Hope nobody believed the weatherman and didn’t ride today!

On our way to the Sequoia Century. Looked like, and was, a very nice day!

I went to bed last night not knowing what I’d be waking up to; the weather report said it was going to rain during the night, let up for a while, and then showers throughout the day. Not the weather report you want to hear for the day of the Sequoia Century, one of my favorite rides, and an essential part of getting Kevin in shape for France. I had a “Plan B” in place, getting my rain bike ready and opting for the 100k instead of 100 miles if I woke up to rain. Even that wouldn’t be much fun; two hours of rain is about as much as I can take and still consider it “fun”; anything past that is pretty miserable.

Coyotes along Skyline
But when the alarm went off at 6:30am (yuck!), I looked out the window and saw dry roads and broken skies. I got Kevin up about 15 minutes later, grabbed a quick bite to eat, and by 7:20am we were out the door and riding towards the start, at the Palo Alto VA hospital, a half hour away. Back in the day we would have driven, but why? For the Sequoia Century, it makes more sense to start from home and end at home, since it comes within 3 or 4 miles on the return. When we got to the start things were pretty quiet for a sold-out ride; I suspect quite a few people assumed the worst and didn’t even set their alarm clocks. They missed a great day to ride!

Kevin at the Boulder Creek rest stop
Oh sure, it wasn’t great by historical standards, but in my revisionist weather world, any day that it’s not actually raining is a good, even great day to ride. We’ve suffered through so much these past five months, so much rain to be specific, and sure it’s great to not have to worry about a water shortage, but from a purely selfish standpoint, droughts are great for the bicycle business and it’s not such a bad thing to get people into water conservation because California’s future is going to have even more people, and thus more demand on resources, than we have today.


Saw quite a few of our customers on the ride, including Sam (and fan of Amy in our Los Altos store), and everyone was having a good time… with the exception of the guy we came across on the Bear Creek Road descent who’d had a run-in with a car and had likely broken his hip or pelvis, an injury that takes quite a while to heal. Bear Creek (which runs between Boulder Creek and Skyline) is infamous for careless and callous drivers, and today was unfortunately no exception. But the high points included seeing three coyotes (a pair up on Skyline and another walking across the road on the Alpine descent) and watching Kevin kick into high gear twice, first on the upper stretches of Highway 9 climbing up from Boulder Creek, and then again on the upper parts of Tunitas Creek. This was notable because he was pretty spent before finding his legs again, and it’s now becoming clear to him that his performance climbing is a function not just of his legs but his mind as well. And, of course, thanks go to the Western Wheelers Bicycle Club for an exceptionally well-run event!

Chain Reaction's traditional "Secret Soda Stop" at the top of Tunitas Creek, manned by Sal (his 5th or 6th year at this!) and Patrick, who provided mechanical services.
It wasn’t our fastest century; 14.5mph average speed, compared to 15.7 on last-Sunday’s Santa Cruz loop, but at 102 miles & 9264ft of climbing, it was quite a bit tougher (and yes, I’ll admit that our 15.7mph average the prior week was aided a bit by some strong tail winds on the coast). But we did make it back within 30 seconds of our planned time of 3:45pm, allowing us to take showers and get dressed before Kevin’s 4pm graduation open house. –Mike–






5 thoughts on “Hope nobody believed the weatherman and didn’t ride today!

  1. I think I saw you guys ripping up Tunitas on my first sweep of the Bike Hut- Skyline section. You guys sure didn’t look spent at all!
    Nice photos and write up 🙂

    -Anna (SAG 2)

  2. Anna: Kevin started out both the Highway 9 and Tunitas climbs dead to the world, but had an amazing recovery toward the top of each. The upper stretch of Tunitas, where it levels out a bit, he was able to hang onto my wheel at a nearly 100% effort on my part, which was impressive because if I’m motivated, I can get some decent speed up there. It was also nice to see that Kevin could do a ride with full-on sections without having a seizure (he has epilepsy, which can sometimes make rides a bit interesting).

    Thanks to Western Wheelers for their typical phenomenal support. Great club! –Mike–

  3. It’s great to see pictures and comments from those on the route. I spent a long day in Palo Alto. Approximately 75% of the registered riders showed up, so we had over 900 riders actually on the road. I was delighted that it didn’t rain. Not in the morning. Not in the middle of the day. Not even during packing up. We had put up a lot of canopies for rain shelter. They wound up being sun shelter. The only disappointment is that the band canceled. It seems that the guitarist doesn’t like the idea of electrocution.

    1. Biggest complaint I heard came from our secret soda stop. Apparently, Coke drinkers won’t accept anything else. I didn’t buy nearly enough Coke. Who knew? But aside from that, the club did a great job, and if you were concerned that running it was a “thankless” job, consider this thanks… and I’m sure many others will echo that sentiment (for those unaware, Judy was in charge of the Sequoia Century this year). Regarding the 25% no-shows, how does that compare to a normal year? Thanks- –Mike–

  4. Nice writeup – all your posts with the near misses (thankfully) are making me paranoid. Mind sharing your camera setup? I might go that route myself….

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