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Saturday, December 7, 2013

Longest Day Ride 2012: A Journey

I've been a bit silent here (again). Not a lot of riding has been happening, as I continue to work through the issues with my back and hip.  Needless to say, I won't have the pleasure of riding myself to smithereens on the Longest Day Ride this year.  This is an account of the ride I did last year as published in Journey Vol.3.  For a blow-by-blow account with photos, go here.

Long Hot Summer

My ride was a loop of the Waikato, a 200 kilometre amble through the countryside on nicely undulating roads, avoiding as much traffic as possible and stopping at rural cafés along the way. I had successfully lured two long-term cycling friends, Megan and Michelle, along to accompany me on the Longest Day Ride.

At 5:56am we left Matangi, squinting into the haze of a typical Waikato morning, backlit by the sunrise. We had the roads to ourselves, even the farmers weren’t out of bed. As we rode up through Scotsman’s Valley, the sun spilled over the ridgeline and draped itself across the foggy paddocks—the grass was glowing. The early morning haze soon retreated to the distant hills and the warm sun lifted our spirits and our cadence. 
Force-feeding ourselves a second breakfast at Morrinsville less than two hours into the ride felt a bit strange, but it was insurance for later. Salad wraps, iceblocks, cold drinks and stretches were the order of the morning. Back in the saddle, the heat and our kilometre count steadily increased.  By lunchtime we knew we were in for a beautiful, but hot, ride.

At the hottest part of the day I could smell the dry grass in adjacent paddocks. The sun beat down on our backs and heat rose up off hot bitumen. With every breath I inhaled hot dry fumes and it felt like I’d dusted my lungs with Cajun powder. There was no respite in the shade—there was no shade. We rode along to a strange crackling sound as bubbles in the hot bleeding bitumen popped under our tyres. I was sweaty and salty. My legs were brown with dust smeared around with sunscreen. I later discovered that it wasn’t dust but bitumen that had flicked up from my tyres and coated my legs.

Watching 100 kilometres click over on our computers was both an uplifting feeling of achievement and a moment of dread—we were only halfway into our day. Meg’s shoulder started to complain, Michelle’s feet swelled up, and I got the shakes. We knew what we needed—an incredibly long stop at the Pirongia pub: Speights, burger and chips, bananas, Powerade, ibuprofen, massage and multiple power naps.

Meg pulled the pin in Te Awamutu, so we dropped her off at her house. We watched our feet shrink in the cold paddling pool, then retreated indoors to the air-conditioned lounge.  It felt like game-over for me, too. Not even Bodhi-dog’s hot raspy tongue licking my legs was enough to make me move. But Michelle muttered something and stood up. I decoupled myself from the cool utopia, dosed up on ibuprofen to try to dull the all-over body ache, and got back onto my bike.

By now our brains were thick with the fog that comes from an all-day ride. We lacked the physical and mental strength to hold good lines through the loose gravel of the unsealed road we were following—we were virtually swimming down the road. After a lengthy deliberation at the first junction (the long way, or the hard way?) we continued on the rough road. We were relieved to find it soon smoothed out and the hard way became fast and fun.

Not long after we found ourselves in Cambridge, sitting in the gutter eating KFC. It was hardly the lowest moment of our day—we actually felt good! Dessert in Hautapu followed and was continued with lolly mixtures stuffed into our jersey pockets. 

As the sun sank lower our shadows stretched out across the road and we edged closer to our goal. Fourteen hours and 31 minutes after setting off, I turned back through the gate in Matangi, but not before one extra 8 kilometre lap around the block in an attempt to make the ride a double century.

Our Longest Day Ride on a hot summer day was over. It was one hundred and ninety kilometres of riding shared with friends in a memorable experience that will long outlast any pain or injury. We have stories to tell, friendships have been cemented, and we look forward to doing do it all again.

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