Metro Boston: Good ride today?
#3728
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#3729
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#3730
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I cleared a physical as well as mental hurdle on Sunday and went for my first legitimate, clipped-in, kit wearing ride since October. I took a spin around Marblehead while my wife and I were home visiting my parents. I went about seven miles, spun slowly, breathed in some ocean air, and was passed by everyone...and it was wonderful. I was sore, but I survived. I might try another short ride Wednesday morning.
Hope everyone had an enjoyable holiday!
Hope everyone had an enjoyable holiday!
We get that and you hit the nail on the head a few times describing key things we do. Spun, breathed and contemplating the next ride. Well done and it is nice to hear from you.
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I cleared a physical as well as mental hurdle on Sunday and went for my first legitimate, clipped-in, kit wearing ride since October. I took a spin around Marblehead while my wife and I were home visiting my parents. I went about seven miles, spun slowly, breathed in some ocean air, and was passed by everyone...and it was wonderful. I was sore, but I survived. I might try another short ride Wednesday morning.
Hope everyone had an enjoyable holiday!
Hope everyone had an enjoyable holiday!
#3732
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What was suposed to ba a quick jaunt on the Minuteman turned into a great ride out to Concord and Carlisle.
Minute Man, Concord, Carlisle Ride - Belmont, MA
Stopped by the farmers market in Lexington. Heard a sax player in shorts, t-shirt, and wearing a tricorne atop his head play a medley of polkas.

After hitting Concord, headed out Lowell Rd. to Carlisle, and stopped by Ferns for a snack.


Saw some turkeys on Old Bedford Rd.
Minute Man, Concord, Carlisle Ride - Belmont, MA
Stopped by the farmers market in Lexington. Heard a sax player in shorts, t-shirt, and wearing a tricorne atop his head play a medley of polkas.
After hitting Concord, headed out Lowell Rd. to Carlisle, and stopped by Ferns for a snack.
Saw some turkeys on Old Bedford Rd.
Last edited by Bishbike; 07-08-14 at 09:25 PM. Reason: pics
#3733
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In a thread on the Living Car-Free Forum, I recently corresponded with a Michigan (Lansing) subscriber to this thread, ”Sprawl-free vs. car-free:
…I think that forms of government have something to do with sprawl. In Michigan, rural areas are in townships. The townships don't have much power when it comes to zoning and planning development. In Massachusetts, I believe, the rural areas are organized into towns. The towns have more autonomy and local control when it comes to zoning and development. (If I'm understanding it right.) I believe that in some cases the Mass. Towns were able to exclude urban sprawl, while Mich. townships legally could not.
Michigan also has a very poor record on regional or metropolitan planning, especially in the Detroit metro area. I remember reading somewhere that Massachusetts and Boston metro municipalities have cooperated better.
Having lived in both metro areas, do you have any insight into why they developed so differently as far as sprawl is concerned?
Michigan also has a very poor record on regional or metropolitan planning, especially in the Detroit metro area. I remember reading somewhere that Massachusetts and Boston metro municipalities have cooperated better.
Having lived in both metro areas, do you have any insight into why they developed so differently as far as sprawl is concerned?
