The truth is that I’d been thinking about quitting for the best part of forty-five minutes. Round and round I went on that track, every lap hurting a little bit more than the previous; every lap taking a little bit longer to complete, every lap that voice inside my head getting a little bit louder.
It might have been adrenaline or it might have been enthusiasm, but it was probably overconfidence in the belief that I could go full gas for an hour that had me tapping out a beautiful, seductive rhythm during those first few minutes of my effort at The Hour for Festum Prophetae. As those first laps ticked away, my focus was complete; I saw only the black line with the Sprinter’s lane and the Côte d’Azure framing my field of vision. The perpendicular lines where the slabs of concrete make up the track passed under me like ballasts on a train track. The effect was all-consuming as I felt my legs spinning smoothly and powerfully while my lungs processed litre upon litre of air.
It was just before turn three on an anonymous but early lap that the feeling swept over me. It was that unmistakable feeling when the shadow of fatigue sweeps by like a bird swooping overhead. I wasn’t tired yet, but the momentum had undeniably shifted; something intangible had changed that signalled the suffering that was about to come.
Over the next few laps my focus shifted from the ballasts to unconvincingly convincing myself that I was mistaken in sensing that harbinger of Fatigue Doom. Yet now I noticed the headwind, and I noticed how it seemed to slow me down much more than the tailwind sped me up. The fixed gear was a liability at this point; my muscles were weakening and there was no option to downshift for the headwind and upshift for the tailwind. It was all a cruel game against momentum. A game I sensed I was starting to lose.
It always seemed we would be gambling with the weather; rain had been forecast but the skies were beautiful and clear when I awoke. As I warmed up, the clouds were slowly creeping in. Just before I set off on the effort officially, @Owen announced that the rain was predicted to arrive 50 minutes into the effort. Rain on a velodrome is a dangerous thing; it reduces friction and causes a bicycle to slip from the banking, which will come as a surprise first to the rider and then to the audience.
I have a voice in my head that questions me. Incessantly. Like an annoyed parent, I have tried “grounding” this voice and taking away its iPad, but the little fucker is monumentally insubordinate, not to mention devious; just when I think I’ve got him locked up securely in the basement, it picks the lock and escapes again.
So there I was, for three-quarters of an hour with an escaped convict, my Questions Voice. When the rain started to fall, it started chatting about this being the perfect excuse to stop riding early. Still I kept on. I had put in something like 50 minutes already and I wanted to see The Hour out, irrespective of the suffering and the overwhelming desire to stop. Then both wheels slipped off the banking; first the back, then the front came down to join the party. Thankfully I was low on the track near the black line and it wasn’t a long enough trip to cause me to crash; but on the next time through the start/finish, my coach @Haldy yelled, “If you’re slipping, pull out.”
That was all I needed to hear. I wanted desperately to stop already, and I’d been thinking up a good excuse for ages. Having someone tell you to stop because it would be dangerous – irresponsible even – to continue is the perfect reason to give in.
So I stopped.
Before the bike had even come to a stop, I regretted it. Fifty minutes and change of comprehensive suffering, and all of it for nothing. Sixty minutes is the mark for The Hour, nothing less and nothing more. It is both its cruelty and its beauty.
I suffered, but I didn’t earn the satisfaction of knowing I suffered to complete a goal. I was already behind my goal pace, and quitting makes it easy to tell myself I could have made it anyway, that I would rally in the last 10 minutes to make it up. But I didn’t, and I wasn’t going to. I quit.
I will go back to the track in a few weeks’ time and do The Hour again. This time, with good weather. This time, I will finish what I started, however much I suffer again and however far behind my pace I am. Rule V.
Vive la Vie Velominatus.
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Happens to the best!
When we finished in Roubaix in the rain I was going round mid track and suddenly had that o-oh feeling and so came down to the bottom of the track. A second later a guy further up slipped off and took out the 3 folk behind me including my mate. That concrete, or specifically those advert patches, are slippery when wet.
Obree aborted an Hour attempt and we all agree he's a totally awesome human.
It poured with rain consistently during my attempt, but my velodrome is tarmac and so doesn't lose much friction in the wet (there is a school of thought that it actually rides faster in the wet, actually). I also managed to keep absolutely on schedule which means that I paced it well but also didn't set my goal distance high enough. Next year I'll go for 41. Or 42 if I've got a TT bike by then.
Can we revise our Frank Hour VSP thing based on what I've calculated your goal distance was from timing you like a creepy cycle stalker?
@RobSandy
yeah did I win?
and wear white socks next time....mutter mutter mutter
and why is track so hard @Haldy? @RobSandy?
It happens Frank.
It's the feeling I used to get when I did races above my level against pro riders even more above my level - you know the ending (and it isn't You, riding over the finish line arms raised) so it's just a matter of how soon you let it happen.
As a very, very good rider of my acquaintance once said to me "You just want it to be over."
@piwakawaka
No distance has been declared so I think the predictor was void. I'll go for 38kms next time. If he does the decent thing and wears white socks.
I don't ride a lot of proper track, i.e. on a track bike, but it's something I've thought about a lot as I am about 5% slower in TT mode on the track than I am on the road, on the same bike etc. I think it's something to do with momentum and inability to rest at all at the track without losing a lot of speed.
@ChrisO
I've only ever had that feeling, i.e. wanting to climb off the bike and not get back on, during hill climb TTs.
@RobSandy
oh man, you need to get on a track bike, it hurts even more, or it could just be my ride...
@piwakawaka
Just pedalling non-stop for a long time is hard. I did a charity event on a watt bike a few years back and pedalled continuously for close to 90 minutes. My legs have never been so mashed after a bike ride, even 200km plus days don't compare.
@Steve Trice
This is why training on a turbo is so effective.
@frank Is your questions voice mocking, sarcastic or brutally deadpan. Mine has evolved over the years from the former to the latter as I've become more accustomed to hurting myself.
As @RobSandy points out, Obree aborted an hour attempt and my former sensei pulled out of an amateur hour attempt due to his questioning voice and rain when he was ahead of schedule to take Obree's amateur record on a wooden outdoor track. You're in exalted company.
I wouldn't want to come across as a pedant or even a train spotter for that matter but they're not ballasts, they're ties (sleepers to the Brits).