Sunday, January 03, 2021

2020 in numbers

Final ride of 2020 on Rollins Pass Road

Really, I couldn't think of a better way to end a difficult year that passed in a realm of surreality — hunched over a sweat-soaked towel in my basement, legs spinning wildly to boost the wattage of a bike trainer, watching the digital grandeur of a futuristic New York City pass by on a movie screen while listening to an audiobook about the Shakleton Antarctic expedition of 1915, all while chasing an utterly arbitrary goal of 4,000 pedaled miles in one year. 

When I reached my goal, I spun down seven miles to grow on, remembered it was Dec. 30, and schemed a snowy plod of a ride for the true final day of 2020. I've had a lot of fun with Zwift since we installed the bike trainer in mid-December, and will staunchly defend the stance that these miles are every bit as meaningful as outdoor miles — especially in this age of social distancing, poor air quality, road dangers, and time limitations for many people who just want to pursue fitness and virtual socializing with friends and strangers. My sore legs certainly agree that the 85 miles I rode on Dec. 30 are "real."  But my focus in training has never solely been on fitness. Any gains in this regard are a distant second to adventures, beauty, awe, and all of the little surprises of simply moving through the world. 

So I planned a New Year's Eve ride on Rollins Pass Road, where I knew I'd find deep snow, expansive views, and almost total solitude. That conditions were mostly terrible for riding a bike was, frankly, to be expected. 

It seemed the road hadn't seen much traffic since I was last here on Dec. 5. The jeep tracks were filled with drifted snow and torn to chaotic shreds where vehicles spun out in the deepening drifts. Where I could ride, I averaged about 3 mph and often had to stop pedaling when my quads were screaming. And I really tried to not stop, because the track was often only the width of a truck tire and hub-deep, so it was almost impossible to start rolling again. This slow, strenuous plod felt quite silly with my tired legs and no goals in mind. Still, the views were superb, the December sun at 10,000 feet was warm enough that I had stripped down to a sweat-drenched base layer, and, most enjoyable of all — the air was clean and still. 


The last of the truck tracks petered out around mile 7.5, so I turned around. This 15-mile, four-hour effort was a bit pathetic in the scheme of the numbers game ... but then again, it's never been about the numbers, has it? Still, numbers are fun just as games are fun. I've enjoyed keeping track of my stats over the years. 

My 2020 numbers surprised me somewhat. I haven't actively trained for anything since February, spent most of my moving time on really slow activities like crawling over mountain boulderfields, and took quite a few days off during the summer when air quality was horrendous. Still, when it was all over I logged a near-record amount of elevation gain — I realized all too late that I was only about 5,000 feet shy of my 2015 PR — and my most cycling miles in a year since the "Tour Divide training/easy-fire-road-spinning days" when I lived in California. Since then, I haven't broken 3,000 miles in a year. Through it all I was still primarily a "runner" in 2020, burning well over 500 hours on the activity. 

A part of me is embarrassed that my "moving time" was nearly 1,000 hours. Part of it is the relatively small number of miles for this effort. If I put in this kind of time on Zwift, I'd probably pedal 15,000 miles or more. Part of it is shame about wasting time. After all, an adult spending this much time on play not only has a hefty helping of privilege, she's also squandering potential for more "productive" endeavors. I won't take a deep dive into my philosophy on productivity here, but I believe any endeavor can only contain as much meaning as we assign to it. Thus, we all live our lives in line with what we value. Only those who don't live in accordance with their own values are wasting their "one wild and precious life." 

My 2020 Year in Numbers: 

Run: 1,780.6 miles, 338,599 feet climbing. 537 hours and 46 minutes. 
Ride: 4,022.2 miles, 507,070 feet climbing. 450 hours and 27 minutes.

Cumulative: 

5,802.8 miles
845,669 feet climbing 
987 hours and 13 minutes (41.1 days) 

Night run in Anchorage, Alaska, at -5F.

January: 

188.2 miles run, 18,509 feet climbing
25.6 miles ride, 4,449 feet climbing
67 hours

I like to tally these monthly totals for my personal records, but since none of the months had a specific focus after March, I don't intend to yammer on about training. In January, almost all of my miles stacked up while I was training in Anchorage during the first week of the year, and then dragging my sled across the mountains of Idaho and Wyoming for 100 miles during the Fat Pursuit. After Fat Pursuit, Beat and I came down with our annual death cold, which laid me low for the rest of the month. I even fretted that I wouldn't recover in time to participate in the Iditarod. Without focused training and with the social distancing necessitated by COVID, I haven't been sick or injured since January. If I make it through this month with health intact, it will probably be the first 365-day period of my adult life in which I could say this. (Please, universe, let me make it through January without getting sick ... I really don't want to get sick with what is likely to make me sick right now.) 

Sled-drag around Turquoise Lake in Leadville, Colorado.

February: 

132.5 miles run, 22,990 feet climbing
0 miles ride.
38 hours

I spent a fair amount of February time in the gym, which isn't reflected in time totals. The "running" miles were mainly sled-drags and cart-pulls. It's funny, though — in my memory I trained so hard leading up the Iditarod Trail Invitational, but that isn't reflected in my Strava numbers. One-legged squats and deadlifts feel like much more effort than they probably are. Ah, I miss going to the gym. I tried to launch home strength training in the spring, but my motivation has been dismal. 