Thanks for your cogent reply about the governance of townships and towns. Of course much development in Michigan was determined [on a grid pattern] by the Northwest Ordinance of 1787, whereas growth in metropolitan Boston was more haphazard; it’s said that most of the major street were former cowpaths. And Boston and the East Coast were more populated in those colonial days than Michigan was in the post-colonial era, so towns grew up more compact in the pre-automotive days. There may also be a more preservationist streak in Boston than in Michigan, as you note; and I think Michiganians are more "pro-growth (development)," IMHO.
Mass transit has flourished here, with the first subway in America built in Boston, and is much more woven into the fabric of urban life.
The architectural critic of the Boston Globe a few years ago wrote a column about the “Cities of Tower and Cars” as contrasted with the “Cities of Outdoor Rooms.” The Cities of T’s and C’s were exemplified by Southfield, MI, where he was visiting. That nickname is quite apparent as you drive I-696.
Of course Boston is the City of Outdoor Rooms. As he describes it, walking through Boston is like walking through someone’s home where you look around and admire the appointments in that “room,” and then proceed through a portal into another, different “room.” I use that motif whenever I take visitors on a walking tour of downtown Boston….
Mass transit has flourished here, with the first subway in America built in Boston, and is much more woven into the fabric of urban life.
The architectural critic of the Boston Globe a few years ago wrote a column about the “Cities of Tower and Cars” as contrasted with the “Cities of Outdoor Rooms.” The Cities of T’s and C’s were exemplified by Southfield, MI, where he was visiting. That nickname is quite apparent as you drive I-696.
Of course Boston is the City of Outdoor Rooms. As he describes it, walking through Boston is like walking through someone’s home where you look around and admire the appointments in that “room,” and then proceed through a portal into another, different “room.” I use that motif whenever I take visitors on a walking tour of downtown Boston….
We arrived back in Boston on Monday, and since I had Tuesday off I did an approximately 50 mile loop from Norwood to Kenmore Square via Concord. I did my usual route through Westwood and Dover to my new-found route of Maple and Whitney to Rte 126, then northward through Framingham to Baker Bridge Rd. On my last two rides Northbound on Rte 126 (“Old Connecticut Path”) after crossing Rte 20, I have mistakenly taken Old Sudbury Rd (Rte 27) instead of Concord Rd (Rte 126), but got it right today.
A favorite rest stop at that intersection is the Wayland Depot as pictured below (file photos), but this time from peering in the window, the place looked like it might be going out of business since the inventory was sparse. Just my impression.
On Baker Bridge Rd, even after all my trips, though usually in the opposite direction coming from Boston, I had never noticed the entrance to the Gropius house, and how close it is to the road. Unfortunately I had no camera to take a picture.
My ride was about 50 miles because somewhere on Trapelo Road, likely on a fast down hill on some rugged pavement before the Cambridge Reservoir causeway, I lost my computer; my last mileage check was about 31 miles at Baker Bridge and Concord Rd. As a self-professed mileage junkie, I can’t do without my “works,” so I spent about an hour of my of my precious day off retracing my route back over two fairly steep up-and–down hills looking for it, and then another hour then going back and forth with my two bikes to my shop get a new computer installed (synchronized for both bikes).

