Nice story, nicely written.  Thanks.

Jack - also an Edward Abbey fan, and I don't care a whit if some of his 
non-fiction was (reportedly) largely fictionalized

On Saturday, January 4, 2020 at 4:25:01 PM UTC-8, Patrick Moore wrote:
>
> Met a friend at the Sandia Pueblo commuter rail station for a nice 
> northward loop through Bernalillo and Algodones and the Santa Ana Pueblo 
> and return; the early morning cold (~23*F when I took my dog for an early 
> "run the evil out of him" run before the ride) quickly warmed with the sun, 
> so that it must have been about 32* when we started at 9 am, and the mid 
> 40s by the time we got back to the station, 2 1/2 hours later; my hands 
> were sauna-ing in the the PI Lobster mitts. Very pleasant winter morning, 
> sunny and still; breeze didn't pick up until the southward return leg; just 
> as I was getting tired. 
>
> I get into a riding rut, riding the same pretty, but uvarying routes 
> nearby over and over again. Within 10 miles from home there are miles of 
> open state and country roads through at-once charming and squalid 
> environments that combine horse culture, ancient little villages, and 
> single wides, but all with vast vistas ending in distant mountains, and 
> punctuated in this bosque area by the cottonwoods that are so precious and 
> noticeable in a high-desert landscape, Fields populated by horses, cows, 
> and vast herds of wintering herons and geese; and even, said my friend of 
> another ride up the Tramway hill, bison in shaggy winter coats. This is 
> what North Valley Albuquerque must have looked like back when Edward Abbey 
> drove along 4th Street while when getting his master's in englit at UNM, 
> and what the Brave Cowboy must have seen during his equestrian 
> peregrination through the city.
>
> Friend was riding his commuter mid-range Cannondale road bike, 3X10 and 
> room for no more than 28s under the cf fork (he rides a Santa Cruz 
> Stigmata, not a Pinarello Dogma; but same weird old-fashioned, 
> Catholic-fixation nomenclature, though); me on the 76" Joe Starck with the 
> ineffably smooth and fast Rene Herse Elk Passes. I was pleased to find that 
> my climbing out of shape muscles must be permanently altered, because I've 
> been riding almost exclusively N-S along the perfectly level Valley (4,980 
> feet) for the past umpteen months, but the hills, one steep one at least 
> 1/2mile long, left me only moderately overexerted and were mostly just 
> fun.There's a very pleasant rhythm when standing to climb fixed; it's less 
> efficient, but there is a very distinct "plateau" of exertion where one can 
> stand for long distances and hold off the inevitable move to anaerobic 
> exhaustion. Must work on hills; climbing fixed is very enjoyable when you 
> prepare for it. I do have 67" and 57" (17/20 Dingle) on the flip side.
>
> 30.something miles; no biggie, I know, but given my condition and age, a 
> very pleasant stretch of my capacity. I want to start riding the 7-mile 
> Tramway hill again; it's been a long time. 
>
> -- 
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
> Patrick Moore
> Alburquerque, Nuevo Mexico, Etats Unis d'Amerique, Orbis Terrarum
>
>
>
>

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