I'm riding the last 3 days with my girlfriend and her father. I'll be on my 650b Riv Road, my girlfriend on her Soma San Marcos, and her father on his 80s Raleigh that I rebuilt for him, Riv-style. We did the full week last year but are doing our own thing this year.
We live near Hiawatha (Thursday night), so we're riding to Cedar Falls from here on Weds, riding back to Hiawatha with RAGBRAI on Thursday, riding partially off-route and partially off-pavement to Coralville on Friday, and riding with RAGBRAI to the end on Saturday. RAGBRAI is a ton of fun, normally uptight Iowans get totally loose. The local hosts give a bemused smile, shaking their heads but taking your money. It's a very good-natured ride. BUT: it has several challenges 1) the ride itself 2) the weather 3) the people 1) The ride is long. This year's days are pretty consistent, from 56 to 74 miles. There are hills (steep, short rollers). Ron has good advice, water and ibuprofen are helpful. Ride at your own pace. If you're slow, then get going early and ride the day with generous stops. RAGBRAI organizes official stopover towns throughout the route, and there are plenty of other opportunities to stop. Many vendors will rent farmyards along the route and set up professional operations each day. Favorites include: Farm Boys' burritos (hearty breakfast) Iowa Conservation team (free bananas, postcards, and water) Iowa Corn board (sweet corn paradise) Beekman's ice cream (made with 2-stroke ag engines) Mr. Pork Chop (substantial, fresh smoked chops) Iowa craft beer tent (usually in the last section of the day's route, thankfully) The vendors in the towns are often more conventional. I prefer to find local restaurants, but they're usually swamped by crowds. Local churches often have benefit suppers, offering spaghetti or similar. Those are the best spots for pie. I had a wonderful blackberry pie with lemon streusel on top last year that may currently hold the top prize. 2) Iowa summers can be brutal, with 90 degree days and 90 percent humidity. Sun screen is mandatory (and needs to be re-applied often), although you see a handful of lobsters after day 1. It can get very hot by noon, so that's another good reason to get some miles in early in the day. Bring mosquito repellent for when you stop. We get some pretty impressive thunderstorms in Iowa. We got caught in one last year, and the wind tore my girlfriend's dad's vinyl poncho right off his back while we were desperately riding to the next town. We huddled in the high school (it smelled like wet canines in there, yuck). I was soaked to the bone and shivering, and didn't fully recover until about an hour later with bright sunshine and a hot pork chop. You can bring rain gear if you want, but I don't because it just makes me sopping wet from sweat instead of wet from rain. But, a change of riding clothes in a dry bag would be a great idea for a day with a chance of storms. 3) RAGBRAI is a traveling circus. More than 20,000 riders (official numbers are difficult because many people ride without passes), support RVs and cars, vendors, etc. Even if you pull off the road to fertilize the cornfield (everyone does it. bring TP), you may find that someone else is using the facilities a couple rows over. You're always in a crowd on RAGBRAI. I find these crowds fun for a short while, and then they're just frustrating. It's imperative to my sanity that I get a break now and again. The RAGBRAI routing is thorough but pretty myopic; it stays on main roads to keep folks from getting lost. I prefer to get off the main route sometimes to explore, or to go to a restaurant without 500 bikers already in line. Your RAGBRAI pass entitles you to lots of support, including bag drag each day to the campsite in the next town. But that campsite is often the high school football field, or the local city park. Shared with 5,000 or more people. The showers are not free, and usually have very long lines. Cell phone charging is very rare (bring an extension cord with multiple sockets so you can share an outlet). The noise is ever-present as well. You'll get passed by folks playing really crappy music, really loudly, through really crappy speakers. The towns are in party mode, so crap country is blaring everywhere. Even where you try to sleep, you may be able to hear the big concert form the campsite. I recommend earplugs. Some folks get up very early, in order to get to the next town first and grab the best camping spots. You'll see these folks under the one tree in the field, napping at 3 pm in a hammock. But they get up at 5 to accomplish this scheme. Although these facilities are livable (we did it every night but one last year), you'll feel better on the ride if you find better places to sleep, with more shade, less noise, and better shower access. Use the RAGBRAI website to look for willing hosts in the towns, maybe place craigslist ads, and ask around on web forums. You can camp with us in Hiawatha for sure (we're ~3 miles away from the epicenter). Our spots in Cedar Falls and Coralville are further away, but we should have space if you want to camp. Cheers, Tim Gavin On Thu, Jun 11, 2015 at 9:24 AM, Ron Mc <[email protected]> wrote: > Take a jar of motrin and keep hydrated for your knees. Take the motrin > before you ride > > -- > You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups > "RBW Owners Bunch" group. > To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an > email to [email protected]. > To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. > Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/rbw-owners-bunch. > For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout. > -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "RBW Owners Bunch" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. 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