Last edited by Jim from Boston; 07-09-14 at 06:12 AM.
#3734
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I know the guy who designed that US20 shirt, Jim. He lives in Lynn! Cool guy, did a day trip drive with him last year.
#3735
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That major road in the first picture usually has fierce traffic, but fortunately has a sidewalk for relatively safe riding. Sidewalks are not much used by pedestrians in the the extended suburbs of the Motor City.
...
We arrived back in Boston on Monday, and since I had Tuesday off I did an approximately 50 mile loop from Norwood to Kenmore Square via Concord...
...
We arrived back in Boston on Monday, and since I had Tuesday off I did an approximately 50 mile loop from Norwood to Kenmore Square via Concord...
A question, if you please. What is the legal status of riding on sidewalks in Massachusetts? I've always assumed it was discouraged and perhaps illegal by town ordnance. Arlington has such a sign where the MM comes in from the west (but of course that stops almost no one from riding the sidewalk over to A.Center and then bombing diagonally across to continue into Cambridge). If I can ride a road at all, I do that. I figure if we ever want real accommodation as vehicles then we must ride as if our bikes were real vehicles and show that fact by example. (I stop at most red lights too.)
Your Norwood-Concord route sounds interesting. One day (like real soon, yeah

__________________
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Real cyclists use toe clips.
With great bikes comes great responsibility.
jimmuller
#3736
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Jim, my understanding is that it's ok to ride on sidewalks as long as you aren't in a central business district (I think that's the official language). Of course, I saw lots of sidewalk riders in Malden and cops never enforced it (but maybe different somewhere like Arlington).
#3737
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Jim, my understanding is that it's ok to ride on sidewalks as long as you aren't in a central business district (I think that's the official language). Of course, I saw lots of sidewalk riders in Malden and cops never enforced it (but maybe different somewhere like Arlington).
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Welcome back home, JimFB.
A question, if you please. What is the legal status of riding on sidewalks in Massachusetts? I've always assumed it was discouraged and perhaps illegal by town ordnance….If I can ride a road at all, I do that. I figure if we ever want real accommodation as vehicles then we must ride as if our bikes were real vehicles and show that fact by example. (I stop at most red lights too.)
Your Norwood-Concord route sounds interesting. One day (like real soon, yeah
) I must trace it out on a map. I have never really understood how to go south from metro NW. The MassPike/Rt20/Rt9/Natick/Framingham/Newton/Wellesley complex always seems a formidable barrier.
A question, if you please. What is the legal status of riding on sidewalks in Massachusetts? I've always assumed it was discouraged and perhaps illegal by town ordnance….If I can ride a road at all, I do that. I figure if we ever want real accommodation as vehicles then we must ride as if our bikes were real vehicles and show that fact by example. (I stop at most red lights too.)
Your Norwood-Concord route sounds interesting. One day (like real soon, yeah

I too assume that riding sidewalks in Metro Boston is illegal. As I mentioned in my Michigan post, sidewalk riding is survivalistic, since most busy roads have NO shoulder. The sidewalk pictured is unique, because many side walks along those major roads end capriously and then may be present on the other side of the road further on down. Pedestrian traffic is almost nil.
I may ride a short distance on a Mass sidewalk for example within a block in a business district if I’m stopping at a store; more often to circumvent a line of cars. Right or wrong, I think of bikes as amphibious. Like an amphibian, a cross between a fish and a reptile, I use my bike as a cross between a vehicle and a pedestrian, though rarely and carefully as the latter.
IMO, the main barriers from NW Metrowest to the Southerlands are Mass Pike and Rte 9. I usually ride numbered routes in the North-South direction, such as 126, 27 and 85, but usually on early weekend days; otherwise not the most pleasant routes. If though you inspect a map closely for roads that cross Mass Pike, and usually also Rte 9, one can find nice alternatives. For example:
Hey sbp…Is your Rice Road the one that goes south from Old Connecticut Path to Comm Ave, where it becomes Oak St? …
…Yep, Rice Rd of Wayland is the 4th quarter of a favorite solo century for me [to] the swoop along the dappled Rice. Just enough twists and turns to keep you alert and just little enough traffic to feel the swoop and flow.
I'm not there yet this year but i plan to be.
Jim, heading south, I cross the Pike on Rice/Oak then first left (east) on Everett to get off Oak and Bogle to go south on Weston Rd traffic in Wellesley, Rt 16 back to Sherborn. I cross under Rt9 on Weston Rd rather than battle the noise and construction of Oak/Rt9. BTW, if one were to stay on Oak to Natick, the bridge into Natick after Bacon St Market is closed so one must climb over Walnut Hill. I go through Wellesley.
I'm not there yet this year but i plan to be.
Jim, heading south, I cross the Pike on Rice/Oak then first left (east) on Everett to get off Oak and Bogle to go south on Weston Rd traffic in Wellesley, Rt 16 back to Sherborn. I cross under Rt9 on Weston Rd rather than battle the noise and construction of Oak/Rt9. BTW, if one were to stay on Oak to Natick, the bridge into Natick after Bacon St Market is closed so one must climb over Walnut Hill. I go through Wellesley.
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What was suposed to ba a quick jaunt on the Minuteman turned into a great ride out to Concord and Carlisle.
Minute Man, Concord, Carlisle Ride - Belmont, MA
Stopped by the farmers market in Lexington. Heard a sax player in shorts, t-shirt, and wearing a tricorne atop his head play a medley of polkas.

After hitting Concord, headed out Lowell Rd. to Carlisle, and stopped by Ferns for a snack.


Saw some turkeys on Old Bedford Rd.

