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In order to accomplish this I would need a few things.
#1: The Bike
I though this would be the easy part.
sp: "what type of riding will you be doing"
me:" oh you know trails,hills, 100 miles a day..."
Guess that's not normal.....judging from his look.
I beleive that part of not looking like a fool was keeping your mouth shut as to not prove it to others. So not knowing anything about bikes I knew enough not to share my decision to race the divide with the salesperson. I am sure that anyone reading this who has ever worked in a bike shop has had an idiot like me walk in. I had no idea on budget, features, suspension or tire size. No idea what helmet, if I really needed those dreaded spandex, clipless what??
Bought my $ 500 Divinci 26er, a bunch of useless accesories and the journey began.
#2: Support
I have a super incredible family! My wife Sharon and 3 kids, Chloe, Ethan and Maya. Telling my wife I wanted to attempt a self-supported mountain bike race through the Rocky Mountains from Banff to Mexico in 6 months from now and I just bought a bike, went as you would expect it would. And when I picked her up from the floor she said that I was crazy but she thought I would kill it! (or myself) She did ask about my life insurance policy. She's awesome. I had to start making my goal public, telling anyone that would listen. Yes I was mocked, by friends, family, bike shop owners and perfect strangers. This was the fuel I needed. Now that it was out there I couldn't back down from showing up in Banff and pedalling out on the Great Divide. One store owner didn't laugh. Jason from Hammer City Cycle. Awesome guy, who not only knew about the race but is aspiring to ride it himself in 2014.
#3: Training
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doubt works its way in, its easy to take a day off. Pressure builds, training suffers when reality starts to fight for a position in my life. I need this! So i fight back. Many, many hours reasearching equipment, route maps, blogs, youtube videos. Learning how to set up camp, pack light, how to eat, how to deal with wildlife, rain, lonliness and fatigue. David Jack (coach) had me out 5-6 times a week. Workouts were based on heart rate. Had to fit in several different types of workouts in including yoga and core exercises. Bought my Redline D660 29er once I realized what I was getting into at the end of January. (all gear excpet for the raptor tires shown in picture) Much better ride. Gear is bought, bike was ready and I finally bought my plane ticket and booked my room at the Y. The ticket was the final step in the commitment process. Felt good to know I was on my way.
A student of pain and suffering you are!
ReplyDeleteGreat BLOG!
I look forward to following things as you progress to your next Tour.