Black River commute

Tonight I snapped a picture of a particularly nice looking part of my commute. The leaves, while a little slippery, are very pretty. Later they will leave interesting dyed patterns on much of the sidewalks.

The diligent observer will notice that I have installed my fairing on my Cruzbike Silvio. It works well enough but I still may end up removing it in favor of simplicity. All that I MUST keep warm is my hands. The rest I can keep warm enough with clothes. My hands? always freeze.

I created this post (except this note and an edit on the picture) from my iPhone…new better tasting – with pictures.

iPost pumpkins

Yesterday we got our pumpkins, all 125 lbs of them.
We hadn’t really planned on being there because the weather was kinda crummy but a momentary clearing and a flawed game of rock-paper-scissors meant we would risk it.
Turns out it was the highlight of our day.

And this is also my first test post with my new tech-toy.

Womens Recumbent World Record – 12 Hour

I just “watched” (virtually) Maria Parker of Cruzbike set a new world record for a recumbent; I am actually a little confused on what exactly the record is was because claims abound and well…they tell me it is a new world record and I believe them. I know what it is now.

Jim, over at CyclingExperiences.com, live-blogged the whole thing keeping us Cruzbike enthusiasts on the edge of our seats all day with hourly updates (every time she crossed the start line).

According to his post Maria Parkers World Record she traveled an incredible 240.1 miles in 12 hours an amazing average of 20.08 mph.

As of this writing the record is not certified but it is certainly amazing!
Way to go Maria Parker!

And much thanks to Jim at CyclingExperiences for setting up shop in what sounds like a remote part of North Carolina to keep us all informed.
You can see his flickr photostream here

Oh yeah, and one of the interesting parts of this story, somewhere on lap #7 Maria suffered a minor crash because wind gusts and wheel covers don’t mix. They quickly changed to her back-up bike (her husband’s bike that was outfitted for her, which by the way is another really cool feature of the Cruzbike Silvio) and she only lost an estimated 3 minutes. She rode her husbands bike the rest of the way.

And the coolest thing, for me personally, is that she did all of this on a (specially outfitted but still) stock Silvio; just like mine.

For part of the time she had wheel covers true but for Lap 7-12 she had no wheel covers and questionable weather with wind gusts and all.

I am so impressed.

The AR System

At the office I am Product Owner / Systems Analyst / meta-developer on a particular project. In this project I am helping to configure a very powerful and complicated suite of applications called the Action Request System (AR System). This system has, among other things, a system server and each application in the suite has it’s own “process”. In this case I was configuring the Assignment Engine (which I think is one of those applications) to perform special actions based on a particular set of rules.

One of the actions it *could* take was one that we didn’t want it to take. We didn’t want the default behavior and in fact we really didn’t need anything to happen
BUT
an idiosyncracy of the system is if there wasn’t an action directive for that process we couldn’t do ANY of the other directives. So the architect, let’s call him Joe, said

Just put a dummy rule in there, do something that will resolve to false.
You mean like If 1+1=3 Then X?
Yeah.

I created the process within which I would put this rule and stopped.
I didn’t want to have to craft the rule, if it didn’t really matter, so I said

What if I just leave it (the rule in the process) blank?
Hm, I dunno, see if it takes it?

It did and I was on my way.

Later, after some other configurations, and a bunch of test cases (translated into about 24 commands) I reported a problem. The Assignment Engine (AssignEng) wasn’t doing what it was supposed to do. In fact the whole system server (AR System) seemed to be having issues.
Joe looked into it for a while (4+ hours) and found, under continued questioning and at my insistence, that I broke it.

The following is a chat extract.

Joe:[] AssignEng Processing 24 pending command(s) of category AE-ASSIGN.
[] AssignEng Processing pending command DoAssign.
[] AssignEng Starting to process DoAssign command.
[] AssignEng **********************************************
[] AssignEng Initialized system.
[] AssignEng AR System Assignment Engine 7.1.00 Build 200708221849
[] AssignEng Initialized access to AR system.
[] AssignEng Found pending command form.
[] AssignEng Initialized. Entering message processing loop.
[] AssignEng
[] AssignEng Checking connection to AR system.
[] AssignEng Connection to AR system is working.