The "road" to McGrath during the Iditarod Trail Invitational, -45F.

March: 

361.8 miles run, 23,156 feet climbing
26.3 miles ride, 1,175 feet climbing
133 hours

Nearly all of these miles happened during my march along the snow-swept Iditarod Trail. The rest of the month was filled with recovery, anxious downtime, stressful travel, and just trying to pick up as many pieces as possible after the pandemic scattered all hopes and plans to the wind. 

Using the last of some hard-earned sled-dragging strength to haul firewood back home

April: 

124.9 miles run, 24,229 feet climbing
220 miles ride, 34,390 feet climbing
54 hours

It's interesting to note that as of April 1, I had only logged 50 miles of cycling in 2020. It had been six months since I'd completed more than a handful of short rides. I remember that cycling fitness came back surprisingly fast — muscle memory is an amazing thing — when I finally took to the roads. I wish muscle memory could be so kind to my upper body, but after my gym closed, my strength quickly plummeted. Ah well. Perhaps that will be a project for this coming spring. 

Slowly getting my running legs back during the stay-at-home era

May: 

146.7 miles run, 37,270 feet climbing
452 miles ride, 59,728 feet climbing
86 hours

As trails dried out in May, I returned to running with more gusto. The 30-minute-mile cart-dragging slogs of winter left me with no leg speed, and I didn't do a lot to earn it back. Several times this year, I admitted to Beat that I am not a "runner," I am a "hiker," and that's okay. Maybe regaining leg speed would be a good project for another extended period without endurance racing ... although attempts to run even relatively fast will likely result in injury. Not overuse injury, mind you, injury because I will eventually, inevitably, smack the ground with a breakable body part.  


Carrying my gravel bike to the top of Mount Evans on the Summer Solstice

June: 

113.4 miles run, 25,903 feet climbing
560.9 miles ride, 65,134 feet climbing
84 hours

June was a fun month ... arguably the least volatile of the pandemic, when it briefly began to look like things might shift toward a better outcome. Our state's stay-at-home orders ended, and we could again venture into the mountains. The state also decided to keep the road to Mount Evans closed for the summer, which sparked a flurry of human-powered activity. In hindsight, it's like Zwift land — a beautiful, car-free world filled with cyclists and the occasional summit-seeking road runner, sweating and smiling in the sunshine. 


Trying and mostly failing not to blow away on Keyhole Pass

July: 

129.3 miles run, 34,626 feet climbing
463.5 miles ride, 58,039 feet climbing
90 hours

In July, Beat and I fell into our summer pattern of picking one huge mountain route to tackle nearly every weekend. These hikes were often near the edge of my comfort zone or slightly beyond, as is the case with this attempt on Longs Peak. Insanely high winds scared me off the summit ridge, which is an exposed class-three traverse. Beat made it to the top that day. The fact that I have yet to reach the summit of this 14er remains a source of shame, but I think I'll need true Goldilocks conditions to try it again. Mountains are scary. 

Climbing to the top of Colorado for my 41st birthday

August: 

190 miles run, 52,112 feet climbing
302.6 miles ride, 37,008 feet climbing
95 hours

In August, wildfire smoke began to take over the skies. At first, it arrived from far away — western Colorado and California, mostly — but the air quality index started regularly spiking into the hazardous zone. In my numbers tally, I noted that each week held three to four rest days — often because I simply could not exert myself outside without developing asthma symptoms. These rest days were interspersed with huge days in the mountains, which is how I racked up 95 hours of moving time. 

A much-appreciated summer snowstorm

September: 

139.2 miles run, 37,031 feet climbing
150 miles ride, 19,865 feet climbing
57 hours

Despite a brief breather in the form of a heavy snowstorm on Sept. 9, the fire summer continued almost unabated once the foot of fluff melted from the ground. Although Beat and I continued to plan big days in the mountains, I'd often need to take a day or two to recover from that ragged feeling in my lungs. 

That time I rode my bike 150 miles from home to the top of Mount Evans and back

October: 

112.2 miles run, 30,466 feet climbing
461.5 miles ride, 61,905 feet climbing
84 hours

October is when all of our big local fires flared out of control, and the fire summer hit closest to home. But I also felt the clock ticking on winter, and pushed to accomplish a few of the little adventure goals I'd set for a rather disappointing summer — the "Big Lonesome" loop along the CDT (we crawled over and around 20-foot-high piles of blowdowns for much of ten hours), the Pawnee-Buchanan loop, and riding to the top of Mount Evans from my house, which involved 150 miles and 18,000 feet of climbing. I picked one of the worst days to do this — it was terribly hot, breezy, and the AQI stayed in the 150+ "unhealthy" range for the entire day. I've decided I'm not going to do this to myself again next summer. I won't risk an asthma attack and potential long-term health effects just to play outside. That is the top reason I wanted a bike trainer, so I can stay indoors and still enjoy the benefits of a good endorphin session. 


November was still too warm, but I enjoyed putting in some big days on the bike.

