More Day 7 Photos

Tony here...
With Sam and the rest of Team Will putting in an inordinate amount of time on a bike today (I know ... as though the previous eight days didn't include an inordinate amount of time on a bike), there won't be a Day 9 journal just yet. So, I'm going to post some additional photos of Shift 1 from Day 7:

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John's Day 7 Journal: Brother Tony Joins the Fun

Brother Tony here again. Sam, or "Sammy," as his fellow riders call him, asked me to write today's entry to provide another perspective. Whoa, here goes ...

Sam’s Route:
New Hartford, IL, to Findlay, IL
Tony’s Route: Assumption, IL, to Findlay, IL
Total Miles-Sam: 121.5 planned
Miles Sam Road: 104
Miles Tony Road: 16
To-Date Total-Sam: 730
Sum Total-Tony: 16
Weather: Beautiful; perfect, really; overcast; great tailwinds

Highlights
Shift 1 of Team Will rode up to where I had been waiting on the corner of a big farmhouse in Assumption, IL. They stopped to get off their bikes and let Mom and Dad park the van. After giving me a big hug, Sam introduced me to the rest of the team. They took drinks of water, some went to the van to grab quick munchies, and Sam did a quick assessment of my attire and bike to make sure I had everything I would need for our ride. Don, having already gotten his century (100 miles) in for the day, said he’d ride in the van the rest of the way. Before getting back on the bike, Brian said he’d ride in the van, too, because his other knee now giving him real trouble. So for my ride to Findlay, Jonathon, Mark, Ray, and Sam would help me—Poseur Extraordinaire—ride the easy Illinois country road east to Findlay.

Look, I know this is pathetic. To put things in scale for you, joining a team who is riding bicycles across the country for a 16-mile stretch is roughly equivalent to joining someone running a marathon for about eight strides of the race. By the time they reach D.C., most Team Will riders will have been on their bicycles for 1,000 miles. For 80 hours. And here I am, just having two weeks ago excavated the bicycle I bought from my college roommate over 20 years ago from somewhere deep in my garage, thinking it’d be some big deal for me to ride for an hour with them. It
is pathetic. But for me it was a big deal if for no other reason than to be able to catch a glimpse of their experience.

When Sam told me he was planning, in his 50th year on the planet, to ride his bicycle across the United States, I knew he’d do it. In the past, he’d planned to run a marathon, planned to ride in a 100-mile bicycle race, planned to get an accounting degree, planned to marry a beautiful woman, planned to ride in a 200-mile bicycle race, planned to have wonderful children, planned to start his own business, etc., and he’d done all those things. No, the surprise would have been if Sam hadn’t ridden his bike across the country in his 50th circle around the sun.

And that’s the thing about Sam. If it were me, I’d be talking about these things with a sort of macho, I’m-cooler-than-you-and-the-rest-of-humanity braggadocio that no one could stop without slapping me in the face, and the slap would only create a pause so I could brag some more. (Case in point: I’m about to brag about my runner’s equivalent of eight-strides-in-a-marathon.) Sam, instead, does these things just because he thinks they’d be cool to do while living this life. Because they’d be fun. Because they’d be a challenge. Because they would be accomplishments. Because he thought that watching the sun rise over a Kansas wheat field would be a genuinely bitchin’ thing to experience. The last time I heard Sam mention that he’d completed the San Francisco Marathon was, oh, about the time Sam completed the San Francisco Marathon. To put things in scale for you, just yesterday I was bragging because
we rode Seguays around San Francisco two weeks ago. (Though to be fair, Sam does brag in every holiday letter about being married to that beautiful woman and having those wonderful kids.)

When we set out from Assumption, Mark took the lead, Jonathan was next, poseur boy third, Sam behind me, and Ray pulling the back while the van, with flashing lights, drove behind us. Sam was coaching me—“stay close to Jonathon,” “ride in a straight line”—while we took things slowly at first (slowly, as in 17-18 mph.) “Okay, speed things up,” Sam yelled to the rest of the team when he's confident I’m not going to bring the bike train to a halt with a spectacular crash. The rest of the group gives Sam hell for barking orders. “He’s been this way the whole ride,” Ray jokes. “He’s impossible to ride with.” Mark picks up the pace and pretty soon we’re all hitting 24-25 mph.

