Fleurieu Peninsula – Velominati Cogal 8th Feb 2014.
Notable quotes to sum up the ride that nearly wasn’t.
“You’re in pretty good shape for the shape you are in.”
Dr. Seuss -“The difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits.”
Albert Einstein -“When you are courting a nice girl an hour seems like a second. When you sit on a red-hot cinder a second seems like an hour. That’s relativity.”
Albert Einstein -“I’ve never known a man worth his salt who, in the long run, deep down in his heart, didn’t appreciate the grind, the discipline. ”
Vince Lombardi –” Fuck it’s hot ! ”
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Dwayne “@Barracuda” Cox
The above quotes pretty much sum up some of the feelings of the recently run and won Fleurieu Peninsula Cogal.
My own personal timeline goes something like this
Points to note regarding the Rules :-
Special mentions
@Mikael Liddy – being dedicated to the cause enough to ride the 100kms+ the night before in the dark to front up on the Saturday morning – Chapeau
Hugh Moore – taking some great photos along the way – refer his Flikr link
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Justin (pie man) V
Thanks to Mikael who invited members of Adelaide Cyclists to join in on a cogal put on by Dwayne and Velominati. I had a most enjoyable day, as I was met by cooler conditions when I arrived at Victor. Whilst waiting prior to the ride it was great to see a fellow Lynskey rider as we both told our tales of love for the bike.
I hadn’t ridden much of the route prior, so just played follow the leader for the entire route as the temperature soon soared as we headed inland to our only real hill for the day, which took its first casualty. After a pucture and a blowout the group settled into a nice rhythm, and we ended up for what I thought was lunch at Mt Compass. It was there that I enjoyed my pie with sauce, which was to power me to the end of the ride.
Although we had stopped a couple times on route and filled our water bottles, the heat had really kicked in by the time we road along the coast from Goolwa to Victor in a very angry cross wind which had the temperature rising well into the 40’s. The water in the bottles was almost boiling, but I figured I still had to drink it to keep some fluid running through my body.
I bid thank you to Mikael for the invitation and to Dwayne for organising the ride (and post ride pizza slices). Hope to ride with you guys again soon.
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@Mikael Liddy
“Be prepared” say the scouts, well I can only assume that the scouts know fuck all about getting ready for a cogal, for all the good my preparations served. Here’s a quick timeline of the ups & downs of trying to arrange my attendance on Feb 8th.
Sept 2013 – Article posted, VMH approval for a weekend away with the cycling crew & partners granted, and family friend approached about borrowing their holiday house for accommodations. All is good.
Oct 2013 – Family friends fall through as apparently their son & his 30th birthday trump our needs for the house…no biggie, we’ll share the costs of hiring a place between everyone.
Dec 2013 – Body attempts to put all weight on left foot getting out of bed after a severe bout of charismatic poisoning before left foot has actually found the ground, hit the deck quicker than Sir Twiggo on a wet Italian descent & tweak left knee quite significantly. Pre TDU & cogal riding is reduced dramatically, but hopes are still high.
Jan 2014 – Knee is behaving(ish), finally riding again & suffering god awful Rule #65 infringement from seat post/saddle area. Bike goes in for service & source of the rule breach is identified as the carbon layup delaminating at the seat post insertion…bike is fucked 2 days before biggest week of riding of the year & unlikely to be repaired/replaced by the cogal (yes I know this is why the minimum value for N should be 3). Attendance looking shaky at best.
Jan/Feb 2014 – Based on the assumption I wouldn’t have a bike, the VMH accepts tickets to a music festival the day before the cogal (the day that would have been spent driving down, wine tasting, etc.). I’m now on parenting duties until a babysitter can relieve me (6.30pm), and as such the last 2 from our initial group of 10 bail on the weekend. This will require some creativity to work out well.
Feb 5th – Demo bike sourced from Giant store (hello TCR Avanced 0 with 11 speed Ultegra Di2), babysitter & additional lights secured for a Friday night ride, cabin booked in the local tourist park and VMH convinced to drive down Saturday afternoon basically for the purpose of driving home on the Sunday. It’s on like Donkey Kong!!!
Feb 7th – It’s going to be how hot? 45 degrees with a stinking hot northerly gale blowing all day? Fuck it, I’ve come this far, I’m riding the bloody thing!