November: 

62.1 miles run, 15,511 feet climbing
670.6 miles ride, 82,626 feet climbing
100 hours

November weather remained warm and dry, but we finally received just enough snow to tamp down the fires and restore air quality to breathable levels. Apparently, I rode my bike a lot. In the early part of the month, there was still some hope that I'd race the Fat Pursuit 200K on Jan. 8, so I focused my training on saddle time. I started to feel quite strong and knocked down a bunch of PRs on local routes. During the last week of November, I joined several friends for bikepacking in Utah. 

December was sort of a blur

December: 

79.8 miles run, 21,053 feet climbing
686.7 miles ride, 82,743 feet climbing
100 hours

December was the month of Zwift. I also logged a few good rides on Mount Evans and Rollins Pass Road (twice), and there was then of course the 160-mile, 24-hour Wild Winter Wind (erm, Wild Winter Way) solo ride on the Solstice. I'm grateful I can lean on my outdoor passions to make the most of a lousy year. Even though I've spent only minimal, distanced time with friends, didn't attend a cultural or social event (besides my own outdoor wedding), didn't race after the Iditarod, didn't travel outside the country, and didn't even visit a restaurant in nine months ... my life still feels adventurous and full. I ponder the ways I'd cope without cycling or hiking, and I have to say, I don't like this mental image. And despite the meandering nature of my outdoor pursuits, I accomplished a few things that I'm proud of:

1. Dragging a heavy sled through a few feet of new snow for 100 miles of the Fat Pursuit course even though it was a ridiculous slog that took 56 hours.

2. Making it to McGrath during the Iditarod Trail Invitational. It was the toughest year I've experienced in six starts. Even though I'm disappointed about quitting, and even though I was a Nome racer so it doesn't "count," reaching McGrath a fifth time was still an enormous undertaking and its own meaningful adventure. 

3. Taking my mountain pursuits farther than I have, and pushing my comfort zone a little closer to the proverbial and literal edge. I hope, given reasonable air quality and weather, to see plenty of new peaks in 2021. 

4. Climbing 845,000 feet. If only I knew I was so close to my 851,000-foot record, I probably would have pursued this goal. The million feet of climbing might come one year, but only if most of my ascending happens on a bike. The problem with running is that descending is hard work, too, and can be more taxing than climbing. That's the limiting factor.  

5. Riding to the top of Mount Evans from home.

6. The Wild Winter Way. My only virtual race this year. It was one I basically made up myself. I loved it! 

I hope you enjoyed your days on the move in 2020. Here's hoping that we can all move a little farther and wider through the world in 2021. 

Friday, January 01, 2021

2020 in photos

Well, so long 2020 ... it's been a year. I agree that we should drop the pretense that 2020 was a solely terrible year, or blindly celebrate that it's "finally over," because what has ended? That said, I think all of us can go back and laugh at our bright-eyed, hopeful predictions at the end of 2019. I certainly believed 2020 was going to be "my year." I had turned over that milestone of being 40 years old, I'd brushed away what seemed like the last strands of five years of ongoing health issues, and I was going to walk all the way to Nome on the Idiatrod Trail. My ultimate challenge! After that, the fun would only continue — the Silk Road Mountain Race in Kyrgystan, big plans for big mountains in Europe, perhaps my most ambitious adventure year yet! 

That none of it worked out hardly seems worth mentioning at this point. I realize I am one of the lucky ones ... so far, at least. 

But we did make it through 2020, a feat in and of itself. Back in the spring, I watched a great YouTube video where a woman laments to her drunken alter-ego that she hasn't accomplished even half of what she set out to do. The alter-ego fires back, "It's pandemic. Any day spent not sick is good day."

Indeed. And on this first day of a brand new year, I'm going back through all of my 2020 photos and compiling my favorites — one for each month, plus the photo that best represents the year for me. The above photo of an Anchorage friend riding a fat bike beside the expressive icebergs of Knik Glacier evokes all of the feelings, so that's the one. 

It was Friday the 13th — March 13th. That was probably the last day that felt somewhat "normal" for most of us in the United States. I was just two days removed from the Iditarod Trail. My adventure became a 300-mile march through deep snow, relentless wind, and intense cold that utterly broke me. I'd never before felt so physically depleted. Emotionally, I was a wreck as well. Between training and focus and desire, this was as hard as I'd tried for any of my endurance goals this decade, and still I fell drastically short of finishing the thousand-mile trek to Nome. But I'd depleted everything in trying. I couldn't even find the energy to leave the depressed solitude of my hotel room in downtown Anchorage and walk across the street to the natural foods grocery store, even though I was so outrageously hungry. 

Still, when my Alaskan friends Missy and Jen invited me to tag along on this ride to Knik Glacier, I knew I could not say no. The early uncertainties of the pandemic were exploding, Beat was still somewhere out there on the Iditarod Trail, and I was an anxious mess. Even a 20-something-mile ride on snow had nothing on my energy-draining ruminations. It was refreshing — healing — to push my tired legs into the pedals of a borrowed fat bike and propel myself through a wonderland of ice and friends. That night, we went out to dinner at a crowded bar — the type of place where you're shoulder-to-shoulder with strangers. We hugged when we said goodbye. It was the last I'd experience of restaurants or hugging friends for the remainder of the year. 

But it was a beautiful day to punctuate what had already been a life-changing journey. I look back on March with a warm nostalgia, to a time and place that will never quite be the same, regardless of what the future holds.  

