Thursday, February 29, 2024

Wrapping Up February 2024

Does anyone really like leap years? In the Southern Hemisphere, I guess it’s a good deal to have an extra day in February—it was sunny and 77° in Johannesburg today, if you were wondering. Here in the north, February 29 is usually just another deep winter day. We did better than average this time, so I won’t complain. And taking stock of the entire month, February 2024 wasn’t too bad.

Tuesday was the first 60° day in West Bend since November 16 … and then it turned into the first 70° day since October 27! Unreal. We peaked at 71° early Tuesday afternoon, obliterating the old record high of 52° from 1976 and our 36° average high for February 27. Then the wind shifted to the northwest, and taking wind chill into account, we dropped all the way to 1° in only 18 hours. We also picked up a trace amount of snow. On Tuesday afternoon I applied sunscreen and rode outside in shorts for the first time in months. By Wednesday afternoon I didn’t even want to walk to the curb to pick up my mail.

March is expected to begin with temperatures in the low 50s to low 60s, which is good enough to get me back out on the bike. I rode outside on three occasions in February, matching last year’s total. Those 63 miles won’t impress anyone, though, and I’m hoping for better things in March. Last year, March was a bit of a disaster: I rode only six times for a total of 141 miles. I should be able to beat that, especially as I will spend the last week of March in southeastern Pennsylvania, where the temperature historically is 10° warmer on average. I’m planning a three-week stay in Pennsylvania. If the weather is good, then that visit should be something of a training camp for me.

Training in February mostly consisted of upper body strength workouts and treadmill walks. I shattered my old record of 74.08 miles of walking for fitness, set in September 2021. In February, I walked exactly 100 miles. Garmin Connect tells me that February also was my best ever month for steps—203,115 of them—but I don’t know what the old record was. And 203,115 is still short of the 10,000 steps per day ideal that so many fitness experts recommend. I needed almost 29 hours to get my 203,115 steps, which comes out to almost 60 minutes per day. I don’t think I want to devote more time than that to walking. But the new treadmill certainly has been a great addition to the home gym. It’s so much easier to do an indoor walk than to bundle up against the cold. With better weather I will return to hikes and ruck marches, but the treadmill has been the solution for walking this winter.

February was a surprisingly good month for Garmin Connect badges. I earned 12 of them, as shown above. I credit the treadmill for almost all of those achievements and for keeping my weight stable throughout the month. I seem to have reached equilibrium in the calories in / calories out calculation. I’m still far heavier than I would like to be, but at least things didn’t get worse this month.

Sunday, February 25, 2024

Saturday, February 24, 2024

SafeSport Trained, Again

Five years ago, I completed SafeSport training for the first time. I was then the captain of Team Pedal Moraine, and I thought it would look good to complete the anti-abuse, anti-harassment program. This year, renewing my certification wasn’t optional: as President of the Wisconsin Cycling Association, it was my duty to complete the training. USA Cycling requires it of all members of the WCA Board of Directors. USA Cycling might require it of you too, especially if you are in a position of leadership within your cycling club or USA Cycling-affiliated local association.

Thursday, February 22, 2024

Breaking The Seal On 2024

There they are, those first precious outdoor miles of the new year! West Bend has enjoyed a few 50° days in 2024, but this was the first one I could use. And even today I didn’t spend as much time in the saddle as I would have liked. In my new role as President of the Wisconsin Cycling Association, I had a 1-hour call with USA Cycling that kept me in my home office until 4 o’clock. I used the rest of the afternoon, all 90 minutes of it, for a ride around town. Unlike most of my season openers, today’s ride was NOT impeded in any way by lingering snow and ice. Even shady park paths were fully accessible. The 10-day forecast proves that winter isn’t over yet, but there are more 50° days coming soon, and maybe this year’s first 60° day next Tuesday.

Friday, February 16, 2024

The 2024 WEMS Schedule

9 Hours of Alpine Valley
June 1
Alpine Valley Ski Resort, Elkhorn

Jack Lake Crazy Eights
June 15
Veterans Memorial Park, Deerbrook

Romp in the Swamp Epic
June 29
Nine Mile County Forest, Wausau

RASTA Rock N Root
July 20
Washburn Lake Trails, Rhinelander

Hundred Down in the Underdown
August 17
Underdown Recreation Area, Gleason

The Wild Ride Buzzard Buster
August/September TBD
Levis Mound Trailhead, Neillsville

Wednesday, February 7, 2024

I Do Solemnly Swear

At the end of January, the Wisconsin Cycling Association asked me to serve as its President for 2024. I gratefully agreed. It will be an honor to lead our statewide, USA Cycling-sanctioned governing body for road, track, and cyclocross racing. (Mountain bike racing still falls under the governance of TREK’s Wisconsin Off-Road Series.) In recent years—and particularly since the COVID-19 pandemic—the role of the WCA has been greatly diminished. Its once-thriving road series has dwindled to a handful of unrelated events, mostly criteriums that are little more than tune-ups for the Tour of America’s Dairyland. In 2024, the WCA plans to reintroduce its criterium series not just as a collection of training races, but as a competitive series in its own right.

The Tour of America’s Dairyland has changed road racing in Wisconsin, mostly for the better but very much to the detriment of the WCA’s Wisconsin Cup. And in my opinion, it would be silly to deny and oppose the changes when we might benefit from them. My objective is to make the Wisconsin Cup a prestigious, “can’t  miss” series that crowns its champions before ToAD begins on June 13. Then, between the end of ToAD on June 23 and the start of the Intelligentsia Cup in northern Illinois on July 19, I want to see a Wisconsin state championship criterium as a standalone event.

So, right now there’s a big emphasis on crits, because there’s so little time to arrange something. But crits are only part of an overall road racing season. I am already working on plans for the state time trial championships and, with luck, there may be some open road racing. I think both of those are best suited for the weeks after the various criterium series. Summertime TTs should attract not only pure roadies, but also triathlon/duathlon competitors, especially as Ironman Wisconsin approaches (September 8). Open road racing is probably the biggest challenge, as it comes with so many logistical considerations that other forms of racing avoid. WiSport continues to hold most of the open road races in Wisconsin, but they are in remote locations with little automobile traffic. My best idea for the state road race championship is to hold it on the auto racing course of Road America. That venue has been used for cycling in the past, so maybe it would be right for the WCA.

Track and cyclocross are in good hands thanks to dedicated and capable volunteers. I don’t have much work to do there … maybe none! And that would be OK. I’m going to be busy. But if you have ideas for bike racing in Wisconsin, then I have time for you.