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Road Cycling “It is by riding a bicycle that you learn the contours of a country best, since you have to sweat up the hills and coast down them. Thus you remember them as they actually are, while in a motor car only a high hill impresses you, and you have no such accurate remembrance of country you have driven through as you gain by riding a bicycle.” -- Ernest Hemingway

Back from a week off

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Old 03-25-05 | 08:53 PM
  #1  
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Upgrading my engine
 
Joined: Aug 2004
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From: Alamogordo
Back from a week off

Instead of on my bike, I spent spring break in Hawaii just relaxing. I learned a few things. First of all, 7 hours in a plane (from Houston to Honolulu) left my butt hurting more than any 6+ hour ride I've been on. And despite the movies, games, magazines, and books available (I ended up reading both of Lance Armstrong's books) to me on the plane, the 7 hour flight was more of a fight against boredom than any ride I've ever been on. I've never been a fan of taking long breaks from the bike, but after the trip was said and done I learned that breaks can actually be a good thing.

Hawaii was great. It was 80 degrees and sunny every day. Compare that to the 40 degrees and raining crap I came home to earlier today. It was great to see so much physical activity around me- people running in the park, riding around town, swimming in the ocean, and so on. There were pedestrians everywhere, something you just don't see that much here in Indiana. And if a trip was out of walking distance there was almost certainly a bus going to wherever you wanted to go. I wish I would have had a day to ride in Hawaii, but I was too busy checking out beaches, Diamond Head, Pearl Harbor, and typical tourist stuff like that. Besides, could it be that Hawaii would be too perfect for a ride? I mean, if you're not fighting off cold weather, rain, bad roads, or inconsiderate drivers, then how do you feel like you accomplished anything worthwhile?

Isn't it funny how sometimes we even need a break from the things we enjoy the most? I see cycling as a break from the world, so why do I feel refreshed after my break from that break? Sounds like a question for me to ponder while I break out of my break and do a century tomorrow.

Enjoy some pictures. The first one is a bike rack in Oahu. Yes, they all look like that. I loved those. The second one is a view from Diamond Head. The third one is the sunset on the beach. I have no idea who those 2 kids are, but they made for a nice picture.
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Old 03-26-05 | 09:15 AM
  #2  
OCP
 
Joined: Sep 2004
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From: MILWAUKEE

Bikes: The kind with two wheels

Cool pix.

We all need a break from what we consider a break (cycling)....it's true.

Sometimes in the depths of late summer when a morning 26-miler seems all so dull and unattractive to me, I think about times like March in Milwaukee, when I would kill for the weather to be able to be out there riding.

And sometimes you get a little burned out toward the end of the season and it is good for not only the body, but the mind, to just put cycling on the shelf for a couple of days.
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