January: Two Top

On January 10, Beat and I, along with our friend Daniel, participated as "beta runners" in the Fat Pursuit, a fat-biking ultra in Idaho that has always managed to be heinously difficult. Everything about the 2020 race was a slog — from barely making it home after delayed flights following a work trip to Anchorage, to a long drive diverted by avalanches and pummeled by snowstorms, to the fact that more than three feet of snow fell during our 55-odd hours on the course. At times we were wading through waist-deep drifts. If I dropped more than a hundred meters behind Beat and Daniel, all traces of their tracks would be erased by wind and snow. We actually found some of our best trail conditions on top of this famously stormy pass over the Continental Divide, although Two Top continued to be famously stormy. This photo captures the mood of the Fat Pursuit well.

February: Storms on the horizon

Shortly after the Fat Pursuit, Beat and I both became quite ill and remained under the weather for most of the rest of January. In February I played a lot of catch-up from that down time, engaging in my final strength-training sessions and preparing for the Iditarod. So I don't have many adventure photos, but this photo of sunset following a day of high winds also captures the moody aura of the month.

March: The last days of innocence

This photo captures the state of the Iditarod Trail in 2020 — buried. I was snowshoeing toward Finger Lake in the late afternoon, barely able to pick out trail markers amid the blowing snow, squinting into goggles, and feeling for threads of relatively packed snow through waves of spindrift. Temperatures dropped below zero. The wildchill was breathtaking. The onset of darkness brought out my worst phobias about angry moose, and I breathed shallowly, almost holding my breath so I'd hear the crunch of hooves over the wind. This was pretty much what I did for nine solid days until it broke me, and I quit the ITI in McGrath. Even though I wouldn't have made it to Nome either way — the pandemic effectively shut down the trail before anyone after the top three cyclists reached Nome — I remain deeply disappointed about quitting. Not that I believe I could have realistically completed the journey, which in its own way is even more disappointing. Still, the warm nostalgia of those final days before the pandemic filters into this experience as well. It was time to think, and space to move — so much expansive space. I miss Alaska deeply. 

April: Quarantine

Like most people, Beat and I were very much at home during the month of April. Beat's office closed before he ever had a chance to go back and collect his things — there are probably empty soda cans on his desk that will still be there in July 2021. I canceled appointments and set up virtual visits with doctors. We'd leave for runs from our front door and stayed within a small radius of our rural neighborhood. It was the month that the city streets and storefronts felt empty, but local trailheads were mobbed. We made efforts to stay away from the crowds, which caused me to feel even more cloistered. I brought my tired legs back to some semblance of life by running on gravel roads, which was physically refreshing but mentally tedious. Still, we were at least gifted a few April snowstorms to clear out crowds and blanket the world in a quiet tranquility that I cherished. 

May: Beat's birthday run

The first time I took my road bike along on a weekly shopping trip and ventured up a canyon more than a few miles away from my house, it felt like a vacation. Most of our adventures still started from home, and exploring new and unique local routes — ideally away from the increasing crowds — became Beat's overarching goal. For his May 31 birthday, he wanted to run a loop around the traditional Boulder Skyline Route — five peaks, 26 miles, nearly 8,000 feet of climbing — but overnight, when all of the other trail users would be home in bed. We started out about an hour before sunset under menacing skies. We were pummeled by rain and tormented by flashes of lightning for a couple of hours, and then the clouds opened to reveal beautiful night. Still, the mood remained unsettled. The end of May marked the beginning of the Black Lives Matter protests. Again, it felt like there was much uncertainty in the world. As we traversed the skyline 3,000 feet above the city, I heard sirens and looked down at flashing lights. I wondered what might be happening in the volatile streets below, and what changes might finally begin because of the unrest. 

June: Venturing into the world

By June, some of Colorado's stay-at-home mandates had been lifted. I decided to join two friends on a bikepacking overnight outside of Breckenridge. It felt so strange to get in the car and drive for two hours away from home. But it was refreshing to ride a bike across the Continental Divide and sleep on a mountainside. It was a welcome respite. 

July: The proposal

All of my favorite days of summer were the big days Beat and I spent in the mountains — even with the 3 a.m. alarms, the wary weather watching, and my heightened anxiety amid long hours of managing movements that are most challenging for my blundering body. I'm more than a little ashamed that "hiking" is so difficult for me, and that almost five years as Coloradoan with technical trails in my backyard has only increased the frequency of my missteps and struggles — and yet, I love it. As with most aspects of life, the most emotionally charged moments are the most memorable. This July 12 traverse was one of our more ambitious trips. We climbed 4,500 feet to the top of James Peak and then picked our way along a jagged ridge with a few exposed maneuvers. Beat was kind about my misgivings, waiting at intervals and pointing out handholds and footholds along the way. The sky had become moody by the time we topped Mount Bancroft. I was feeling jittery but walked around the perimeter of the broad peak to take photos of the view. This was the final vista I captured before walking back toward Beat. There, as I pulled a sandwich from my pack and took a huge bite, he cleared his throat and asked me to marry him. It was the most beautiful and perfect moment I could ever imagine for myself and my partner in life. 