Minute Man, Concord, Carlisle Ride - Belmont, MA
Stopped by the farmers market in Lexington. Heard a sax player in shorts, t-shirt, and wearing a tricorne atop his head play a medley of polkas.
After hitting Concord, headed out Lowell Rd. to Carlisle, and stopped by Ferns for a snack.
Saw some turkeys on Old Bedford Rd.
#3741
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Continuing the riding-on-sidewalks theme, my understanding is that Massachusetts pemits it except in business districts, where it is forbidden, but provides for a local option that permits towns and cities to impose further restrictions.
rod
rod
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Another short ride this morning (about 10 miles). I met a cycling friend I haven't seen in many months to drink coffee and take a short spin. He remarked during the ride that he forgot how much he enjoyed "social" rides like the one we were taking. I had to agree, and it just added more proof to my belief that the joys of cycling extend far beyond the physical. In my time off the bike I certainly missed the physical aspect of riding, exerting myself, etc., but more than that I missed the camaraderie of shared experiences on the bike. A 5:00 a.m. ride with a friend is certainly invigorating mentally. Plus, a delicious iced coffee never hurts!
Sorry for the philosophical detour, but I've been in that kind of a mood lately.
Sorry for the philosophical detour, but I've been in that kind of a mood lately.
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I’m posting about my 30 mile extended pleasant commute this morning from Kenmore to Norwood because my route was through the little-reported sector of the Metroverse on this thread, of Dorchester-Quincy-Milton-Canton. I left about 5:15 AM through Back Bay and the South End as the City was waking up. I went down Morrissey Blvd and over the Hancock St Bridge spanning the Neponset River (photo 1). I noted a MUP under the bridge on the Boston side. I have heard about a harborside MUP from downtown, perhaps still in the planning stages, but on an early morning outbound commute, the Road is the best.
Hancock St through Quincy is light commercial/residential, Then on Adam Street is the Adams Historic Park (photo 2) followed by about a half mile of a wide street with a wide shoulder passing by elegant homes (3). Adams then becomes much like Hancock into Milton.
Milton is a great place to ride. It’s an elegant to ritzy completely residential suburb with nice streets. The terrain is pleasantly hilly with gradual ascents and corresponding downhill runs. Milton borders on the Blue Hills Reservation with totally forested roads with low traffic, and perfectly newly paved roads (4). I took Unquity Road to the busy Rte 138 / Rte 128 intersection in Canton but soon got off onto the enchanted Greenlodge and Elm Streets with a screaming downhill run past a secluded golf course. Canton into Norwood was a tolerable ending.
The whimsical house in Norwood with the second floor animals is not on my usual bike route, though it was today, but on a car commute. Back in the Spring it was totally dilapidated, and I have watched the progress. The movie “The Money Pit” comes to mind (5).




Milton is a great place to ride. It’s an elegant to ritzy completely residential suburb with nice streets. The terrain is pleasantly hilly with gradual ascents and corresponding downhill runs. Milton borders on the Blue Hills Reservation with totally forested roads with low traffic, and perfectly newly paved roads (4). I took Unquity Road to the busy Rte 138 / Rte 128 intersection in Canton but soon got off onto the enchanted Greenlodge and Elm Streets with a screaming downhill run past a secluded golf course. Canton into Norwood was a tolerable ending.
The whimsical house in Norwood with the second floor animals is not on my usual bike route, though it was today, but on a car commute. Back in the Spring it was totally dilapidated, and I have watched the progress. The movie “The Money Pit” comes to mind (5).
Last edited by Jim from Boston; 07-10-14 at 08:11 AM.
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I’m posting about my 30 mile extended pleasant commute this morning from Kenmore to Norwood because my route was through the little-reported sector of the Metroverse on this thread, of Dorchester-Quincy-Milton-Canton. I left about 5:15 AM through Back Bay and the South End as the City was waking up. I went down Morrissey Blvd and over the Hancook St Bridge spannning the Neponset River (photo 1). I noted a MUP under the bridge on the Boston side. I have heard about a harborside MUP from downtown, perhaps still in the planning stages, but on an early morning outbound commute, the Road is the best.
Hancock St through Quincy is light commercial/residential, Then on Adam Street is the Adams Historic Park (photo 2) followed by about a half mile of a wide street with a wide shoulder passing by elegant homes (3). Adams then becomes much like Hancock into Milton.
Milton is a great place to ride. It’s an elegant to ritzy completely residential suburb with nice streets. The terrain is pleasantly hilly with gradual ascents and corresponding downhill runs. Milton borders on the Blue Hills Reservation with totally forested roads with low traffic, and perfectly newly paved roads (4). I took Unquity Road to the busy Rte 138 / Rte 128 intersection in Canton but soon got off onto the enchanted Greenlodge and Elm Streets with a screaming downhill run past a secluded golf course. Canton into Norwood was a tolerable ending.
The whimsical house in Norwood with the second floor animals is not on my usual bike route, but on a car commute. Back in the Spring it was totally dilapidated, and I have watched the progress. The movie “The Money Pit” comes to mind (5).