Day 7-05Sign

The interaction between riders is casual, light, fun. I hear Mark and Jonathon talking ahead of me, apparently continuing a conversation that had probably begun much earlier in the ride, maybe in Nevada. Ray’s jabbering with Sam, Sam’s giving me the occasional correction. The pace is brisk, no doubt, and I’m actually not slowing the group down. Jonathan asks how I’m doing and I tell him that as long as I’m able to answer his questions that I’m okay. “When I stop talking, I’ll be too busy breathing,” I tell him. Jonathon says, “It’s when I’m not breathing that I worry about. Like in the Rockies.”

Mark pulls the team for much of the first part of the ride. With the tailwinds helping us along—“This is the easiest century I’ve ever ridden,” Sam says later, crediting the tailwinds—Mark keeps a good pace without quickly tiring out. As Mark finally falls back and Jonathan moves to draft the group from the lead, I hesitantly (but with all the confidence I can muster) tell Jonathan that I’d be willing to lead when it’s my turn. “Just don’t give me a hill to climb,” I request. I should have known something was up when Jonathan didn’t respond.

Earlier in the day, I drove along this route in my car to try to get a feel for what I was getting myself into. Alone in the car I thought the stretch seemed a long one to ride on a bike, almost intimidatingly so for someone who’s spent all post-college years mastering the art of a non-physical, sedentary lifestyle. This stretch had more hills than I had anticipated by looking at MapQuest. In the car, I’d mark the miles in my head using the Imperial Valley Odometer I developed as a kid—“okay, this is El Centro to Imperial (three miles); the rest of the ride is Imperial to the other side of Brawley (12 miles)”—and I have to admit I was starting to doubt if I could really do the ride with a team of real riders who had ridden 700 miles to get here.

Assumption to Findlay
Assumption, IL, to Findlay, IL; A Whole 16 Miles

But here I was. We’re more than halfway between the equivalent of El-Centro-to-Brawley when Jonathan peels off from the lead and gives me drafting duties. “Whoa, here goes,” I think. In front of me, a nice long downhill, some flatland, and a very un-nice long uphill. That's the biggest hill on this stretch, I remember from my earlier scouting. I remind myself that after we get up the hill that we’ll have roughly an El-Centro-to-Imperial distance to Findlay, where we’ll meet up with Shift 2 for the handoff. As we easily descend the downhill, I’m trying to figure out how to peel off the lead before the uphill begins without looking like too much of a whimp. The real riders give me votes of confidence as I draft them through the downhill and flatland at fun speeds, though, so I decide to take a crack at the uphill. When the climb begins, our 24-25 mph pace becomes 19-20 mph, but I’m still doing okay. About halfway up the hill I realize there’s no more answering questions as my breathing is taking priority over talking. Still maintaining about 20 mph, my legs are feeling heavy and wobbly at the same time. Sam says, comfortingly, “Tony, don’t worry … we all struggle through these.” Knowing I can’t keep up the pace and fearing that I’ll slow the team down too much, I decide about three-quarters of the way up the hill to peel off the lead. As I fall back, the real riders give me “attaboy”s and “way-to-go”s as they pass me. These guys are like that.

By the time we’re over the hill Jonathan, Mark, and Ray are about 25 yards ahead with Sam falling back with me. Sam kindly drafts for me at a leisurely 20 mph pace so I can catch my breath before we pick it up again. By the time we hit Findlay and roll in for the handoff, we’re about a 30 seconds behind the other three, which is much less of a drag than the 20-30 minutes Sam had feared my participation would create. So while I wasn’t able to get the team up the entire hill, I didn’t bring the team to a complete halt, either. I have that going for me.

Day 7-07Mark and Tony After the Ride
Mark and Tony, After the Day 7 Ride

I made it, a full hour's ride with a team of real riders. To a man, Shift 1 seemed very cool about having me along. Instead of making feel like the amateur rider I am, they welcomed me into their group for the equivalent of eight-marathon-strides and made the experience a good one. Once off our bikes at the middle school parking lot in Findlay, the team put the bikes on the van, enjoyed a beverage, posed for pictures, chatted up Shift 2—who had just arrived from a hospital visit—and handed them the flag. Shift 2 then took off from Findlay to carry the flag to the next destination and to Shift 3, who this morning passed the flag back to our Shift 1 at the Indiana-Ohio border. This pace will continue for two more days.

