The fall issue of the RUSA newsletter provides a list of brevets for 2003. I noted that the earliest was to be held on January 25 in Austin, Texas. In that my wife, Wanda, and I anticipated being in San Antonio visiting her son and his family about that time, I decided to include that brevet in our schedule. So we packed up the Taurus, mounted the bicycle on the roof rack and headed first for California to visit the wife's sister and nieces and then Texas, making sightseeing stops alone the way.
I got in several scenic training rides along the route: The first on US1 along the Mendocino and Sonoma coasts, two rides in southern California fighting traffic on the Pacific Coast Highway and then relaxing on the Santa Ana River bikeway, a nice ride from Tucson, Az, over Gates Pass to the Saguaro National Park and back, and finally a 70 mile ride with a seven mile, 3000 foot climb at the end in Big Bend National Park. (By the way, if you've never visited Big Bend but find yourself in west Texas, be sure to check it out - beautiful area.)
I called Russell Hahn, the Austin area RBA and apparently the ride director for all their brevets this year. He told me that the ride started from the Dell Diamonds Ballpark in Roundrock, Texas, a few miles north of Austin. (Roundrock is headquarters for Dell Computers.) I had Wanda drop me off at the park's parking lot well before the 6AM start time on a dark and misty morning and milled around with 18 others waiting for the start. About five minutes before start time someone's rear tire popped loudly - apparently preferring suicide over making the upcoming ride. We waited while its rider changed tubes and got rolling at 0610 along a smooth and fast asphalt drive out of the park. The group included three recumbents and a fold up bike. There were no women riders.
The road didn't remain smooth and fast for long but the entire group, riding at a relaxed pace, stayed together for the first four or five miles before breaking into two large groups. As bad luck (or poor planning or lack of attention) would have it I found myself riding between the two groups. Eventually the group ahead made a right turn at an intersection and then stopped about 300 yards beyond the intersection. I caught them while they were standing there discussing whether they'd come the right way. We waited to see what the slower group would do at the intersection. They went straight through. We gave chase which eventually left me, the slowest rider, behind everyone. About dawn I passed a rider whose chain had slipped off his small chainwheel. He assured me that he didn't need help so I went on to find Gary, one of the recumbent riders, waiting at the next turn for the fellow. For the whole ride Gary was diligent in ensuring that no one got lost or left too far behind.
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By now the faster riders had ridden through the slower group and were out ahead. I noted that the slower group although 300 yards ahead wasn't gaining on me so I decided to try to catch them. Eventually I did, but with an effort that I'm not sure was worth it. I could have hung back and rode up with the fellow with the slipped chain because he also caught up, though Gary on his recumbent didn't. I noticed that the locals waved at all the cars and pickups we met. Part of Texas hospitality, I guess. A while later I got to chatting with a fellow named John. I told him that I'd driven 2800 miles to ride on rough tarmac roads in 40 degree weather in the drizzle - something I could do every day at home. He said, "You should have been here Tuesday it was 89 degrees". For me it's a good thing it was cold and wet on the brevet rather than 89 degrees.
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There was only one control - at the turn around point in Cameron, Texas - but there was a convenience store at Circleville at about the 30 mile point that everyone stopped at. There I chugged a pint of chocolate milk and rode on.
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I was caught by a fellow who complemented me on my home made rear luggage rack. I briefly explained how I'd made it and then he asked about the "wheel guard". Wheel guard? Wheel guard? "Yeah, you know around the rear wheel." "Ah, you mean the fender." Now there was one dry land cyclist! (On the other hand it might be that all the duct tape I use to hold the disintegrating plastic fender together may have confused him.)
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Gary on his recumbent had arrived before I left the convenience store and I noted that the other two recumbents hadn't stopped at all so eventually I found myself with another rider drafting behind Russell. I had caught him after a couple of riders had caught me and invited me to work with them in a paceline. One of my paceline mates rode what appeared to be a brand new Lemonds Buenos Aires, the other, a Davidson. A Davidson in Texas? After a few miles I felt that I might be pushing it a bit too hard in the paceline so when we caught Russell I dropped out and tagged along behind his recumbent at an easier pace. After a few miles I became a bit embarrassed about not pulling at the front so asked Russell his views on the etiquette of a standard bike drafting behind a recumbent. He said that a recumbent doesn't get much benefit from drafting behind a standard bike and that he was just pedaling along at his own pace and that I was welcome to ride along or go on alone if I found the pace too slow.