Hancock St through Quincy is light commercial/residential, Then on Adam Street is the Adams Historic Park (photo 2) followed by about a half mile of a wide street with a wide shoulder passing by elegant homes (3). Adams then becomes much like Hancock into Milton.
Milton is a great place to ride. It’s an elegant to ritzy completely residential suburb with nice streets. The terrain is pleasantly hilly with gradual ascents and corresponding downhill runs. Milton borders on the Blue Hills Reservation with totally forested roads with low traffic, and perfectly newly paved roads (4). I took Unquity Road to the busy Rte 138 / Rte 128 intersection in Canton but soon got off onto the enchanted Greenlodge and Elm Streets with a screaming downhill run past a secluded golf course. Canton into Norwood was a tolerable ending.
The whimsical house in Norwood with the second floor animals is not on my usual bike route, but on a car commute. Back in the Spring it was totally dilapidated, and I have watched the progress. The movie “The Money Pit” comes to mind (5).
#3745
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Another short ride this morning (about 10 miles)…it just added more proof to my belief that the joys of cycling extend far beyond the physical. In my time off the bike I certainly missed the physical aspect of riding, exerting myself, etc., but more than that I missed the camaraderie of shared experiences on the bike...
Sorry for the philosophical detour, but I've been in that kind of a mood lately.
Sorry for the philosophical detour, but I've been in that kind of a mood lately.
Last week I finished my 10-Week Century Training Schedule as published a few years ago by Bicycling Magazine. I didn't really have a Century in mind as a goal, but the daily mileage quota gets me out on the Road more than I would otherwise. I was totally committed to it, but work, family, and climatic conditions allowed me to complete 967 of the 1522 miles over ten weeks (63%). Nonetheless, I feel that I am into a state of what I call “hyperfit” for me at least, but usually only attained in the summer at about week 8. I hope to maintain my mileage at that level for the rest of the summer.
I'm particularly motivated to ride currently because:
I cleared a physical as well as mental hurdle on Sunday and went for my first legitimate, clipped-in, kit wearing ride since October. I took a spin around Marblehead while my wife and I were home visiting my parents. I went about seven miles, spun slowly, breathed in some ocean air, and was passed by everyone...and it was wonderful. I was sore, but I survived...
You may have heard that I had a fractured sacrum from a cycling accident in June 2012, and I was off the bike for about five months.
I too was inactive for several months due to a cycling accident, and longed to get back on the Road. Reading and posting to Bike Forums kept the hope alive. My most wistful times occurred when I made trips by ambulance between my acute-care and rehab hospitals along my favorite cycle-commuting route on gorgeous perfect-cycling June days. Now cycling time is even more precious than ever.
Early on in my convalescence, I knew that I would recover also, from this incident which I described in a PM to a fellow local BF subscriber:
Originally Posted by Jim from Boston
…When I was about two weeks into my hospital stay, I was watching an un-named, circa early 1950's black-and-white movie with the sound off because my roomate was asleep. It seemed to be a romance, with Glenn Ford and Anne Baxter. A scene came on where they were driving in a car and had a sudden collision, and Glenn threw himself in front of Anne.
He awoke in a hospital bed, and she was OK. The following scenes showed him gradually recovering, as he tried to get out of bed with a trapeze bar, then walk with a cane. Soon, he strangely, and surreptiouously from Anne Baxter, slipped away to a golf course and tried to hit some balls. She was obviously mad at him when he got back (all this still with the sound off.) Then there appeared on screen a newspaper headline that Ben Hogan was going to participate in an upcoming major golf tournament.
It turns out that the movie was “Follow the Sun,” a 1951 biopic of Ben Hogan. I looked him up on Wikipedia, especially about the accident and found this:
This episode gave me a first glimmer of hope that I would be on the bike again…
He awoke in a hospital bed, and she was OK. The following scenes showed him gradually recovering, as he tried to get out of bed with a trapeze bar, then walk with a cane. Soon, he strangely, and surreptiouously from Anne Baxter, slipped away to a golf course and tried to hit some balls. She was obviously mad at him when he got back (all this still with the sound off.) Then there appeared on screen a newspaper headline that Ben Hogan was going to participate in an upcoming major golf tournament.
