Four months later and I'm kinda fit, enjoying riding, 250kms, and 4000 meters climbing a week... I'm even watching GCN - don't start watching it, (it is too late for me) it will show you stuff you didn't know you need, can't afford to buy, but will definitely get. And watching things like Tour de France, Giro d'Italia, La Vuelta... Yes - I have become a mamil - middle aged man in lycra. No, not a pretty sight. But there is a good reason - it is my mid-life crisis and I will do what I... wait... what my wife allows... yes. Besides, I couldn't afford a real crisis.
And then Hubris kicks in... all by itself, nope, I'm pretty sure I had nothing to do with it. 'Let's sign up for this bike ride...' it says... 'er... okay...' I say.
Ever been to Japan? No, me neither. Did you know that Japan is basically a mountain range? No...? Nope, I didn't either... not until after I'd signed up anyway. I'll give you some statistics about the odyssey vs the 21 day Grand Tours
- Distance about 2600km - in ten days... compared to-
- Giro d'Italia 2018 - 3572kms... 170km per day
- Tour de France 2018 - 3350 kms... 160km per day.
- La Vuelta (Spain's grand tour) - 3254 kms... 155km per day.
- Climbing or Elevation Gain - approx 50,000m... actually my first route showed 119,000m... I nearly cried...* but now down to 5000m per day - woohoo!
- Giro - 44,000m - 2200m per day.
- Tour de France - 21,125 - 1000m per day.
- La Vuelta - I don't know, can't find it... I imagine it is like 12 meters.
- Average weight of Rider, Bike, and carried gear.
- Japan Odyssey - well, this is just me -
- 75kg... on a good day, with the wind blowing in the right direction.
- Bike 9kg...
- Gear - 12kg... I hope.
- Total - 96kg.
- The Grand Tour Riders-
- Weight 65kg average.
- Bike - 7kg+/- 200g... usually.
- Gear - ha! Zero.
- Total 72kg.
*Why did I nearly cry? Well, I one climbed 8880m... it took 27 hours!!!
So... I'm 50% heavier, riding almost double their distance, and climbing 2-3 times their daily elevation gain... Why? Why would I sign up for this..?
And no I don't have...
- Neutral service.
- Support Vehicles
- Team bus
- Team cars
- Team masseuse
- Team chef
- Team physio
- Team nutritional consultant
- Spare bikes
- Spare wheels
- Spare components - well, not many, I have a tube and some chain links.
- Spare shirts... no wait, I have a spare shirt, and shorts too!
- Medics, doctors, police escort, closed roads, tv coverage...
- I have a phone... with maps on it, yes sir... oh, and a GPS tracker that will put a blue dot on your screen... if you wanted to follow progress... not quite Eurosport coverage...
They will ride 1-5 hours per day, me (I'm hoping only) 12-16... And they have all their gear given to them... and their bikes are so modern and cutting edge they could be one of those fancy Japanese specialty knives... mine? Mine could be a bucket... with a broken handle... and holes in it... and they will be aero... Me? I will have so much surface area I could be a sail.
Hubris eh? Hubris sucks.
Sólido Properties... rentals, property management, beer drinking, bike riding... time wasting, procrastinating (at the expert level), ski instructing (not at the expert level...) blog writing, ADD enjoying (yes it can be fun, just ask my buddy Mike - he likes being a doctor, but he is also a little crazy, you should see all the vehicles he has - I bet he has 20 of them, no I don't know why, seems strange I know, I can't imagine his insurance costs... or maintenance...) wait... back again - yes... I'm off to Japan, to 'just ride a bike...' cos it will be AWESOME! I hope.
Post Script...
But the question - Why? Why did I choose to do this...? The reason...? Well, I asked myself (many, many times) should I, could I... can I do this...? Eventually, I stopped asking could I... eventually the question changed and became 'will I regret not trying...?' And the answer to that...? Well, that was an easy yes.
But the question - Why? Why did I choose to do this...? The reason...? Well, I asked myself (many, many times) should I, could I... can I do this...? Eventually, I stopped asking could I... eventually the question changed and became 'will I regret not trying...?' And the answer to that...? Well, that was an easy yes.