Guest Article: The Ride Starts On Time. No Exceptions.
In light of the first North American Cogal (a Cogal is a gathering of Velominati just like a Cabal was a gathering of Illuminati); this Guest Article by community lurker @gmoosh seems apropos. Except that obviously every ride starts at V past the hour. In this spirit, we have added Rule #87.
Message from the Keepers to @gmoosh, it is precisely V past Awesome; time to stop lurking and start sharing more of your undeniable insight into la Vie Velominatus with the community.
Yours in Cycling,
Frank
—
Things that happen on time: Saturn V rocket launches. D-Day invasions. BBC time codes. Japanese Shinkansen. UCI time trials. Things that do not. Greyhound buses. Airline flights. Weddings. Work meetings.
There is an obvious, significant and qualitative difference between them. One class are demonstrable showcases of Rule #5. The other involve the mundane, forgettable and lamentable periods of time between such brilliance.
That is why the best rides, and, I would argue, every ride, should leave at exactly the stated time. If the ride is called for 7:30, it should leave at 7:30. Not 7:31. Not 7:29. Anyone arriving after the stated time of departure should see, far up the road, the Lycra-clad asses of Ones-Who-Take Riding-Seriously.
The upside of always leaving on time is considerable. Others will be late exactly once. You signal that the sanctity of this ride, like all rides, is not something with which you should muck. You demonstrate, not with words but with actions, your commitment. As a bonus, you make more time for post-ride espresso.
Conversely, if you’re not ready to roll at the announced time, you’re prove that in your feebly misplaced life, other things-sleeping, driving, talking to you spouse or even pumping your tires-are more important than The Ride. You are wrong. That’s why you are sprinting up the street like a domestique after a puncture, while everyone else is chatting with insouciance on the rollout far ahead of you.
Don’t believe that starting on time is important? Ask Pedro Delgado. In the 1989 Tour, he showed up 2:40 late to the opening prologue, accepted his fate and rocked as hard as he could. And lost the Tour, finishing third behind an aero-helmeted Greg Lemond, and a collapsed and crying Laurent Fignon.
It is worth mentioning that there is exactly one acceptable way to be late: Overtaking the leader of the group on the first significant hill in a casually deliberate display of the Five and Dime. If you can’t consistently do that, show up ready to roll, and roll when expected.
Discipline. Commitment. Punctuality. Three great tastes that taste great together.
@minion
@Oli
@frank
Thank you gentlemen for bringing some reality to this outpouring of zeal and selfproclamation – were I come from it’s okay to admit you are not perfect – agreed it is not good to be late, and it is a bit disrespectful, but it is also a bit aspirational at times
– I’m almost afraid to turn up for a Cogal if arranged this side of the planet, in case I am 4 seconds late and you lot beat the fuck out of me with your C02 cannisters….
@King Clydesdale
Dude, you need to talk to your girlfriend a bit more before you move in together
@gmoosh
that said, fine article, respect +1
@harminator
I’m not missing anything at all, and I stand by what I said. SYNCHRONISE WATCHES!
Ah, right, that’s where Cogal comes from. I thought it was just some Pacific North West crypto-hippy thing.
Is it a cog-arl or a cog-l.
And if it was wet would you wear cogoules (that might be a British joke).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cagoule
@King Clydesdale Good luck with that one mate and let us know if the next gf is any better ;-) Take it from someone who’s been married 17 years, if you let shit like that wind you up then it’s best to keep everything in separate names.
On the OP, my reading of the new Rule #87 is that one advertises the ride time at the top or bottom of the hour, and it starts at V past that time… which I believe is what Oli was saying and what many clubs practise. We’re talking about a few minutes, not half an hour.
You can turn up on time, or early even, and have a pre-ride chat or espresso, or you can turn up in the interval between the advertised start and V-past and get straight to it.
Works for everyone.
Maybe another word for the Lexicon – don’t really know what it means, just slipped into ma heed
Velominazi
@Dr C
You’re right, no one is perfect and I’d be lying if I said I was never late but for me this is all about the repeat offenders or those who don’t give a shit that everyone else is standing around doing waiting. Shit happens that might cause you to be late but not on a regular basis. I would hate the idea that, if I am late for whatever reason, people will waste their time waiting for me.
Knowing that a ride leaves promptly at a particular time is important because if I am late, I know exactly how far behind them I am, I’d rather know for sure that if they left at the prescribed time and I’m ten minutes late, they’re long gone and the only way to catch them would be if there’s a short cut early on in the ride. if not then I’ll go and ride by myself.
@Mikael Liddy
Right you are. Corrected. Since more than 50% of the information on the internet is now incorrect, I’m going to have to find a new way to do my spellchecking inside my allotted 7 second window.
@ChrisO
I’m embarrassed that our reputation as hippies has reached the Mid-East.
@Chris
+1
@all
I think you need to get laid
Thinking about Julia again aren’t ya
@Marcus
I don’t.
But when I do, I always arrive first.
@Mikael Liddy
@JimmmyMick
@Steampunk
Have I responded to this yet? Funny thing is we spelled it right in the Lexi way back when we put that in there.
Must remember the correct spelling from here on out, because that’s not cool.
@itburns
Absolutely solid gold. Badge goes to you this week.
@ChrisO
Cog-all. Or however the fuck you want to say it.
@Dr C
@Marcus
I think you mean to say we should all get late.
@frank
Must be karma (or is that bike-ma?) for becoming Rule #33 compliant on Saturday.