Sunday, July 03, 2011

Quick ride into the hills

Trying to get my legs back in time for a century ride in September. A few of the scouts in our troop are game to try the distance for the first time. I'm one of their chaperones. Took the Raleigh International (fixed). Beautiful summer morning. Elapsed time 2h15min, 1800 ft climbing.

Monday, February 16, 2009

Shake Down ride, confidence shaken

300km brevet on the horizon next weekend, so with Saturday the only break in a rainy weekend, I set off at 7am for a 100 mile ride on my old "hilly hundred" route: 100 miles and 7300 ft of climbing.

I made it to Crockett in 4 hrs, had a light lunch at the very likable Valona market and deli in town. But on the way home, starting at about Inspiration Pt, I really ran out of gas. I could only manage 30 or 45 minutes at a time without an off-the-bike rest. A little worrying, considering next weekend I'd be doing 187 miles. Later that night, I looked back at some of my notes from years past. Turns out I'm not eating enough on my rides! I'm averaging 170 calories per hour, whereas I used to regularly consume 230 or 250/hr on brevets. As my wife reminded me, less-than-sufficient food really doesn't work for me, so I'm optimistic next weekend will work out.

California budget crisis: leadership crisis

A tidy summary online at the New York Times this evening re California's continuing budget woes:

The roots of California’s inability to address its budget woes are statutory and political. The state, unlike most others, requires a two-thirds majority vote in the Legislature to pass budgets and tax increases. And its process for creating voter initiatives hamstrings the budget process by directing money for some programs while depriving others of cash.

In a Legislature dominated by Democrats, some of whom lean far to the left, leaders have been unable to gather enough support from Republican lawmakers, who tend on average to be more conservative than the majority of California’s Republican voters and have unequivocally opposed all tax increases.

And then there is Governor Schwarzenegger, whose budget woes far outweigh those of his predecessor, Gray Davis, whom he drummed from office in a 2003 recall that stemmed from the state’s fiscal problems at the time. The governor has failed to muster votes among lawmakers in his own party, whom he often opposes on ideological grounds, resulting in more scorn from Democrats.

(source)

While the Governor is not blameworthy in isolation, it is ironic, as noted by the Times, that he replaced Gray Davis because of the state's budget troubles. What has Governor Schwarzenegger done in the meantime to resolve the issue that launched him into office? Has he spent any meaningful time really leading, educating Californians on what the options are for managing state revenue inflows and outflows in a more viable manner? No. Opportunity squandered. Leadership ducked.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

Democracy promotion, half-baked

In today's NYT online;

"After Sept. 11, 2001, Mr. Bush and his aides decided that autocratic
regimes, particularly in the Middle East, fostered hopelessness that
led to the attacks on the United States."

Thus in part the justification for Pres. Bush's democracy agenda.
While the above surely contributes to the conditions that open a path
to extremism, the Bush administration failed to recognize an important
second component of US comportment in the world, one that was
essential to keep the administration's pronouncements about the value
of democracy from sounding hypocritical. The Bush gang failed to
realize that as a superpower and symbol of democratic structure, we
carried a heightened obligation to define and hold, indeed exemplify,
the moral high ground. Every foreign policy initiative that fails to
pass muster undercuts our ability to sell this way of life, and in the eyes of people around the world, lowers
democracy into the same pit as those autocratic regimes we cite as
stimulants to the cause of extremism.

Sunday, January 25, 2009

How I Spent my Saturday


200 km (125 mile) bicycle ride yesterday. First of the San Francisco Randonneurs brevet series in preparation for a long ride this summer. Golden Gate Bridge to the Pt Reyes lighthouse and back. The day prior it rained all day, with more promised for Saturday, but we were largely spared. The was even some sun on the beach N of the lighthouse.



The hardest miles for me were between 40 and 70, in Pt Reyes park. Hills have been my strong suit in past years, but I've done so little hill riding in the last six months that they really sapped me this time. I stopped for a wonderful bowl of chicken, wild rice, and vegetable soup (cream!) at the Busy Bee Bakery in Inverness Park. That helped start my recovery, and a tailwind from miles 83-100 also helped. Around 5 or six hours into the ride my internal "furnace" was finally lit. As long as I fed in easily digestible food at regular intervals (for instance, 125 calories of vanilla GU gel every 45 minutes) my legs stayed strong.

The light on the SF skyline and the bridge were beautiful at just before 5pm when I returned. We live in a wonderful part of the world. A few more details of the ride here.

Sunday, January 04, 2009

Wednesday, December 31, 2008

Thanksgiving at New Years

Big excitement at our table this New Year's Eve:


Thanksgiving to New Year's passes even faster than the whoosh of the rest of the year. So this New Year's it was good to have some time to recall the many good happenings of 2008 to our family. The kids, C and I pieced together an impromptu list over dinner.
Sailing in the Virgins with grandparents
June in Hawaii
sister-in-law Carol stayed with us over the summer
M debuted on the musical stage
H and M with new ipods!
H thriving in a new school
M trying the snare drum in band
C a happy interim librarian
C finished her second century on a bike
I got wrapped up in a camera fixation
with the cub scouts at Camp Cutter and at winter camp
Visits to family in RI during business trips to Boston
built a fence with the neighbors
went from two cars to one
bought no new bicycles this year
helped neighbors get married before prop 8 passed
had a joyful Election Day






Happy New Year to all