You can’t teach an old dog new tricks but you can grab a beer and watch that old dog do the same stupid thing over and over again, which is almost the same as a doing trick. On an unrelated note, I find myself, for the third year running, staring down the business end of the week approaching the Climb4Cancer time trial up Zoo Hill in Issaquah, Washington.
Zoo Hill is perhaps the most diabolical climb I know of, and I include in that statement the various cobbled bergs we tackled in Belgium this year, as well as the considerable heap of climbs around the US and Europe that I’ve had the great pleasure of hauling my too fat to climb carcass up. The trouble with this particular climb is the ferocity of the lower pitches which give way to a dead-straight final section of road consisting of ever-steepening rollers.
There is no keeping the powder dry on the ramps that litter the bottom half of the climb; this is an á bloc, stay-alive effort which serves to mop up speed and morale in equal measure. By the time you make the right-hand turn onto the sinister second half of the climb, your guns are fried and lungs hemorrhaging V resin. This section of road is nearly straight (which Science has proven is the most annoying kind of road to climb) and consists of a series of rollers which gain in gradient and culminate with the longest and steepest of them. This section is made physically daunting by the already-blown guns at your disposal, and mentally devastating by the fact that even if you could remember how many rollers there are in total, there is no way you can remember how many you’ve already sorted. (The answers are always “too many” and “not enough”, respectively.)
Riding this section during recon, it’s tempting to imagine moving Sur La Plaque and using the momentum from the short descents to fly up the next roller and thus dispatching with this comparatively easier section without much ado. Arriving here during the race, however, one faces an alternate reality consisting of legs reduced to quivering lumps of useless flesh, and rather than slipping into the big ring, ghost-shifting into a non-existent lower gear.
I look forward to my next attempt at bettering my time up Haleakala in Hawaii, which represents an unrelenting 60km ride from sea level to 3,000 meters, dished out in a massive four-hour helping of serial suffering. But I find nothing but dread in my heart when I cast my mind to the quarter of an hour of comprehensive pain I will endure on Saturday.
Donations Update
This event is organized to support cancer research with donations going to the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center. The Climb4Cancer Charity has arranged for donation-matching; for those of you who donated prior to the event, your contributions were given in the name of the Velominati Community. Thanks to you all for your support.
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View Comments
Frank, don't we usually run some unofficial no points VSP trying to guess your time for this fucker? Well, I'll kick it off and since you must still have a bit of form from this spring, and hopefully you've been hitting the hill repeats, and hopefully the weather holds, I am betting you break your record and record a 13:41. Game on!
@Buck Rogers
13:33, you gonna bring is Frank?
Next time I'm in town you really have to take me there.
@RedRanger
I'm thinking a la the volcano, the Dutch Monkey scrapes it in under the target. 13.56
Volcano? Did someone say volcano? Ah...wait for it... [end tease...]
best of luck Frank. 13:58
May the force be with you. 13:53
Good luck Frank, less than 14 mins in the pain locker well worth it for a noble cause!
@Buck Rogers
Alright - I'll offer no VSP Points but a set of Handlebar Cufflinks to the person who gets closest to my time. The production ones will look better than these and they aren't quite ready to go just yet, but when they are, they'll be sent out.
Here's what we've got so far. The ride starts at 9:00am on Saturday, Pacific Time.
@Buck Rogers 13:41
@RedRanger13:33
@Mikael Liddy 13.56
@roger 13:58
@girl 13:53