After our bike ride yesterday, Sam rode with me in the car from Findlay, freeing up a little space in the van for the other riders for a short while. We fueled up in Findlay, went to a bar-b-que thrown by ride organizers in Charlseton, IL, then drove to Indianapolis. Sam and I talked during the ride about his experiences so far—“It’s amazing what your body can do when ask it. I’ve ridden the equivalent of seven centuries in seven days.”—and he downloaded pictures to my computer. Sam explained that after a typical day’s ride he’ll take a quick nap in the van, write his day's journal entry for the blog, and make at least a couple phone calls before rolling into their hotel. At the hotel, assuming the Internet connection is good, he'll send me his journal entry and some pictures for the blog, quickly check his e-mail, and get as much sleep as he can.

After 16 miles on a bike and a slew of miles in the car, I was totally exhausted when I got home near Chicago at 11:00 last night. One day, 16 miles by bike, hundreds of miles by car, and I was wiped. Unlike Shift 1 of Team Will, though, I woke up in my own bed this morning and didn’t get back up on my bike. If yesterday was indeed an easy ride, I wish for nothing but tailwinds for Team Will for the remainder of the ride. All thanks to Shift 1 for letting me get a glimpse into their Herculean experience.

Day 7-08Sam and Tony

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Day 7 Photos

My brother Tony joined us for the last hour of Sunday's leg through Illinois and he'll provide a third-party perspective of our efforts in a journal entry Monday morning. For now, here are some photos from Sunday's ride.

Day 7-01Arriving In Assumption
Shift 1 Arriving in Assumption, IL

Day 7-02In Line
Mark, Jonathan, and Ray Getting Tony Up to Speed

Day 7-03Coming In
Sam and Tony, Arriving in Findlay, IL

Day 7-04Shift 1 Plus 1
Team Will, Shift 1 Plus 1, Day 7

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Day 5 and 6 Photos

A couple photos from our ride through Kansas:

Day 5-Sunrise Over Kansas
Day 5 Sunrise

Day 6-Kansas Road
Day 6 Sunrise

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John's Day 4 Journal: Our Day In the Rockies* (With An Asterisk)

Total Miles: 122.7 planned; 115 actual
Miles I Road: 94
To Date Total: 424
Weather: 60 degrees in the morning 80 degrees at end of ride; light cross wind; GREAT riding weather

Highlights
Well, all good things must come to an end. They say that when you do an endurance event such as this, the fourth and fifth days are the true test. My friend Clay had told me that you are pumped up on adrenaline the first three days but by day four the physical toll will come to bare. Boy, was he right. Our team fought the demons and about every other obstacle we could come across, but in the end we all climbed the last 2,000 feet of the Continental Divide—only the highest peak you can ride in America—and the world became grand once again.

The morning started typical enough with a 2:45 wake-up call and then a drive to a transfer point for shifts. This cost us time and calls between teams to meet up. Once on the road we immediately made a wrong turn in the dark that cost us an additional eight miles. Various other obstacles—including wrong turns and washed-out bike paths—ended up costing us almost three hours in delays and with the desire to climb at least a portion of the Continental Divide; we ended up cutting short a portion of the ride toward the end to ferry forward to the Divide.

But that was only a portion of what I dealt with today. The real problems occurred within me. The toll of 3-to-4-1/2 hours of sleep over the course of the last four nights, 330 miles of bike riding the prior three days, along with the additional travel finally hit me like a 2x4 across the head. I had several “come to Jesus” conversations with myself and the mental fatigue would rush through me so hard I thought I would fall off the bike and pass out. Then, during one of those conversations with myself, I remembered that this is all part of the process. The challenge is partly physical, to be sure, but the real challenge lives within yourself. With that, things changed for me. It was still painful but much more exciting and in the end the prize was standing at the top of a mountain knowing I could overcome anything.

I haven’t yet introduced the rest of my team but now is a good time. There are six of us. In all, we have been around this earth for a combined 288 years. Everything starts with Jonathon, for he is the common tie that got all of us together. He comes from biking pedigree, with both parents hard core riders even in their 70’s. He just rides and when you ask him how he is doing, it is always “okay”. For him, this is only another mark on his riding achievements, without him we all would be lost.