August: Mount Alice

The beautiful alpine adventures continued into August. I took advantage of Rocky Mountain National Park's new permit system — an effort to address COVID by reducing crowds — to enjoy relative solitude on incredible routes throughout the park. Mount Alice, in all of her dramatic cragginess, was one of my favorite mountains. 

September: A crush of 13ers

Beat and I were married on September 19 in a beautiful sunset ceremony on the summit of our backyard mountain, Bear Peak, with my family and several friends in socially distanced attendance. We have some great photos from the evening, but my general policy with these year-end photo posts is to choose images that I took. So I picked one more dramatic alpine photo of Beat standing on the saddle below Chief's Head, overlooking the spectacular upper cirque of Glacier Gorge. This was another tough day for me, and I remember thinking that I looked forward to the downtime of winter, when I wouldn't have to feel so anxious about my outdoor excursions. It was always rewarding, and always hard. Now that it's winter, I again find myself dreaming of these places, and of traveling on foot along craggy ridges and interminable boulder fields. There are so many mountains that that I consider out of reach given my insecurities about exposure, but still ... as long as I am living and loving mountains, there will always be a desire to go "higher." 

October: Fire summer

I am still angry about October. Colorado's fire season, which had scorched hundreds of thousands of acres and choked the skies with smoke since July, is usually winding down by the time the katabatic winds of late autumn arrive. But not in 2020. It was hot, it was dry, and a half dozen local fires exploded with a fury and level of destruction never before seen in this region. We experienced California-like megafires, roaring through more than 100,000 acres in a single day, destroying hundreds of homes and killing at least two people. In total, more than 625,000 acres burned in 2020 — more Colorado acreage than burned in 40 years between 1960 and 2000. Yes, forest needs to burn to clear out sickly beetle-kill trees and make room for healthy seedlings. But a lot of the fires torched forests that some researchers believe won't recover in our lifetimes, if ever. As the climate warms, Colorado is likely to become more like New Mexico — grass and shrublands at altitudes where we currently have pine and hemlock forests. Wildfire is going to expedite this transition, and witnessing the conflagerations was more upsetting that I even imagined it might me. For much of the month, I watched the sky turn black. I choked on my own breath. I lost interest in going outside, for a time. It's not a global pandemic, but in many ways, watching the environment change before my eyes is similarly disheartening, less likely to turn around, and more permanent. Yes, I am still angry about October. 

November: A soul-warming — if bone-chilling — escape

Late-arriving November storms finally brought some relief to the fire season, and we could finally breathe easier — literally. My mood and outlook improved substantially as winter weather arrived. Some of this I credited to CBD supplements. Some I credit to the personality quirk that causes me to love winter most. Not a small amount is relief about the U.S. election, which was not wholly confidence-inspiring, but better than some of the alternatives. I also believe a lot of my well-being is based in the air that I breathe. When breathing is difficult, both body and mind slip into malaise. When breathing is clear, it feels like there's nothing I can't do. Thus was my experience in November — lots of biking, lots of local adventures, none of the struggles of summer. Toward the end of the month, I made my first "escape" since March, crossing the Utah border for a week of biking in Canyonlands, Capitol Reef, and the San Rafael Swell. This was a wonderful trip, a chance to see friends and absorb stunning vistas in the gorgeous, empty desert. I was a little unprepared for the realities of camping every night when temperatures dropped to single digits and I had no indoor respites. So I froze. But I was in heaven. 

December: Keeping the long view

My gratitude for breathing easy and moving freely in the big world continued into December. After a few early snowstorms, the month was mostly warm and dry — admittedly, terrible for both the stability of mountain snowpack and our longterm prospects for avoiding another catastrophic fire summer in 2021. Right now I am not letting myself think about that, because I'm already saddened by the huge surge in COVID numbers, the lethargic nature of the vaccine rollout, and all of the travel plans I've already canceled in anticipation of a similarly cloistered 2021. Beat and I nixed a March trip to Alaska. And after maintaining hope that my friend Danni and I would pursue our Kyrgyzstan bike trip in August, we've already deferred our plans to 2022 — if ever. Sigh. I certainly am grateful for the opportunities I still have. But like everybody else, I too leave 2020 behind with a sense of loss. 

I took this photo of two mountain goats near the summit of Mount Evans, that hulking 14er with a controversial name and a road to the top that I pedaled a half dozen times in the second half of the year. Each ride brought new perspectives — the snowy optimism of June, the summery warmth of July, the smoky oppression of August and October. Finally, in December, the solitude and clarity of winter. It's been a difficult year, but I'm thrilled to have reached the proverbial starting point of another trip around the globe. Here's to more beauty, gratitude, and hopefully the more positive sorts of challenges in 2021. 


Photo posts from years past: 
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010 part one, part two
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
Friday, December 25, 2020

Wild Winter Way

It started, as most endeavors have in 2020, with widespread cancellations. One by one, all of our winter races dropped from our calendars — the Tuscobia Winter Ultra, Fat Pursuit, Arrowhead. My favorite social media group, the "Wild Winter Women," proposed putting together a virtual race for the final weeks of the year. If there's anything that makes my heart happy during this isolated holiday season, it's watching other women embrace the joys of the winter slog. I took on the role of de facto race director, in that I set up a Web site and promised to publish results afterward. The premise of Wild Winter Way was effectively "do what you want." But as a nod to Tuscobia, we established the long distance at 160 miles. 


