Last week we completed the second stop in the tour for our book, The Rules; The Way of the Cycling Disciple. For the first two, we partnered with Rapha to do a five-to-six hour ride and then sign the books at the shop afterwards. In both cases, I was amazed by the quality of the riding and by the ride leaders themselves, Robert in NYC and Eric in SFO. Between the two, I have to say SFO takes the crown for an amazing ride outside a city; the views were stunning, we got to ride up a gravel road up to Mount Tam, and rode like howler monkeys on fresh tarmac on the way down.
Another great bonus from the ride was that I finally got to meet @Nate, who has been part of our community since 2010 or so. We’ve had several near-misses over the years but this time it finally worked out. He and Bicycle Time‘s editor Gary Boulanger took me for a lovely ride around the bay on Friday and a nice dinner in Cow Hollow. It was great meeting two longtime friends in one sitting. The next day was 100km covering about 2020 meters of climbing along breathtaking scenery with a great group of riders. Here is @Nate’s report from the ride and signing.
Yours in Cycling,
Frank
—
The Rules booksigning juggernaut rolled into SF last weekend, in the person of Keeper Frank. I’ve been trying to get @frank down here for a ride for a couple of years, and it finally came to pass.
Friday evening Gary Boulanger and I took Frank for a ride over the Golden Gate Bridge. Once we got off the bridge I thought we’d be out of the wind, but there was still a good bit of it. Thankfully we had the Dutch Monkey with us to punch a hole in it. There were some postride refreshments but no staying up till 1 am drinking this time around.
Back at the San Francisco Rapha Club on Saturday morning the Giro was being shown in HD on two large screens, and espresso was consumed. @HMBSteve was there, along with a large contingent of Rapha club ride regulars. In celebration of the Rules, the start of the Giro, and the recently-offered Rapha Pantani jersey (beautiful piece of kit, if you have the scalatorissimo to pull it off) we had some serious climbing on tap.
After a briefing by Eric, our able ride leader, the group of about 30 headed out, once again across the Golden Gate Bridge. Our double paceline soon found itself strung out on the slopes of Mt. Tamalpais. The second half of the climb was on Railroad Grade, a gravel fire road, which was a blast – feasible on road bikes, but in sections you had to pick your line, and often the surface was quite rough. The only thing for it was to hammer as hard as possible so as not to lose momentum.
After a stop at the top of the mountain, we descended to the ocean, rode along the coast, worked our way back over the flanks of Mt. Tam, and headed back to San Francisco. Passing through the Presidio, Eric took us by the headquarters of Lucasfilm, where Star Wars obsessions were duly indulged.
Back at the Rapha Club, @frank, aided by some Chimay, signed every copy of The Rules in the club. It was very cool to see how the Rules resonate with so many fellow cyclists, whether they have only recently taken up the sport, or have been at it for most of their lives. And it was a blast to share our fine local roads with @frank.
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If you're determined to have something orange on your skull, I can't recommend this model highly enough.
@frank Is that the Giro Aeon? I'd be interested in a report on that as it looks like our team will be in Giro helmets next season and I need to choose one.
Probably get an Air Attack too.
What's going on in the regroup pic with the guy in the pink jersey?
been riding with the poc octal for a couple weeks now. long (>6hrs in 90F heat), short, rain, racing, racing in the rain. if you ignore what it looks like in pictures on your head, and it fits your head shape, its the bomb. adjustable, light, and seems to decrease neck/shoulder/trap stiffness post ride. YMMV. only problem is that one has to pay for it. I'm trying to rationalize a second one to setup permanently for commuting with a light and contour videocam.
@Rom
Frank told him to raise his saddle, and he figured the only way to do so and still reach the bars was to detach his torso. Commitment.
Not sure if it's aero, though.
Picture 8, is that a EPMS? Or has your saddle shat itself?
@ClydesdaleChris
spare tub strapped with toe strap - old school Rules
@andrew
Huh, the guy in the red, white and black jersey is levitating as well. Interesting that he can pedal a bike all that way with legs amputated below the knee, but I suppose that when one can levitate, riding a bike without your lower legs becomes a rather small feat...
@sthilzy
@Mikael Liddy
Looking to get that this season