Tuesday, June 28, 2011

Training?

From June 2011
It's about 57 degrees, at 4:45 AM on a late June morning. I'm pretty comfortable in a long sleeve jersey. I'm training for....uhhhh, nothing I guess. I really haven't had a goal in a few years, but for some odd reason I'm still driven like mad to pedal my butt off. It's hard to believe, in the morning chill and dark, that within a few hours sweat will be pouring off of my head. I pedal along the frontage road toward Rustlers Loop with plans to ride most of the trails in the Kokopelli area. In the past this wasn't that ambitious of a ride, but due to sickness I haven't ridden for more than two hours at a time all year.

From June 2011
Even though it should be a gradual thing, I'm a bit shocked by how suddenly I can see the trail and my surroundings. The sun is still a long way from rising. The vastness of the great western sky tends to prolong all this morning magic. The cliffs and river are still sleepy, not a breath of wind to stir the surface or ruffle a clump of sage. The birds however, are anything but asleep. They chirp and sing and alert each other to my intrusion upon their space.

From June 2011
There is no sun on my back or shoulders, but I know it's up there. The cliff bands hundreds of feet above me glow like coals in a camp fire. The long sleeve jersey I'm wearing seems misplaced this time of year, but I'm glad I wore it. The desert chill will hang on until the great ball of fire appears at my lower level. For a time I am safe in the shade of these sand stone walls.

From June 2011
It's coming, unstoppable, white hot light, ready to sear my soul. Whew...that's a bit deep for a bike ride. In other words I'm really dreading the heat...but for now I pedal onward, safe in the shadows.

From June 2011
WHAM!!!! Suddenly there it is, doing it's thing, heating the world, giving us light and life and cancer...all things we need and some we don't. That long sleeve jersey now seems ludicrous. It gets stashed in my pack to be forgotten. Maybe I'll wear it again in the Fall, or in the high country, but for sure not now.

From June 2011
The canyon walls protect me for a large portion of the rest of the ride, but inevitably I must face him, Mr Sun. And when I do it's also a fight with gravity, as I ascend my nemesis, Collar Bone Hill. It's a repeated punch in the junk that gains back every inch of vertical that I lost during the preceding 25 miles. Even the blackest of rocks now reflect light, sweat stings my eyes, the heating day causes the wind to howl. Training? What am I training for? Hmmmm???

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

The Longest Days of the Year...

From June 2011
All of a sudden it's Summer. The time of year where you end an evening ride and there is no place to eat afterward...because all the restaurants in Fruita close at 9PM.

From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011
It's the time of year when the high country is finally opening up and you take those first breaths of thinner air and fragrant pine scent.

From June 2011


From June 2011
The flowers aren't quite done yet, but the explosion is on the down swing, at least down in the desert.


From June 2011


From June 2011


There is a lot of water flowing this year. The mountain streams are raging. We found a few waterfalls on our travels.
From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011


And we found a few mountains...
From June 2011


From June 2011


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From June 2011


And we found a MonteCarlo too!
From June 2011



From June 2011


And a really old beer can!
From June 2011


And mountain bike "art" or as hikers probably say...a bunch of bike trash left on the trail.
From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011
Dinka is hasn't quite learned to use berms yet...

From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011


From June 2011
Dinka has however learned a new game. She has learned that racing Dad is fun. She picks just the right type of trail, then bolts past me. She then looks back now and then to see if I'm gaining. If I am she pours on the steam. It's hilarious, and I must admit on most trails I can't catch her.

From June 2011


From June 2011
It's a good summer to be alive!!!

The Acclimatization of Dinka Jane...

From June 2011
This tuft of hair is from the top of Dinka's head. It fell out yesterday while I was petting her little noggin. At first I was bummed. The last of her dreadlocks had just fallen out...It was so cute the way it would stick strait up on the top of her head. But then I realized it was also the last of the remnants from her time on the street, fighting for her life, dirty, nearly starved to death.

From June 2011
She's now fully acclimatized to her new, and I hope better, environment. She is no longer bald, her weight is up from 10lbs to 12lbs. (Proportionately that is a LOT of weight) She no longer bolts for the door, pukes in the truck, barks and shakes at the sight of men other than me.

From June 2011
She's a happy dog I'd say...and many folks keep saying how lucky SHE is...well I have to disagree. Mary and I are the lucky ones. She came to us when we needed her most, just long enough to learn from Gus, and then to help us say goodbye. Now she fills that hole, a 55lb black and white, 14 year's in the making hole...and she does a damn fine job! Our little Dinka Jane....

From June 2011


From June 2011