Eventually I did find it too slow and because there was a group of seven riders not too far ahead, decided to see if I could catch them. I got to within a couple hundred yards of them before giving up the attempt. Slowly after that they increased their distance on me. But one of the group was also dropping behind. I recognized him as one of the two I'd ridden with in the paceline, the Lemonds rider. I followed him at a distance of 200, increasing to 400, yards into Cameron. About five miles out of Cameron I met the first three riders headed back to Roundrock and just as I entered the town I met another three riders headed home.
I found the bulk of cyclists at the Texas Cafe, all enjoying a sit down lunch. I sat down with Tom, the fellow I'd chased into Cameron.. We both ordered the smoked turkey sandwich with French fries. (The stuff in the sandwich turned out to be the same highly processed sawdust and meat from artificial turkeys that we're served three times a week at the cafeteria where I work. I should have ordered a hamburger.) Tom was from Indianapolis. He had been in Houston for a meeting a couple days earlier and had rented a bike in Austin for the ride. When I told him that I was from Washington state he introduced me to the other rider of our short-lived three-man paceline, Guy Oldfield, from Richland, Washington. Guy had been a SIR member in 1999 and was again getting into biking. He was in Texas for a meeting in San Antonio on the following Monday and had brought his own bike, the Davidson, along.
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While trying to finish off my so-called turkey sandwich I poured over the route sheet. Although the route was basically an out and back, some extra distance had been added to the beginning of the ride in order to make it long enough, thus the last ten or so miles were not going to be on the same roads as we'd ridden in the morning. Tom, whose rented bicycle didn't have a computer, was relying on others to show him the way. He asked if I knew the way back and I said, "I think so", trying to make it sound like an indecisive "I think so". He must have heard a decisive yes because he said, "In that case I'll follow you back". Sounded like a lot of responsibility to me.
Before leaving Cameron I had to cross the street to a convenience store to buy some Gatoraide to replenish my liquid supply. There I met Gary and Pat - Pat also on a recumbent. Half of the others who'd eaten at the cafe had already left by the time Pat, Gary, Guy, Tom and I left the control. There were no riders behind us. Russell had apparently pulled into town, gotten his brevet card signed and headed back without much of a stop. Eventually Gary and Pat stopped to remove clothing. Tom, Guy and I rode on.
The area for the first 30 miles or so east of Roundrock is mostly farm land - pretty typical looking mid-western countryside - something you see from eastern South Dakota to, obviously, east Texas, and from eastern Nebraska to central Ohio. But slowly, going out to Cameron, the tilled fields become fewer and the pastures more frequent until it's all pastureland - not range land such as one sees further west, but fenced pasture fields.
I saw two eastern blue birds on the ride and a dead owl on the shoulder. Sighting the blue birds was a pleasure. They were common when I was a kid in Michigan in the 50's but I seldom get to see them anymore. They winter in eastern Texas. The dead owl - one of the larger species, caused an entirely different emotion. Road kill doesn't normally bother me - there's too much of it to be shocked over its existence. But I can't recall ever seeing a road-killed owl. I seldom see owls other than perhaps a swoop of white in the car's headlights a couple times a year. To me owls are mysterious, nocturnal flying animals - something just beyond the normal. It's a shock to see one killed in such a common fashion - as though it were nothing more than a deer or opossum.
There were nine or ten of us that gathered at the convenience store at Circleville. There I downed another pint of chocolate milk and we all started back to Roundrock together. After several hours of intermittent heavy mist and light drizzle it now began to rain. There were 21 miles left.. About a mile from the convenience store Guy had a flat and Gary, ever attendant to his flock of cyclists (I suppose they're called herds in Texas) stayed with him as did Tom and two other riders. Russell, Pat, John and two others whose names I can't remember (one of whom had lived in Vancouver, B.C., and had ridden a bike from Vancouver to San Francisco) and I went on. Eventually the four of us on standard bikes dropped Russell and Pat on their recumbents. For much of the rest of the ride John explained to me the meteorological and cultural differences between Austin and Dallas (Austin is a much better place to live - not as windy and not as cold and you don't have to put up with the yuppies and their pampered offspring of Plano, a suburb of Dallas), about how the freeways in Houston were once the pride of the state but were now a disgrace, etc. John had ridden Paris Brest Paris in 95 and 99 but has been out of a job for the past year and probably won't be able to afford to go back this year.
The four of us arrived at the finish in 10:04. A good time for me. The route had numerous gentle hills - gentle enough that I never once shifted out of my middle chain ring. That, and riding with others most of the way, even with the rather lengthy lunch break in Cameron, made the ride faster than the three other 200s I have done. Wanda was waiting for me when we arrived and by the time I'd changed some clothes and mounted the bicycle on the car roof, the others arrived. After having Russell sign my brevet card and shaking hands with some of the fellows and telling Guy that I'd see him in the spring I hopped into the Ford and we started our long drive back to the Pacific Northwest.