After the trials & tribulations involved in actually getting to the cogal, the day itself (despite the conditions) was reasonably uneventful. We started with a solid group of 20 made up of a few locals, some guys from a bike shop about half way back to Adelaide & a couple of other city boys I’d convinced to ignore the forecast cos “it’s always cooler down at Victor.” That statement rang true for the first 20 minutes until we turned inland & decided to ride in a furnace for the next 4 hours.
High Points
– The ride down the on perfectly still mid 20’s evening through the SA countryside & watching night fall with only the thoughts running through my head for company. Was just blissful.
– Finally meeting @Barracuda in the flesh after many a month of online commentary
– The V-Flag in all its glory flying proudly at the start & finish of the ride (it really does smell of Flanders)
– @Fiasco Steve and his seemingly endless reserve of energy…maybe those vegans are on to something?
– Riding completely new roads with all but a few complete strangers & feeling at home immediately, somehow Cogals just work.
– Pizza & beer after 100kms in stupid hot conditions, I’m convinced I will never taste a better beer in my life.
Low Points
– The weather. In all honesty we were fucking stupid for doing what we did, I was still feeling dehydrated 4 days later.
– Related to low point 1, seeing @Barracuda get destroyed by the conditions & have to skip a portion of the route sucked given the effort he’d put in & how pumped he’d been in the lead up. The fact that he got back on the bike for the hardest part of the ride (50 degree temps & a brutal cross/headwind) was a testament to Rule #5 and we waited til after the ride to tell him that the part he missed was the only tailwind all day!
All in all it was a great event with good riding, great people and awesome food & drink put on before and after by the crew at Nino’s.
p.s. We discovered later that night that baby Panadol is like EPO for babies, one minute you’ve got a vomiting, feverish baby and then the next he’s ready to take on the world(that’s a story for a whole other time)!
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@fiasco steve
Ah, the Cogal through the tranquil Fleurieu.
This was my first experience with all things Velominati, the anxiety that this presented was apparent. What shall I wear? Does my kit match? Are my biddons of correct volume?
All these were of no concern as we embarked on a ride into 30km head winds with the air temp at 40 degrees at 8.30am. It was a war of attrition as slowly the gallant troops pushed through to keep the wheels turning. The route was excellent, perhaps the highlight very early into the ride was Nettle Hill, this cheeky little lump with was enough to see one rider decide that leaning his breakfast on the hill was a good idea. We are still unsure if this was a mark of respect for the hill by leaving some DNA behind, or he felt that this would lighten his load for the rest of the battle.
A great day, it was hot, but this was just part of the fun. The watermelon in Goolwa was excellent.
Highlight was Morgan and his Dad from Murray Bridge doing the ride together.
[dmalbum path=”/velominati.com/content/Photo Galleries/j.andrews3@comcast.net/Fleurieu Peninsula/”/]
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Quotes are a bit out of whack with who said them ! Technical glitch eh @Gianni.
Vince Lombardi didnt say " Fuck its Hot" - I definitely said it though!
There is something seriously messed up with the weather down that end of the continent! I live in North QLD, and I see temps over 40 rarely, but we do race in winter in 30deg+ temps often enough. Admittedly, we have 90% humidity as a permanent fixture but still.
@Puffy, yep, very messed up that day.
Normally when the forecasters predict hot weather down here they are often wrong by a good 5 to 10 degrees as cool change comes early.
The one day they get an extreme weather forecast right had to be the Cogal Day. Was extreme
That sort of heat really does take it out of you. Once you get to the point where your body is not cooling down it becomes a real slog, so well done to all who finished.
I had a long hot ride on Friday finishing near 40C and I was still feeling dehydrated yesterday.
@Barracuda
No, I'm pretty sure Vince Lombardi said that.
@ChrisO the thing that really got to me was that every time I took a swig out of the bidon, instead of providing some refreshment, it felt like I was drinking from a boiled kettle.
It was a shame because from about 1/4 of the way through the ride things started to string out & break up a little, and it became a real balancing act between trying to keep the pace down to ensure everyone stayed reasonably close together & trying to get the ride done so we could get out of the heat as soon as possible.
Here are the photos that Hugh took for us on the day
http://www.flickr.com/photos/hughmoore/sets/72157640670803463/
Nice work all, I know how much it sucks riding in that sort of heat. Great photos Hugh, some tough buggers there. Amazing to see the sacred V flag in Aussie, my home country, that I've only seen in Belgium myself.
Chapeau to all, but srsly, South Australia in high summer, WTF did you expect ?
Those sort of temps can cook your brain.
Of course, to ride in such condition, one must be a little cooked anyway. 40 F, is way better.