In my maturity I've come fully into my miserly ways. Living in Prescott I cannot imagine doing what I used to do often several times each week in Chicago: driving 100 miles to ride my bike. And though there are great adventures all over the southwest the sense of `weirdness' overcomes me when I send money to people 100 miles away to give me a map, a water bottle, sign liability waivers. And then spend 3 figures in gas money to drive for four hours ... to ride my bike.
!?*@##!!!
And here I live in Prescott!!
So I'm resigned to the `loneliness' of the hard core ultra cyclist. That is, poorly paraphrasing Eddie Merckx, when asked how he came to be so dominating a cyclist, he responded: "Ride a lot."
I'm making up routes and courses that are low traffic volume, good road, challenging and with the occasional water spiggot every 40 or 50 miles.
Here's one from my front door:
- Prescott to Bagdad: 67 miles
- Bagdad to Yarnell: 56 miles
- Yarnell to Congress: 10 miles
- Congress to Wilhoit: 29 miles
- Willhoit back to Prescott: 17 miles.
Likely climbing: 12,000 feet
Start half an hour before daybreak to be advantaged by daylight.
No fee.
No sag.
Self-support.
No club affiliation.
No course `certification' or `sanctioning.'
YSYD (you're stopped, you're dropped).
No rando organization.
No getting your card stamped or signed.
A complimentary burial on the side of the road for DNF'ers.
No T-shirt.
No goofy set of safety pins with a number on some sheet of linen.
No subsequent internet hounding by profit-mongers wanting to patronize you with "Hilly Hell" mantras.
Who will know you did it?
You. Only you.
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