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Posts Tagged ‘San Francisco’

Watch their ride across the country

Thanks to the film crew on the road, here are some snippets from the first four days of the ride. I’ll update this video as more footage comes in, and eventually you’ll be able to see them ride from sea to shining sea.

Dear Sponsors

 

Here’s a first report on the Sea to Shining Sea

May 22-San Francisco to Napa

A necessarily short report on a long first day off the Sea to Shining Sea ride.

The ride group of 18 wounded warriors, able bodied riders from State Farm, our major sponsor and from S2SS arose at 4:30 AM to meet a 5AM baggage call at the hotel. We The next hour was taken up with arranging bikes and equipment before we set off for breakfast at a parking lot next to the Golden Gate Bridge. After scrounging a variety of riders’ breakfast food groups–granola bars, bread, various fruits, energy drinks,etc. , we were treated to a marvelous a capella rendition of the National Anthem by an Army Sgt., followed by a send off prayer by our riding army Chaplain, and a bit after 7AM we were off.

The weather was absolutely perfect–not a cloud in the sky, but rather ominously as it turned out, a heavy westerly wind. So while the ride across the bridge was spectacular, certainly one of the great sights anywhere in America, we were already battling a wind that would in the end plague us throughout the day.

As he had promised us at the farewell dinner the night before at the Presidio, Robin Williams joined the riders at the first water stop across the bridge, in Sausalito. He was full of the wise cracks and instant repartee for which he is famous and proved to be an experienced, courteous and engaging riding partner. (I learned only later from one of our experienced riders that the bike he was on sells for c. $50,000. On the other hand the most important part of a bike is the engine….)

We came across our first hills after Sausalito, minor ones compared to what we will face later in the ride, but enough to begin to challenge some of the riders, especially those who have not been able to train on hills. So began the second story of the day–large and growing gaps between riding groups. While this is understandable, and even preferable from a safety point of view, if the gaps get too big, the problem of monitoring all the riders becomes very difficult–at the same time that it becomes more important.

Williams left us it the next water stop, in Fairfax, which was at about our 20 mile point, reached at 10AM. He noted, as he headed off for a good cup of espresso, that the previous hills we had ridden were “nothing” compared to the one we would hit just north of Fairfax, and cheerfully added that that was why he was leaving us at this point.

I was delighted to find one of my sponsors, Thom Weisel, with his Saturday ride partners at our stop in Fairfax. Thanks Thom for your great support!

Williams was right. We heading up several long hills over the next 16 miles through beautiful farm country, on little traveled roads–but into a severe head wind that made even simply hills feel like mountains. I spent most of this portion “screening” one of the vets who rides a handbike. These are very low to the ground and thus difficult for cars to see should they come upon them suddenly, as can often happen on these winding hill roads. In this case, Seth is an excellent rider, but did not have a flag attached to the back of his bike, which is the usual way to signal a hand bike’s presence to drivers. To the safety measure consists of having an upright biker ride directly behind the hand bike on the assumption that drivers will at least see the upright bike. But it makes for enervating hill climbing, at a slow speed, staying close to the hand bike without hitting it.

Seth and I were both happy to arrive at the Marin County Fire Dept, our lunch stop, mile 36, at 12:15. Lunch there was provided by the wives of men and women from the area whose children are currently serving in the US military. One of them had a son flying Apache helicopters in Afghanistan and had read on the S2SS web page that one of our disabled vets, Stuart, had received his injury while flying an Apache there. She anxiously sought Stuart out, told him about her son and asked me to take a picture of the two of them that she immediately posted to her son.

I should say that at all of our stops today, and at the farewell dinner last night, riders had men and women come up to them over and over, not just to thank them for their service, but to add that they,too, had served or had children serving in the military. And I have been moved to find that a number of the disabled vets served in Iraq at the same time I did.

From the lunch stop on, the winds were brutal. Finally at about the 50 mile point, we reached the stunning Napa valley. The light by now was dramatic, as the sun was sinking to the west behind a curtain of rather ominous thunderclouds. The ride group was now becoming very spread out, as several bikers had the usual mechanical problems–flat tires, broken cables,etc, and as the hills and wind began to take their toll. The challenge now was to try to keep the group more or less together because we were due to arrive at the Yountville VA facility for a community sponsored barbeque at 4PM.

Well by 4PM , on a small group of riders had reached the last water stop, at the Sonoma fire station–still some 24 miles from the finish. it was clear that the good people of Yountville were in for a long wait.

After considerable communications up and down the line, the WTS CEO Jeff Messner decided to gather up the lagging riders and take them by van to our hotel in Napa, just short of the VA where all riders would “circle up” to ride into the facility, beaten but unbowed, together. God had other ideas because as we entered the town of Napa, a violent and frigid rain storm burst on us. At that point it was every one for themselves. We were all so cold that no one had any thought of waiting for the others. I was feeling fine physically (we were at the 75 mile point when the storm broke) but was very cold despite two extra layers of clothing and a rain jacket.

