
Once upon a time, long, long ago in the summer of 2008 Shane and I heard of the Grizzly Century in the mountains between Yosemite and Sierra national parks. Shane rode it that year with a terrible cold and after hill after hill of harrowing climbing (as described by him) he finally abandoned the race somewhere before the final peak, not wanting to descend in the snow with his tuberculosis-like cough. He was sick for months after that, and this is the point where I suppose I should admit that he'd called me to ask if I thought he should ride that day and I'd told him to harden the fuck up and be a man. My curiosity was piqued, of course. I had meant to do the ride last year, but this is Northern California and people flaked on me. I was too poor last year to do the ride anyway. This year I put out the word on Facebook and one person was as intrigued as I was. It should be no surprise that it was Me in Boy Form, Counterpart Chris.

The original plan was to drive the 4 hours down to the race the night before and then just sleep in the car... and then reason won out. I looked at about 5 different hotel reservation sites to find a hotel near North Fork, CA. Mostly they seemed pretty expensive bed and breakfast type places, and then finally I found a cheap Motel 6 right in North Fork for about $60/night. Score! I got half way through booking before I realized that I was booking a hotel in North Fork, PENNSYLVANIA. Shit. I started again with the zip code, and again Hotels.com directed me to PA. I did a Google map search and all the hotels that showed up within 100 miles said "call for reservations." I'm a 21st century kind of gal, and I don't make 15 phone calls to comparison shop for hotel rooms. I do not even like to use my phone for calling. Twenty-first century fail.
There were more fails when it came to planning. "If the ride starts at about 7, then we should be done by about noon, one o'clock at the latest, so we can request a late check-out and come back and shower..." Counterpart Chris suggested.
"Uh, Chris, have you seen the course profile? There must be 8,000' of climbing in the first 80 miles. I can ride a sub-five century, but not over mountains. I was figuring more like 7-8 hours." I was beginning to fear that this ride would be ruined by trying to race through it in time to not have to pay for a second night at the hotel. When the cheapest hotel I could find was an hour from the start, I breathed a sigh of relief. There was absolutely no way we could get to a hotel an hour away and shower in time for a late check-out. I was free to enjoy the ride again.
We arrived at the start and rolled out a leisurely 20 minutes late after buying cartoon jerseys with bears on them. Mine had a bear making sushi and licking his fingers in a somewhat salacious way if you have the mind of a 13-year-old boy, which I do. The first incline hit after about a mile, and Couterpart Chris blasted off. I sat there grinding away on my pedals and breathing hard but refusing to sprint off after him. I could only lose that game, and I would rather hand him the car key in the first 5 miles rather than chase after him for the next 95 and dig myself into a hole I couldn't get out of. The day before I'd ridden a spin class (my 5th of 6 that week) on a CycleOps bike with a real power meter. I'd been crushed when the girl next to me was pushing the same power on the interval sets and didn't seem to be working as hard as I was. I too had become an "average" cyclist, and I had to respect my limitations with 75 miles of climbing ahead of me.
Counterpart Chris finally slowed down for me and I offered him the car keys if he wanted to go on ahead. He declined and we started climbing the first major climb from 2500' to 4500'. After awhile Counterpart Chris said, "Oh my god, when is this going to end?"
"Didn't you look at the elevation profile?" I asked.
"No." (And this is why we're the same person.)
"We're climbing pretty much straight through from mile 1 to mile 75 at 75000', then there's a 5000' drop over 10 miles and it's all flat home. I'm thinking of this as a 75-mile climb, and any downhills we get in between are bonus miles. This is going to be one of those 7 mph centuries." Silence. "Chris, how do you play the alphabet game?" I asked.

"You take turns and each person has to say a word that starts with the same letter. I played for five hours once. Mouse."
"Map."
"Mold."
"Musty..."
And much of the conversation for the day continued like that. When we spread out a bit or on the downhills we would have some time to think of new words, and then we'd pass each other again and yell out:
"Muckraker!"
"Moron!"
"Mastodon!"
"Mucus!"
"MULLET!"
People always knew that we were coming, and after recovering from the initial shock of a couple of kids riding by yelling, "Molester!" "Masturbate!" I think they figured out the rules of the game.
"Hey, it's the kids with the word game!" they would say.

The alphabet game ate up the first 60 miles or so of the ride, and we hardly noticed all the climbing. The views were typical California spectacular, with wooded mountains and those knobby glacial rocks that Yosemite is famous for sticking up out of the landscape. We took lots of pictures, but Counterpart Chris lost his camera somewhere between the ride and San Francisco, and I had an iPhone emergency and had to do a factory reset and lost ALL my pictures since 2009. I will instead tell you what pictures I would have put in here: Note: this is the one surviving picture from the trip.
We got to the top of the first peak where they were serving... lunch? "What mile are we at?" Counterpart Chris asked.
"Uhhh, 27," I told him.

