At the halfway point, there was plenty of this:
The “aid station” was stocked with all sorts of booze,
including beer, whiskey, and tequila (courtesy of Drunk Cyclist.)
Most people drank a lot. In fact,
we drank so much that it was hard to tell that we were “racing.”
Just ask Daisy Dukes Guy:
Or Unicorn Man:
Even Sandie the school girl got in on the action, discussing the
finer points of 40oz drinking with Wonder Wo-Man:
Mandy was there, and asked if I was having fun. I was riding my bike and drinking, so I
answered in the affirmative. As much as
we wanted to though, we couldn’t stay there all day.
A group of us took off from the rest stop…
Every single one of us drunk as shit.
We crossed the road and hit some more trails, and they went
up, up, up again. All of us were
suffering, but at least the alcohol numbed the pain a little bit. When we got to the top, there was a fun
downhill section. I flew through it,
taking the worst lines possible. I was
full of confidence because I was pretty much wasted, and luckily I didn’t bust
my ass. I think our whole group rode
better because of that rest stop.
We exited the singletrack into a clearing, with no course
markings in sight. We were
lost…again. Daisy Dukes Guy and Wonder
Wo-Man did their best to help figure out where we were.
They took off down the hill, but the rest of us weren’t sure
if that was the way to go. We hung back
and had another beer, and then we decided to back track. We eventually rolled up on the course sweeper
with a couple of other guys, and he directed us to the turn we missed. We had a pretty good group of drunken idiots
riding along trying to survive, and we rode like that for a while.
At one point when we stopped to regroup, I happened to look
down and notice something on Sandie’s fork.
That pretty much summed it all up.
We kept going, having no idea how far we had to go. I heard someone say we had twelve miles to
go, and I wondered if I could make it.
As the alcohol wore off, the suffering increased. I decided that I didn’t want to be out there
anymore, so I picked up the pace and left everyone behind. I was hurting, but at that point I had no
choice. I popped out of the trail and
into a parking lot, and I thought that I was almost finished. I was way wrong. I crossed the road and headed up a steep
climb, full of switchbacks that seemed to go on forever. I eventually made it to the top.
I forgot to mention that I grabbed a beer to go, and used my
Awesome
Strap to hold it in place.
After all that shit I still had a little more gravel road
climbing. I felt like it took forever,
and there was no end in sight. I started
to think I was gonna die out there in the woods, and no one would ever find
me. Buzzards were circling overhead,
wairing for me to fall over and take my last breath.
Just then, I hit a long section of really fast, swoopy
downhill stuff. It was fun as hell, but
I kept wondering when the next climb would come. I was tired, but I still had a smile on my
face from all the fun stuff.
And just like that I heard a crowd of people cheering and I
saw a bridge up ahead.
I had just finished the most horrible and most fun thing
I’ve ever done. Six hours in the saddle on one gear, well over thirty
miserable miles, and a shitload of alcohol.
I really enjoyed Single Speed USA , and I’m glad I made
the trip up there. Big thanks to George
and Mandy (and anyone else around there that helped) for hosting a kick ass
bike event.
Maybe tomorrow I’ll get into the aftermath.
3 comments:
lol. Solid write up. I agree, the riding hurt way more when the alcohol started to wear off. Such a fun fun day. Can't wait for SSUSA MN ;-)
Looks like the XXC sticker was very appropriate.
http://xxcmag.com/merch/xxc-sticker-packs
it was great to finally meet you in person, glad you made it up here and managed to survive SSUSA.
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