At this stage, after a long ride, your body is simply depleted of energy, your body is telling you to get warm again and is beginning to pull blood from your extremities to the core to preserve you vitals. There is a real danger if it goes on too long of hypothermia. So we all scrambled in a rather effective display of ride indiscipline to get to the hotel ASAP. There we were met by hotel and S2SS staff with large towels, told to rack our bikes, mount up into the vans as we were for a ride to the VA facility. By now it was almost 7 PM and we had been riding for 12 hours. (Note my actual “riding time” was about 6 hrs 45 mins, the rest of the time being consumed by waits at various rest stops while we reassembled the group. Clearly we will need a better plan going forward).

The folks at the VA were very understanding, gave everyone a warm ovation, fed us many necessary carbohydrates and accepted our apologies and thanks. We got back to our hotel at about 9PM, cold but inwardly exhilarated that the ride has begun and that despite some difficult conditions, we had made it through the first day of what promises to be a great trip.

Thank you all again for your support for this wonderful cause.

 

Day 1

San Fransisco to Napa. It was an amazing 1st day. I have ridden farther and harder, but I have never been in the saddle this long.

I am grateful to all those that came out to support us, especially to those that fed us. Without them I couldn’t have ridden for more than an hour. 8 hours on a bike today and the whole trip was 12 hours…WOW!

A star-studded start to S2SS!

Last night Kevin Sullivan posted this image on his blog. That’s Robin Williams out to dinner with our riders before they started their ride! Then, this morning, the AP shot a few photos of Robin joining our riders during Day 1.

Day 1: San Fran to Yountville

This morning, our riders begin. From San Francisco to Yountville, CA, their first of 64 days will take them 77 miles, out of 4,000 on their way to Virginia Beach. See their various stops along the way, or view their detailed Day-1 route map.

UPDATE (8:46 a.m. PT): Looks like only Chris’ GPS provides real-time location data.

I’m excited that Andrew Hartzell, and Chris Frost and Marc Esposito have GPS devices enabled as they ride. We’ll see how accurate and up-to-the-minute those are. Access Andrew’s GPS, access Chris’ GPS, or access Marc’s GPS.

Good luck riders! Even those of us who aren’t riding with you - we’re with you.

Wheel Dipping Video/Photos

Yesterday, prior to the start of the Sea to Shining Sea bike ride, the riders checked one ocean off their list, before beginning their journey to the next. In an afternoon ride to San Francisco Bay, shown in the video below, they dipped their rear tires into the Pacific waters. In two months, their front tires will touch the Atlantic.

Wheel dipping

What a great day! It is amazing that this is happening! Not only is ride itself something to be marveled at, but I am truly lucky to be in the company of heroes.

Thank you all for making this happen.

Exploring SF

Here is my ride around SF. You can see where I turned around because I forgot my helmet. This is also my 1st ride on my Bruce Gordon.

San Francisco Examiner Features Our Riders

Mike Aldax, of the San Francisco Examiner, met with five of the Sea to Shining Sea riders and published a great piece about their journey.

SAN FRANCISCO — Imagine pedaling a bicycle for nearly a month, traveling almost 4,000 miles during the peak of summer through every possible landscape, including deserts and mountain passes — while disabled. Sound difficult?

Not to hundreds of injured war veterans who fought enemy combatants in the Middle East and will be participating in a grueling cycling quest from San Francisco to Virginia that begins Saturday.

In 63 days, they will have only 11 days to rest. On five days, they will cycle more than 100 miles at a time. Their longest trip is 120 miles through southeast Nevada, where temperatures can exceed triple digits.

The article also features some nice quotes from our riders:

“If you succeed after an injury in anything, you’re taking the power away from the injury,” [he] said. “You’re taking the power away from the enemy.” – Josh Davis

“I have no doubt at all that I’ll finish,” [she] said. “I’m going to take it one pedal at a time.” – Nicolette Maroulis

“If we can get people to focus on what we can do, but not what we can’t do anymore, that will make the whole trip worthwhile.” – Chris Frost

“In most things, the majority of it is mental,” he said. “Your body can truly go farther than you expect.” – Marc Esposito

“I’m assuming the first two weeks are going to be painful,” he said. “And then after that, I’m going to go numb and it’s not going to bother me anymore.” – Stuart Contant

Arrival

We all arrived safely in San Francisco last night. I attempted to ride up one of the monster hills here in the city unsuccessfully. After making it 3/4ths of the way up my wheel began to spin out and I tumbled back.

Ride begins Saturday, May 22 in San Fran

Our incredible group of riders will embark from the Golden Gate Bridge bridge on their first of 63 days, traveling towards Napa, CA.

The approximate route/schedule for May 22 is as follows:

Click here for a full list of events from the start to the end of their journey