Saturday, July 07, 2012

Into July

It is unfathomable to me how it became mid-summer (yes, in my opinion, the Bay area summer begins in April and trickles to an noncommittal type of close in October. We have summer the way Alaska has winter.) It's a cliche thing for adults to say, but it's already July, really? Where does the time go? Leah and I got out for a mountain bike ride on July 4 at Skeggs, the local favorite singletrack maze. We relished in the relative ease and freedom of unloaded bikes. I even pulled my full-suspension Element off the wall for the first time in weeks. Despite it being a near-perfect seventy degrees on the fourth of July, we only saw four other mountain bikers, two who were Leah's friends (every time we go riding it seems Leah runs into people she knows, which would seem less weird to me if this wasn't a population center of 7 million people. I guess the bike community is tight-knit no matter where you go.)

And today, July 6, I'm in Frisco, Colorado. Beat snagged a rare spot the near-impossible lottery for the Hardrock 100, so we are staying here with a friend for a week while he attempts to acclimate for that grueling race. I tagged along in hopes of getting some solid UTMB training, but I admit I'm still worried about my shin. Ah, at least I don't have to run the Hardrock in any capacity. That's a load off my shoulders. (Poor Beat. He is also still struggling with a lower back injury and isn't thrilled about his odds, but the impossibility of the lottery means he couldn't pass up this chance by backing out.) We arrived just in time for what I've heard is the first major rainstorm in weeks, with liquid sheets pummeling I-70 as we drove out of Denver beside rocky slopes shrouded in clouds. I had great nostalgic moments while traveling through this small section of the Great Divide Mountain Bike Route, pointing out the reservoir bike path where I became nearly hopelessly turned around and riding in circles, and the Silverthorne Wendy's where the late-night drive-through employees refused to serve me because I didn't have a car, until I pulled my best puppy dog face ever and said, "Please? Please? I'm so hungry."

I'm so excited to be in Colorado. The air is so thin here at 9,000 feet that even climbing a few flights of stairs leaves me winded. And yet I want to tell my shin to just harden up buttercup for a week so I can run free through these mountains. If that's not to be, then I'll rent a mountain bike. I know it's a charmed life, I know, which is why time is unravelling so quickly right now. 

5 comments:

  1. Stupid shin. Not sure what to tell you except to enjoy Colorado. I pulled my hamstring last week and am not sure if it will hold up tomorrow while I run a marathon. Luckily it is a race I don't care about. Am concerned for you for UTMB and wonder if you shouldn't get it checked out and see if you can do anything to get through to UTMB.

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  2. Man, we never know where you'll pop up next, huh?

    I agree with Danni, maybe it is something more serious like a stress fracture, worth getting it looked at just to be sure. I hope it feels better soon!

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  3. Try and enjoy your time in Colorado, Jill! And good luck to Beat!

    Sarah
    www.thinfluenced.com

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  4. Welcome to CO! We love Frisco. My aunt & uncle own a townhouse there that we get to use sometimes - such a cool town, and lots of outdoor fun to be had in that area. Enjoy!

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  5. I just finished your book. Thanks, Very inspirational. Last time you were in Frisco the crowds annoyed you. Very understandable with the normal solitude of the ride.

    Good luck to Beat.

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