160 miles was an intriguing distance for a winter bicycle ride — something that could be done in a single day, although once you factor a hilly course with mixed snow and ice, grinding the high resistance of studded tires, and carrying the requisite supplies necessary for a full day out in cold temperatures, maybe just barely. I wanted to start from home and make a big loop east of the Continental Divide while mostly avoiding the urban corridor. I had fun drawing up a route that was exactly 160 miles — with 21,000 feet of climbing — following snow-packed gravel roads, unmaintained back roads, and long paved climbs. The best bike for the job, I decided, was my good ol' Moots 29er: mostly because it's my most comfortable bike. Also, with aggressive studded tires, it's arguably my most capable bike for winter road riding. Fat bikes can do almost anything, but because they're designed to float rather than dig in, they tend to wash out in the sand-snow chunder so common on rural roads. 

I packed three liters of water, about 4,000 calories of food — mostly cheese sticks, banana bread and ham sandwiches — three batteries for a handlebar light, one helmet light, one spare headlamp, a water filter, wind pants and jacket, two puffy jackets, primaloft mittens, mitten shells, spare hat, socks, neck warmer, extra buffs, a mask, assorted electronics, full repair kit and pump, spare tube, and assorted personal items. The forecast called for a high of 48 degrees in Golden, where I expected to be at noon, and an overnight low of 15 in Ward, where I hoped to be at midnight. What was daunting about the weather was the wind. We were pummeled with 60 mph gusts in the days leading up to the ride. Although the forecast called for slightly lower wind speeds on Monday, the ongoing whistles and howls through my restless night convinced me that I'd probably have to face the teeth of the gale. 

My planned "race date" was the Winter Solstice — the shortest day of the longest #$&! year of our lives. With sunrise at 7:20 a.m. and sunset at 4:38 p.m., I had 9 hours and 18 minutes of daylight to work with, which is a lot, really, when you think about it. I remember reading somewhere that everywhere on Earth receives more or less the same amount of daylight over the span of a year — Alaska greedily consumes all of theirs during the summer and endures deprivation through the winter.  The equator dutifully doles out daylight in equal rations all year long. These mid-latitudes swing between 15 and 9 in either direction, which ... eh. Is there really that much difference in the modern era, when most of us spend day and night in front of screens? Yet, it is fun to celebrate Solstice — that time of year when the sun is most angled over these gentle latitudes, and color and light are infused with a richness that you never see in June. 

I headed out at 6:15 a.m. The temperature was 34 degrees and winds were still gusting well over 30 mph. An ominous if beautiful sunrise portended a difficult battle — "sailors take warning" and all that.  Buffeted by gusts, I had to engage a hard effort just to reach Flagstaff Road — two miles with a steep descent and a 500-foot climb. "I can't afford to burn all these matches right out of the gate," I thought. I also started shivering. 34 degrees isn't terribly cold, but after enduring twenty minutes of stiff headwind, the spare layers were already coming on. "Maybe I should turn around and grab my puffy shorts and once more coat," I thought. "Nah, I'll be all right." 

One problem with starting an endurance challenge from my front door is the tyranny of familiarity. There are too many sections that I know by heart; I know how far I need to travel, and I know how long these miles should take. Through a barrage of crosswind gusts, I raced to keep a good pace on Gross Dam Road, then turned into the teeth of the wind to ascend another 2,000 feet up Gap Road. Gap Road is named for a veritable wind funnel of a notch between two 10,000-foot mountains. Riding this road on a windy day feels like wrestling with an angry ghost. You can't see the ghost and you never know which way he's going to shove you; you just know it's going to hurt. 

On this day it was more of a mud wrestling match. Several inches of old snow had drifted across the road, churned into sugar, and then stirred up by traffic. The resulting chunder is difficult to describe. It's not sand, it's not mud, it's not snow — it's really all of the above, just gross and loose and seemingly bottomless. The angry ghost landed a solid jab just as my rear wheel washed over a chunder pile, and I crashed ear-first into the muck. I spit out a string of obscenities and looked at my watch. Three and a half hours! It usually only takes me two and a half hours to ride to the end of the road, which was still more than three miles away. I swore some more and ground into the pedals, swerving and churning, pegging my heart rate for four miles an hour. 

I reached Panorama Point, which was deserted, and sat on a bench overlooking angry clouds to the west. I ate two thick slices of banana bread even though I only brought four and they were supposed to be treats for later in the ride. Then I had a little cry. I like to have little cries during my endurance efforts. Tears reset the system and release extra endorphins. But when I'm not yet to the end of Gap Road ... not even at mile 20 of a 160-mile ride ... maybe that's not such a good sign. 

Finally, I started a long descent into the urban corridor on minimally maintained roads through Golden Gate Canyon — Mountain Base Road, which was awash in drifts, and Drew Hill Road, which was a fun mix of chunder over black ice. I was grateful for those studded tires! But I had to take care not to wash out, wherein studs won't save you. As I crept downhill through the shaded canyon, my core temperature plummeted. Even a puffy jacket and the mitten shells didn't ward off the chill. This was supposed to be the warmest part of the day. Maybe that's not such a good sign. 