Joe: See those 24 “pending commands” up at the top?
Joe: When it would try to process them…the server would crash…
Lief: ok
Joe: It would do the following:
1) Come up
2) Try processing those 24 commands
3) Die
4) Restart
5) Repeat….every ten seconds until the sever was hosed.
Joe: Nicely done, BTW!
Lief: thanks. : )

Everyone on that team admits they hadn’t seen an application/process/thing like this bring down the main server (AR System) before and that it was broken in an amazing and profound fashion.
All this goes to show that I am not limiting myself to the physical world anymore.

I’m takin this show virtual baby!

Normalcy

Last friday I was on the Central Link light rail leaving Seattle…and I was late.

I had already missed the faster commuter train and was using the Link to get me closer to home so I could go fast for 20 minutes instead of having to go fast for 50 minutes.

Both put me home about the same time but one gets me home more rested – ready for a night out with The First Mermaid.

I was the fourth bike on the car and moving my Silvio side to side at each stop to stay out of the way of pedestrians, of which there weren’t many. At one stop two “fare checkers” boarded my car and swept the joint. After they were done and perhaps one minute before the next stop they approached me purposefully. By the way, they interrupted a casual conversation with a fellow cyclist about my bike that had started something like ‘that’s one hell of a bike.”.

The first one, for lack of a better name let’s call him TDee, waved and wagged his upright finger at me and my bike and said

Sir, your bicycle is not authorized to be on this train.

By this time TDum had taken his place by TDee’s side.

I was astounded. I thought they were joining the pleasant conversation I was having with the other cyclist and now I was presented with the sudden and real possibility that I would be kicked off the train, and somehow I didn’t “fit in”. And furthermore I would be REALLY late for my date. I couldn’t have that. Date’s are infrequent occurrences at best and besides…he just wagged his finger at me and my babybike, did he not?

What? Why not?

TDum this time, helpfully;

Sir, you are in the best position you can be in on this train, you really are, (referring to me being out of the way of peds) but your bike just doesn’t fit.

What is the problem? I don’t understand.

At this point who-said-what get’s a little hazy but the wording was clear.

That is not a normal bike.

I reacted to that like the mother of a small, innocent, and insulted child. I got a shot of adrenaline (probably why who-said-what gets a little hazy) which clarified my thinking and I replied, leaning forward, with a small amount of mock confusion,

What? Why…ahhh, would you please define “normal” for me? What is a “normal” bike?

TDee pointed at the bike-hanger and stammered, looking over the geometry of my front wheel drive, moving bottom bracket, 700C, short wheelbase, recumbent bicycle and was obviously confused. It clearly didn’t match his thinking and was in direct conflict with his directive…but he couldn’t figure out why or how – because there really was no problem.

I had a flash of the engagement I had two years ago with the conductor on the Sounder who claimed that my chainring being exposed, as it was, to the “people” on the train was somehow inherently dangerous and I followed TDee’s eyes to my chainring. But TDum helped out.

Well, it doesn’t fit. It couldn’t be hung up there (in the bike cubby).

By the way, even if I COULD hang my bike in that cubby, (which I have tested, and I can) I don’t want to.

The problem is that it is free hanging nub of a hanger that you hook only one wheel over and with every bump, stop, start, and course correction of the irregular track and driver the bike rattles and bangs all over the place. Really lame solution if you ask me.
It is also a real trick to balance yourself, in cleats, while en/disengaging your bike, holding it in mid air as the train is lumbering to a start/stop. Much, much easier to just keep the rubber side down.

I replied, with conviction

I could hang it there, absolutely.

Then TDum made a measurable statement.

Well, your bike is just longer than those.

At this point I unfolded my drive-train from it’s “tucked” position and said

It is not?! If you put his bike right down next to mine you will see that the wheelbase is the same.

