Category: Cycling
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Day 11: Austin Junction
Distance: 60 avg: 9.6 Me and John rode the whole day together, which provided some good company and some interesting conversations. The day was 52 miles of climbing, sometimes slow, sometimes more. Plus another 8 or so miles of downhill. We ran into some heavy rain but went through it fine and dried off. We…
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Day 10: Dayville
Distance: 85 avg: 13.6 Today’s biking was probably some of the best I’ve ever seen. A couple quick climbs and some amazing downhill that went on forever. I pushed my Surly up to 37.2 mph. I probably could have gone faster but chickened out. 😛 Last night another ‘cycling enthusiast’ showed up at camp. His…
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Day 9: Gone Fishing!
Trout fishing that is! Today was a rest day and I had a mission: learn to fish! I haven’t fished since I was 10, and everywhere I went there were people fishing. People even had fish-shaped mailboxes. So I felt it was time. I got some tips from the locals. My fishing guru became Wally,…
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Day 8: Ochoco Lake
Distance: 66 avg: 13.6 Due to the problems on the mountains earlier today had a fair amount of delays. I had to repair my brakes to the point that I could get to Sisters. I also ripped my trousers yesterday and had to sew them up. Strangely I brought a sewing kit( thanks paola) but…
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Day 7: Suttle Lake
Distance: 48 avg: 9.1 Today was the first day where I brushed with death. I knew today would be intense but it turned out to be extremely dangerous. The day started well enough. It rained through the night, but the clouds released and a beautiful morning shined through. I got on my bike and headed…
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Day 6: Blue River
Distance 62 miles avg: 12.6 Today I had some equipment issues to deal with. My sleeping bag is not warm enough for the coming weather. Plus overall my clothing is not warm enough and it was mostly cotton. So today I replaced a lot of my gear and got some new stuff. It was quite…
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A new method for thawing ground beef!
One of the fastest ways to change the temperature of something is to pass air over it. This is the most efficient heat transfer method, ‘convection’. So I took a pound of frozen ground beef and strapped it to my bike. And voilà, 15 miles later and it’s totally thawed!
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If you like giant apple fritters
The university of Oregon has the biggest. And yes, I ate the whole thing, to my own detrement.
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Days 4 & 5: Corvallis & Eugene
Day 4: distance 51 miles avg: 12.6 Day 5: distance 47 miles avg: 13.9 They don’t call it adventure cycling for nothing:
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Day 3: Grand Ronde
Distance: 67 miles avg: 11.6 As a desert-dweller I don’t cope well with cold And rain. My main problem seems to be staying dry. Your body sweats loads in the desert but you don’t notice it. Mostly it evaporates immediately. In Oregon that sweat doesn’t evaporate. I wish my body had a configurable parameter for…