I arrived in Golden feeling defeated. The wind still howled at the lowest altitude of my route. I also was as far east as I was going to go — no more tailwinds. It took a healthy dose of energy just to pedal west along flat city streets. I thought about turning north and heading home. Who would care? It's not like this Wild Winter Way really meant anything. It was a virtual race that I made up. Still, if I gave up now, just because it was hard, I would have to give up all of the rewards I was seeking — traveling through the beautiful day into the long night, relishing a simple, almost childlike state that forgets fear and expectation, and opening my mind to wonders beyond my usual rigid perceptions. 

It's difficult to describe the inner state of these journeys. I recently finished the book "How to Change Your Mind" by Michael Pollan, and many times found myself nodding, "That's It!" This book summarizes Pollan's personal and academic research into psychedelic drugs, exploring their history, biology, and potential for therapeutic applications. Now, I have never tried psychedelics and don't intend to still. But I can relate to the mystical journey, the pursuit of awe that Pollan frequently describes. 

 “When the ego dissolves, so does a bounded conception not only of our self but of our self-interest," Pollan writes. "What emerges in its place is invariably a broader, more openhearted and altruistic—that is, more spiritual—idea of what matters in life. One in which a new sense of connection, or love, however defined, seems to figure prominently.” 

So instead of heading north toward Boulder, I started up Lookout Mountain, where the gusty, angry ghost regathered his strength and pounced. Crosswinds became an insurmountable obstacle. I just had to throw a foot down and wait for a lull. Eventually, the ghost caught me off guard, shoving body and bike into a guardrail. My knee and shin throbbed as I teetered over an alarming precipice. After that, every time I had to round a switchback and change my defensive stance, I stepped off the bike and walked. It was shameful, but at this point, I was committed to the ride. It didn't matter how long it took or how slow I went. I was going to finish this thing. Because of this almost imperceptible shift in expectation, I felt more content — happy, even. 

My resolve was further tested along an unmaintained bike path paralleling I-70, which was just ... interminable. Here the fat bike would have been better, but one can only ride so well through loose yet crusty sugar. The infernal west wind roared directly in my face, so there was no more need for defensive wrestling moves — just a dull grind into an invisible wall. For nearly ten miles I churned along miserably, spending the rest of my energy matches just to ride the bike rather than walk it, and gaining almost no real altitude when I still had a 4,000-foot climb up Echo Mountain to contend with. There, my ride would top out at 11,135 feet, but it would be a faint victory. After that, nearly 100 miles and more than 10,000 feet of climbing still remained. I probably stopped 20 times to sulk and text Beat variations of "This Wind Is Kicking My Ass." There was no cell signal, and none of the messages went through. Probably for the best. 

I was grateful to leave that infuriating bike path and veer onto the long paved climb toward Echo Mountain — more than 15 miles of steady uphill grind. A fair amount of snow had drifted across the road and no one had yet been through to plow it, so the wrestling match commenced. The wind would not give an inch. I had listened to its roar for eight solid hours. There would be no relief. 

As I neared the top, sunset cast gorgeous pink and gold light across the mountainous horizon. The wind had swirled up a particularly impressive lenticular cloud, and I enjoyed open access to these views at the perfect time of day. The space felt immense, and yet the chill became increasingly confining. I stopped to put on most of my spare layers. I felt a tinge of fear for the many hours of darkness in front of me. I turned on the front headlight only to find it barely worked — it would only flicker in its dimmest setting. I tried a second battery and then the third with similar results. I probably should have anticipated that these batteries might not work so well when cold. My anxiety spiked substantially because the long night was coming and I was nearly blind — I had only one helmet light battery and thus needed to keep it on its lowest setting. I wanted to save my headlamp in case everything else failed. 

Under a crush of cold and darkness, I was overcome with irrational urgency, an inner voice screaming that I needed to descend into Idaho Springs as quickly as possible. I launched into the descent with my sad headlight blinking white flashes into otherwise jet-black darkness. These were surreal miles, coasting in panic mode with a kind of disco light effect guiding the way, shivering so profusely that I could barely steer the bike, my hands too numb to do much with the brakes, and wondering with slight detachment what would happen if a deer suddenly darted out in front of me. 

"This is so trippy," I thought, and laughed with a thirdhand observer's amusement about the poor choices I was making. 

Luckily, the spell broke before anything bad happened. I finally stopped to windmill some blood back into my hands and fiddle with the lights, coaxing one to work on a more solid setting and stuffing the other two batteries down my bra for rewarming. I started to daydream about the one gas station I'd pass in Idaho Springs, and the hot coffee with cream I was definitely buying alongside the few liters of water I needed. I originally planned to complete my ride unsupported but justified making this stop. It was coffee and water. Who would care? 

I pulled into the parking lot, propped my bike against a window, and was again fiddling with my lights when a large Greyhound bus pulled up to the store. The marquee read "New York" and the interior was completely packed with passengers. Dozens of people poured out of the bus and into the store, lining up at the bathrooms, filling the aisles, and swarming around the nearby garbage cans outside. I haven't been around this many people since the pandemic started. It's just my luck that my first crowd experience in nine months happened in the midst of a long and deeply fatiguing solo ride where my anxiety was already spiked. I panicked. Even though my backpack was slung over one shoulder with half of my stuff hanging out, I mounted the saddle and began pedaling away, forgetting I'd clipped my helmet to the rear wheel. A clunk halted my pedal stroke — "Why did my bike stop working?" — before I remembered I put it there to trip up potential thieves for a few seconds while I purchased coffee. As I struggled with the helmet straps, smokers continued encircling me, masks off and cigarettes lit. I fully lifted the bike and carried it across the street until I was safely out of the store's spotlight, where I could lean against a chain-link fence and put myself back together.