There was an overlook and Counterpart Chris asked a stranger to take our picture. "Bend over, Chris," I told him. Then I stood behind him. Insert picture I'm describing here. Instead I will put a picture of something else. The people around us were shocked, and not in that good-natured kind of way.
"I'm glad that it's not the other way around!" one woman said.
"I think they're homophobic," Counterpart Chris whispered to me later.
"Aw, come on people," I said. "It's for Facebook. You've got to say something like, 'How did the hill go Chris?'" Sheesh, it wasn't Chris and I who had something up our butts.
I stuffed myself with baclava, nutella, and grapes and Counterpart Chris munched on potatoes for awhile before we got back on our bikes. Counterpart Chris is one of those people who can't eat anything. He's gluten intolerant, violently allergic to dairy, and eggs don't sit too well with him either. Plus, he's got a "no high-fructose corn syrup" policy, which is always good to have but was limiting his fueling options. As we picked our way higher and higher up the hill, we were each banking more and more "M" words as Counterpart Chris drifted back for longer and longer periods of time. Because I have grown up in the past few years, I didn't want to rub it in his face because he really did look like hell and I knew the day would come when I was feeling like hell and he would have to wait for me. When that day came, I knew that I didn't want him rubbing my nose in it.
"How are you doing?" I asked.
"If you drop me, I'll see you at the top," he said, which all endurophiles know means, 'Fuck off, I'm not in my happy place and I'm going to punch you if you try to help me.'
"What's the matter? You want some spice drops?" (Some things never change with me.)
"No, if I don't take a crap soon I think I'm going to die."
We hadn't seen a porta potty since lunch, and when we passed the 60-mile rest stop and there were still no facilities, I urged him to do it in the woods.
"What will I wipe with?!"
"C'mon! A leaf! What's worse, wiping with a big ol' leaf or shitting your pants. Just go! How do you think the bears do it???" In recent years I have also amended Claire's Number 1 Rule of Public Pooping: "Don't" to Claire's Number 1 Rule of Public Pooping: "Don't Unless You Will Be Done Before You Can Find Your Page/Load Angry Birds." Chris's angry turds could clearly beat Angry Birds in a race. "Hell, even I shit in the woods las week!" (It's true. Another life experience I can cross off the list.) So finally I stood at the side of the road and smiled and waved as people rode by while Counterpart Chris had a bear in the woods moment.
On the final climb up to 7500' I turned around to share a word like "Marjoram" or something and Counterpart Chris just wasn't there anymore. I had no idea how long he'd been gone and couldn't be 100% sure he was behind me and not in front of me. Anyway, this was the first time all day that I'd wished I'd had more gears. We had been climbing hills that were made for lots of traffic up until this point, but this was more like a service road that didn't bother to carve the flattest path but just followed the contours of the hill, which sometimes got uncomfortably steep. It was just hard enough that I didn't want to give up my mojo and wait for my brother from another mother. When we reached an impromptu water stop about 5 miles from the summit, it took Counterpart Chris several minutes to catch up and when he did he looked ashen and his lips were a funny color. I forced an Odwalla bar on him, despite his gluten thing because it looked like it was either going to be stomach discomfort or a long wait for the SAG van out in the middle of nowhere. He chose stomach discomfort. It was enough to get us both to the top of the hill where there was another spread of fresh fruit, baclava, and potatoes.
We had heard that there was a bad crash down the hill, so we decided to chill in the last rest stop for a bit to let them clear the road. They had a little fire going in a habachi, and next to it there was a pile of wood and... a hatchet!!! "Look, Chris! An axe!" I squealed, grabbing it.
"Uhhhh... be careful with that!"
I inexpertly raised the hatchet above my head and brought it down with pitiful force on a log. I think the log survived. Truth be told, I was too scared to chop hard. Weapons scare me, even hatchets. "Take a picture of me with it!" I said.
So Counterpart Chris took a picture of me looking WAY too excited holding an axe, and then made me put it down. Around that time a big ol' Jeep pulled up with a very dead buck tied to the roof. It was all covered in blood and stuff. I'm not so sensitive to the loss of an animal life as I used to be, so instead of mourning the deer like I would a cute puppy in an ASPCA poster, I just thought it was disgusting. I mean, come on. It's a carcas! And you strapped it to the roof of your car. How's that any different from picking up road kill at the side of the road (it's perfectly good meat, right? It didn't die of a disease or anything) or frying up your neighbor's dog because you're low on hamburger meat? "Hey, Earl! I just stepped on a huge roach! Go get me a cracker!"
Now that we were at the summit, we had a 12-mile, 5000' descent and then a 15-mile flat ride around the lake back to the start. On the downhill I tried to practice my countersteering by pressing on the inside drops, but even though they say it's supposed to be much more stable than being in the hoods, I just couldn't commit to being away from my brakes on a long descent and wound up descending at a comfortable 30 mph rather than pushing it to a pulse-racing 35-40 mph. Where did my huge balls go?
And that's pretty much it. We rode the rest of the way in, Counterpart Chris came back from his bonk. I murdered all the popcorn I could at the finish. Chris accidentally forgot his jersey in the school bathroom (which is why there are no pictures). I stripped down to nothing to change in the parking lot to save myself a trip back to the school, and was only vaguely worried about being entered into the sexual offenders registry for exposing myself on school property. Then we stopped at a Chipotle on the way home and I got terrible heart burn (something that happens to me about once every 2 years). Then we both got grouchy by the time we hit San Francisco again.
The End!
(By the way, does anyone know how to resize images in Google Chrome for Mac?)
1 comment:
It sounds like you are back and in a new and improved way. Glad things are starting to go your way for a change. Sounds like a bitch of a ride.
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