It turns out that the movie was “Follow the Sun,” a 1951 biopic of Ben Hogan. I looked him up on Wikipedia, especially about the accident and found this:
Originally Posted by Wikipedia
Hogan and his wife, Valerie, survived a head-on collision with a Greyhound bus on a fog-shrouded bridge, early in the morning, east of Van Horn, Texas on February 2, 1949. Hogan threw himself across Valerie in order to protect her, and would have been killed had he not done so, as the steering column punctured the driver's seat.
This accident left Hogan, age 36, with a double-fracture of the pelvis, (I had a fracture of the sacrum) a fractured collar bone, a left ankle fracture, a chipped rib, and near-fatal blood clots: he would suffer lifelong circulation problems and other physical limitations. His doctors said he might never walk again, let alone play golf competitively. While in hospital, Hogan's life was endangered by a blood clot problem, leading doctors to tie off the vena cava. Hogan left the hospital on April 1, 59 days after the accident.
After regaining his strength by extensive walking, he resumed golf activities in November 1949. He returned to the PGA Tour to start the 1950 season, at the Los Angeles Open, where he tied with Sam Snead over 72 holes, but lost the 18-hole playoff.”
This accident left Hogan, age 36, with a double-fracture of the pelvis, (I had a fracture of the sacrum) a fractured collar bone, a left ankle fracture, a chipped rib, and near-fatal blood clots: he would suffer lifelong circulation problems and other physical limitations. His doctors said he might never walk again, let alone play golf competitively. While in hospital, Hogan's life was endangered by a blood clot problem, leading doctors to tie off the vena cava. Hogan left the hospital on April 1, 59 days after the accident.
After regaining his strength by extensive walking, he resumed golf activities in November 1949. He returned to the PGA Tour to start the 1950 season, at the Los Angeles Open, where he tied with Sam Snead over 72 holes, but lost the 18-hole playoff.”
Last edited by Jim from Boston; 07-10-14 at 01:32 PM.
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Thank you for the inspiring message Jim! I'm glad that your recovery has gone well, and indeed I am in a more hopeful state recently. As I alluded to in my previous post, sometimes the biggest barriers are mental and not physical. Case in point-- today while riding alongside my friend I felt no pain, and was not even thinking of pain. Distraction is wonderful sometimes.
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Jim, simply incredible. A fractured sacrum is a tough one to avoid in this endeavor. Way to go, man!
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Thank you for the inspiring message Jim! I'm glad that your recovery has gone well, and indeed I am in a more hopeful state recently. As I alluded to in my previous post, sometimes the biggest barriers are mental and not physical. Case in point-- today while riding alongside my friend I felt no pain, and was not even thinking of pain. Distraction is wonderful sometimes.
When you’re in the throes of such an injury, there’s a lot of uncertainty about what the future holds. Hopefully your caregivers having the breadth of experience in dealing with such problems and the outcomes, and other "survivors," can embolden your hopes.
Welcome to this thread, OldsCOOL. He’s a paisano from Michigan, and we’ve corresponded a bit on and off the Forums, including this comment about my Century Training Schedule:

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Hammered out and back to Concord and back via the climb on Concord Ave.
Out And Back to Concord via Concord Ave. Climb - Belmont, MA
Got a flat and got to put my newly aquired Lezyne Road Drive pump to the test. Worked like a champ. Got the tire up to 100 psi or so with no problem!
Out And Back to Concord via Concord Ave. Climb - Belmont, MA
Got a flat and got to put my newly aquired Lezyne Road Drive pump to the test. Worked like a champ. Got the tire up to 100 psi or so with no problem!
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Join Date: Nov 2007
Location: Boston, MA
Posts: 251
Bikes: 2002 Bianchi Eros, 2013 Peter Mooney Custom
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Played it healthy and got a Power Bar and some water.
Kimball Farm for ice cream is also another favorite, but I have to bring my sweetie to help me, because even their small is bigger than the large at most places.