I rousted Frank early. The Sunday morning group ride rolls out at 6:30 am from Twin Falls. As I put bikes in the truck I saw a sky full of stars, a good indicator for a beautiful morning ride. I have been crazed to show Frank our local Sunday morning group ride and now he was on Maui it was finally going to happen. It is a casually deliberate ride along the north shore of the Haleakala volcano – the windward side, which is also the wet side. Frank is from Seattle and actually prefers to ride in the rain, I knew a little rain would not scare him off. We start at dawn to avoid the mid-day heat. A brief rain storm is a welcome way to cool off and still be dry twenty minutes later.
Some light mist was hitting the windshield as we came around the volcano, the wipers went on. This grew into a healthy, steady rain. We passed one rider using a headlight and rear flasher. I couldn’t tell who he was but I knew he was heading where we were heading. No one would be out on a bike at this hour for any other mission. When we finally pulled into the gravel parking area it was a proper wind/rain event. I wanted to invoke Peter Van Petegem’s beautiful line about how this weather was good for us. If the sun was over the horizon, no light was penetrating the clouds. My wife pulled up in a second car just long enough to curse the weather gods, bid us a fond farewell and head to a drier, warmer part of the island for a more civilized ride. Most reasonable people would have done just that.
We are not reasonable people. A few more unreasonable guys showed up. A reasonable girlfriend/cyclists was overjoyed to hear my wife had departed, she did too, leaving her shivering man and his bike behind. Starting a long ride wet is never great but it is warm here and we would get some dry and sun eventually. This group of unreasonable cyclists rolled out in good spirits. This was the Sunday group ride.
Frank had his new ultra-light carbon climbing wheels and their braking in wet conditions needed to be understood. He likes his brake calipers set very open (which I don’t get) but it made the testing even more exciting. Even my aluminum rims were only partially effective on roads this wet, I felt like I was pulling on the levers half the ride. Frank said the carbon rims worked well in these conditions; he could feel warm water coming off the wheels in the corners.
We reached the half-way point where coffee and food are enjoyed at an outdoor but sheltered picnic table. This was by far the wettest of these rides I’ve ever done. I’m not sure the rain stopped for one minute. Frank was in his element; talking cycling and being wet. Even through the rain and mist he understood this was a special route.
From our coffee stop in Nahiku, the strong continue on to Hana and the not-as-strong start the long initial climb back, happy the climbing will eventually put some warmth under the soaked lycra. Frank went to Hana, I headed back.
A friend and I spent the return ride diagnosing an annoying click coming from his bike. The rain never let up. Every descent was done squinting into the wet, hoping the piss poor visibility was sufficient to avoid mayhem. A moment behind another rider meant a face full of water coming off his rear wheel.
By the time I returned to the truck I had eaten everything in my pockets and rifled the glove box in the vain hope of finding something else edible. Every part of my kit was soaked many times through. Frank returned a bit later, buoyant, not the least bit annoyed at the weather. This was not a Rule #9 ride; we were not bad-asses for going out in these conditions, but we are not normal people.
This was a great ride.
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@frank I was 3:41:49--a whopping 5.9 secs too fast. I must have miscalculated the advantage of your new Café Roubaix wheels. Good enough for 2nd place?
@wiscot I'm with you, brother. I spent the holiday in West Bend. Never got above -3 or -4C, and there was 31cm of snow. Glad to be back in Colorado.
@graham d.m.
Yeah. Massachusetts boy. Not too far from Milton, snoov!
@wiscot
Stand by. Photo of my bike with lezyne mini-pump on down-tube will appear shortly. Not everything is going in my damn pockets, FFS, despite Frank's admonitions.
Speaking of warm water, it was 40C plus today in Melbourne and the water in the pool is a bath like 33C degrees.
I read of you guys battling cold and crap weather in the North, down here it is so hot. But great dry heat, not humid.
@anotherdownunder
Reminds me of a beautiful poem about the Australian summer by Abigail Elizabeth McIntyre;
'An Aussie Summer ' a poem by Abigail Elizabeth McIntyre
Fuck, It's HOT !
@anotherdownunder
yeah it hit a lazy 46 here in Adelaide today...apparently it'll cool down before I head out tomorrow morning.
After weeks of sub zero, the last few days have seen East Scotland in balmy double figures. 12 deg C today, global warming having a positive effect at last. 3 deg more and it's shorts weather. Must shave the guns again though. I had been relying on that extra insulating layer under the roubaix lycra...
@Gianni I had the privilege to ride the West Maui loop in September. The VMH allowed me a day to get up at 6AM to get the loop in one morning. Could not beleive how many other cyclists were out there. I started in Lahaina then went over to the tropical side and on way back had the winds at my back and averaged 45 KPH on final 25 KM on my beaten down guns.
Too scared to Climb up Haleakala, maybe next time! Did not want to die on my VMH. Broke one of the rules and rode up for one of those sunrise tours and rode down though. I regret that decision mightily.
@bdias85
Good on ya. The east maui loop is a real beauty.
You are wise. it's not a ride to be taken lightly. Those downhill tours are rubbish, sorry you got sucked into that. Better to ride up to the park entrance and descend down as fast as you want on a nice road bike.