It never gets easier, you just go faster.
– Greg LeMond
Rule #5 looms above the other Rules in terms of sheer relevance to Cycling; it is the fundamental building block upon which this sport is built. The Five is what drives us, it is the force that springs from a well that flows deep within each of us. It must be discovered, and then we learn to use it. Like all wells, our individual Five Well is but an access points into a vast source, one that flows unseen between many other wells and is spread over enormous distances. The Five binds us all together as brothers and sisters along the path to La Vie Velominatus; we may learn to access The V and we may learn to use it but we can never control it.
If Rule #5 is the fundamental building block of our sport, then Rule #10 is its fundamental application. There is a climb I frequently ride that starts from the Twentynine Pines Campground on the Teanaway Road North Fork Road out of Cle Elum that snakes up to Esmeralda Basin at the foot of the Enchantments (which is possibly the most beautiful place on Earth). The climb isn’t difficult in itself; 355 meters gained over 15 kilometers on good gravel at a modest alpine elevation of 800m.
One of the beautiful aspects of climbing is that a moderate gradient can in many ways be more challenging than a steep one; steep slopes will force you to tap into your reserves very quickly, but they also offer no alternative but to continue grinding away. A moderate gradient has more to do with will and determination; the slope doesn’t take its pound of flesh in itself – the difficulty of the climb comes from the willingness of the rider to push themselves into the red through sheer determination.
The climb to Esmeralda Basin starts fast along a faux-plat with lots of washboard that forces the rider to dodge along the road in search of the best surface. By the time the gradient starts to increase, the legs will be dull from dodging through the bumpy terrain and the mind will already feel tired from the strain of concentration, much like it does at the end of a secteur of pavé. At this point, the washboards are more scarce, but the quality of the gravel surface also deteriorates. The high speeds can still be maintained, but this requires immense focus as you still need to pick your line carefully while maintaining the force of the effort and resisting the ever-increasing desire to relent.
The last five kilometers are steeper and on the worst surface, with rain having carved erratic ruts and mud, gravel and debris collecting in loose deltas along their bases. But the various trailheads along the way means the road near the top is lined with cars which make you feel like you’re climbing to a summit finish at the Tour de France; the final push is made easier via a bit of adrenaline from this fantasy, but it only speeds the journey into hypoxia. Into the parking lot at the top, panting like a rabid gorilla cause strangers to peer at you askance wondering if you are dying or just crazy. To most of them, the idea does not occur that you might be both.
It is no coincidence that Rule #5 plus Rule #5 equals Rule #10; how hard a climb is follows from how hard we are willing to push ourselves. There is no such thing as an easy climb; it isn’t the gradient that causes one to suffer – it is magnitude of the effort.
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Keep it up.
A-Merckx
Add kilos to your body frame and every climb is simply mind over matter and keeping the pistons pumping and grinding whilst mentally fighting the thoughts of changing the cassette/ratios to make it easier the next time.
@frank - another typically excellent and reflective piece. It seems almost axiomatic that the climbs never actually get easier if you are pursuing the V. We establish goals to get to the top faster than the last time or in a different gear or perhaps.....without stopping. If, with each ride, we try to better our last, the climb will always feel as if the Man with the Hammer is behind the next tree. Attaining these goals is rarely accomplished in a straight line up and to the right. I encounter setbacks and disappointments, but, like other Velominati more accomplished than I, the measure of the will is in the next ride. Your article is inspiring as there are many hills in our region and I truly love the feeling when arriving at the summit; but somehow, the climb itself is, for me, even more rewarding than the view or the descent. "Resisting the ever-increasing desire to relent" - brilliant stuff.
The hour is never shorter than the hour
The summit never moves from its perch
The curves of the path never straighten
It never gets easier, you only go faster
The best rules are the ones with which compliance demands trips to the pain cave. (Rule 9 is my personal favorite.) Any Fred Wanker can kit up in flawless Rapha with his flipped stem slammed to his headset and his quick-releases angled attractively. All the Dura Ace in the world won't un-drop you OR your hairless legs.
Some people strip-mine their V-reserves dry and go fracking for more, because there's more hill to climb, or more road to explore, or because home is far away. Some people coast downhill at 25kph on Sundays. You can look the part, but if you're with cyclists who work, and you haven't done your pain cave time, it always shows.
@sthilzy
IS THAT A CREATOR JOKE?
Brilliant piece Frank, there's a local climb that's generally the measuring stick used to judge climbing ability that's 5.5k long at a steady 5% from start to finish.
To begin with, improvements were easy to come by with increases in riding time & consistency. Now however, they require a commitment to spend 15+ minutes at the bottom of the pain cave sans torch for even the most minute time saving...but the satisfaction of a tough goal achieved is so much sweeter.
It is that point where we are both the Hammer and the Nail when we truly find out what we're made of..
@Mikael Liddy
17+ minutes for some of us :(