…and just in case “wheelbase” was too much jargon for them I added, pointing with both hands at the same time along the vertical line of each axle,

Where each wheel hits the ground is identical.

I was taking a wee chance on that one but I knew the difference was negligible and I considered that point settled because they had just given a brief, eyebrow-raising, stand-up-straight, moment of recognition. Okay, ready for the next one.

You see, I have read about these altercations, and heard all the arguments before – I had that clear thinking-ness rolling and was ultra-confident they couldn’t convince me anything was wrong.

I was also confident that they would STILL kick me off of the now stopped train, out of pride or authority or spite…or all three.

Their next action was the most surprising of all (and probably a really good reason not to call them TDum and TDee, at least not TDum anyway).
TDum turned to TDee and muttered something low and in passing and without another word or even a glance at me; as if it had never happened, they just…got off the train.

I was still bristling (inwardly, and perhaps outwardly as well) but basically kept a cool (to me) visage and “talked ’em down”.

The other cyclist, as he was getting out, shot me a questioning glance that said “what the heck just happened?”, shook his head in confusion, and got off behind them.

It took me about four miles, three mock-continued arguments (wherein I always won – again), multiple retellings, and one blog post to put it behind me.

Each from each

The Wee Mermaid has a way with words…and shoes.
Recently she has taken to a flip flop on one foot alongside a rubber galosh on the other.

It makes for a unique visual and auditory experience when she runs hunkered down, clinging with her toes on one foot and her heel (if that is possible) on the other through, say, a McLendons or the mall.

flip-clumph-smack
flip-clumph-smack
flip-clumph-smack
flip-clumph-smack
flip-clumph-smack

Meditate on a horse race, with rubber horseshoes, on concrete, and jellyfish tied ’round the ankles and you’ll have it.
It is pretty clear which one is ours.

Somewhere along the line she described her style as “each from each” and she uses it liberally. She has even coerced her sister and together they might insist on nightgowns and ‘each from each’.

Now you know.

A new stake in the sand

I just checked on my old record, set on my Thunderbolt, and let’s just start this off with a subtle statement.

I smashed it.

Cutting to the chase numbers right away:

  • Distance = 16.8 mi (perfectly calibrated odometer/speedometer)
  • Time = 54min 42s (56 seconds better than my previous record)
  • Average = 18.5 mph

With only 400 miles on my Silvio I beat my herculean effort on my Thunderbolt and I did it via Colman Park (not Massachusets hill) which is approximately 2 tenths of a mile further…on the flat that would be about 30-40 seconds…on a hill maybe 1 minute?

Some other points to note about this ride.

  • I had a good time going out of the gate, I got lucky on a few lights in Renton and was able to maintain most or all of my momentum without danger.
  • I am about 5-8 lbs lighter this year than I was last year.
  • I was running light (no bike bin) because I have noticed the aero-drag of the bike-bin.
  • I was not nearly as wiped out after this ride as I was in Aug of 08 – I am in better shape and I didn’t lay it all on the line with the ride…I went hard for sure but there was still more in the tank when I was done.
  • At the onset of my first real climb I was rockin a 21 mph average over 20 minutes
  • After that climb reduced my average to 18+ my flat speed brought it back up to mid 20’s.
  • The next big climb through Colman Park took it back down to about 19 and change and if I am not mistaken I crested that hill in the 38th minute and re-attained a 20 mph average before I hit the city riding.

Incidentally, the fact that I wasn’t as tired doesn’t mean a whole lot. I could have TOTALLY spent every last reserve, collapsed at the door and maybe eeked another minute out of my commute? I may try that some day but really the best point is that with roughly the same “level of effort” I can reduce my commute time by nearly 10 percent.

Where 60 minutes used to be a target, now 55 minutes is.
Where 65 minutes used to a norm, now 60 minutes is.

Traffic lights and other factors make a bigger difference than the aerodynamics and weight of my bike for my commute but overall I am extremely happy with this bike and especially my prospects for longer faster rides.

Go Cruzbike!