Whew! Who even knew that cross-country bus travel was still a thing right now? I was greatly relieved to pedal away from the lights of I-70 and into the yawning darkness of Virginia Canyon. Sure, I didn't get my coffee. And sure, I was now going to have to scout out frozen creeks to collect water that I needed sooner than later. But any difficulties ahead were much less daunting than that crush of humanity. I was slightly agoraphobic even before the pandemic. I wondered if I'll be able to function normally in a crowd, ever again.

After that adrenaline spike, the world returned to surreality. My next section took me through a maze of barely traveled jeep roads to bypass a crush of humanity in the casino towns of Black Hawk and Central City. Snow was deep and grades were steep, and I stumbled along, gazing bleary-eyed at the snowy forest where a few random trees held strings of Christmas lights. From there I descended into Apex Valley, where a bridge crossed the ice of North Clear Creek. Just below the bridge was an open lead with enough rocks around it to spur some confidence about straddling the ice. Balancing on top of rocks proved tricky, but I was grateful to take a sip of icy clear water and know that I had earned it. Since the water temperature was already close to freezing, it rapidly turned to slush in my water bottle. I took a few more sips while standing in place — my first moments of real stillness since the start of my ride. What was that strange sound? For the first time in more than twelve hours, the air was simply quiet. 

The angry ghost had been subdued. Late evening had arrived, and almost all traffic had disappeared from these mountain roads. The air was quiet, the land was quiet, and the sky was filled with an expanse of stars and a lopsided half-moon.  A giddy sort of "endurance buzz" took over, and I pedaled onward in a state of bliss. I tackled the climbs with renewed zeal, half believing in this strange out-of-body sensation — that time had ended and yet consciousness remained. Now I was free to roam the universe without the nagging demands of a body. This would last until I felt woozy because my glucose tanked, and then I'd have to stop to cram down a few more bites of sandwich, after which a higher level of lucidity — and thus mental fatigue — would return. But I loved my night ride along Peak to Peak Highway. Loved it. How often does one just continue moving through an expansive and starry night, the only sentient being in the universe, breathing frosty air and sipping slushy water so cold that it sparks a thrilling electric jolt? (I believe these are called ice cream headaches.) This was exactly the experience I was seeking, reason enough to travel all of those grueling miles while wrestling an angry ghost.

I reached my furthest north point at the quirky mountain town of Ward, sometime before 2 a.m. Here I again bundled up after shedding most of my layers — even though temperatures had dropped well below freezing, with the wind gone, I'd heated up rapidly — and launched into a 4,000-foot descent into Boulder. As I was zooming down Lefthand Canyon, I passed a dark driveway with something softly lit on the ground. It looked like my name. At first I thought I was half-hallucinating, as one does at 2 a.m. after 20 hours on a bike. But it was real! An acquaintance left out this encouraging sign and a cup of warm tea. The tea was caffeinated and the perfect temperature to gulp quickly — unlike my headachy slush water — and I relished the infusion of energy and hydration, along with warm gratitude. Simple acts of kindness can mean so much.

The wind had returned before the end of the descent, so the steep climb up Lee Hill renewed a punishing battle. My overnight bliss had faded, and all that remained was seemingly insurmountable fatigue. I'd burned up all of my energy matches. I burned them while the sun was still up, while battling chunder and angry ghosts. There were only fumes and fantasy to carry me through the darkness. Now even fumes were gone. I'd ridden my bike nearly 150 miles. It wouldn't be so bad if I could call that distance good and just stop here, but I still had one final 3,000-foot climb to surmount before I was physically at home. Ten miles of pure pain. Was it even possible? I had lots of snacks still — I hadn't eaten nearly enough calories — and resolved to stop every mile, catch my breath, and cram down a few grams of sugar before continuing. 

Again, I was back in familiar territory. Again, I knew where my capabilities should fall. "SuperFlag" climbs 2,000 feet in 4.5 miles. My best time on this segment is 45 minutes. It's mediocre, but it absolutely crushes the 105 minutes it took me during the wee hours of Tuesday morning. It had become so late that it was now early, and the first commuters were rolling down the icy pavement on their way to work. I made sure I was never walking my bike when I saw headlights — dignity and all — but once the road crossed that ten-percent-grade threshold, I wasn't even capable of pedaling. I had nothing left. Just nothing. A deep nausea set in, and I could no longer consume the snacks I promised during more frequent breaks. While pedaling, it was all I could do not to vomit. There were a few moments when I genuinely wondered if I could even walk my bike home. But finally, just before 6 a.m., the lights of my front door came into view — just as I'd left them, 24 hours earlier. 

One short day. One long, strange trip. This is the Wild Winter Way. It has its up-front costs, and this one felt particularly high given the slowness of my recovery since. But bodies are fickle. Nausea and soreness fades. The awe, the wonder, the expansive perspectives — those remain. It's worth it.