Mark is another riding machine, is of good temperament, and puts up with me the most as we are van riding partners on this trip.

Brain, at 38, is the kid. He’s quiet and a solid rider but has been dealing with a knee problem that swells like an apple after he rides. But when you ask about the knee, he only says it getting better.

Ray is the oldest at 55 years of age, has been riding for three years but is strong. He has a great sense if humor and provides a good balance between us all.

Don is 46. He’s also been riding for just a few years. He keeps things light and still is learning the ropes but his tenancy is unequal.

Along with
Mom & Dad, who I mentioned before, this is the crew I now live with day and night. We eat, sleep, and ride together day and night. We are all in this together. By this time we could be at others throats but instead we have only grown closer. We all are determined but joke openly with each other. In all, a great bunch of guys.

Day 4-Jonathon&Mark
Jonathon and Mark

Day 4-Don-CLimbing The Divide
Don Climbing the Divide

Day 4-Glenwood Bike Trail-Rockies
Glenwood Bike Trail, the Rockies

Day 4-Team 1 at the Top
Team 1 at the Top

Day 4-Me -I feel GREAT
Me. I Feel Great!

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More Day 1 & 2 Photos

Here are some additional photos from our trek:

Day 2 - Don from Behind
Day 2 - Don

Day 2 - 1st Summit-Nevada
Day 2 - The Shift 1 Riders


Day 1 - Typical Riding
Day 1 - Typical Riding

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John's Day 1 Journal: One In the Books

Route: San Francisco, CA, to Sacramento, CA
Total Day's Miles: 123.01
Miles I Rode: 123.01
Weather: Overcast in the Bay Area 52-60 degrees; around 85 degrees at end of ride.

Morning Starrt-Day1
Shift 1 Riders

Highlights
Up at 3:00 after a restless night’s sleep in anticipation of what about to come. Dipped our tires in the Pacific Ocean with the Golden Gate Bridge as a backdrop. We were all excited about getting things started. Riding over the Golden Gate Bridge is pretty dramatic way to start a trip such as this. Do you know they lock the gates on the Golden Gate every night ‘til 5:00 in the morning? We know now!! As we stared hopelessly across the bridge, now trying to plan how we would make up our lost time, a bike rider appeared out of the fog from the other side, stopped, and pushed a big red button that said “TO OPEN GATE PUSH RED BUTTON.” So went the first hour in the dark as we navigated the many turns on the route. When the road opened up it was all fun as tailwinds provided us the needed push to get to Sacramento on time for a “Kick-Off” rally event at the state capital. We had a police escort—cool stuff. The rally was a powerful way to realize the importance of our trip. It’s about recognizing and bringing awareness to childhood cancer, the number one killer of children from disease in America.

There are 14 riders working three shifts. There is also a support crew of about ten who drive the sag wagons (vans) and set-up events we will be attending. There is also a film and photo crew.

Because of the event at the capital, we didn’t leave until after 4:00 pm, finally ate, and traveled our way to our next stage in Lovelock, NV, 240 miles away.

I’m feeling surprising well but the test begins tomorrow as our bodies attempt to adjust to the multiple long days.

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Sacramento Rally Photos

Brother Tony yet again...

Piper has shared photos from yesterday's rally in Sacramento.
Click here to view a quick slideshow of yesterday's event.

Team Will 50
Sam Arriving at Team Will's Sacramento Rally

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The First Shift Riders

Here are the Shift 1 riders:

Shift 1 Riders
Left to right: Brian, Ray, Jonathon, Mark, me, Don

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The Route

Here's a picture of the map of our route. (Click on the map to see a full-sized version. 6.1 MB.)

RouteMap-700

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The Preparation

Preparing for this ride was a two-pronged effort. The first prong involved putting some miles on our wheels to get in shape and prepare to ride such long distances daily. Here's a picture of three of us after we he completed the Davis Double, a 200-mile ride in Davis, CA:

Davis Double

The second prong of preparation had to do with fundraising. Here, Don offers up his body in a "40-Year-Old-Virgin"-type fundraiser where contributors could buy a wax strip to remove his body hair.

Fundraiser-Don-700

CORRECTION: Don wasn't waxed in this photo. Instead, someone donated money to create a razor strip down his chest and belly.

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