The commute bar has been lowered

A couple of things before I get to the meat of this one –

This is about biking, specifically my new bike, and because I spend up to two hours a day on my bike; well let’s just say that she doesn’t have a name…but…she…does seem to have just acquired a gender.

This is about statistics, which is a thing some people who get freaked out about their bikes do. Not all bike freaks do…well for that matter I wouldn’t have considered myself a bike freak in the truest sense of the word except that I have just spent 10 minutes thinking and talking about how I am going to describe to all of you Mermaid lovers just how cool my new bike is, new bikes are in general, and thinking of a clever way to entreat you to read this post anyway.
Oh, and I will be prattling on about statistics related to my bike.

Let’s move on.

This morning I was paying close attention to an unexplained shimmy after about 32-34mph coasting downhill. When I hit 37.8 without a single shimmy** and then proceeded to hit every green light through Renton (NEVER HAPPENS!!!) I decided

This is a good day for a record attempt

** Grumpy may be disappointed to hear this considering how much fun he was having talking about ‘lateral elasticity’ but I am not saying it is MIA just yet. The only difference between yesterday and today is I re-inflated my tires to their proper psi (110) and finally figured out how to properly inflate the head shock. It may have been darn near flat before – I have no way of knowing. Also, I was paying close attention to it…that always makes problems disappear.

I stop at the airport for a shot of albuterol (just in case) and mumble something challenging to myself at a passing rabbit commuter. I caught him at the north end of the airport.

The headwind down Rainier nearly sunk me, that and my left hamstring was troubling me but being the freak scientist that I am I tarried on. Well that and last night I just read that part in the Call of The Wild to La Grande Mermaid where Buck wins his masters foolish bet by breaking a 1000 lb sled loose from the ice and dragging it 100 yards by himself.

Gee!
Haw!
MUSH!!

So I couldn’t give up on a count of a little wind.

After a nice climb through Seward Park (she climbs pretty fast) I came down to the Blvd and found a reverse rabbit*. He looked strong and he was clearly out on a training run. That is, I have a built in excuse for when he overtakes me; he is training and I am ‘commuting’. So I hammered it up to 22mph and in the headwind settled into a mildly strenuous 19mph.

His headlight only ever got smaller.

* a reverse rabbit is another biker that you encounter in your travels that never actually starts in front of you, like a plain ‘ol rabbit. Usually you see them enter in your mirror, this time he came from a side street and pulled in behind.

Another commuter rabbit came and went and soon I found myself closing in on downtown. I ran into a few red lights that killed some time but holy cow, I found a new skill this morning – a high speed sprint and it REALLY goes. The ability to pull on the handle bars makes such a profound difference in the feel of a sprint. I don’t know objectively if I can crank it up any faster than on my Thunderbolt (no gender by the way) but she certainly feels lively and quick and springy and fast.

Now I come into stoplight ‘heaven’, but it’s good cause I can get a breather. Still I wish we could learn from the dutch on this one. I make my way through the chicane of buses, cars, pedestrians, and other bikes down to my straightaway finish – the waterfront.

I engage my newfound skill and sprint up to about 25mph and I top out. I guess I shoulda had something to eat this morning. There is more gear and more go in my body but something gives out and I just don’t have the energy to keep the sprint going as long as I usually can. So I settle into a hard-ish 21 or so, dodge a few tourists bound for the slow boat to Alaska (and some goofball blocking two lanes while performing a textbook 13-point u-turn) and I skim up Wall St.

This time I only slip my wheel once…I am getting better.

My ride statistics (my computer is not calibrated well so on the avg I have adjusted the number based on my time – the rest of the numbers don’t matter too much so I didn’t bother.)
Top speed – ~37.8mph
Distance – adjusted 16.85 miles (reading 17.09)
Time – 58:01
Average Speed – adjusted 17.4 mph (reading is 17.8)
Total odometer – 96.7 miles

As it turns out that was a fun story to recount, I hope the Mermaid lovers weren’t put off by my initial bike-siren and got this far.